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30.12.06
"I DON'T care about the principles! All that I want is that my wife
can live with me and that we can raise a family!" cried out the
engaging young man on the TV talk show.
Sammy is an Arab citizen from Acre, studying for a doctor's degree at
Haifa University. Something terrible happened to him: he fell in love
with the wrong woman - a Palestinian from Jenin in the occupied
territories. He had met her by accident in Ramallah, obtained for her
(on false pretences, he admits) a permit to stay in Israel for one day
and married her. Since then he can visit her only once every few weeks
in Jenin.
She cannot come to live with him in Acre, because the Knesset has
enacted a "temporary" law that forbids categorically, without any
exceptions, Palestinian women in the occupied territories from joining
their husbands in Israel. (That applies equally, of course, to the
Palestinian husbands in the occupied territories of Israeli Arab
women.)
The freedom of love and marriage is one of the basic human rights. Its
denial to 1.4 million Israeli citizens, solely because they are Arab,
is a severe violation of the international Bill of Rights that has
been signed by Israel. It also attacks the roots of Israeli democracy.
The pretext - what else could it be? - is "security". Among the
105,000 Palestinian women from the occupied territories who, in the
course of the years, have married Israeli citizens, 25 have taken part
in terrorist acts. 25 (twenty-five!) as against 104,975 (one hundred
and four thousand nine hundred and seventy-five!)
But, as usual with us, "security" is serving here as camouflage for
the real reason. Behind the prohibition lurks the demographic demon, a
demon with a sinister power over the brains of Israelis, that can
twist their thoughts, extinguish the last spark of decency and
morality and turn quite normal human beings into monsters.
His emissaries scour the world for Jews, real or imagined. They have
discovered (and brought to Israel!) Indians who claim to be descended
from the tribe of Manasseh, one of the ten tribes that were exiled by
the Assyrians - according to the Bible - from Palestine some 2720
years ago. In New Mexico they have discovered families whose ancestors
were supposedly Jews baptized 500 years ago under the threat of the
Spanish Inquisition. They bring Russian Christians, who have a tenuous
connection with Jewish families, and the Falashmura from Ethiopia,
whose Judaism is rather dubious. All of these are dragged to Israel
and obtain immediate citizenship and a generous "absorption subsidy".
But a young woman from Jenin, whose family has lived in this country
for centuries, is not allowed to live here with her husband, whose
forefathers have lived in Acre for generations. All because of that
fearful demon.
A HUNDRED and twenty years ago Asher Ginsburg, known as Ahad Haam
("One of the People"), a great Jewish thinker, visited Palestine and
was horrified by the way the Jewish settlers treated the native Arabs.
Since then, many pretexts for pushing Arabs out have been invented.
Almost every year the pretext in vogue has changed. Now a new one has
become fashionable: "the Nation State". Tsipi Livni was perhaps the
first to use it.
Israel is a "Nation state" of the Jews, and therefore it has the right
to do anything that serves Jews and harms non-Jews, even when they are
Israeli citizens. "The good of the individual has to give way to the
common good!" a respected professor said about the case of Sammy,
"and
the common good forbids allowing the Palestinian wife of Sammy to
enter Israel, which is the Jewish Nation State."
That sounds simple and logical. The Nation State exists for the
nation. But it is not simple at all. It raises several intractable
questions. For example:
What is the nation in question? A world-wide Jewish nation? An
Israeli-Jewish nation? Or just an Israeli nation?
And what kind of nation state are we talking about? The French nation
state at the end of the 18th century? The Polish nation state that
came into being at the end of World War I? Or the American nation
state as it exists today? All these are models of a nation state - but
very different from each other.
ANYONE WHO argues that Israel is the state of the world-wide Jewish
nation is emptying the word "nation" of all content. This would mean
that our state belongs to a community most of whose members do not
live in Israel, are not Israeli citizens, do not pay Israeli taxes and
have no vote in Israeli elections. American Jews like Henry Kissinger,
Paul Wolfowitz and Thomas Friedman, while committed body and soul to
Israel, would vigorously deny that they belong to the Jewish "nation"
rather that to the American.
Years ago, the Knesset enacted a law that denies anyone the right to
run for elections without publicly accepting that Israel is "the state
of the Jewish people". However, it is Israeli citizenship alone that
decides who can vote.
So perhaps our nation-state really belongs to a Jewish-Israeli nation?
Is Israel the nation state of its Jewish citizens only? Many Israelis
may feel that way. But that is contrary to Israeli legislation, which
says that all citizens are equal before the law. According to the
Supreme Court and official doctrine, Israel is a "Jewish and
democratic state". A sort of square circle or round square.
Israeli identity cards record the holder's "nation". Cards belonging
to Jews say: "Nation: Jewish". Years ago, the Supreme Court rejected
the petition of a citizen for the entry "Nation: Israeli". Now the
court is dealing with another petition of dozens of citizens (myself
included) who want the item in their cards to read "Nation: Israeli".
Is this country really an Israeli nation state? If so, does the
Israeli nation include all Israeli citizens, much as the American
nation includes all US citizens? In particular - does this nation
include the 1.4 million Palestinian-Arab citizens, about a fifth of
the state's population?
ISRAEL'S ARAB citizens suffer discrimination in almost all spheres of
life. The list, which is no secret, would fill several pages. Just as
examples: the education system spends on an Arab child one fifth of
what it spends on a Jewish one. The health system spends on an Arab
citizen much less than on a Jew. Almost all Arab local councils are
bankrupt, one of the reasons being that the government pays them per
capita much less than Jewish councils. An Arab citizen cannot get land
from the Land Authority, which holds almost all the land in Israel.
Not to mention the built-in official discrimination of the Law of
Return and the Law of citizenship.
Twice Israeli soldiers and policemen have shot at Arab demonstrators
who are Israeli citizens, killing several of them - once in 1976
("Land Day"), the other time in 2000 ("the October Events"). They
never shot Jewish demonstrators in Israel. (Once the police shot a
Jewish demonstrator who was shooting at them from the roof of his
home.)
Now everybody understands that a confrontation with the problem cannot
be evaded anymore.
At the end of the 1948 war, in which the state of Israel was founded,
only a small number of Palestinian-Arabs remained. Most of their
compatriots had fled or been driven out. The cultural, social and
political elite left at the beginning of the war. The pitiful remnant
that was left was subjected for 18 years to a regime of intimidation
and oppression called "military government". But the second generation
mustered up the courage to raise its head.
Now a third generation has grown up. Many of its members, both male
and female, have attended universities and become entrepreneurs,
professors, lawyers and physicians. Recently, their representatives
published a "vision" which demands not only the elimination of all
forms of discrimination, but also religious, cultural and educational
autonomy.
That is a revolutionary message, and several similar documents are
also on their way. Today the Arab citizens are a self-confident
community with their own (unrecognized) institutions and political
parties. This community is now more than twice the size of the Jewish
community that founded the State of Israel in 1948.
The existence of a national minority of this size cannot be ignored.
It cannot be pretended anymore that the problem does not exist, or
that it can be solved (and dismissed) by some millions of shekels
more. Israel is facing a fateful decision, which will not only
determine the character of its relations with its Arab citizens, but
also the very character of the state itself.
THERE IS no sense in arguing with those who hope publicly or secretly
for ethnic cleansing and the removal of all the Arabs from the state,
and indeed from the whole country between the sea and the Jordan
River. Neither is there much sense in arguing with those who want to
keep the Israeli Arabs as second-class citizens, estranged from the
state and deprived of influence. That is a time bomb.
Israeli democracy is faced with a choice between two alternatives:
(a) A citizen's state, in which all the citizens are equal,
irrespective of ethnic origin, nation, religion, language and gender.
In Israeli political jargon, that is called "a state of all its
citizens" - an absurd appellation, for how can a democratic state not
belong to all its citizens?
Such a state is not concerned with ethnic origin and religious faith.
Every group of parents can decide how to educate their children (in
the framework of certain parameters fixed by the state). There will be
no difference between a Jewish, Arab or Polynesian citizen. Relations
between the individual and the state will be based solely on
citizenship. Example: the United States, where every person
automatically becomes part of the American nation upon receiving
citizenship.
(b) A national state, in which a Jewish-Israeli majority exists side
by side with a Palestinian-Israeli minority. In such a state, the
majority has its national institutions, but the minority, too, is
recognized as a national entity, with clearly defined national rights
in certain spheres, such as culture, religion, education etc. (These
rights were defined by the right-wing Zionist leader Vladimir Ze'ev
Jabotinsky as early as a hundred years ago, when he drew up the "Helsingfors
Plan" demanding rights for the Jews in Russia.) Example: the status of
the Catalans in Spain.
Some days ago, the researcher Yossi Amitay drew my attention to an
article written by Pinhas Lavon one month (!) after the founding of
the State of Israel. Lavon (who later served as Minister of Defense
and was implicated in the infamous "Lavon Affair') analysed the
problem of the Arab minority after the war. He suggested a choice
between an "autonomist" approach which would allow the minority to
form its own autonomous institutions in a state dominated by the
majority belonging to another nation, and a "state-values" state, in
which all citizens would be treated according to universal and
egalitarian standards.
Lavon preferred the second alternative (a state belonging to all its
citizens), and so do I.
NOT LONG ago, Avigdor Liberman presented a plan of his own: to give up
the so-called "triangle" region (on the Israeli side of the Green
Line) together with the dense Arab population living there, in
exchange for the annexation of Palestinian territories in which Jewish
settlers are living. The principle: Jews to Israel, Arabs to
Palestine.
Liberman, the racist who immigrated from the former Soviet Union, has
learned from Stalin that whole communities can be treated like chess
figures. Only very few people took this plan seriously. It is well
known that Liberman advocates the (so-called "voluntary") ethnic
cleansing of all the Arabs from the state and from the occupied
territories. His "plan" is quite unrealistic anyhow, because most of
Israel's Arab citizens live in Galilee and the Negev, far from the
Green Line, and Liberman does not suggest giving up those.
The interesting part of the ploy was not the "plan" itself, but the
reaction of the Arab citizens to it. Not one single Arab voice was
raised in favor of the idea. The Arab citizens are determined to
remain citizens of Israel, even when a Palestinian state comes into
being next to it.
This community wants to integrate itself in the life of Israel, its
economy, democratic institutions and social fabric. It has succeeded
in doing as much as it has been allowed to. It wholeheartedly supports
the creation of a State of Palestine in the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip, but intends to remain a national minority in Israel - much as
most American Jews supported the creation of the State of Israel but
themselves preferred to remain as a minority in the US.
Israel, for its part, cannot give up 1.4 million hard-working
inhabitants who pay taxes and contribute their share to the national
product. History shows that a country that drives out whole
communities always loses. Spain has not recovered from the expulsion
of the Jews and Muslims 500 years ago. France was grievously hit be
the expulsion of the Huegenots. Germany still suffers from the
expulsion (and worse) of the Jews.
I AM an Israeli. I certainly want to live in a State of Israel where
the majority speaks Hebrew and the Hebrew identity, the Hebrew culture
and the Hebrew tradition can be developed. That does not restrain me
at all from striving for a situation in which the Palestinian citizens
of the state are free to develop their own national identity, culture
and tradition.
The nation-state took form some centuries ago on the ruins of the
feudal and dynastic state, in response to the needs of the era. The
economic, technological, military and cultural developments of the
time demanded the organization of larger territorial-political units,
like France, Britain and Germany. In order to consolidate such a
state, every nation invented for itself a unifying national history
(more or less "imagined", as the scholar Benedict Anderson termed it)
and imposed it on conquered or voluntarily incorporated peoples
(Corsicans, Scots, Bavarians, Basques and many others).
This kind of nation-state has now become obsolete. Reality has
changed. The United States created a giant federal state spanning half
a continent, and later Germany and France have created the European
Union and turned over to it economic, military and even political
functions that used to be exercised by the nation-states.
The nation-state as such remains in existence, because it fulfils a
deep-seated human need to belong to a group. But it is gradually
turning into a multi-cultural, open and liberal state, that absorbs
(although not painlessly) millions of foreigners, because it cannot
exist without them. The USA was the first to take this course, and now
this is happening even in the small countries of Eastern Europe - the
very countries where many of the early Zionists were infected with
their narrow and fanatical kind of nationalism.
If the State of Israel does not want to explode from within, it must
sooner or later become such a state - an Israeli state in which Sammy
from Acre can live in dignity, together with his wife Lola from Jenin.
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