Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
New Dimension of Israeli Apartheid: Three
Palestinian MPs Barred from Participation for Several Months
By Uri Avnery
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 11, 2016
|
|
|
Haneen Al-Zu'abi, Bassal
Gatas, and Jamal Zahalka visiting families of Palestinians
murdered by Israelis extra-judicially, February 2016 |
Haneen Al-Zu'abi: A Lady With A Smile
IT IS not easy to be an Arab in Israel. It is not easy to be a
woman in Arab society. It is not easy to be an Arab in Israeli
politics. And even less easy to be an Arab woman in the Knesset.
Haneen Al-Zu'abi is all these together. Perhaps because of this she
wears a perpetual smile the smile of somebody who has won, after all.
It can be very annoying, this smile. Annoying and provocative.
These days, Zu'abi has achieved something no Arab woman in Israel ever
dreamed of: the whole country is talking about her. Not for an hour, nor for
a day, but for weeks on end. The vast majority of Jewish Israelis
hate her guts. Zu'abi's smile is triumphant. HANEEN BELONGS to
a large Hamula (extended family) that dominates several villages near
Nazareth. Two Zu'abis were members of the Knesset in its early days one
was a vassal of the (then) ruling Zionist Labor Party, the other a member of
the left-wing Zionist Mapam party. It was he who coined the memorable
phrase: "My country is at war with my people!" Haneen Zu'abi
is a member of the Balad ("Homeland") party, an Arab nationalist party
founded by Azmi Bishara, an Israeli-Palestinian intellectual. Bishara was an
admirer of Gamal Abdul Nasser and his pan-Arab vision. When the Shin-Bet was
about to arrest him on some pretext or other, he fled the country, asserting
that because of a severe kidney disease, prison would endanger his life.
He left behind a three-man Knesset faction, one of three Arab factions
of similar size. All of them were a constant irritation to their Jewish
colleagues, so they invented a remedy. A new law was enacted denying Knesset
membership to any party that did not gain enough votes for a four-member
faction. (A larger minimum could have endangered the Orthodox Jewish party.)
The logic was simple: the three small Arab factions hated each other's
guts. One was Communist (with one Jewish member), one Islamist and one
nationalist (Balad). But lo and behold, under threat of annihilation
even Arabs can unite. They formed a "Joint List" ("Joint", not "United") and
together gained 13 seats three more than before. They are now the third
largest faction in the Knesset, right after Likud and Labor, an eyesore to
many of their colleagues. THIS IS the background of the
latest outrage. For months now, Israel has been in the
throes of a mini-intifada. In the two former intifadas, (Palestinian
protesters against the Israeli occupation) acted in groups under the orders
of organizations, which were easily infiltrated. This time, individuals act
alone, or together with cousins who could be trusted, without any prior
signs. The Israeli (occupation) forces (army, police, Shin Bet) have no
information whatsoever and are therefore unable to prevent these acts.
Moreover, many of today's (Palestinian protesters against the Israeli
occupation) are children boys and girls who just pick up a knife in their
mother's kitchen and, on the spur of the moment, run out and attack the
nearest Israeli. Some of them are 13, 14 years old. Some of the girls wield
scissors. All of them know that in all probability they will be shot dead on
the spot by soldiers or passing armed civilians. The preferred
victims are soldiers or settlers. Lacking these, they attack any Israeli,
man or woman, in sight. The mighty Israeli security forces are
admittedly helpless against this kind of "infantifada" (as my friend Reuven
Wimmer calls it). In their distress, the security forces do what they always
do in such situations: use methods that have already failed many times.
Apart from summary executions on the spot
(justified or unjustified, these methods include the demolition of the
family's home, to deter others, as well as the arrest of parents and other
family members). Frankly, I detest these
measures. They remind me of a Nazi term I remember from my youth: "Sippenhaft"
("kin liability. It is barbaric. It
is also highly ineffective. A boy who has decided to sacrifice his life for
his people is not deterred by such things. Not a single piece of contrary
evidence has ever been produced. On the contrary, it stands to reason
that such barbaric acts increase hatred and provide motivation for more
attacks. BUT THE most atrocious and stupid measure is the
withholding of dead bodies. I am almost too ashamed to bring this up.
After almost any act (by Palestinian protesters against the Israeli
occupation), the body of the perpetrator adult or child is picked up by
the security forces. Under Muslim law and usage, dead bodies must be buried
the same day or the next one. Withholding them is a supreme act of cruelty.
Our security services believe that this contributes to prevention. For
Muslims, this is a supreme act of sacrilege.
This is the background of the latest scandal.
The three Balad members of the Arab faction visited the families of the
perpetrators, whose bodies had been withheld. Their version is that they
came to discuss how to retrieve the bodies. The security forces insist that
they also expressed their condolences and even stood in silence for a
minute. The Knesset, "from wall to wall", was outraged. How dare
they? Extolling "murderers"? Showing sympathy for their families?
The Balad members of the Joint Faction are, apart from
Zu'abi and her smile, Bassal Gatas, and Gamal
Zahalka. I have never met Gatas personally. He is 60 years old, a
Christian Arab, a doctor of engineering, and a businessman. He was for a
long time a member of the Communist Party but was thrown out when he
insisted on his right to criticize the Soviet Union. Azmi Bishara is his
cousin. On TV, he makes a very sensible impression. I consider Gamal
Zahalka a personal friend. Once we both attended a conference in Italy and
undertook some hikes together with our wives. I like him very much.
The three Balad members were banned from
the Knesset for several months, except for the right to participate
in Knesset votes (a right that cannot be denied).
Now a new bill proposes that the Knesset can, by a majority of three
fourths, expel members from the Knesset altogether. This
means that unless the Supreme Court declares
this bill unconstitutional - the Knesset will soon be Araber-rein, free from
Arabs. A purely Jewish Knesset for a purely Jewish state.
THIS WOULD be a disaster for Israel. Every fifth Israeli is an Arab.
The Arab minority in Israel is one of the largest national minorities, per
capita, in the world. Pushing such a minority out of the political process
will weaken the very structure of the state. When the state came
into being, we believed that after a generation or two the gulf between the
two communities would close, or nearly so. The opposite has happened.
In the early years, political cooperation between Jews and Arabs in a joint
peace-camp was strong and getting stronger. These days are long past. The
gulf has widened. There was and is an opposite trend, too. Many
Arabs are integrated in important professions, such as medicine. The last
time I was hospitalized, I could not guess if the chief doctor of my
department was Jewish or Arab. I had to ask my (Arab) male nurse, who
confirmed that the very gentle doctor was Arab. I have found that Arab
medical personnel are generally gentler than Jewish ones. In
several professions, Arabs are more or less integrated. But the general
trend is the opposite. Where once there were cordial relations between
neighborhoods, or between political organizations, contacts have loosened or
disappeared altogether. There were times when my friends and I
visited Arab towns and villages almost every week. Not anymore. This
is not altogether an one-sided process. Insulted and rejected for so long,
Arab citizens have lost the appetite for cooperation. Some of them have
become more Islamist. The happenings in the Occupied Territories affect them
deeply. A third and fourth generation of Israeli Arab citizens is
becoming more proud and self-reliant. They are very disappointed by the
failures of the Jewish peace movements. To throw the Arab members
out of the Knesset is, as a French politician once famously said, "This is
worse than a crime it is a mistake!" It would cut the ties between
the Israeli state and more than 20% of its citizens. Some Israelis may dream
of evicting the Arabs altogether from the historical country all six
million of them in Israel proper, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip -
but that is a pipedream. The world in which this was once possible does not
exist any more. What is possible, and indeed already exists, is a
creeping apartheid. It is already the reality in the West bank and East
Jerusalem, and as this episode shows it is becoming the reality in
Israel proper, too. The hysteria
that has engulfed the country after the "visit to the
'terrorists' families" has
touched the Labor party, and even Meretz, too.
I am putting "terrorists" in
quotation marks because they are terrorists only to the Jews. For Arabs they
are heroes, shaheeds (martyrs), Muslims
who sacrifice their lives to "testify" to the greatness of Allah.
The question is, of course, what is the job of an Arab MK? To upset
the Jews? Or to narrow the gap and convince Israelis that
Israeli-Palestinian peace is both possible and worthwhile. I am
afraid that Zuabi's smile does not help with the second aim. IF
ANYTHING, this affair has reinforced the arguments for the Two State.
Let each of the two states have a parliament of its own, where they can
commit all the stupidities they want, and a serious joint Coordination
Council, where serious decisions can be taken.
***
Share this article with your facebook friends
|
|
|