Thursday, July 24, 2014

Some Common Misconceptions

·         Palestinian parents do not want their children to become martyrs. Some mistakenly believe that Palestinian parents would consider it an honor to have their children sacrifice their lives to kill Israeli soldiers or civilians. The opposite is true. In my experience, parents start to panic if their children come home much later than midnight, because that is typically when the Israeli army enters Palestinian cities to begin raiding the refugee camps and parents do not want their children caught up in any trouble with the soldiers. Children and teens who are caught throwing rocks at the army plead with the police not to tell their parents, knowing they will be punished and because they know how much it will upset their parents. I think the misunderstanding occurs because of the respect given for martyrs. After all, they did give their lives for the sake of their country. It is the same situation in America or any other country. When soldiers are killed, their sacrifice is honored and parents often find a small amount of consolation with the thought that at least their child died for an honorable cause and that he or she is now at rest far from the tragedies of life on Earth. It is the same for the families of Palestinian martyrs. Of course, all parents want their children to live a life of peace, happiness and opportunity. This is something denied to many Palestinian children. Martyrs are honored for their sacrifice and struggle to free their people, but it is a parent’s worst nightmare that their child will become a martyr.

·         The current conflict does not go back to the time of Abraham and has nothing to do with Isaac and Ishmael. Rather, this is a new conflict that has its roots with the birth of Zionism in the 1890’s. Zionism is defined as Jewish Nationalism, or the idea that Jews need their own country to escape persecution. Before the birth of Zionism, Jews Muslims and Christians lived peacefully together in Palestine. When the Ottoman Empire was dissolved following WWI, Britain took control of the areas now known as Palestine, Jordan and Iraq. Waves of Jewish Immigrants came to Palestine; many came to establish socialist communities called kibbutzim. Many Palestinians worked and lived on land that was actually owned by wealthy Arabs in Lebanon. Jewish immigrants established many organizations to assist in buying the land from the absentee owners for much higher than its actual value at the time, and the Palestinians were forced off the land. Original plans to divide Palestine into an Arab and a Jewish state were not welcomed because many Jews wanted all of Palestine as well as Jordan. Palestinians also rejected the partition because the Jewish immigrants were to be given an area extremely disproportional to their numbers and which included many Palestinian villages. Palestinians were excluded from economic development and feared that they were losing control of their land. The Palestinians and Jews fought to remove the British from Palestine. When the British left, the Jews declared the creation of the state of Israel in 1948. They massacred entire villages, Deir Yassin among them, and drove thousands of Palestinians from their homes and from their country. Jordan and Egypt annexed the West Bank and Gaza, respectively. After the war of 1967 Israel occupied the Golan Heights, the Gaza Strip, East Jerusalem and the West Bank. Today thousands of refugees still live in camps in other Arab countries as well as Palestine (Gaza and the West Bank ) - (70% of Jordan is populated by Palestinian refugees and their descendants). Today Palestinians want to return to their homes, and for Israel to end the military occupation. Many Palestinians are descendants of people who have lived in Palestine since before the days of Christ and many told me how proud they were to be the “original Christians.” This current conflict has nothing to do with Isaac or Ishmael; it started with the ideology of Zionism and Zionists driving Palestinians from their land. It frustrates me to hear people say that “they have been fighting over that land since the days of Abraham and will continue to do so until the Second Coming.” This conflict did not start with Abraham, but unless people change their way of thinking, it may continue until the end of the world. 

The Right of Return


About 2,000 years ago the ancient kingdom of Israel ceased to exist when wars and conquering emperors scattered the Jews across the globe. Now many people, especially Zionists and Christian Zionists, celebrate the creation of Israel as a fulfillment of biblical prophecy and the return of an exiled people to their homeland. Any Jew may immigrate to Israel and obtain citizenship in Israel, claiming that it is their birthright as Jew. At the same time
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have been killed, imprisoned and exiled from the land of their birth, which has been renamed Israel. Why should the descendants of the ancient Israelites be allowed to return to Palestine after 2,000 years when those who still remember being driven from their childhood homes and still possess the deed to the land and the key to the front door are banned from entering the country? 

Supporters of Israel give two common answers to this question. Many say it is God’s will that the Jews return to their homeland, and that the creation of Israel is a fulfillment of biblical prophecy.  I am a Christian and I believe in the prophecies in the scriptures, but I think all religious people recognize that there are many cases in history where prophecy has been misinterpreted and the Bible used as an excuse to put one group of people higher than another and persecute the innocent. None of us can pretend to know the will of God. But we do know how Jesus lived. He said “love your enemy.” He was gentle, a friend to all, he healed and forgave the people who arrested and killed him.  No matter who is in the right politically, the war and violence cannot be justified in the name of biblical prophecy. While I believe in biblical prophecy, I do not believe Israel is a fulfillment of it. Does it even matter? Doesn’t God love all his children? The second answer I often hear as for why Israel had the right to be founded the way it was and kill the way it does is that because of anti-Semitism and especially the holocaust, there was nowhere else for the Jews to go. Why should Palestinians be responsible for the tragic and horrific actions of anti-Semitic European nations? Why shouldn’t it have been Germany and Russia who gave up parts of their land to provide a safe place for the Jews to establish a country? Many anti-Semitic nations supported the creation of Israel as a solution to the “Jewish problem,” a way to get them out of their country. Russia supported the creation of Israel largely due to the fact that Israel was built on socialist principles. It is Israel’s bellicose treatment of its neighbors that sews the seeds of hate among Palestinians and other Arabs.

According to history, logic and international law, Palestinians naturally have the ancestral and legal right to live in Palestine/Israel/Jerusalem.  It is because of Israeli law and the United States’ refusal to support international law that Palestinians’ rights remain unrecognized. The Israeli Law of Return, signed July 5th 1950, allows any Jew living anywhere in the world to immigrate and obtain Israeli citizenship.[i] I once met a young British Israeli man living in Sderot, Israel on the border of the Gaza strip. He took me on a tour of his city. The first thing I heard upon arriving in Sderot was “If you hear a siren go off you have 15 seconds to make it to a bomb shelter before a rocket hits.” We walked through the streets which were dotted with bomb shelters, and where I could actually feel the fear in the air.  Saw the playgrounds where long tunnels in the form of brightly painted caterpillars acted as bomb shelters. The community center screened a documentary with footage of Palestinian rockets hitting the city, and of children running from the schoolyard into a bomb shelter inside the school. He led me to the top of a hill on the outskirts of the city where the majority of the rockets hit and where there are no bomb shelters within a 15 second sprint. There we were, overlooking the Gaza strip, less than a mile away. A place which I don’t think I would ever dare to enter. As rough as the situation was there in Sderot I knew that just beyond that barbed wire fence the conditions are 100 times worse. In Gaza it isn’t small homemade rockets whose casualties are tragic but rare, but rather it is precision missiles, tanks, ground troops and chemical weapons like white phosphorous that kill hundreds of people.
white phosphorous fired over civilian population in Gaza
There everything from building materials to potato chips are carefully regulated. Fishermen’s families suffer because people are shot if they are caught fishing more than three miles off shore and gas for the boats is a luxury. People in Sderot live there because housing is cheaper than other cities in Israel. People in Gaza are lucky to have a home. The majority of those living in the Gaza Strip are there because the violence that ensued during the founding of Israel forced them to flee to refugee camps there or they were forcefully and systematically driven from their homes in 
White phosphorous fired on Palestinian school in Gaza
the surrounding area (including towns like Sderot) and forced into Gaza. Many people there live within sight of their old villages (where they and their great grandparents were born), prevented from returning by soldiers who shoot anyone who dares get too close to the fence.  While not the majority, many of those soldiers’ or their parents’ original homes are in the United States, Britain, France, etc. There they had normal happy lives where they were financially stable and accepted as part of society. That was the case of my British Israeli tour guide in Sderot. So it was with great shock that I heard him explain how the Palestinians should be grateful for the help and aid that Israel provides them and complain about how hard it was “to live where people are constantly trying to steal your land.” Perhaps he should check the ground underneath his feet for remains of those same peoples’ homes. So who has the right to live where hundreds of villages like Sderot now stand?

The Right of Return is the Palestinian and Arab political belief that Palestinian refugees and their immediate descendants have the right to return to their land. [ii] The logic and legality of this claim is difficult to dispute. In 1948 the UN passed resolution 194 declaring that “the [Palestinian] refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbors should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible”.[iii] Instead, those homes and villages were occupied by Israeli residents or destroyed to make room for Israeli villages or forestry projects. U.N. resolution 3236, passed in 1974, affirms that "the inalienable right of Palestinians to return to their homes and property from which they have been displaced and uprooted, and calls for their return."[iv] Al-Awda: The Palestine Right to Return Commission describes in detail the demand of international law for the Right of Return. These laws include The Universal Declaration of Human RightsThe International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial DiscriminationThe International Convention on Civil and Political Rights and the principle of self determination.

From the very beginning of peace negotiations the Right of Return has been one of the major obstacles in getting all sides to agree. Israelis will not allow Palestinians to return because there would no longer be a Jewish majority in the state. Israel sees itself as a Democratic Jewish state. Jews do not believe that the state can be both Jewish and Democratic unless they are the overwhelming majority. To solve that problem they drove out hundreds of thousands of Palestine’s inhabitants until now only 20% of Israel’s population is Palestinian.

Why should Palestinians and Arabs be blamed for this conflict? While Jews were being persecuted in Europe and America they were welcomed in the Middle East. Why should Palestinians be punished for the actions of anti-Semitic nations? And why should the United States continue to support Israel in preventing the rightful return of Palestine’s people? 

Israel’s Law of Return must be amended so that Jews facing persecution may have Israel as an option for refuge, and so that those Palestinians living in exile may return to their homeland. But then Israel as we know it would cease to exist, becoming either democratic and pluralist (and non-Jewish), or Jewish and apartheid (where the laws, rights and living conditions are different for each race). But why did Palestine, where Christians Jews and Muslims lived side by side in harmony, have to be wiped off the map? Would it not be better to return to that state, be it called Israel, Palestine or any other name? That is why Palestinian refugees and exiles must be permitted to return to their homeland. The state that emerges then will become a true ally and the real example of democracy and human rights that Israel claims to be.




[i]Israel’s Basic Laws: The Law of Return”https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Politics/Other_Law_Law_of_Return.html
[ii] Al-Awda: The Palestine right to return commission. http://www.al-awda.org/
[iii] United Nations. Palestine- Progress Report of the United Nations Mediator. 194. December 1948. http://domino.un.org/unispal.nsf/0/c758572b78d1cd0085256bcf0077e51a?OpenDocument
[iv] United Nations. The Question of Palestine. 3236.  November 1974. http://domino.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/0/025974039acfb171852560de00548bbe?OpenDocument