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Written by LUDWIG WATZAL LUDWIG WATZAL
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Published: 21 November 2007 21 November 2007
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Two rabbis, visiting Palestine in 1897, observed that the land was like a bride, "beautiful, but married to another man". By which they meant that, if a place was to be found for a Jewish "homeland" in Palestine, the indigenous inhabitants had to leave. Where should the people of Palestine go? Squaring that circle has been the essence of Israel´s dilemma ever since its establishment and the cause of the Palestinian tragedy that it led to. It has remained insoluble. Ghada Karmi's new book, Married To Another Man, Israel´s Dilemma in Palestine, (published by Pluto Press, London-Ann Arbor) shows that the major reason for this failure was the original and unresolved Zionist quandary of how to create and maintain a Jewish state in a land inhabited by another people. Zionism was never able to resolve the problem of "the other man".
There are only two
ways: Either the "other man" had to be eradicated, or the Jewish state project
had to be given up. Israel did not do either. It
succeeded in 1948 in expelling and keeping out a large number of Palestinians,
but Israel was never able to
"cleanse" the land
of Palestine entirely. The
fundamental mistake of the Zionists was their belief that "the entire land of Palestine was Jewish and the Arab presence
in it a resented foreign intrusion". All in all, the Zionists were "relatively"
successful, but for the indigenous owners of the land it was a catastrophe which
has been going on until today. "If Israel remains a colonialist state in
its character, it will not survive. In the end the region will be stronger than
Israel, in the end the
indigenous people will be stronger than Israel, " as Akiva Eldar quoted the
former Mazpen member Haim Hangebi in the Israeli Daily Haaretz on August 8,
2003. The author concludes: "Zionism´s ethos was not about peaceful co-existence
but about colonialism and an exclusivist ideology to be imposed and maintained
by force."
Ghada Karmi is a
renowned commentator on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and a well-known figure
on British radio and TV. She was born in Jerusalem, and forced to leave as a child in
1948. She grew up in Britain where she became a physician,
academic and writer. Currently, Karmi is a research fellow and lecturer at the
Insitute of Arab and Islamic Studies at the University of Exeter. She has written several books,
including In Search of Fatima,
which was widely praised.
The Zionist dilemma
was perfectly and bluntly expressed by the so-called "post-Zionist"
representative and professor, Benny Morris, which led not only to an uproar in
the scientific community, but also to a deep disappiontment, because Morris was
considered to belong to the "new historians". In this interview with the daily
Haaretz and in his article in The Guardian he presented himself as an ardent
Zionist. He encapsulates all Zionism´s major elements, its inherent
implausibility as a practical enterprise, its arrogance, racism and
self-righteousness, and the insurmountable obstacle to it of Palestine´s
original population, which refuses to go away. For his colonialist and racist
view he was severely critiziced by Baruch Kimmerling and many others who could
not understand his attitude.
Morris said
incredible things: "A Jewish state would not have come into being without the
uprooting of 700,000 Palestinians. Therefore it was necessary to uproot them.
There was no choice but to expel that population." According to him the Zionists
made a mistake to have allowed any Palestinans to remain. "If the end of the
story turns out to be a gloomy one for the Jews, it will because Ben-Gurion did
not complete the transfer of 1948. (...) In other circumstances, apocalyptic
ones, which are liable to be realized in five or ten years, I can see
expulsions. If we find ourselves (...) in a situation of warfare (...) acts of
expulsion will be entirely reasonable. They may even be essential (...) If the
threat to Israel is existential, expulsion will
be justified." Morris concludes, Zionism is faced with two options: perpetual
cruelty and repression of others, or the end of the enterprise. These
alternatives give the whole enterprise an apocalyptic touch. For the time being,
the Israeli security establishment has chosen the "iron wall"-concept which
refers to a wall of bayonets.
Ghada Karmi shows in
one of her chapters,"The Cost of Israel to the Arabs", that the price they had
to pay was horrendous. She holds not only Israel but also the West, especially the
United States of
America, is responsible for the rejectionist
attitude of the Israeli political class. They just did never consider any
compromise. In this chapter the author describes the damage that Israel´s
creation inflicted on the Arabs, how it has retarded their development and
provoked a reactive and dangerous radicalization. The Arabs are always asked to
be realistic and recognise the facts on the ground. "The Arabs were expected to
make peace with Israel - and to love it as well."
Under the surface Israel has made much progress towards
normalisation with the Arab world. The Arab leaders have to conceal that truth
from their own populations. Karmi views Western policy in Israel´s case rather
strategic than ideological. The installation of the Jewish state as the local
agent of Western regional self-interest was an effective way of dividing the
Arabs, so as to ensure that they remained dependent and subjugated."
Egypt and Jordan
are the best examples.
In the Chapter "Why
do Jews support Israel?" the author asks "Why did a
project, which was, on the face of it, implausible in the first place and
inevitably destructive of others, succeed so well? Just as importantly, why did
it continue to receive support, despite a clear record of aggression and
multiple breaches of international law against its neighbours that ensured its
survival - not just as a state but as a disruptive force?" A number of disparate
factors account for the unconditional support for Israel: the Holocaust and its associated trauma
and guilts, the exigencies of Western regional policy, religious mythology,
so-called common values, and Israel as the "only democracy in the Middle East" et cetera. It is difficult to find a similar
phenomenon for a state in the 21st Century that gets away with vast human rights
violations, colonial subjugation of another people and a disdain of
international law. Not only for the American Jewish community but also for many
liberal Jews "Israel had taken on a mythic quality,
part-identity, part-religion, and its dissolution, as a Jewish state, became
psychologically and emotionally unthinkable. The obverse of this coin was of
course a paranoid suspicion and hatred of anyone who threatened Israel
in the slightest way." Karmi describes the Zionist desperate attempt to prove an
unbroken chain between the Jews of Palestine and those of Europe. "Put like this, the absurditiy of the idea is
obvious, but that in fact was the proposition Zionists wanted people to believe
in order to justify the Jewish `return` to the ´homeland`." Because the Zionist
claim rested on such shaky grounds, Jewish researchers "tried to use genetics as
a way of demonstrating a link between European (Ashkenazi) Jews and their
supposed Middle Eastern origins by way of finding a common ancestry with Middle
Eastern Jews".
The author discusses
the relationship between the US and Israel and the dominant influence of the
"Israel lobby", especially AIPAC which adopted an right-wing posture, both in
its support for the Likud party in Israel and the political right in the US,
including the Christian Zionists whose belief system goes like follows: They
adhere literally to the Old Testament. Fundamental was the return of the Jews to
the land of
Israel, which was given
them by God through the covenant with Abraham. According to this legacy all the
land between the Nile and the Euphrates was
granted to the Jews. The Jewish return to Palestine (Israel) was essential as a prelude to
Christ´s Second Coming; in that sense, Jews were the instrument by which divine
prophecy would be fulfilled. However, they were obliged to convert to
Christianity and rebuild the Jewish Temple. Seven years of tribulation would
follow, culminating in a holocaust or Armageddon, during which the converted
Jews and other godless people would be destroyed. Only then would the Messiah
return to redeem mankind and establish the Kingdom of God on earth where he would reign for a
thousand years. The converted Jews, restored as God´s Chosen People, would enjoy
a privileged status in the world. At the end of all this, they and all the
rightous would ascend to heaven in the final `Rapture`. The Jewish role in all
this meant: "Jews restored to Israel and converted, leading to the
Second Advent, leading to mankind´s redemption."
In chapter four,
five and six the author critizices the so-called peace process, Arafat´s
destructive final role and Israel´s attempt to revive the Jordanian option. In
signing the Oslo
agreement, "Arafat legitimized Zionism, the very ideology that hat created and
still perpetuates the Palestinian tragedy". The Israeli aim to destroy the
Palestinans could not have been better described as in the words of the Israeli
sociologist professor Baruch Kimmerling who wrote in his book Politicide that the process of gradual
military, political and psychological attrition whose aim was to destroy the
Palestinians as an independent people with a coherent political and social
existence would make them vanish by their fragmentation and irrelevance. "Forty
years of Israeli politicide had done its work on the Palestine question as a
national cause. The Palestinians, already in an unenviable position of physical
fragmentation after 1948, became politically fragmented with the Israeli
occupation." In her chapter "Solving the problem Karmi argues that a two-state
solution is out of reach. Consequently, she calls in chapter seven for a
one-state solution. "In a single state, no Jewish settler would have to move and
no Palestinian would be under occupation." The author thinks that creating a
Jewish state was "crazy" at Herzl´s time and even now therefore "creating a
unitary state of Israel/Palestine, far less implausible than the Zionist project
ever was, should be no less successful".
Refering to
Hangebi´s statement that Israel as a "colonial state" cannot
survive, Karmi proposes an unthinkable idea: "The best solution to this
intractable problem is to turn back the clock before there was any Jewish state
and return history as from there."Middle East." But at the end, she turns back to realism:
"The clock will not go back and, although the Jewish state cannot be uncreated,
it might be, so to speak, unmade. The reunification of Palestine´s shattered
remains in a unitary state for all its inhabitants, old and new, is the only
realistic, humane and durable route out of the morass. It is also the only way
for the Israeli Jewish community (as opposed to the Israeli state) to survive in
the
Dr.
Ludwig Watzal works as an editor
and a journalist in Bonn,
Germany. He has
written several books on Israel and Palestine. He can be reached at: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.