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[An excellent exposure by two former CIA analysts of the racism
underlying the Zionist enterprise, the ethnic cleansing nature of
its actions, and the blind support it enjoys in the US.]
§ Recognizing
Zionism's Racism
§ Creating
Enemies
§ The
Zionist Dilemma
§ Countering
the Counter-Arguments
§ Why
It Matters
During a
presentation on the Palestinian-Israeli situation in 2001, an
American-Israeli acquaintance of ours began with a typical attack on
the Palestinians. Taking the overused line that "Palestinians never
miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity," he asserted snidely
that, if only the Palestinians had had any decency and not been so
all-fired interested in pushing the Jews into the sea in 1948, they
would have accepted the UN partition of Palestine. Those
Palestinians who became refugees would instead have remained
peacefully in their homes, and the state of Palestine could in the
year 2001 be celebrating the 53rd anniversary of its independence.
Everything could have been sweetness and light, he contended, but
here the Palestinians were, then a year into a deadly intifada,
still stateless, still hostile, and still trying, he claimed, to
push the Jews into the sea.
It was a
common line but with a new and intriguing twist: what if the
Palestinians had accepted partition; would they in fact have lived
in a state at peace since 1948? It was enough to make the audience
stop and think. But later in the talk, the speaker tripped himself
up by claiming, in a tone of deep alarm, that Palestinian insistence
on the right of return for Palestinian refugees displaced when
Israel was created would spell the destruction of Israel as a Jewish
state. He did not realize the inherent contradiction in his two
assertions (until we later pointed it out to him, with no little
glee). You cannot have it both ways, we told him: you cannot claim
that, if Palestinians had not left the areas that became Israel in
1948, they would now be living peaceably, some inside and some
alongside a Jewish-majority state, and then also claim that, if they
returned now, Israel would lose its Jewish majority and its
essential identity as a Jewish state.¨¨
This exchange,
and the massive propaganda effort by and on behalf of Israel to
demonstrate the threat to Israel's Jewish character posed by the
Palestinians' right of return, actually reveal the dirty little
secret of Zionism. In its drive to establish and maintain a state in
which Jews are always the majority, Zionism absolutely required that
Palestinians, as non-Jews, be made to leave in 1948 and never be
allowed to return. The dirty little secret is that this is blatant
racism.
But didn't we
finish with that old Zionism-is-racism issue over a decade ago, when
in 1991 the UN repealed a 1975 General Assembly resolution that
defined Zionism as "a form of racism or racial discrimination"?
Hadn't we Americans always rejected this resolution as odious
anti-Semitism, and didn't we, under the aegis of the first Bush
administration, finally prevail on the rest of the world community
to agree that it was not only inaccurate but downright evil to label
Zionism as racist? Why bring it up again, now?
The UN General Assembly based its 1975 anti-Zionist resolution on
the UN's own definition of racial discrimination, adopted in 1965.
According to the International Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Racial Discrimination, racial discrimination is "any
distinction, exclusion, restriction or preference based on race,
colour, descent, or national or ethnic origin which has the purpose
or effect of nullifying or impairing the recognition, enjoyment or
exercise, on an equal footing, of human rights and fundamental
freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural or any other
field of public life." As a definition of racism and racial
discrimination, this statement is unassailable and, if one is honest
about what Zionism is and what it signifies, the statement is an
accurate definition of Zionism. But in 1975, in the political
atmosphere prevailing at the time, putting forth such a definition
was utterly self-defeating.
So would a
formal resolution be in today's political atmosphere. But enough has
changed over the last decade or more that talk about Zionism as a
system that either is inherently racist or at least fosters racism
is increasingly possible and increasingly necessary. Despite the
vehement knee-jerk opposition to any such discussion throughout the
United States, serious scholars elsewhere and serious Israelis have
begun increasingly to examine Zionism critically, and there is much
greater receptivity to the notion that no real peace will be forged
in Palestine-Israel unless the bases of Zionism are examined and in
some way altered. It is for this reason that honestly labeling
Zionism as a racist political philosophy is so necessary: unless the
world's, and particularly the United States', blind support for
Israel as an exclusivist Jewish state is undermined, unless the
blind acceptance of Zionism as a noble ideology is undermined, and
unless it is recognized that Israel's drive to maintain dominion
over the occupied Palestinian territories is motivated by an
exclusivist, racist ideology, no one will ever gain the political
strength or the political will necessary to force Israel to
relinquish territory and permit establishment of a truly sovereign
and independent Palestinian state in a part of Palestine.
Top
Recognizing Zionism's Racism
A racist
ideology need not always manifest itself as such, and, if the
circumstances are right, it need not always actually practice racism
to maintain itself. For decades after its creation, the
circumstances were right for Israel. If one forgot, as most people
did, the fact that 750,000 Palestinians (non-Jews) had left their
homeland under duress, thus making room for a Jewish-majority state,
everyone could accept Israel as a genuine democracy, even to a
certain extent for that small minority of Palestinians who had
remained after 1948. That minority was not large enough to threaten
Israel's Jewish majority; it faced considerable discrimination, but
because Israeli Arabs could vote, this discrimination was viewed not
as institutional, state-mandated racism but as the kind of
discrimination, deplorable but not institutionalized, faced by
blacks in the United States. The occupation of the West Bank, Gaza,
and East Jerusalem, with their two million (soon to become more than
three
million) Palestinian inhabitants, was seen to be temporary, its end
awaiting only the Arabs' readiness to accept Israel's existence.
In these "right" circumstances, the issue of racism rarely arose,
and the UN's labeling of Israel's fundamental ideology as racist
came across to Americans and most westerners as nasty and
vindictive. Outside the third world, Israel had come to be regarded
as the perpetual innocent, not aggressive, certainly not racist, and
desirous of nothing more than a peace agreement that would allow it
to mind its own business inside its original borders in a democratic
state. By the time the Zionism-is-racism resolution was rescinded in
1991, even the PLO had officially recognized Israel's right to exist
in peace inside its 1967 borders, with its Jewish majority
uncontested. In fact, this very acceptance of Israel by its
principal adversary played no small part in facilitating the U.S.
effort to garner support for overturning the resolution. (The fact
of U.S. global dominance in the wake of the first Gulf war and the
collapse of the Soviet Union earlier in 1991, and the atmosphere of
optimism
about prospects for peace created by the Madrid peace conference in
October also played a significant part in winning over a majority of
the UN when the Zionism resolution was brought to a vote of the
General Assembly in December.)
Realities are
very different today, and a recognition of Zionism's racist bases,
as well as an understanding of the racist policies being played out
in the occupied territories are essential if there is to be any hope
at all of achieving a peaceful, just, and stable resolution of the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The egg of Palestine has been
permanently scrambled, and it is now increasingly the case that, as
Zionism is recognized as the driving force in the occupied
territories as well as inside Israel proper, pre-1967 Israel can no
longer be considered in isolation. It can no longer be allowed
simply to go its own way as a Jewish-majority state, a state in
which the circumstances are "right" for ignoring Zionism's
fundamental racism.
As Israel
increasingly inserts itself into the occupied territories, and as
Israeli settlers, Israeli settlements, and Israeli-only roads
proliferate and a state infrastructure benefiting only Jews takes
over more and more territory, it becomes no longer possible to
ignore the racist underpinnings of the Zionist ideology that directs
this enterprise. It is no longer possible today to wink at the
permanence of Zionism's thrust beyond Israel's pre-1967 borders. It
is now clear that Israel's control over the occupied territories is,
and has all along been intended to be, a drive to assert exclusive
Jewish control, taming the Palestinians into submission and
squeezing them into ever smaller, more disconnected segments of land
or, failing that, forcing them to leave Palestine altogether. It is
totally obvious to anyone who spends time on the ground in
Palestine-Israel that the animating force behind the policies of the
present and all past Israeli governments in Israel and in the
occupied West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem has always been a
determination to assure the predominance of Jews over Palestinians.
Such policies can only be described as racist, and we should stop
trying any longer to avoid the word.
When you are
on the ground in Palestine, you can see Zionism physically imprinted
on the landscape. Not only can you see that there are settlements,
built on land confiscated from Palestinians, where Palestinians may
not live. Not only can you see roads in the occupied territories,
again built on land taken from Palestinians, where Palestinians may
not drive. Not only can you observe that water in the occupied
territories is allocated, by Israeli governmental authorities, so
inequitably that Israeli settlers are allocated five times the
amount per capita as are Palestinians and, in periods of drought,
Palestinians stand in line for drinking water while Israeli
settlements enjoy lush gardens and swimming pools. Not only can you
stand and watch as Israeli bulldozers flatten Palestinian olive
groves and other agricultural land, destroy Palestinian wells, and
demolish Palestinian homes to make way for the separation wall that
Israel is constructing across the length and breadth of the West
Bank. The wall fences off Palestinians from Israelis, supposedly to
provide greater security for Israelis but in fact in order to cage
Palestinians, to define a border for Israel that will exclude a
maximum number of Palestinians.
But, if this
is not enough to demonstrate the inherent racism of Israel's
occupation, you can also drive through Palestinian towns and
Palestinian neighborhoods in and near Jerusalem and see what is
perhaps the most cruelly racist policy in Zionism's arsenal: house
demolitions, the preeminent symbol of Zionism's drive to maintain
Jewish predominance. Virtually every street has a house or houses
reduced to rubble, one floor pancaked onto another or simply a pile
of broken concrete bulldozed into an incoherent heap. Jeff Halper,
founder and head of the non-governmental Israeli Committee Against
House Demolitions (ICAHD), an anthropologist and scholar of the
occupation, has observed that Zionist and Israeli leaders going back
80 years have all conveyed what he calls "The Message" to
Palestinians. The Message, Halper says, is "Submit. Only when you
abandon your dreams for an independent state of your own, and accept
that Palestine has become the Land of Israel, will we relent [i.e.,
stop attacking Palestinians]." The deeper meaning of The Message, as
carried by the bulldozers so ubiquitous in targeted Palestinian
neighborhoods today, is that "You [Palestinians] do not belong here.
We uprooted you from your homes in 1948 and now we will uproot you
from all of the Land of Israel."
In the end, Halper says, the advance of Zionism has been a process
of displacement, and house demolitions have been "at the center of
the Israeli struggle against the Palestinians" since 1948. Halper
enumerates a steady history of destruction: in the first six years
of Israel's existence, it systematically razed 418 Palestinian
villages inside Israel, fully 85 percent of the villages existing
before 1948; since the occupation began in 1967, Israel has
demolished 11,000 Palestinian homes. More homes are now being
demolished in the path of Israel's "separation wall." It is
estimated that more than 4,000 homes have been destroyed in the last
two years alone.
The vast majority of these house demolitions, 95 percent, have
nothing whatever to do with fighting terrorism, but are designed
specifically to displace non-Jews and assure the advance of Zionism.
In Jerusalem, from the beginning of the occupation of the eastern
sector of the city in 1967, Israeli authorities have designed zoning
plans specifically to prevent the growth of the Palestinian
population. Maintaining the "Jewish character" of the city at the
level existing in 1967 (71 percent Jewish, 29 percent Palestinian)
required that Israel draw zoning boundaries to prevent Palestinian
expansion beyond existing neighborhoods, expropriate
Palestinian-owned lands, confiscate the Jerusalem residency permits
of any Palestinian who cannot prove that Jerusalem is his "center of
life," limit city services to Palestinian areas, limit development
in Palestinian neighborhoods, refuse to issue residential building
permits to Palestinians, and demolish Palestinian homes that are
built without permits. None of these strictures is imposed on Jews.
According to ICAHD, the housing shortage in Palestinian
neighborhoods in Jerusalem is approximately 25,000 units, and 2,000
demolition orders are pending.
Halper has
written that the human suffering involved in the destruction of a
family home is incalculable. A home "is one's symbolic center, the
site of one's most intimate personal life and an expression of one's
status. It is a refuge, it is the physical representation of the
family, maintaining continuity on one's ancestral land." Land
expropriation is "an attack on one's very being and identity."
Zionist governments, past and present, have understood this well,
although not with the compassion or empathy that Halper conveys, and
this attack on the "very being and identity" of non-Jews has been
precisely the animating force behind Zionism.
Zionism's
racism has, of course, been fundamental to Israel itself since its
establishment in 1948. The Israeli government pursues policies
against its own Bedouin minority very similar to its actions in the
occupied territories. The Bedouin population has been forcibly
relocated and squeezed into small areas in the Negev, again with the
intent of forcing an exodus, and half of the 140,000 Bedouin in the
Negev live in villages that the Israeli government does not
recognize and does not provide services for. Every Bedouin home in
an unrecognized village is slated for demolition; all homes, and the
very presence of Bedouin in them, are officially illegal.
The problem of the Bedouins' unrecognized villages is only the
partial evidence of a racist policy that has prevailed since
Israel's foundation. After Zionist/Israeli leaders assured that the
non-Jews (i.e., the Palestinians) making up the majority of
Palestine's population (a two-thirds majority at the time) departed
the scene in 1948, Israeli governments institutionalized favoritism
toward Jews by law. As a Zionist state, Israel has always identified
itself as the state of the Jews: as a state not of its Jewish and
Palestinian citizens, but of all Jews everywhere in the world. The
institutions of state guarantee the rights of and provide benefits
for Jews. The Law of Return gives automatic citizenship to Jews from
anywhere in the world, but to no other people. Some 92 percent of
the land of Israel is state land, held by the Jewish National Fund
"in trust" for the Jewish people; Palestinians may not purchase this
land, even though most of it was Palestinian land before 1948, and
in
most instances they may not even lease the land. Both the Jewish
National Fund, which deals with land acquisition and development,
and the Jewish Agency, which deals primarily with Jewish immigration
and immigrant absorption, have existed since before the state's
establishment and now perform their duties specifically for Jews
under an official mandate from the Israeli government.
Top
Creating Enemies
Although few
dare to give the reality of house demolitions and state institutions
favoring Jews the label of racism, the phenomenon this reality
describes is unmistakably racist. There is no other term for a
process by which one people can achieve the essence of its political
philosophy only by suppressing another people, by which one people
guarantees its perpetual numerical superiority and its overwhelming
predominance over another people through a deliberate process of
repression and dispossession of those people. From the beginning,
Zionism has been based on the supremacy of the Jewish people,
whether this predominance was to be exercised in a full-fledged
state or in some other kind of political entity, and Zionism could
never have survived or certainly thrived in Palestine without
ridding that land of most of its native population. The early
Zionists themselves knew this (as did the Palestinians), even if
naïve Americans have never quite gotten it. Theodore Herzl, father
of
Zionism, talked from the beginning of "spiriting" the native
Palestinians out and across the border; discussion of "transfer" was
common among the Zionist leadership in Palestine in the 1930s; talk
of transfer is common today.
There has been
a logical progression to the development of Zionism, leading
inevitably to general acceptance of the sense that, because Jewish
needs are paramount, Jews themselves are paramount. Zionism grew out
of the sense that Jews needed a refuge from persecution, which led
in turn to the belief that the refuge could be truly secure only if
Jews guaranteed their own safety, which meant that the refuge must
be exclusively or at least overwhelmingly Jewish, which meant in
turn that Jews and their demands were superior, taking precedence
over any other interests within that refuge. The mindset that in
U.S. public discourse tends to view the Palestinian-Israeli conflict
from a perspective almost exclusively focused on Israel arises out
of this progression of Zionist thinking. By the very nature of a
mindset, virtually no one examines the assumptions on which the
Zionist mindset is based, and few recognize the racist base on which
it rests.
Israeli governments through the decades have never been so innocent.
Many officials in the current right-wing government are blatantly
racist. Israel's outspoken education minister, Limor Livnat, spelled
out the extreme right-wing defense of Zionism a year ago, when the
government proposed to legalize the right of Jewish communities in
Israel to exclude non-Jews. Livnat justified Israel's racism as a
matter of Jewish self-preservation. "We're involved here," she said
in a radio interview, "in a struggle for the existence of the State
of Israel as the state of the Jews, as opposed to those who want to
force us to be a state of all its citizens." Israel is not "just
another state like all the other states," she protested. "We are not
just a state of all its citizens."
Livnat cautioned that Israel must be very watchful lest it find in
another few years that the Galilee and the Negev, two areas inside
Israel with large Arab populations, are "filled with Arab
communities." To emphasize the point, she reiterated that Israel's
"special purpose is our character as a Jewish state, our desire to
preserve a Jewish community and Jewish majority here so that it does
not become a state of all its citizens." Livnat was speaking of
Jewish self-preservation not in terms of saving the Jews or Israel
from a territorial threat of military invasion by a marauding
neighbor state, but in terms of preserving Jews from the mere
existence of another people within spitting distance.
Most Zionists
of a more moderate stripe might shudder at the explicitness of
Livnat's message and deny that Zionism is really like this. But in
fact this properly defines the racism that necessarily underlies
Zionism. Most centrist and leftist Zionists deny the reality of
Zionism's racism by trying to portray Zionism as a democratic system
and manufacturing enemies in order to be able to sustain the
inherent contradiction and hide or excuse the racism behind
Zionism's drive for predominance.
Indeed, the
most pernicious aspect of a political philosophy like Zionism that
masquerades as democratic is that it requires an enemy in order to
survive and, where an enemy does not already exist, it requires that
one be created. In order to justify racist repression and
dispossession, particularly in a system purporting to be democratic,
those being repressed and displaced must be portrayed as murderous
and predatory. And in order to keep its own population in line, to
prevent a humane people from objecting to their own government's
repressive policies, it requires that fear be instilled in the
population: fear of "the other," fear of the terrorist, fear of the
Jew-hater. The Jews of Israel must always be made to believe that
they are the preyed-upon. This justifies having forced these enemies
to leave, it justifies discriminating against those who remained, it
justifies denying democratic rights to those who later came under
Israel's control in the occupied territories.
Needing an enemy has meant that Zionism has from the beginning had
to create myths about Palestinians, painting Palestinians and all
Arabs as immutably hostile and intransigent. Thus the myth that in
1948 Palestinians left Palestine so that Arab armies could throw the
Jews into the sea; thus the continuing myth that Palestinians remain
determined to destroy Israel. Needing an enemy means that Zionism,
as one veteran Israeli peace activist recently put it, has removed
the Palestinians from history. Thus the myths that there is no such
thing as a Palestinian, or that Palestinians all immigrated in
modern times from other Arab countries, or that Jordan is Palestine
and Palestinians should find their state there.
Needing an enemy means that Zionism has had to make its negotiating
partner into a terrorist. It means that, for its own preservation,
Zionism has had to devise a need to ignore its partner/enemy or
expel him or assassinate him. It means that Zionism has had to
reject any conciliatory effort by the Palestinians and portray them
as "never missing an opportunity to miss an opportunity" to make
peace. This includes in particular rejecting that most conciliatory
gesture, the PLO's decision in 1988 to recognize Israel's existence,
relinquish Palestinian claims to the three-quarters of Palestine
lying inside Israel's pre-1967 borders, and even recognize Israel's
"right" to exist there.
Needing an
enemy means, ultimately, that Zionism had to create the myth of the
"generous offer" at the Camp David summit in July 2000. It was
Zionist racism that painted the Palestinians as hopelessly
intransigent for refusing Israel's supposedly generous offer,
actually an impossible offer that would have maintained Zionism's
hold on the occupied territories and left the Palestinians with a
disconnected, indefensible, non-viable state. Then, when the
intifada erupted (after Palestinian demonstrators threw stones at
Israeli police and the police responded by shooting several
demonstrators to death), it was Zionist racism speaking when Israel
put out the line that it was under siege and in a battle for its
very survival with Palestinians intent on destroying it. When a few
months later the issue of Palestinian refugees and their "right of
return" arose publicly, it was Zionist racism speaking when Israel
and its defenders, ignoring the several ways in which Palestinian
negotiators signaled their readiness to compromise this demand,
propagated the view that this too was intended as a way to destroy
Israel, by flooding it with non-Jews and destroying its Jewish
character.
Top
The Zionist Dilemma
The supposed
threat from "the other" is the eternal refuge of the majority of
Israelis and Israeli supporters in the United States. The common
line is that "We Israelis and friends of Israel long for peace, we
support Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza, we have
always supported giving the Palestinians self-government. But 'they'
hate us, they want to destroy Israel. Wasn't this obvious when
Arafat turned his back on Israel's generous offer? Wasn't this
obvious when Arafat started the intifada? Wasn't this obvious when
Arafat demanded that the Palestinians be given the right of return,
which would destroy Israel as a Jewish state? We have already made
concession after concession. How can we give them any further
concessions when they would only fight for more and more until
Israel is gone?" This line relieves Israel of any responsibility to
make concessions or move toward serious negotiations; it relieves
Israelis of any need to treat Palestinians as equals; it relieves
Israelis and their defenders of any need to think; it justifies
racism, while calling it something else.
Increasing numbers of Israelis themselves (some of whom have long
been non-Zionists, some of whom are only now beginning to see the
problem with Zionism) are recognizing the inherent racism of their
nation's raison d'être. During the years of the peace process, and
indeed for the last decade and a half since the PLO formally
recognized Israel's existence, the Israeli left could ignore the
problems of Zionism while pursuing efforts to promote the
establishment of an independent Palestinian state in the West Bank
and Gaza that would coexist with Israel. Zionism continued to be
more or less a non-issue: Israel could organize itself in any way it
chose inside its own borders, and the Palestinian state could
fulfill Palestinian national aspirations inside its new borders.
Few of those
nettlesome issues surrounding Zionism, such as how much democracy
Zionism can allow to non-Jews without destroying its reason for
being, would arise in a two-state situation. The issue of Zionism's
responsibility for the Palestinians' dispossession could also be put
aside. As Haim Hanegbi, a non-Zionist Israeli who recently went back
to the fold of single-state binationalism (and who is a long-time
cohort of Uri Avnery in the Gush Shalom movement), said in a recent
interview with the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz, the promise of mutual
recognition offered by the Oslo peace process mesmerized him and
others in the peace movement and so "in the mid-1990s I had second
thoughts about my traditional [binational] approach. I didn't think
it was my task to go to Ramallah and present the Palestinians with
the list of Zionist wrongs and tell them not to forget what our
fathers did to their fathers." Nor were the Palestinians themselves
reminding Zionists of these wrongs at the time.
As new wrongs
in the occupied territories increasingly recall old wrongs from half
a century ago, however, and as Zionism finds that it cannot cope
with end-of-conflict demands like the Palestinians' insistence that
Israel accept their right of return by acknowledging its role in
their dispossession, more and more Israelis are coming to accept the
reality that Zionism can never escape its past. It is becoming
increasingly clear to many Israelis that Israel has absorbed so much
of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem into itself that the
Jewish and the Palestinian peoples can never be separated fairly.
The separation wall, says Hanegbi, "is the great despairing solution
of the Jewish-Zionist society. It is the last desperate act of those
who cannot confront the Palestinian issue. Of those who are
compelled to push the Palestinian issue out of their lives and out
of their consciousness." For Hanegbi, born in Palestine before 1948,
Palestinians "were always part of my landscape," and without them,
"this is a barren country, a disabled country."
Old-line Zionist Meron Benvenisti, who has also moved to support for
binationalism, used almost identical metaphors in a Ha'aretz
interview run alongside Hanegbi's. Also Palestine-born and a
contemporary of Hanegbi, Benvenisti believes "this is a country in
which there were always Arabs. This is a country in which the Arabs
are the landscape, the natives. I don't see myself living here
without them. In my eyes, without Arabs this is a barren land."
Both men discuss the evolution of their thinking over the decades,
and both describe a period in which, after the triumph of Zionism,
they unthinkingly accepted its dispossession of the Palestinians.
Each man describes the Palestinians simply disappearing when he was
an adolescent ("They just sort of evaporated," says Hanegbi), and
Benvenisti recalls a long period in which the Palestinian "tragedy
simply did not penetrate my consciousness." But both speak in very
un-Zionist terms of equality. Benvenisti touches on the crux of the
Zionist dilemma. "This is where I am different from my friends in
the left," he says, "because I am truly a native son of immigrants,
who is drawn to the Arab culture and the Arabic language because it
is here. It is the land. Whereas the right, certainly, but the left
too hates Arabs. The Arabs bother them; they complicate things. The
subject generates moral questions and that generates cultural
unease."
Hanegbi goes
farther. "I am not a psychologist," he says, "but I think that
everyone who lives with the contradictions of Zionism condemns
himself to protracted madness. It's impossible to live like this.
It's impossible to live with such a tremendous wrong. It's
impossible to live with such conflicting moral criteria. When I see
not only the settlements and the occupation and the suppression, but
now also the insane wall that the Israelis are trying to hide
behind, I have to conclude that there is something very deep here in
our attitude to the indigenous people of this land that drives us
out of our minds."
While some
thoughtful Israelis like these men struggle with philosophical
questions of existence and identity and the collective Jewish
conscience, few American defenders of Israel seem troubled by such
deep issues. Racism is often banal. Most of those who practice it,
and most of those who support Israel as a Zionist state, would be
horrified to be accused of racism, because their racist practices
have become commonplace. They do not even think about what they do.
We recently encountered a typical American supporter of Israel who
would have argued vigorously if we had accused her of racism. During
a presentation we were giving to a class, this (non-Jewish) woman
rose to ask a question that went roughly like this: "I want to ask
about the failure of the other Arabs to take care of the
Palestinians. I must say I sympathize with Israel because Israel
simply wants to have a secure state, but the other Arabs have
refused to take the Palestinians in, and so they sit in camps and
their hostility toward Israel just festers."
This is an extremely common American, and Israeli, perception, the
idea being that if the Arab states would only absorb the
Palestinians so that they became Lebanese or Syrians or Jordanians,
they would forget about being Palestinian, forget that Israel had
displaced and dispossessed them, and forget about "wanting to
destroy Israel." Israel would then be able simply to go about its
own business and live in peace, as it so desperately wants to do.
This woman's assumption was that it is acceptable for Israel to have
established itself as a Jewish state at the expense of (i.e., after
the ethnic cleansing of) the land's non-Jewish inhabitants, that any
Palestinian objection to this reality is illegitimate, and that all
subsequent animosity toward Israel is ultimately the fault of
neighboring Arab states who failed to smother the Palestinians'
resistance by anesthetizing them to their plight and erasing their
identity and their collective memory of Palestine.
When later in
the class the subject arose of Israel ending the occupation, this
same woman spoke up to object that, if Israel did give up control
over the West Bank and Gaza, it would be economically disadvantaged,
at least in the agricultural sector. "Wouldn't this leave Israel as
just a desert?" she wondered. Apart from the fact that the answer is
a clear "no" (Israel's agricultural capability inside its 1967
borders is quite high, and most of Israel is not desert), the
woman's question was again based on the automatic assumption that
Israel's interests take precedence over those of anyone else and
that, in order to enhance its own agricultural economy (or,
presumably, for any other perceived gain), Israel has the right to
conquer and take permanent possession of another people's land.
The notion
that the Jewish/Zionist state of Israel has a greater right to
possess the land, or a greater right to security, or a greater right
to a thriving economy, than the people who are native to that land
is extremely racist, but this woman would probably object
strenuously to having it pointed out that this is a Jewish
supremacist viewpoint identical to past justifications for white
South Africa's apartheid regime and to the rationale for all
European colonial (racist) systems that exploited the human and
natural resources of Africa, the Middle East, and Asia over the
centuries for the sole benefit of the colonizers. Racism must
necessarily be blind to its own immorality; the burden of conscience
is otherwise too great. This is the banality of evil.
(Unconsciously, of course, many Americans also seem to believe that
the shameful policies of the U.S. government toward Native Americans
somehow make it acceptable for the government of Israel to pursue
equally shameful policies toward the Palestinians. The U.S. needs to
face its racist policies head on as much as it needs to confront the
racism of its foremost partner, Israel.)
This woman's view is so very typical, something you hear constantly
in casual conversation and casual encounters at social occasions,
that it hardly seems significant. But this very banality is
precisely the evil of it; what is evil is the very fact that it is
"hardly significant" that Zionism by its nature is racist and that
this reality goes unnoticed by decent people who count themselves
defenders of Israel. The universal acceptability of a system that is
at heart racist but proclaims itself to be benign, even noble, and
the license this acceptability gives Israel to oppress another
people, are striking testimony to the selectivity of the human
conscience and its general disinterest in human questions of justice
and human rights except when these are politically useful.
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Countering the Counter-Arguments
To put some
perspective on this issue, a few clarifying questions must be
addressed. Many opponents of the occupation would argue that,
although Israel's policies in the occupied territories are racist in
practice, they are an abuse of Zionism and that racism is not
inherent in it. This seems to be the position of several prominent
commentators who have recently denounced Israel severely for what it
does in the West Bank and Gaza but fail to recognize the racism in
what Israel did upon its establishment in 1948. In a recent bitter
denunciation of Zionist policies today, Avraham Burg, a former
Knesset speaker, lamented that Zionism had become corrupted by
ruling as an occupier over another people, and he longed for the
days of Israel's youth when "our national destiny" was "as a light
unto the nations and a society of peace, justice and equality."
These are nice words, and it is heartening to hear credible
mainstream Israelis so clearly denouncing the occupation, but Burg's
assumption that before the occupation Zionism followed "a just
path" and always had "an ethical leadership" ignores the unjust and
unethical policy of ethnic cleansing that allowed Israel to become a
so-called Jewish democracy in the first place.
Acknowledging the racist underpinnings of an ideology so long held
up as the embodiment of justice and ethics appears to be impossible
for many of the most intellectual of Israelis and Israeli defenders.
Many who strongly oppose Israel's policies in the occupied
territories still, despite their opposition, go through considerable
contortions to "prove" that Israel itself is not racist. Rabbi
Michael Lerner, editor of the Jewish magazine Tikkun and a long-time
opponent of the occupation, rejects the notion that Zionism is
racist on the narrow grounds that Jewishness is only a religious
identity and that Israel welcomes Jews of all races and ethnicities
and therefore cannot be called racist. But this confuses the point.
Preference toward a particular religion, which is the only aspect of
racism that Lerner has addressed and which he acknowledges occurs in
Israel, is no more acceptable than preference on ethnic grounds.
But most
important, racism has to do primarily with those discriminated
against, not with those who do the discriminating. Using Lerner's
reasoning, apartheid South Africa might also not be considered
racist because it welcomed whites of all ethnicities. But its
inherent evil lay in the fact that its very openness to whites
discriminated against blacks. Discrimination against any people on
the basis of "race, colour, descent, or national or ethnic origin"
is the major characteristic of racism as the UN defines it.
Discrimination against Palestinians and other non-Jews, simply
because they are not Jews, is the basis on which Israel constitutes
itself. Lerner seems to believe that, because the Palestinian
citizens of Israel have the vote and are represented in the Knesset,
there is no racial or ethnic discrimination in Israel. But, apart
from skipping over the institutional racism that keeps Palestinian
Israelis in perpetual second-class citizenship, this argument
ignores the more
essential reality that Israel reached its present ethnic balance,
the point at which it could comfortably allow Palestinians to vote
without endangering its Jewish character, only because in 1948
three-quarters of a million Palestinians were forced to leave what
became the Jewish state of Israel.
More questions
need to be addressed. Is every Israeli or every Jew a racist? Most
assuredly not, as the examples of Jeff Halper, Haim Hanegbi, Meron
Benvenisti, and many others like them strikingly illustrate. Is
every Zionist a racist? Probably not, if one accepts ignorance as an
exonerating factor. No doubt the vast majority of Israelis, most
very good-hearted people, are not consciously racist but "go along"
unquestioningly, having been born into or moved to an apparently
democratic state and never examined the issue closely, and having
bought into the line fed them by every Israeli government from the
beginning, that Palestinians and other Arabs are enemies and that
whatever actions Israel takes against Palestinians are necessary to
guarantee the personal security of Israelis.
Is it anti-Semitic to say that Zionism is a racist system? Certainly
not. Political criticism is not ethnic or religious hatred. Stating
a reality about a government's political system or its political
conduct says nothing about the qualities of its citizens or its
friends. Racism is not a part of the genetic makeup of Jews, any
more than it was a part of the genetic makeup of Germans when Hitler
ran a racist regime. Nor do Zionism's claim to speak for all Jews
everywhere and Israel's claim to be the state of all Jews everywhere
make all Jews Zionists. Zionism did not ask for or receive the
consent of universal Jewry to speak in its name; therefore labeling
Zionism as racist does not label all Jews and cannot be called
anti-Semitic.
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Why It Matters
Are there
other racist systems, and are there governing systems and political
philosophies, racist or not, that are worse than Zionism? Of course,
but this fact does not relieve Zionism of culpability. (Racism
obviously exists in the United States and in times past was
pervasive throughout the country, but, unlike Israel, the U.S. is
not a racist governing system, based on racist foundations and
depending for its raison d'être on a racist philosophy.) Many
defenders of Israel (Michael Lerner and columnist Thomas Friedman
come to mind) contend that when Israel is "singled out" for
criticism not also leveled at oppressive regimes elsewhere, the
attackers are exhibiting a special hatred for Jews. Anyone who does
not also criticize Saddam Hussein or Kim Jong Il or Bashar al-Assad
for atrocities far greater than Israel's, they charge, is showing
that he is less concerned to uphold absolute values than to tear
down Israel because it is Jewish. But this charge ignores several
factors that demand criticism of Zionist racism. First, because the
U.S. government supports Zionism and its racist policy on a
continuing basis and props up Zionism's military machine with
massive amounts of military aid, it is wholly appropriate for
Americans (indeed, it is incumbent on Americans) to call greater
attention to Zionism's racism than, for instance, to North Korea's
appalling cruelties. The United States does not assist in North
Korea's atrocities, but it does underwrite Zionism's brutality.
There is also a strong moral reason for denouncing Zionism as
racist. Zionism advertises itself, and actually congratulates
itself, as a uniquely moral system that stands as a "light unto the
nations," putting itself forward as in a real sense the very
embodiment of the values Americans hold dear. Many Zionist friends
of Israel would have us believe that Zionism is us, and in many ways
it is: most Americans, seeing Israelis as "like us," have grown up
with the notion that Israel is a noble enterprise and that the
ideology that spawned it is of the highest moral order. Substantial
numbers of Americans, non-Jews as well as Jews, feel an emotional
and psychological bond with Israel and Zionism that goes far beyond
the ties to any other foreign ally. One scholar, describing the
U.S.-Israeli tie, refers to Israel as part of the "being" of the
United States. Precisely because of the intimacy of the
relationship, it is imperative that Zionism's hypocrisy be exposed,
that Americans not give aid and comfort to, or even remain
associated with, a morally repugnant system that uses racism to
exalt one people over all others while masquerading as something
better than it is. The United States can remain supportive of Israel
as a nation without any longer associating itself with Israel's
racism.
Finally, there are critical practical reasons for acknowledging
Zionism's racism and enunciating a U.S. policy clearly opposed to
racism everywhere and to the repressive Israeli policies that arise
from Zionist racism. Now more than at any time since the United
States positioned itself as an enthusiastic supporter of Zionism,
U.S. endorsement, and indeed facilitation, of Israel's racist
policies put this country at great risk for terrorism on a massive
scale. Terrorism arises, not as President Bush would have us believe
from "hatred of our liberties," but from hatred of our oppressive,
killing policies throughout the Arab and Muslim worlds, and in a
major way from our support for Israel's severe oppression of the
Palestinians. Terrorism is never acceptable, but it is explainable,
and it is usually avoidable. Supporting the oppression of
Palestinians that arises from Israel's racism only encourages
terrorism.
It is time to begin openly expressing revulsion at the racism
against Palestinians that the United States has been supporting for
decades. It is time to sound an alarm about the near irreversibility
of Israel's absorption of the occupied territories into Israel,
about the fact that this arises from a fundamentally racist
ideology, about the fact that this racism is leading to the
ethnicide of an entire nation of people, and about the fact that it
is very likely to produce horrific terrorist retaliation against the
U.S. because of its unquestioning support. Many who are intimately
familiar with the situation on the ground are already sounding an
alarm, usually without using the word racism but using other
inflammatory terms. Israeli commentator Ran HaCohen recently
observed that "Israel's atrocities have now intensified to an extent
unimaginable in previous decades." Land confiscation, curfew, the
"gradual pushing of Palestinians from areas designated for Jews"
have accompanied the occupation all along, he wrote, but the level
of oppression now "is quite another story.[This is] an
eliminationist policy on the verge of genocide."
The Foundation
for Middle East Peace, a Washington-based institution that has
tracked Israeli settlement-building for decades, came to much the
same conclusion, although using less attention-getting language, in
its most recent bimonthly newsletter. Israel, it wrote, is
"undertaking massive, unprecedented efforts beyond the construction
of new settlement housing, which proceeds apace, to put the question
of its control of these areas beyond the reach of diplomacy."
Israel's actions, particularly the "relentless" increase in
territorial control, the foundation concluded, have "compromised not
only the prospect for genuine Palestinian independence but also, in
ways not seen in Israel's 36-year occupation, the very
sustainability of everyday Palestinian life."
It signals a
remarkable change when Israeli commentators and normally staid
foundations begin using terms like "unprecedented," "unimaginable in
previous decades," "in ways not seen in Israel's 36-year
occupation," even words like "eliminationist" and "genocide." While
the Bush administration, every Democratic presidential candidate
(including, to some degree, even the most progressive), Congress,
and the mainstream U.S. media blithely ignore the extent of the
destruction in Palestine, more and more voices outside the United
States and outside the mainstream in the U.S. are finally coming to
recognize that Israel is squeezing the life out of the Palestinian
nation. Those who see this reality should begin to expose not only
the reality but the racism that is at its root.
Some very thoughtful Israelis, including Haim Hanegbi, Meron
Benvenisti, and activists like Jeff Halper, have come to the
conclusion that Israel has absorbed so much of the occupied
territories that a separate, truly independent Palestinian state can
never be established in the West Bank and Gaza. They now regard a
binational solution as the only way. In theory, this would mean an
end to Zionism (and Zionist racism) by allowing the Jewish and the
Palestinian peoples to form a single secular state in all of
Palestine in which they live together in equality and democracy, in
which neither people is superior, in which neither people identifies
itself by its nationality or its religion but rather simply by its
citizenship. Impossible? Idealized? Pie-in-the-sky? Probably so but
maybe not.
Other Israeli
and Jewish activists and thinkers, such as Israel's Uri Avnery and
CounterPunch contributor Michael Neumann, have cogently challenged
the wisdom and the realism of trying to pursue binationalism at the
present time. But it is striking that their arguments center on what
will best assure a decent outcome for Palestinians. In fact, what is
most heartening about the newly emerging debate over the one -
versus the two-state solution is the fact that intelligent,
compassionate people have at long last been able to move beyond
addressing Jewish victimhood and how best to assure a future for
Jews, to begin debating how best to assure a future for both the
Palestinian and the Jewish people. Progressives in the U.S., both
supporters and opponents of present U.S. policies toward Israel,
should encourage similar debate in this country. If this requires
loudly attacking AIPAC and its intemperate charges of anti-Semitism,
so be it.
We recently
had occasion to raise the notion of Israeli racism, using the actual
hated word, at a gathering of about 25 or 30 (mostly) progressive
(mostly) Jews, and came away with two conclusions: 1) it is a hard
concept to bring people to face, but 2) we were not run out of the
room and, after the initial shock of hearing the word racist used in
connection with Zionism, most people in the room, with only a few
exceptions, took the idea aboard. Many specifically thanked us for
what we had said. One man, raised as a Jew and now a Muslim, came up
to us afterward to say that he thinks Zionism is nationalist rather
than racist (to which we argued that nationalism was the motivation
but racism is the resulting reality), but he acknowledged, with
apparent approbation, that referring to racism had a certain shock
effect. Shock effect is precisely what we wanted. The United States'
complacent support for everything Israel does will not be altered
without shock.
When a
powerful state kills hundreds of civilians from another ethnic
group; confiscates their land; builds vast housing complexes on that
land for the exclusive use of its own nationals; builds roads on
that land for the exclusive use of its own nationals; prevents
expansion of the other people's neighborhoods and towns; demolishes
on a massive scale houses belonging to the other people, in order
either to prevent that people's population growth, to induce them
"voluntarily" to leave their land altogether, or to provide
"security" for its own nationals; imprisons the other people in
their own land behind checkpoints, roadblocks, ditches, razor wire,
electronic fences, and concrete walls; squeezes the other people
into ever smaller, disconnected segments of land; cripples the
productive capability of the other people by destroying or
separating them from their agricultural land, destroying or
confiscating their wells, preventing their industrial expansion, and
destroying their businesses; imprisons the leadership of the other
people and threatens to expel or assassinate that leadership;
destroys the security forces and the governing infrastructure of the
other people; destroys an entire population's census records, land
registry records, and school records; vandalizes the cultural
headquarters and the houses of worship of the other people by
urinating, defecating, and drawing graffiti on cultural and
religious artifacts and symbols when one people does these things to
another, a logical person can draw only one conclusion: the powerful
state is attempting to destroy the other people, to push them into
the sea, to ethnically cleanse them.
These kinds of
atrocities, and particularly the scale of the repression, did not
spring full-blown out of some terrorist provocations by
Palestinians. These atrocities grew out of a political philosophy
that says whatever advances the interests of Jews is acceptable as
policy. This is a racist philosophy.
What Israel is
doing to the Palestinians is not genocide, it is not a holocaust,
but it is, unmistakably, ethnicide. It is, unmistakably, racism.
Israel worries constantly, and its American friends worry, about the
destruction of Israel. We are all made to think always about the
existential threat to Israel, to the Jewish people. But the nation
in imminent danger of elimination today is not Israel but the
Palestinians. Such a policy of national destruction must not be
allowed to stand.
¨
Bill Christison joined the CIA in 1950, and served on the
analysis side of the Agency for 28 years. From the early 1970s
he served as National Intelligence Officer (principal adviser to
the Director of Central Intelligence on certain areas) for, at
various times, Southeast Asia, South Asia and Africa. Before he
retired in 1979 he was Director of the CIA's Office of Regional
and Political Analysis, a 250-person unit.
Kathleen
Christison also worked in the CIA, retiring in 1979. Since then
she has been mainly preoccupied by the issue of Palestine. She
is the author of Perceptions of Palestine and The Wound of
Dispossession.
¨¨
Assuming, according to the scenario put forth by our
Israeli-American friend, that Palestinians had accepted the
UN-mandated establishment of a Jewish state in 1948, that no war
had ensued, and that no Palestinians had left Palestine, Israel
would today encompass only the 55 percent of Palestine allocated
to it by the UN partition resolution, not the 78 percent it
possessed after successfully prosecuting the 1948 war. It would
have no sovereignty over Jerusalem, which was designated by the
UN as a separate international entity not under the sovereignty
of any nation. Its 5.4 million Jews (assuming the same magnitude
of Jewish immigration and natural increase) would be sharing the
state with approximately five million Palestinians (assuming the
same nine-fold rate of growth among the 560,000 Palestinians who
inhabited the area designated for the Jewish state as has
occurred in the Palestinian population that actually remained in
Israel in 1948). Needless to say, this small, severely
overcrowded, binational state would not be the comfortable
little Jewish democracy that our friend seems to have
envisioned.
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