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	Unsustainable Israeli Politics of Exclusion in 
	Jerusalem  
	By Nicola Nasser 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 31, 2011 
	   While the history of the world is moving decisively toward a 
	culture of inclusion, diversity and pluralism, Israeli politics seems to 
	challenge history by moving in the opposite direction of exclusion and 
	unilateral self - righteous monopoly of geography, demography, history, 
	archeology and culture, especially in Jerusalem, where Israelis are 
	desperately trying to establish a “Jewish” capital for Israel and “the 
	Jewish people” worldwide, excluding centuries old presence of Palestinian, 
	Arab, Muslim and Christian deep-rooted existence and heritage, thus sowing 
	the seeds of imminent conflict and foreseeable war by strangling a city that 
	has historically been of diversified and pluralistic character and a 
	flashpoint for human misery whenever exclusion becomes the rule of the day. 
	  Israeli politics is not moving against history only, but is challenging 
	world politics as well. Although the first Knesset of the newly born “state 
	of Israel” voted on December 13, 1949 to move the seat of government from 
	Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, and despite Israel’s annexation of east Jerusalem on 
	June 27, 1967, which the UN Security Council declared “null and void,” both 
	unilateral declarations have never been accepted and recognized by the 
	international community, not even by the U.S., Israel’s strategic guardian. 
	  More recently, while millions of Christians were celebrating the birth 
	of Jesus Christ in Bethlehem, on the southern outskirts of Jerusalem, and 
	the birth of Christianity in Jerusalem, the scene of Jesus’ resurrection 
	following his death by crucifixion, which is the cornerstone of Christian 
	faith, the Knesset was, on Christmas day, scheduled to consider a draft law 
	that would declare Jerusalem “the capital of the Jewish people” and the 
	capital of Israel at the same time.   The fact that the ruling elite 
	in Tel Aviv has made a prior recognition of Israel as a “Jewish” state a 
	precondition for making peace implicitly and consequently applies to 
	Christians as well, otherwise how could any observer interpret the still 
	simmering crisis with the Vatican over the holy places in Jerusalem. The 
	“Fundamental Agreement” signed by both sides on December 30, 1993, as well 
	as an agreement on the recognition of the civil effects of ecclesiastical 
	legal personality, signed on November 10, 1997, have yet to be ratified by 
	Israel's Knesset. Some in the Israeli media has been recently accusing the 
	Vatican of seeking to hold control of “Jewish holy sites” in Jerusalem.   
	The Vatican in the past supported making Jerusalem a corpus 
	separatum, an international city in accordance with the UN Resolution 
	181 of 1947; Israel’s non-compliance delayed Vatican’s formal recognition of 
	Israel until 1993.   More recently, the Vatican renewed calls for an 
	internal agreement to protect the holy places in Jerusalem. Cardinal 
	Jean-Louis Tauran, head of the Vatican’s Council for Inter-religious 
	Dialogue, and Vatican’s former foreign minister, declared “There will not be 
	peace if the question of the holy sites is not adequately resolved. The part 
	of Jerusalem within the walls – with the holy sites of the three religions – 
	is humanity’s heritage. The sacred and unique character of the area must be 
	safeguarded and it can only be done with a special, 
	internationally-guaranteed statute.”   The only perceived threat to 
	the holy places against which the Vatican is seeking protection comes from 
	the Israeli politics of exclusion. Rabbi David Rosen, member of the Israeli 
	delegation to the negotiations with the Vatican told the Israeli daily 
	Haaretz on January 17, 2010 that Israel “has not been faithful to the pacts 
	of 1993.”     The precondition of recognizing Israel as a “Jewish 
	state” is rejected by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), Israel’s 
	partner in peace accords, and its self-ruled Palestinian Authority, the 
	22-member League of Arab States and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation 
	(OIC); in a statement he issued on December 26, 2011, the Secretary-General 
	of the 57-member states of the OIC, Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, condemned the 
	Israeli draft law that declares Jerusalem “the capital of Israel and the 
	Jewish people” as “a direct assault on the Palestinian people and their 
	inalienable and clear rights” and “a flagrant violation of international law 
	and international legitimacy resolutions,” which affirm that Jerusalem is 
	part of the Palestinian territories occupied by Israel in 1967. PLO 
	representatives considered the Israeli draft law a “declaration of war” and 
	a recipe for igniting a religious conflict. The Islamic – Christian 
	Commission in Support of Jerusalem, in a statement, said if the Israeli 
	draft law is passed it would make Jerusalem “for Judaism and Jews only, 
	which means there would be no freedom of worship in the land of worship.” 
	  Israeli attorney and founder of Terrestrial Jerusalem, a 
	Jerusalem-based NGO, Daniel Seidemann, wrote on November 30, 2011: 
	“Cumulatively, Israeli policies in East Jerusalem today threaten to 
	transform the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from a bitter national conflict 
	that can be resolved by means of territorial compromise, into the potential 
	for a bloody, unsolvable religious war. This threat derives from Israel's 
	dogged pursuit of the settlers' vision of an exclusionary Jewish Jerusalem.” 
	  “… Today, Israel must choose between two visions of Jerusalem. On the 
	one hand, it can continue pursuing an exclusive, largely fictitious rule 
	over an already divided, bi-national city -- exposing Israel to virtually 
	universal censure and imperiling the two-state solution. On the other hand, 
	it can pursue policies that can make Israeli Jerusalem, Yerushalayim, a 
	thriving national capital, recognized by all, existing side-by-side with but 
	politically divided from the Palestinian capital in Jerusalem, al Quds. To 
	those who cherish Israel and understand what is truly at stake, the choice 
	is clear,” Seidemann concluded.   What is much more important than 
	excluding “a conflict that can be resolved by means of territorial 
	compromise,” is that the Israeli politics of exclusion in Jerusalem, which 
	could be summarized by Judaization of the holy city, is a roadmap to de-Arabizing, 
	de-Islamizing, de-Christianizing, de-historizing and de-humanizing 
	Jerusalem, the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world, and this 
	could not be anything but a roadmap to hell.   Absolutely this is 
	unsustainable Israeli politics.   Nicola Nasser is a 
	veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied 
	Palestinian territories. He can be reached at:
	nassernicola@ymail.com.   
     
       
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