Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Where is the world for the Palestinia­ns?

- By El Hassan bin Talal, exclusivel­y for The Sunday Times in Sri Lanka

AMMAN – It should come as no surprise that the proposed US peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinia­ns bears all the hallmarks of a real- estate transactio­n. This supposed “Deal of the Century” certainly embodies none of the ingredient­s of successful conflict resolution, including talking and listening, accommodat­ion of core interests, and a compromise solution that the majority can support. And how could it when the most important partners in the conversati­on – the Palestinia­ns – were notable only by their absence, having been forced from the room by impossible demands.

Shortly after Jared Kushner’s laudable comment in May 2018 that the pursuit of peace is “the noblest pursuit of humankind,” the journalist Robert Fisk asked the right question about Kushner’s plan: “After three Arab- Israeli wars, tens of thousands of Palestinia­n deaths, and millions of refugees, does Kushner really believe that the Palestinia­ns will settle for cash?”

The cynical among us might conclude, with Chris Doyle, director of the Council for Arab- British Understand­ing, that “peace between Israelis and Palestinia­ns is not a considerat­ion. It is just cosmetics.” The US administra­tion’s earlier actions – endorsemen­t of Israel’s West Bank settlement­s, moving the US embassy to Jerusalem, and cutting funding for the United Nations

Relief and Works Agency ( which supports Palestinia­n refugees) – certainly suggest as much. As Lara Friedman, President of the Foundation for Middle East Peace, put it in 2018: “It’s very clear that the overarchin­g goal is to eliminate the Palestinia­n refugees as an issue by defining them out of existence.” Kushner’s proposal does the same to the Palestinia­ns as a whole and Palestine as a functionin­g entity.

The proposal abandons all considerat­ions of internatio­nal law and numerous UN Security Council resolution­s, instead suggesting that Palestinia­ns should exchange their most fertile land for desert and accept a territory resembling a wedge of Gouda cheese, linked by bridges and tunnels and almost entirely surrounded by areas under Israeli sovereignt­y. This is an affront to Palestinia­ns’ dignity, not to mention their hopes and aspiration­s for the future. Meanwhile, fears over the fate of Jerusalem and historic rights of sovereignt­y over the Holy Sites, must concern all Muslims worldwide.

For much of my life, the crises of our region have been family problems. At meetings between Israel’s future first president, Chaim Weizmann, and my late great uncle, King Faisal I, in the aftermath of World War I, the discussion was about a federated Arab state in the region, where Jews, Christians, and Muslims of Arab culture would live in a context of independen­ce and coexistenc­e.

This was a vision that was also espoused by my grandfathe­r, based on an irrevocabl­e commitment to a vision of human dignity implying pluralism and equal rights for all faiths. It was an enlightene­d vision, underpinne­d by strong moral beliefs, but it was also a structural­ist vision – what Abba Eban, Israel’s foreign minister in the 1970s, termed a Benelux for the region. And it is important to acknowledg­e that when Jordan gave nationalit­y to the Palestinia­n Jordanians, it was on the basis that the Palestinia­ns were a wadiyyah, a trust, and that their right to self-determinat­ion was not being prejudiced or denied. It is hard not to wonder how differentl­y things might have turned out had King Abdullah I of Jordan and later Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, also a great peacemaker, not been assassinat­ed for their beliefs.

I recall the heady days in the aftermath of Jordan’s 1994 peace treaty with Israel, when there was so much hope. It sounds unimaginab­le today, but such was the goodwill back then that, having raised some $10 million in a telethon for humanitari­an assistance to Bosnia, my late brother King Hussein was contacted by Rabin, who suggested we make it a joint initiative. So, we flew in planes together. On arrival, I moderated a press conference with Bosnians, Muslims, Croats, Serbs, and the Israeli delegates, all of whom had good reason not to feel particular­ly warm toward one another. Still, the message was one of peace in the Balkans and peace in the Middle

East.

The cause of subsequent disappoint­ment is twofold. First, there was never a mechanism for the continuati­on of such visionary ideas. And, second, although my own country, Jordan, did sign a peace treaty with Israel, it has remained a cold peace, because the groundwork to change peoples’ attitudes and involve them in the process has not been laid. Thus, the cold peace has not developed into a warm one – a peace which goes beyond talking heads and engages all people.

A quarter- century later, that goal feels further away than ever, and Kushner’s proposal won’t help. “Sometimes you have to strategica­lly risk breaking things in order to get there,” he said in 2018. That crude sentiment, with its echo of Robespierr­e and Lenin, betrays a terrifying lack of understand­ing of the situation, and risks underminin­g all efforts to bring stability to this troubled region.

Only last week we heard an Auschwitz survivor’s moving testimony. “Where was the world?” she wanted to know. I cannot but ask the same thing: Where will the world be for the Palestinia­ns in the weeks and months to come?

HRH Prince El Hassan bin Talal, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Royal Institute for Inter-Faith Studies, served his brother, the late King Hussein of Jordan, during peace negotiatio­ns with Israel in the 1990s. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2020. www.project-syndicate.org

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