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Excuse Me, But Israel Has No Right To Exist -- Sharmine Narwani
http://english.al-akhbar.com/blogs/sandbox/excuse-me-israel-has-no-right-exist
The phrase “right to exist” entered my consciousness in the 1990s
just as the concept of the two-state solution became part of our
collective lexicon. In any debate at university, when a Zionist was out
of arguments, those three magic words were invoked to shut down the
conversation with an outraged, “are you saying Israel doesn’t have the
right to exist??”
Of course you couldn’t challenge Israel’s right to exist – that was
like saying you were negating a fundamental Jewish right to have…rights,
with all manner of Holocaust guilt thrown in for effect.
Except of course the Holocaust is not my fault – or that of
Palestinians. The cold-blooded program of ethnically cleansing Europe of
its Jewish population has been so callously and opportunistically
utilized to justify the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian Arab nation,
that it leaves me utterly unmoved. I have even caught myself – shock -
rolling my eyes when I hear Holocaust and Israel in the same sentence.
What moves me instead in this post-two-state era, is the sheer audacity of Israel even existing.
What a fantastical idea, this notion that a bunch of rank outsiders
from another continent could appropriate an existing, populated nation
for themselves – and convince the “global community” that it was the
moral thing to do. I’d laugh at the chutzpah if this wasn’t so serious.
Even more brazen is the mass ethnic cleansing of the indigenous
Palestinian population by persecuted Jews, newly arrived from their own
experience of being ethnically cleansed.
But what is truly frightening is the psychological manipulation of
the masses into believing that Palestinians are somehow dangerous –
“terrorists” intent on “driving Jews into the sea.” As someone who makes
a living through words, I find the use of language in creating
perceptions to be intriguing. This practice – often termed “public
diplomacy” has become an essential tool in the world of geopolitics. Words, after all, are the building blocks of our psychology.
Take, for example, the way we have come to view the
Palestinian-Israeli “dispute” and any resolution of this enduring
conflict. And here I borrow liberally from a previous article of mine…
The United States and Israel have created the global discourse on
this issue, setting stringent parameters that grow increasingly narrow
regarding the content and direction of this debate. Anything discussed
outside the set parameters has, until recently, widely been viewed as
unrealistic, unproductive and even subversive.
Participation in the debate is limited only to those who prescribe to
its main tenets: the acceptance of Israel, its regional hegemony and
its qualitative military edge; acceptance of the shaky logic upon which
the Jewish state's claim to Palestine is based; and acceptance of the
inclusion and exclusion of certain regional parties, movements and
governments in any solution to the conflict.
Words like dove, hawk, militant, extremist, moderates, terrorists,
Islamo-fascists, rejectionists, existential threat, holocaust-denier,
mad mullah determine the participation of solution partners -- and are
capable of instantly excluding others.
Then there is the language that preserves "Israel's Right To Exist"
unquestioningly: anything that invokes the Holocaust, anti-Semitism and
the myths about historic Jewish rights to the land bequeathed to them by
the Almighty – as though God was in the real-estate business. This
language seeks not only to ensure that a Jewish connection to Palestine
remains unquestioned, but importantly, seeks to punish and marginalize
those who tackle the legitimacy of this modern colonial-settler
experiment.
But this group-think has led us nowhere. It has obfuscated,
distracted, deflected, ducked, and diminished, and we are no closer to a
satisfactory conclusion…because the premise is wrong.
There is no fixing this problem. This is the kind of crisis in which
you cut your losses, realize the error of your ways and reverse course.
Israel is the problem. It is the last modern-day colonial-settler
experiment, conducted at a time when these projects were being unraveled
globally.
There is no “Palestinian-Israeli conflict” – that suggests some sort
of equality in power, suffering, and negotiable tangibles, and there is
no symmetry whatsoever in this equation. Israel is the Occupier and
Oppressor; Palestinians are the Occupied and Oppressed. What is there to
negotiate? Israel holds all the chips. They can give back some land,
property, rights, but even that is an absurdity – what about everything
else? What about ALL the land, property and rights? Why do they get to
keep anything – how is the appropriation of land and property prior to
1948 fundamentally different from the appropriation of land and property
on this arbitrary 1967 date?
Why are the colonial-settlers prior to 1948 any different from those who colonized and settled after 1967?
Let me correct myself. Palestinians do hold one chip that Israel
salivates over – the one big demand at the negotiating table that seems
to hold up everything else. Israel craves recognition of its “right to
exist.”
But you do exist - don’t you, Israel?
Israel fears “delegitimization ”
more than anything else. Behind the velvet curtain lies a state built
on myths and narratives, protected only by a military behemoth, billions
of dollars in US assistance and a lone UN Security Council veto.
Nothing else stands between the state and its dismantlement. Without
these three things, Israelis would not live in an entity that has come
to be known as the “least safe place for Jews in the world.”
Strip away the spin and the gloss, and you quickly realize that
Israel doesn’t even have the basics of a normal state. After 64 years,
it doesn’t have borders. After six decades, it has never been more
isolated. Over half a century later, and it needs a gargantuan military
just to stop Palestinians from walking home.
Israel is a failed experiment. It is on life-support – pull those
three plugs and it is a cadaver, living only in the minds of some
seriously deluded foreigners who thought they could pull off the heist
of the century.
The most important thing we can do as we hover on the horizon of One
State is to shed the old language rapidly. None of it was real anyway –
it was just the parlance of that particular “game.” Grow a new
vocabulary of possibilities – the new state will be the dawn of
humanity’s great reconciliation. Muslims, Christians and Jews living
together in Palestine as they once did.
Naysayers can take a hike. Our patience is wearing thinner than the
walls of the hovels that Palestinian refugees have called “home” for
three generations in their purgatory camps.
These universally exploited refugees are entitled to the nice
apartments – the ones that have pools downstairs and a grove of palm
trees outside the lobby. Because the kind of compensation owed for this
failed western experiment will never be enough.
And no, nobody hates Jews. That is the fallback argument screeched in
our ears – the one “firewall” remaining to protect this Israeli
Frankenstein. I don’t even care enough to insert the caveats that are
supposed to prove I don’t hate Jews. It is not a provable point, and
frankly, it is a straw man of an argument. If Jews who didn’t live
through the Holocaust still feel the pain of it, then take that up with
the Germans. Demand a sizeable plot of land in Germany – and good luck
to you.
For anti-Semites salivating over an article that slams Israel, ply your trade elsewhere – you are part of the reason this problem exists.
Israelis who don’t want to share Palestine as equal citizens with the
indigenous Palestinian population – the ones who don’t want to
relinquish that which they demanded Palestinians relinquish 64 years ago
- can take their second passports and go back home. Those remaining had
better find a positive attitude – Palestinians have shown themselves to
be a forgiving lot. The amount of carnage they have experienced at the
hands of their oppressors – without proportional response – shows
remarkable restraint and faith.
This is less the death of a Jewish state than it is the demise of the
last remnants of modern-day colonialism. It is a rite of passage – we
will get through it just fine. At this particular precipice in the 21st
century, we are all, universally, Palestinian – undoing this wrong is a
test of our collective humanity, and nobody has the right to sit this
one out.
Israel has no right to exist. Break that mental barrier and just say
it: “Israel has no right to exist.” Roll it around your tongue, tweet
it, post it as your Facebook status update – do it before you think
twice. Delegitimization is here – have no fear. Palestine will be less
painful than Israel ever was.
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