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It is a tragic
irony that, more than 55 years ago, one
desperate people seeking sanctuary from murderous racism decimated
another - and continue to oppress its scattered survivors to this day.
In 1948, about 700,000 Palestinians were expelled from their homeland,
their land and possessions taken by the new Jewish state of Israel.
This included the Jerusalem home of my grandparents, Hanna and Mathilde
Bisharat, which was expropriated through a process tantamount to
state-sanctioned theft.
Today, many
assume that to achieve Middle East peace, we Palestinians must surrender
our right to return to our homes and homeland. Millions of Palestinians
- with memories and photographs of our stolen properties, keys to our
front doors, and an abiding sense of injustice - are expected to swallow
our losses in order to facilitate a "two-state solution."
But it's not that
simple. Although Israel has claimed that Palestinians
willingly abandoned Palestine after being urged to leave in radio
broadcasts by Arab leaders, a review of broadcast transcripts by Irish
diplomat Erskine Childers in 1961 revealed that Palestinians were
exhorted by Arab leaders to stay, not leave their homes. In fact, Yigal
Allon, commander of Palmach, the elite Zionist troops, and later Israeli
foreign minister, launched a whispering campaign to terrorize
Palestinians into flight.
Nor were we
simply unintended victims of a war launched by the Arab states against
Israel. As far back as the late 19th century, leaders of Political
Zionism (the movement to create a Jewish state in Palestine) advocated
"transfer" of the Palestinians, by force if necessary. In 1948, Jews
owned only 11% of the land allocated by the United Nations to the Jewish
state - not enough for a viable economy. As David Ben-Gurion said in
February 1948 before he became prime minister of Israel: "The war will
give us the land.
The concepts of
'ours' and 'not ours' are peace concepts only, and in war they lose
their whole meaning."
Zionist leaders
knew that an Arab minority of 40% would challenge the Jewish
demographic dominance they sought. Hence, nearly half of the
Palestinian refugees ultimately expelled were forced out before the Arab
states attacked Israel in May 1948. Israeli historian Benny Morris
documented 24 massacres of Palestinian civilians, some claiming
hundreds of unarmed men, women and children, during subsequent
fighting. Thousands more Palestinians were, like the residents of
Majdal (now Ashkelon) - a southern coastal city 15 miles north of the
Gaza Strip - chased across the border into Gaza after the armistice of
1949.
Palestine had to be "cleansed" of its native population to establish
Israel as a Jewish state. Ironically, those who today protest that the
return of the refugees would destroy Israel unwittingly confirm this
viewpoint, for the refugees are simply the Palestinians and their
offspring who would have become Israeli citizens had they not been
exiled.
Israel's denial of responsibility for the refugees and rejection of
their
repatriation (intransigence that was condemned early on by a U.S.
official as "morally reprehensible") is nearly as offensive as the
original expulsion itself. Israel welcomed immigrant Jews from all over
the world but shot Palestinians who tried to return to recover movable
property, harvest the fruit of their orchards or reclaim their homes.
Oxford professor Avi Shlaim concluded in his book "The Iron Wall" that
"between 2,700 and 5,000 [Palestinian] infiltrators were killed in the
period 1949-56, the great majority of them unarmed."
Nothing the
Palestinians had done merited this treatment, something the
international community has consistently recognized. A 1948 U.N.
resolution recognizing the Palestinian right of return has been
annually - and almost unanimously - reaffirmed ever since. The
Palestinian right of return is also supported by Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International.
The two-state
solution envisioned today would probably ameliorate the conditions of
the one-third of the Palestinians living under Israeli
military occupation in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. There,
Palestinians face incessant military attacks that have demolished homes
and orchards and killed an average of nearly 70 Palestinians per month
over the last three years. A smothering matrix of closures, curfews and
checkpoints restricts movement and has caused unemployment to soar to
more than 70% and threaten Palestinian children with malnutrition.
Meanwhile, Israeli settlers, shock troops in the grinding 36-year
campaign to seize and colonize yet more
Palestinian land, speed through the West Bank and Gaza Strip on "Jewish
only" roads. The oppressive features of Israeli military occupation were
entrenched long before Palestinians resorted in the mid-1990s to the
desperate - yet still indefensible - tactic of suicide bombings to slow
the colonizing juggernaut.
But this
two-state solution would not address the concerns of 1.2 million
Palestinians living in Israel as second-class citizens. Palestinian
citizens there possess formal political rights - that much Israel can
afford after expelling most Palestinians in 1948. But these
Palestinians have restricted access to land (most real property in
Israel is owned by the state or the Jewish National Fund and is leased
to Jews only). They are also forced to carry identity cards that brand
them as non-Jews, and they cannot serve in the armed forces (the key to
many benefits in Israeli society). Palestinian towns and villages are
starved of resources, with many lacking connections to the country's
electrical or water systems. Government policies, from immigration to
family planning, are designed to counter the "demographic threat"
Israelis fear in the higher birthrate of Palestinian citizens.
Israeli law
enshrines the principle that Israel is the "state of the Jewish
people," and it lacks firm guarantees of the legal equality of all
citizens. Nor would the two-state solution fairly redress the rights of
diaspora Palestinians - permitting us only return to a new, already
overcrowded and underfunded "statelet" in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
There is no bar to implementing the Palestinians' right of return. If
there is room in Israel for a million Russian immigrants (including
many non-Jews), there is room for those Palestinians who would elect
return over other legal options. The sole obstacle is Israel's desire
to maintain a "demographic balance" favorable to Jews.
Why is it
self-evident that our international legal rights should give way to
cement dominance of Jews over Palestinians in Israel? Why is this
assumption unquestioned - especially in the U.S., which fought a civil
war for the ideal of equal rights under the law? How do claims that are
2,000 years old trump our rights when we have modern deeds in hand? Why
should Palestinians pay for a European holocaust? Why do U.S. officials
– including our two Democratic senators in this multicultural state –
unconditionally support Israel with billions in tax dollars while
ignoring glaring contradictions between Jewish exclusivism and truly
democratic values? Would Americans tolerate any group placing its
religious symbol on the national flag, appropriating the state for some
citizens rather than all and pursuing policies systematically giving
privileges to its members over others?
Palestinians are
prepared to sacrifice for a just and therefore lasting
peace, but not to simply formalize our dispossession and exile or our
institutionalized subordination in Israel. Isn't it time to explore a
way for Jews to co-inhabit Israel/Palestine without excluding,
dominating and oppressing Palestinians? The past cannot be undone - but
the future can be. We, Israelis and Palestinians together, should be
seeking to form a society founded on tolerance and mutual respect
for each other's humanity, a country that would truly be the "light
unto nations" that Israel always aspired to be. When title to our home
is restored - and the rights of its current occupants have been fully
respected - I hope one day to stand in front of it with my family and
welcome neighbors and visitors of all faiths and backgrounds, as my
grandparents did before 1948.
*
George Bisharat
is a professor at the University of
California's
Hastings College of Law.