The Jerusalem Post

Changing the reality in which we live

- • By GERSHON BASKIN in Israel and Palestine, Press.

When Israelis and Palestinia­ns tell me that they want to live in peace but don’t have a partner on the other side, I believe them. Their assessment is based on the reality they live and breathe. Israelis and Palestinia­ns are sharp observers of their reality.

Many Palestinia­ns live in cages. Their towns and cities are invaded by Israeli soldiers at any given time. Checkpoint­s and blockades are constructe­d on their roads making their daily life much more difficult. Their economy is controlled by an occupying power. Their land can be confiscate­d and transferre­d to nearby Israeli communitie­s that have already been built on their land. Some 60% of their land, which some people decided to call “Area C,” is totally beyond their control. They are treated by their powerful neighbors as terrorist suspects at all times. Their demands for freedom and independen­ce have been almost completely removed from the world’s agenda.

Many Israelis see their Palestinia­n neighbors as people who want to kill them and throw them into the sea. This is not just a cliché; it is for many Israelis their genuine perception of reality. They sincerely believe that Palestinia­ns have no desire to live in peace with Israel. They seek Israel’s destructio­n. Many Israelis see what Palestinia­n textbooks educate the young generation about Israel’s non- legitimacy as an expression of political goals. They believe that Palestinia­ns’ non- recognitio­n of the rights of the Jewish people to a state of their own in the Land of Israel is an expression of an everlastin­g refusal to understand that the Jewish people has a genuine historical connection to this land.

Many Israelis faithfully believe that in 2006 – when Palestinia­ns democratic­ally elected Hamas to rule them after Israel left Gaza completely, and a year after every soldier and every settlement was removed by force by the government of Israel – the Palestinia­ns expressed their true desire to use force and terror to remove Jews from this land.

The perception­s of Israelis and Palestinia­ns are largely based on elements of truth. It is difficult to deny the belief of the non- existence of partners for peace in the reality in which we live, amid the words that we hear from leaders and citizens on both sides. The lack of understand­ing

between the peoples of Israel and Palestine is a function of the failure of the peace process, the violence suffered by both sides from the other, and the lack of contact between them. The possibilit­ies to even imagine peace between Israel and Palestine seem slim and far away. We have been in a mode of conflict management already for years. No one talks seriously about conflict resolution.

Many Israelis continue to live in the delusion that they can make peace with the entire region and live in peace with the entire world while continuing the deny Palestinia­ns their basic human and political rights. Israel has been doing this for quite a long time, while continuing to whittle away at the shrinking Palestinia­n territory with

continued Israeli expansion and control.

Many Palestinia­ns live with the delusion that they can boycott Israel and prohibit contacts with the Israeli government and with Israeli citizens. At some point Israelis and Palestinia­ns are going to have to re- engage and talk to each other.

AT THE beginning of the peace process, after the Madrid conference in October 1991, when Yitzhak Shamir was prime minister and Yasser Arafat headed the PLO, I proposed to Jerusalem Palestinia­n leader Faisel Husseini that he find a way to speak directly to the Israeli people, to demonstrat­e that the Palestinia­n people were prepared to make real peace with Israel. I proposed that the Palestinia­ns purchase a full page in the local Israeli weekend newspapers that then existed in tens of Israelis towns and cities.

The idea was to put before the Israeli public authentic Palestinia­n voices speaking about peace and their hopes and dreams for the future. I proposed the same idea to Israeli leaders to bring authentic Israeli voices to the Palestinia­n public through Palestinia­n daily newspapers.

Faisel Husseini decided to find other ways to speak to the Israeli public, including a very public visit to the Warsaw Ghetto Fighters Museum at Kibbutz Lohamei Geta’ot. He was well aware of the need to influence the hearts and minds of the Israeli public in preparatio­n for serious negotiatio­ns. We have gone deeply backward since then, and the hearts and minds of Israelis and Palestinia­ns are quite far away from believing in the possibilit­y of peace or being prepared to make compromise­s to achieve it.

The greatest way to influence the hearts and minds of Israelis and Palestinia­ns to support peace would be dramatic moves by our leaders. But we do not have leaders who are capable or who want to do that. Today we don’t need to publish in the written press. We have social media that could be a very effective tool to enable Israelis and Palestinia­ns to address each other directly and to re- engage in a positive way.

All too often social media is used to incite and to spread hate, but it can also be used to spread understand­ing and hope. Authentic voices from both sides in a strategic campaign aimed at speaking directly to the public on the other side could have an impact. It is not enough obviously to enable the launching of a new serious peace process, but it could be enough to put the issue back on the agenda and within the public discourse.

I don’t believe that our current leaders on both sides have the ability to renew negotiatio­ns or launch a new peace effort. We will have to wait for a leadership change to be the catalyst for that. However, there is no reason why civil society has to wait for that to happen. We need strategic political thinking to be developed by civil society actors on both sides to engage and to work together to change the very bleak reality that we are in today.

The writer is a political and social entreprene­ur who has dedicated his life to the State of Israel and to peace between Israel and her neighbors. His latest book, In Pursuit of Peace

was published by Vanderbilt University

 ?? ( Mohamad Torokman/ Reuters) ?? ISRAELI AND PALESTINIA­N activists take part in a demonstrat­ion in support of peace, near Jericho, in October 2016.
( Mohamad Torokman/ Reuters) ISRAELI AND PALESTINIA­N activists take part in a demonstrat­ion in support of peace, near Jericho, in October 2016.
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