“Palestine” without Jews. By Herb Keinon.
“Palestine” without Jews. By Herb Keinon. Jerusalem Post, July 31, 2013.
Abbas wants “not a single Israeli” in future Palestinian state. By Noah Browning. Reuters, July 29, 2013.
Keinon:
Thankfully
the relaunch of Israeli-Palestinian talks has, so far, been fairly void of the
overdramatic rhetoric about being on the brink of Abraham’s children sitting in
peace and harmony under their respective vines and fig trees.
The
closest we came to words about feeling the flutter from the wings of the peace
dove was newly minted US special envoy Martin Indyk on Monday, quoting
President Barack Obama during his March visit to Israel: “Peace is necessary,
peace is just, peace is possible.”
But
even that minimalist description was jarred a few hours after the Washington
launch of the talks on Monday, and just before Israeli and Palestinian teams
sat down for an iftar dinner, when
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas provided his vision of Israeli- Palestinian
peace during a visit to Cairo.
“In a
final resolution, we would not see the presence of a single Israeli – civilian
or soldier – on our lands,” Reuters quoted Abbas as saying in a briefing to mostly Egyptian journalists.
In
other words, the state Abbas wants Israel to give him must be judenrein.
The
irony of a man whose spokesmen accuse Israel of apartheid saying that his
“vision” of his state is one in which no Israeli foot can trod is simply
astounding.
At a
time when Israeli confidence that it will be possible to actually live
alongside a Palestinian state needs desperately to be built up, words like
these are at the least counterproductive, and at the most destructive.
“The
test of whether the Palestinians will live in peace alongside us is whether
they will allow some of us to live among them,” a senior Israeli official said
some three years ago. His comments came at a time when Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu was indicating that in any future agreement, not all Jews should have
to leave the parts of Judea and Samaria that will come under Palestinian
control, and that those who want to live in places that have deep religious and
historical significance to the Jewish people should be allowed to do so.
Abbas’s
words in Cairo do not exactly enhance a mood of reconciliation. And it is
exactly that mood of reconciliation that needs to be pumped up right now, not
deflated.
One can
debate later whether it will be either wise or safe for a Jewish minority to
live in a future Palestinian state, but to completely rule it out off the bat
does not bespeak a lot of goodwill. And, if the Israeli public is to back a
deal, it will need some sense of goodwill from the other side.
In May
1994, just after the signing of the Oslo Accords and just before Israel handed
Gaza over to Palestinian administrative control, Yasser Arafat gave a speech in
English at a mosque in Johannesburg.
During
that speech Arafat called for a jihad over Jerusalem (though he said later he
meant a “jihad for peace”) and hinted that the Oslo Accords were a tactical
move that could later be discarded.
The
Oslo advocates, though horrified by his words, explained that the Palestinian
leader did not really mean it, that these words were meant for domestic Islamic
consumption only, and that Israel should not overreact and throw out the baby
with the bathwater.
Time
proved that Arafat meant what he said, and that his head – even in those early,
giddy Oslo days – was not exactly in the peace mode.
Efforts
to whitewash his words were misguided.
Unlike
Arafat, Abbas did not call for a jihad in his briefing to journalists in Cairo,
nor did he talk about agreements with Israel as only tactical measures that
could be jettisoned when real victory seemed possible.
But
still, there is something jarring about his declaration that his vision for a
state is not one based on tolerance and mutual respect but rather on the
principle that no Israeli will be allowed to tread in “Palestine.” (Equally
jarring is that comments such as these, and he has made them before, are
greeted with relative equanimity abroad.)
These
words are even more galling considering that in the course of the negotiations
Abbas will surely demand that Israel accept tens of thousands of descendants of
Palestinian refugees, if not under the rubric of a “right of return” (which
Israel will certainly reject), then certainly as a “humanitarian gesture.”
There
is a substantial Arab minority in Israel. If there is to be peace, why is it a
given that there can be no Jewish minority in “Palestine.”