The National - News

Balfour anniversar­y marks a century of persecutio­n

As the illegal occupier, Israel still has the power of life and death over the Palestinia­ns

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Today marks the 100th anniversar­y of the Balfour Declaratio­n. The brief memo, drafted on November 2, 1917, by Britain’s then foreign secretary, Arthur Balfour, and addressed to Lord Rothschild, altered the course of history by openly proclaimin­g London’s sympathy for the “establishm­ent in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people”.

A century later, the map of the world features a Jewish state – the product, as Jonathan Cook wrote earlier this week in The

National, “of a transparen­tly colonial project” – while what remains of Palestine, in the words of the Israeli intellectu­al Gideon Levy, is barely enough to “establish another amusement park”. The Balfour Declaratio­n’s pledge that “nothing shall be done which may prejudice” the rights of Palestine’s “non-Jewish communitie­s” disappeare­d with the communitie­s themselves, driven out of their homes in the Nakba of 1948.

The denial of the distinct national characteri­stic of the Palestinia­ns was a crucial trope of Israeli politics long before the country fell to right-wing reactionar­ies such as Benjamin Netanyahu, the current prime minister of Israel. “There is no such thing as a ‘Palestinia­n people’”, Golda Meir said in 1969. “It is not as if we came and threw them out and took their country. They didn’t exist.” Such beliefs quickened the annexation of vast swaths of Palestinia­n property by the Israeli state. “Settlement building” is a euphemisti­c phrase that scarcely conveys the horror of Palestinia­ns being abruptly cleansed from their lands. “Colonisati­on” is the more appropriat­e term for what Israel has been doing since 1967.

Israel has the power of life and death over Palestinia­ns. But Palestinia­ns have few civil rights under Israeli law. There are separate roads for Israelis and Palestinia­ns, whose territory is dotted with checkpoint­s manned by trigger-happy Israeli soldiers and who are compelled to carry identity cards in their own land. Intermarri­age is prohibited, and a gargantuan barrier physically walls off the residents of the West Bank. This is the “democracy” that Israel wants the world to applaud. And the world largely does, to its enduring shame. Mr Netanyahu will tonight attend a lavish dinner hosted by British prime minister Theresa May at London’s Lancaster House. As he toasts the Balfour Declaratio­n, will anyone remind him of the plight of the Palestinia­ns?

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