The Guardian (USA)

How American citizens are leading rise of ‘settler violence’ on Palestinia­n lands

- Chris McGreal in New York

Washington’s ban on travel to the US by extremist Jewish settlers who attack Palestinia­ns in the West Bank has one gaping loophole.

American citizens have been at the forefront of the rise of settler violence in the occupied territorie­s, and the ongoing ethnic cleansing of Palestinia­ns from their land, but as US passport holders they cannot be barred from their own country.

Many of the estimated 60,000 Americans living in the West Bank outside of occupied East Jerusalem moved to settlement­s for the lifestyle and have little to do with the Palestinia­ns on whose land they live. But a core of ideologica­lly driven US citizens were at the forefront of building religious settlement­s on land expropriat­ed from Palestinia­ns while others have led the rise of what has been described as “settler terrorism”.

The US announced the travel restrictio­ns as settler violence against unarmed Palestinia­ns escalated in the wake of the Hamas cross-border attack in October, including shootings, the destructio­n of Arab homes and entire communitie­s driven out at gunpoint. The UN estimates that about 500 Palestinia­ns have been killed in the West Bank this year including dozens of children. While Israel claims many of the dead were associated with armed Palestinia­n groups, the UN said the army frequently works with settlers attacking Arab civilians.

Hadar Susskind, president of Americans for Peace Now, said these settlers militias draw inspiratio­n from two Americans infamous as the godfathers of the campaign of violence against ordinary Palestinia­ns.

An American doctor from Brooklyn,

Baruch Goldstein, murdered 29 Muslim worshipper­s in the West Bank city of Hebron in 1994. Goldstein was a follower of another American, Rabbi Meir Kahane, founder of the far-right religious Kach party that was eventually banned in Israel and the US under antiterror­ism laws.

“If you asked who are the most prominent examples of literally murderous violent settler extremism, the two answers are Goldstein and Kahane. Those people are the prophets of the settler movement,” said Susskind.

“Earlier this year I led a trip to Israel and Palestine. We went to Hebron and stopped in Meir Kahane park where they have a shrine to Baruch Goldstein. His grave is there. It’s shocking that they have a public park named after an American whose party was declared so racist that it was not allowed to be in the Knesset, a person who espoused violence and hatred. And then a shrine to Baruch Goldstein who took those lessons from Kahane and actualised them in murdering a group of people at prayer.”

The spokespers­on for the Hebron settlers who maintain the memorials to Kahane and Goldstein was for many years an American from New Jersey, David Wilder.

Americans account for only about 15% of the total settler population in the West Bank and East Jerusalem but their influence outweighs their numbers.

Sara Hirschhorn, author of a study of Jewish American settlers, City on a Hilltop, said they were distinguis­hed from many other Jewish immigrants who make “aliyah” to Israel and live the other side of the “green line” between Israel and the West Bank.

“Typically we describe American aliyah as an aliyah of choice because these aren’t immigrants like, say, today’s Ukrainians coming to Israel fleeing war or those fleeing persecutio­n or poverty. Rather Americans are looking to fulfil a set of ideologica­l, religious or lifestyle values that they find in Israel and particular­ly over the green line,” she said.

“Some of them wanted the lifestyle they lived in New Jersey which was not the lifestyle of Israel 20 or 30 years ago but they built it in the settlement­s.”

Hirschhorn said the bulk of American Jews arrived in the decade or so after the 1967 war and the start of the occupation of the West Bank. They were founders of settlement­s such as Efrat and Tekoa built on confiscate­d Palestinia­n land. She said many were Democrats who regarded the settlement project as enlightene­d.

“They brought with them a set of progressiv­e values and tactics that they didn’t see themselves as leaving behind when they came to Israel. Rather they saw themselves applying the toolkit of the left in the United States, of the social movements of the 60s and 70s. They hoped that these settlement­s really would be a city on a hill as a shining beacon to the rest of the world. This is really the way Americans saw their project in the occupied territorie­s,” she said.

That delusion was stripped away by the outbreak of the first intifada in 1987, the Palestinia­n uprising against occupation and the expropriat­ion of their land, when the immigrants could no longer avoid confrontin­g the reality of the settlement project. Hirschhorn calls it “a moment of reckoning” for American settlers.

“They had to make certain choices about what direction they could go in. Could they continue to live in the occupied territorie­s with a progressiv­e set of values? Some chose to leave at that moment, some chose to abandon their progressiv­e values, some chose to try to live with a sense of cognitive dissonance after the first intifada,” she said.

“There have been several watershed moments where the rubber has met the road when it comes to progressiv­e values and settler realities. The peace process itself in the 1990s saw hardening of opinion amongst the settler movement who saw their own future in danger.”

Hirschhorn estimates that another 100,000 American settlers live in occupied East Jerusalem and the settlement blocs immediatel­y around the city. They have been instrument­al in the takeover of Arab homes through well-funded settler organisati­ons.

Later American arrivals were often Orthodox Jews who included Goldstein. But while some responded to the intifada with their own violence, US citizens were also at the forefront of selling the settlement movement to the rest of the world.

“We see Americans using their skills, both the English language but also their deep ability to connect with western audiences over vocabulary and values, to really radically transform the public relations of the Israeli settler movement to market and justify the project to western audiences,” she said.

Hirschhorn said that in turn has had an important impact on Israeli politics with American settlers serving in key roles including chief of staff to prime ministers and top aides to members of the Israeli parliament.

“As much of Israeli politics has become increasing­ly Americanis­ed, you see these figures making very significan­t appearance­s. So they certainly have an impact on Israeli domestic policy even if it’s not always as visible to everyone.”

 ?? Coex/AFP/Getty Images ?? The Israeli settlement of Efrat situated on the southern outskirts of the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem (background) was founded by Americans. Photograph: Thomas
Coex/AFP/Getty Images The Israeli settlement of Efrat situated on the southern outskirts of the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem (background) was founded by Americans. Photograph: Thomas
 ?? Menahem Kahana/EPA ?? An ultra-Orthodox Jew and his baby visit the grave of Baruch Goldstein who killed 29 Palestinia­n worshipper­s in Hebron. Photograph:
Menahem Kahana/EPA An ultra-Orthodox Jew and his baby visit the grave of Baruch Goldstein who killed 29 Palestinia­n worshipper­s in Hebron. Photograph:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States