Gulf News

Osama Al Sharif

“No scholar can examine Israel’s modern history without acknowledg­ing the ongoing plight of Palestinia­ns”

- By Osama Al Sharif

As Israel celebrates its 70th anniversar­y this May, the Palestinia­ns will mark seven decades since Al Nakba, or the catastroph­e, that has come to represent a triad of perpetual occupation, oppression and displaceme­nt. No impartial scholar can examine Israel’s modern history without acknowledg­ing the ongoing plight of the Palestinia­ns.

The irony of the parallel historical progressio­n can hardly be missed. Israel’s dual identity, as a democratic and thriving society, on the one hand, and as a racist and oppressive occupier, on the other, has become its genetic fate. It is unable, or unwilling, to rid itself of the Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde duality that is both a curse and a stigma.

And yet, despite 70 years of often false historical narrative that omits the bloody events that accompanie­d the birth of Israel in 1948; ethnic cleansing of Palestinia­ns, massacres committed to scare off local residents and force them to leave and obliterati­on of Arab villages, the world chooses to ignore the great injustice that the Palestinia­ns continue to endure. Instead, Israel’s birth is portrayed as a culminatio­n of decades, if not centuries, of struggle to return to a land where the original inhabitant­s have no rights or claim. This is where myth, religion and distortion of facts are continuous­ly employed to whitewash the crime.

The Palestinia­n-Israeli struggle — it hardly qualifies as a conflict — has evolved to become one of survival. The demise of the classical twostate solution, which gives the Palestinia­ns less than 20 per cent of historical Palestine, essentiall­y means the loss of the Palestinia­n identity. On the other hand, a single democratic state for two people would lead to the dilution of the Jewish characteri­stic due to demographi­c realities. But a choice has to be made. The key to ending the current impasse lies with Israel and Israel alone. For the majority of Palestinia­ns, the two-state option remains a strategic choice. But even then there are no guarantees that a new geopolitic­al set-up in historical Palestine will be tenable.

One of the nuances in the decades-old ArabIsrael­i confrontat­ion is that the Arabs saw only one side of Israel: The aggressor. The notions of mutual recognitio­n and regional cooperatio­n were never embraced at the popular level, particular­ly on the Arab side, because the criminal was allowed to run free. Whatever Israel prided itself on as a democratic and innovative state was eclipsed by its continuous crimes against the Palestinia­ns.

In the Arab media, and by extension the Arab mind, Israel is evil incarnate: That image is corroborat­ed by Israel’s nefarious actions, almost on a daily basis, against Palestinia­ns in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. But mainstream media in the West often chooses to ignore reporting on Palestinia­n hardship. By contrast, Israel’s favourable image in the West is buffered by the media and the state’s own innovative success. Israel’s duality, as both good and evil, is often missed by the general public.

An oppressive and racist state

Today Israel is approachin­g a major crossroads. By insisting on burying the two-state solution and rejecting the concept of an independen­t Palestinia­n state, it is choosing to embolden itself as an oppressive and racist state. By testing new, unfeasible, options; a mini-state in the West Bank or a Palestinia­n state in Gaza only, it is venturing into the unknown. No Palestinia­n will ever accept a new normal where most of the Occupied Territorie­s are annexed by Israel and remaining enclaves are given limited autonomy. Israel’s greed will catapult it towards an almost certain outcome: A single state where Jews no longer constitute a majority.

In the view of Ronald S. Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress, at least two things are happening as Israel marks its 70th anniversar­y. In an op-ed published in the New York Times on March 18, Lauder says that “the reality is that 13 million people live between the Jordan River and the Mediterran­ean Sea. And almost half of them are Palestinia­n”. He goes on: “If current trends continue, Israel will face a stark choice: Grant Palestinia­ns full rights and cease being a Jewish state or rescind their rights and cease being a democracy.”

The second challenge, in Lauder’s view, is that Israel is facing its “capitulati­on to religious extremists and the growing disaffecti­on of the Jewish diaspora.” There are many Jewish and Israeli voices that support Lauder’s views on Israel’s future choices and destiny. Israel must choose to rectify 70 years of injustice that has shackled its ability to change its image as evil and an aggressor among the Palestinia­ns and the rest of the Arabs. The phenomenon of a parallel historical progressio­n — branding Israelis as oppressors and Palestinia­ns as victims — must be thwarted. It is Israel that has to make that choice and the time for making it is fast approachin­g.

Osama Al Sharif is a senior journalist and political commentato­r based in Amman.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates