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Israel exists but I will never accept it as a Jewish
state Aref Assaf
October 12, 2010 Yet again, the 2010 version of the Peace
talks between Israel and the Palestinians are preconditioned
upon the recognition by the Palestinian side of the right of
Israel to exist as a Jewish state. Indeed the so called ‘direct
talks” should lead to, and legitimize, once and for all, the
right of such a Jewish state to exist in definitive borders and
in peace with its neighbors. The vision of justice, both past
and future, simply has to be that of two states, one
Palestinian, one Jewish, which would coexist side by side in
peace and stability. although much talked about, finding a
formula for a reasonably just partition and separation is still
the essence of what is considered to be moderate, pragmatic and
fair ethos.
Thus, the really deep issues--the "core"--are
conceived as the status of Jerusalem, the fate and future of the
Israeli settlements in the Occupied Territories and the
viability of the future Palestinian state beside the Jewish one.
The fate of the descendants of those 750000 Palestinians who
were ethnically cleansed in 1948 from what is now, and would
continue to be under a two-state solutions, the State of Israel,
constitutes a "problem" but never an "issue" because, God
forbid, to make it an issue on the table would be to threaten
the existence of Israel as a Jewish state. The existence of
Israel as a Jewish state must never become a core issue. That
premise unites political opinion in the Jewish state, left and
right and also persists as a pragmatic view of many Palestinians
who would prefer some improvement to no improvement at all. Only
"extremists" such as Hamas, anti-Semites, and Self-Hating
Jews--terribly disturbed, misguided and detached lot--can make
Israel's existence into a core problem and in turn into a
necessary issue to be debated and addressed.
The Jewish
state, a supposedly potential haven for all the Jews in the
world in the case a second Holocaust comes about, should be
recognized as a fact on the ground blackmailed into the "never
again" rhetoric. All considerations of pragmatism and
reasonableness in envisioning a "peace process" to settle the
'Israeli/Palestinian' conflict must never destabilize the sacred
status of that premise that a Jewish state has a right to exist.
Notice, however, that Palestinian are not asked merely to
recognize the perfectly true fact and with it, the absolutely
feasible moral claim, that millions of Jewish people are now
living in the State of Israel and that their physical existence,
liberty and equality should be protected in any future
settlement. They are not asked merely to recognize the assurance
that any future arrangement would recognize historic Palestine
as a home for the Jewish People. What Palestinians are asked to
subscribe to recognition the right of an ideology that informs
the make-up of a state to exist as Jewish one? They are asked to
recognize that ethno-nationalistic premise of statehood.
The
fallacy is clear: the recognition of the right of Jews who are
there--however unjustly many of their Parents or Grandparents
came to acquire what they own--to remain there under liberty and
equality in a post-colonial political settlement, is perfectly
compatible with the non-recognition of the state whose
constitution gives those Jews a preferential stake in the
polity. It is an abuse of the notion of pragmatism to
conceive its effort as putting the very notion of Jewish state
beyond the possible and desirable implementation of egalitarian
moral scrutiny. To so abuse pragmatism would be to put it at the
service of the continuation of colonialism. A pragmatic and
reasonable solution ought to center on the problem of how to
address past, present, and future injustices to non-Jew-Arabs
without thereby cause other injustices to Jews. This would be a
very complex pragmatic issue which would call for much
imagination and generosity. But reasonableness and pragmatism
should not determine whether the cause for such injustices be
included or excluded from debates or negotiations. To
pragmatically exclude moral claims and to pragmatically protect
immoral assertions by fiat must in fact hide some form of
extremism. The causes of colonial injustice and the causes that
constitutionally prevent their full articulation and address
should not be excluded from the debate. Pragmatism cannot become
the very tool that legitimate constitutional structures that
hinder de-colonization and the establishment of egalitarian
constitution.
So let us boldly ask: What exactly is entailed
by the requirement to recognize Israel as a Jewish state? What
do we recognize and support when we purchase a delightful
avocado or a date from Israel or when we invite Israel to take
part in an international football event? What does it mean to be
a friend of Israel? What precisely is that Jewish state whose
status as such would be once and for all legitimized by such a
two-state solution? A Jewish state is a state which exists
more for the sake of whoever is considered Jewish according to
various ethnic, tribal, religious, criteria, than for the sake
of those who do not pass this test. What precisely are the
criteria of the test for Jewishness is not important and at any
rate the feeble consensus around them is constantly reinvented
in Israel.
Instigating violence provides them with the impetus
for doing that. What is significant, though, is that a test of
Jewishness is being used in order to constitutionally protect
differential stakes in, that is the differential ownership of, a
polity. A recognition of Israel's right to exist as a Jewish
state is a recognition of the Jews special entitlement, as
eternal victims, to have a Jewish state. Such a test of supreme
stake for Jews is the supreme criterion not only for racist
policy making by the legislature but also for a racist
constitutional interpretation by the Supreme Court. The idea of
a state that is first and foremost for the sake of Jews trumps
even that basic law of Human Freedom and Dignity to which the
Israeli Supreme Court pays so much lip service. Such
constitutional interpretation would have to make the egalitarian
principle equality of citizenship compatible with, and thus
subservient to, the need to maintain the Jewish majority and
character of the state. This of course constitutes a serious
compromise of equality, translated into many individual
manifestations of oppression and domination of those victims of
such compromise--non-Jews-Arabs citizens of Israel.
In our
world, a world that resisted Apartheid South Africa so
impressively, recognition of the right of the Jewish state to
exist is a litmus test for moderation and pragmatism. The demand
is that Palestinians recognize Israel's entitlement to
constitutionally entrench a system of racist basic laws and
policies, differential immigration criteria for Jews and
non-Jews, differential ownership and settlements rights,
differential capital investments, differential investment in
education, formal rules and informal conventions that
differentiate the potential stakes of political participation,
lame-duck academic freedom and debate.
In the Jewish state of
Israel non-Jews-Arabs citizens are just "bad luck" and are
considered a ticking demographic bomb of "enemy within". They
can be given the right to vote--indeed one member one vote--but
the potential of their political power, even their birth rate,
should be kept at bay by visible and invisible, instrumental and
symbolic, discrimination. But now they are asked to put up with
their inferior stake and recognize the right of Israel to
continue to legitimate the non-egalitarian premise of its
statehood.
We must not forget that the two state "solution"
would open a further possibility to non-Jew-Arabs citizens of
Israel: "put up and shut up or go to a viable neighboring
Palestinian state where you can have your full equality of
stake”. Such an option, we must never forget, is just a part of
a pragmatic and reasonable package. The Jewish state could
only come into being in May 1948 by ethnically cleansing most of
the indigenous population--750000 of them. The judiaization of
the state could only be effectively implemented by constantly
internally displacing the population of many villages within the
Israel state.
It would be unbearable and unreasonable to
demand Jews to allow for the Right of Return of those
descendants of the expelled. Presumably, those descendants too
could go to a viable Palestinian state rather than, for example,
rebuild their ruined village in the Galilee. On the other hand,
a Jewish young couple from Toronto who never set their foot in
Palestine has a right to settle in the Galilee. Jews and their
descendants hold this right in perpetuity. You see, that right
"liberates" them as people. Jews must never be put under the
pressure to live as a substantial minority in the Holy Land
under egalitarian arrangement. Their past justifies their
preferential stake and the preservation of their numerical
majority in Palestine.
So the non-egalitarian hits us again.
It is clear that part of the realization of that right of return
would not only be a just the actual return, but also the
assurance of equal stake and citizenship of all, Jews and
non-Jews-Arabs after the return. A return would make the
egalitarian claim by those who return even more difficult to
conceal than currently with regard to Israel Arab second class
citizens. What unites Israelis and many world Jews behind the
call for the recognition of the right of a Jewish state to exist
is their aversion for the possibility of living, as a minority,
under conditions of equality of stake to all. But if Jews enjoys
this equality in the United States why cannot they support such
equality in Palestine through giving full effect to the right of
Return of Palestinians?
Let us look precisely at what the
pragmatic challenge consists of: not pragmatism that entrenches
inequality but pragmatism that responds to the challenge of
equality.
The Right of Return of Palestinians means that
Israel acknowledges and apologizes for what it did in 1948. It
does mean that Palestinian memory of the 1948 catastrophe, the
Nakbah, is publicly revived in the Geography and collective
memory of the polity. It does mean that Palestinians descendants
would be allowed to come back to their villages. If this is not
possible because there is a Jewish settlement there, they should
be given the choice to found an alternative settlement nearby.
This may mean some painful compulsory state purchase of
agricultural lands that should be handed back to those who
return. In cases when this is impossible they ought to be
allowed the choice to settle in another place in the larger area
or if not possible in another area in Palestine. Compensation
would be the last resort and would always be offered as a
choice. This kind of moral claim of return would encompass all
Palestine including Tel Aviv.
At no time, however, it would
be on the cards to throw Israeli Jews from their land. An
egalitarian and pragmatic realization of the Right of Return
constitutes an egalitarian legal revolution. As such it would be
paramount to address Jews' worries about security and equality
in any future arrangement in which they, or any other group, may
become a minority. Jews national symbols and importance would be
preserved. Equality of stake involves equality of symbolic
ownership.
But it is important to emphasis that the
Palestinian Right of Return would mean that what would cease to
exist is the premise of a Jewish as well as indeed a Muslim
state. A return without the removal of the constitutionally
enshrined preferential stake is return to serfdom.
The upshot
is that only by individuating cases of injustice, by extending
claims for injustice to all historic Palestine, by fair address
of them without creating another injustice for Jews and finally
by ensuring the elimination of all racist laws that stems from
the Jewish nature of the state including that nature itself,
would justice be, and with it peace, possible. What we need is a
spirit of generosity that is pragmatic but also morally
uncompromising in terms of geographic ambit of the moral claims
for repatriation and equality. This vision would propel the
establishment of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. But for
all this to happen we must start by ceasing to recognize the
right Israel to exist as a Jewish state. No spirit of generosity
would be established without an egalitarian call for jettisoning
the ethno-nationalistic notion upon which the Jewish state is
based.
The path of two states is the path of separation. Its
realization would mean the entrenchment of exclusionary
nationalism for many years. It would mean that the return of the
dispossessed and the equality of those who return and those
non-Jew-Arabs who are now there would have to be deferred
indefinitely consigned to the dusty shelved of historical
injustices. Such a scenario is sure to provoke more violence as
it would establish the realization and legitimization of Zionist
racism and imperialism.
Also, any bi-national arrangement
ought to be subjected to a principle of equality of citizenship
and not vice versa. The notion of separation and partition that
can infect bi-nationalism, should be done away with and should
not be tinkered with or rationalized in any way. Both
spiritually and materially Jews and non-Jews can find national
expression in a single egalitarian and non-sectarian state.
The non-recognition of the Jewish state is an egalitarian
imperative that looks both at the past and to the future. It is
the uncritical recognition of the right of Israel to exist as a
Jewish state which is the core hindrance for this egalitarian
premise to shape the ethical challenge that Palestine poses. A
recognition of Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state means
the silencing that would breed more and more violence and
bloodshed. The same moral intuition that brought so many
people to condemn and sanction Apartheid South Africa ought also
to prompt them to stop seeing a threat to existence of the
Jewish state as the effect caused by the refugee 'problem" or by
the "demographic threat" from the non-Jew-Arabs within it. It is
rather the other way round. It is the non-egalitarian premise of
a Jewish state and the lack of empathy and corruption of all
those who make us uncritically accept the right of such a state
to exist that is both the cause of the refugee problem and cause
for the inability to implement their return and treating them as
equals thereafter.
We must see that the uncritically accepted
recognition of Israel right to exist is, as Joseph Massad so
well puts it in
Al-Ahram,
to accept Israel claim to have the right to be racist or, to
develop Massad's brilliant formulation, Israel's claim to have
the right to occupy to dispossess and to discriminate. What is
it, I wonder, that prevent Israelis and so many of world Jews to
respond to the egalitarian challenge? What is it, I wonder, that
oppresses the whole world to sing the song of a "peace process"
that is destined to legitimize racism in Palestine?
To claim
such a right to be racist must come from a being whose victim's
face must hide very dark primordial aggression and hatred of all
others. How can we find a connective tissue to that mentality
that claims the legitimate right to harm other human beings? How
can this aggression that is embedded in victim mentality be
perturbed?
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