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Illegal Israeli Settlers Are Destroying the
Two-State Solution
By Uri
Avnery
Al-Jazeerah,
CCUN, February 3, 2017 |
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Editor's Note:
With all due respect to Uri Avnery, he needs to review his
statement about the 1948 war. It started by Israelis who had previous plans,
such as Plan Dalit, to evict Palestinians from their villages and towns,
as well as to force the Arab armies out of most of the Arab state
territories.
The Arab armies did not start the war, they just entered the
territories of the Arab state of Palestine, according to the 1947 UN
Partition resolution. The Egyptians entered Gaza, the Jordanian entered the
West Bank, and the Syrian and Lebanese entered the Galilee, all of which
were territories of the Arab state according to the resolution.
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Israeli theft of Palestinian
lands |
Palestinians evicted from
their villages and towns by Israeli forces in 1948 |
Respect the Green Line!
THE MOST incisive analysis of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict I have
ever read was written by the Jewish-Polish-British historian Isaac Deutscher.
It consists of a single image. A man lives on the upper floor of a
building, which catches fire. To save his life, he jumps out of a window and
lands on a passerby in the street below. The victim is grievously injured,
and between the two starts an intractable conflict. Of course, no
metaphor is completely perfect. The Zionists did not choose Palestine by
chance, the choice was based on our religion. The founder of the movement,
Theodor Herzl, initially preferred Argentina. Still, the picture is
basically valid, at least until 1967. From then on, the
settlers continued to jump across the Green Line,
with no fire in sight. THERE IS nothing holy about the Green
Line. It is no different from any other border line around the world,
whatever its color. Most borders were drawn by geography and the
accidents of war. Two peoples fight for the territory between them, at some
point the fighting comes to an end, and a border is born. The land
borders of Israel known for some reason as the "Green Line" were also
established by the accidents of war. A part of that line was the result of a
deal between the new Israeli government and the king of Jordan, Abdallah I,
who gave us the so-called Triangle as a baksheesh, in return for Israel's
agreement to his annexation of most of the rest of Palestine.
So what's so holy about this border? Nothing, except that it's there. And
that is true for many borders throughout the world. A border is
established by accident and confirmed by agreement. True, the United Nations
drew borders between the Jewish and the Arab states in its 1947 resolution,
but after the Arab side started a war in order to
thwart this decision, Israel greatly enlarged its territory.
(Editor's Note: Actually, the Arab armies
entered the areas allocated to the Arab state of Palestine by the 1947 UN
Partition resolution but Israelis started the war to evict Palestinians from
their villages and towns, see Plan Dalit). The 1948
war ended without a peace treaty. But the armistice lines established at the
end of the war were accepted by the entire world as the borders of Israel.
This has not changed during the 68 years that have passed since then.
This situation prevails both de facto and de jure. Israeli law applies only
within the Green Line. Everything else is occupied territory under military
law. Two small territories East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights - were
unilaterally declared to be annexed by Israel, but nobody in the world
recognizes this status. I ELABORATE on these well-known facts
because the settlers in the occupied territories have lately started to
taunt their critics in Israel by bringing up a new argument: "Hey, what's
the big difference between us?" You too sit on Arab lands, they tell
us. True, before 1948 the Zionists settled on land they bought with good
money but only a small part of it was bought from the fellahin who tilled
it. Most of it was acquired from rich absentee landowners, who had bought it
cheaply from the Turkish sultan when the Ottoman Empire was in dire
financial straits . The tillers of the land were driven out by the Turkish,
and later the British, police. Large stretches of land were
"liberated" during the fighting of 1948, when masses of Arab villagers and
city-dwellers fled before the advancing Israeli forces, as civilians do in
every war. If they didn't, a few salvos of machine-gun fire were enough to
drive them out. The inhabitants who were left in Jaffa after the
town was conquered, were simply packed on trucks and sent to Gaza. The
inhabitants of Lod (Lydda) were driven away on foot. In the end, about
750 thousand Arabs were expelled,
more than half the Palestinian people at
the time. The Jewish population in Palestine amounted then
to 650 thousand. Some inner voice compels me at this point to
mention a Canadian-Jewish officer named Ben Dunkelmann, then 36 years old,
who commanded a brigade in the new Israeli army. He had served with
distinction in the Canadian army in World War II. He was ordered to attack
Nazareth, the home-town of Jesus, but succeeded in inducing the local
leaders to surrender without a fight. The condition was that the local
population would not be harmed. After his troops had occupied the
town, Dunkelmann received an oral order to drive the population out.
Outraged, Dunkelmann refused to break his word of honor as an officer and a
gentleman, and demanded the order in writing. Such a written order never
arrived, of course (no such orders were ever put in writing), but Dunkelmann
was removed from his post. Nowadays, when I pass Nazareth, a
thriving Arab town, I remember this brave man. After that war, he returned
to his native Canada. I dont think he ever came back here again. He died 20
years ago. HONEST DISCLOSURE: I took part in all this. As a simple
soldier, and later as a squad leader, I was a part of the events. But
immediately after the war I wrote a book that disclosed the truth ("The
Other Side of the Coin"), and a few years later I published a detailed plan
for the return of some of the refugees and the payment of compensation to
all the others. That, of course, never happened. Most of the land
and the houses of the refugees were filled with new Jewish immigrants.
Now the settlers say, not without some justice: "Who are you to despise us?
You did the same as we are doing! Only you did it before 1967, and we do it
now. What's the difference?" That is the difference. We live in a
state that has been recognized by most of the world within established
borders. You live in territory that the world considers occupied Palestinian
territory. The state of Texas was acquired by the USA in a war with Mexico.
If President Trump were now to invade Mexico and annex a chunk of land (why
not?), its status would be quite different. Binyamin Netanyahu
some now call him Trumpyahu is all for enlarging the settlements. This
week, under pressure from our Supreme Court, he staged the removal of one
tiny little settlement, Amona, with a lot of heartbreak and tears, but
immediately promised to put up many thousands of new "housing units" in the
occupied territories. OPPOSITE POLITICAL extremes often touch each
other. So it is now. The settlers who want to wipe out the
difference between us and them, do it not just to justify themselves. Their
main aim is to erase the Green Line and include all the occupied territories
in Greater Israel, which would extend from the Mediterranean Sea to the
Jordan River. A lot of Israel-haters want the same borders but as
an Arab state. Indeed, I would love to chair a peace conference of
Israel-haters and Palestine-haters. I would propose to decide first on the
points they all agree on namely the creation of a state from sea to river.
I would leave to the end the decision whether to call it Israel or
Palestine. A world-wide movement called BDS now proposes to boycott
all of Israel, in order to achieve this end. I have a problem with that.
GUSH SHALOM, the Israeli peace organization to which I belong, takes
great pride in being the first to declare a boycott on the products of the
settlements many years ago. We still uphold this boycott, though it is now
illegal under Israeli law. We did not declare a boycott on Israel.
And not only because it is rather awkward to boycott oneself. The main
object of our boycott was to teach Israelis to differentiate between
themselves and the settlements. We published and distributed many thousand
copies of the list of companies located and products produced outside the
Green Line. Many people are upholding the boycott.
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