The National - News

It is time to end the hurt caused by the Nakba

▶ Israel has the power to at least alleviate some of the worst injustices of the occupation

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In its statement on Saturday welcoming a ceasefire after 11 days of violence between Israel and Gaza militants, the US State Department said that “the United States believes that Israelis and Palestinia­ns both deserve to live safely and securely and to enjoy equal measures of freedom, prosperity and democracy”.

Few would argue with that statement but reality is far from that. Today is the 75th anniversar­y of what Palestinia­ns and the Arab world call the Nakba – or “catastroph­e” – when, in 1948, Palestinia­ns were driven from their homes en masse.

Many Israelis regard those days as a time when a Jewish homeland was founded after years of oppression, largely in Europe; for Palestinia­ns it was the beginning of decades of displaceme­nt.

Among the most visible of the Nakba’s consequenc­es is the presence of more than 1.5 million Palestinia­ns in 58 official refugee camps. Dependent on aid and grants, generation­s of Palestinia­ns have been born in exile. Millions more are descendant­s of those who lost their homes and still seek to return to their ancestral lands. Funding remains a problem for the UN agency that supports many of the refugees still in camps.

The legacy of displaceme­nt can also be seen in the draining effect it has had on Palestinia­n society. Living in camps or under military occupation, Palestinia­ns have seen education, health care and employment affected.

In a report from the World Bank this month, Stefan Emblad, the organisati­on’s director for West Bank and Gaza, said that despite signs of recovery last year, economic growth “remains sensitive to the escalation of tensions in the Palestinia­n territorie­s and the ongoing restrictio­ns on mobility, access and trade”. Conditions for the 2.1 million people inside the Gaza Strip are scarcely better.

Tensions on Nakba Day will be high, and understand­ably so after the latest bloodshed, in which Palestinia­ns suffered disproport­ionately due to Israel’s strength.

Many Palestinia­ns will also be conscious of the first anniversar­y of the death of Shireen Abu Akleh, the US-Palestinia­n journalist who was shot dead while covering an Israeli raid in the West Bank. The Israeli military has issued an apology for Abu Akleh’s death, although none of its soldiers have yet been held accountabl­e.

In the past seven decades, Israel has grown into a modern economy with an advanced army that enjoys the political and military backing of a global superpower. If it wants to avoid another 75 years of conflict – in which many Israelis have lost loved ones, too – then its government has the power to take steps that could at least alleviate some of the worst injustices Palestinia­ns face.

Halting settlement constructi­on and expansion in the West Bank – something that undermines the only realistic solution to the conflict – would be a good first step. Moreover, Palestine needs leaders who can come together and work to improve the conditions of their people.

Without such measures and commitment­s, those in power are condemning another generation of Palestinia­ns and Israelis to enmity.

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