Palestinian Leaders Must Halt the Hatred. By Andrea Levin.
Palestinian leaders must halt the hatred. By Andrea Levin. Boston Globe, August 8, 2013.
Levin:
As
renewed negotiations get underway between Israelis and Palestinians, it’s vital
for the success of the endeavor to identify what went wrong in earlier
discussions.
Secretary
of State John Kerry wisely stressed in his July 30 briefing with Israeli and
Palestinian leaders the central aim of “ending the conflict” and he emphasized
as well the “end of claims” against Israel. These are basic tenets of any
rational definition of peace and would mean, finally, the end of the drive to
remove the Jewish state. They would mean genuine acceptance by Palestinian
Arabs of the sovereign rights of a Jewish nation in what is an overwhelmingly
Muslim-dominated region.
Notwithstanding
the many previous signed agreements, hand shakes and photo ops, such acceptance
has been largely cosmetic. While Palestinian leaders have endorsed coexistence
in speeches for Western audiences, including at Washington think tanks and
international gatherings, too often for the audience that counts most —
Palestinian Arabs who live next door to Israel and who need to hear their
leaders’ clear affirmation of the legitimacy of the Jewish state — the message
has been the opposite.
Indeed,
the Palestinian leadership over the two decades since the signing of the
landmark Oslo Accords in 1993 has failed disastrously to prepare the
Palestinian people for peace with their Jewish neighbors.
Ironically,
before Oslo, there was no Palestinian-controlled TV to demonize Jews, but after
Israel’s ceding of territory and authority, official media outlets came into
existence that regularly glorify terrorist violence, deny Jewish ties to the
land of Israel, denigrate Jews in crude stereotypes, vow expulsion of the Jews
and claim all the territory between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea
as Palestine.
Regrettably,
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas continues to play a double game.
Thus on May 26, 2013, at the World Economic Forum, Abbas offered up the
familiar public rhetoric, declaring: “We don’t teach and we don’t educate our
children to hate or even discriminate against any religion, be it Judaism or
any other.” He said: “We strive to spread the culture of peace among our
people.”
Yet,
for example, on July 3 another of hundreds of broadcasts on Palestinian
television directly controlled by Abbas’s Palestinian Authority featured young
girls reciting crude anti-Jewish bigotry:
Oh, you
who were brought up on spilling blood
You
have been condemned to humiliation and hardship.
Oh Sons
of Zion, oh most evil among creations
Oh
barbaric monkeys, wretched pigs. (Palestinian Media Watch)
The
murderers of Jews are constantly extolled in what is cast as a fight to the
death with Israel. On May 9, 2013, for instance, a TV segment was devoted to
praising and thanking Abdallah Barghouti, currently serving 67 life sentences
for his participation in such terror attacks as the Sbarro Pizzeria bombing in
Jerusalem. In that attack families were singled out for particular slaughter
and included Malki Roth, a 15 year old who was lunching with her best friend.
They’re buried next to one another.
Extreme
fabrications regarding Jewish history may seem to the uninitiated too ludicrous
to take seriously – the Temple Mount, Judaism’s holiest site, is said to have
no Jewish connection despite vast archeological, biblical and other evidence.
Jesus is said to be a Canaanite Palestinian teaching Islam, a claim that
repudiates Jewish and Christian history together. Moses is said to be Muslim.
Newspaper columns and broadcasts in official Palestinian media deny any ancient
Jewish ties to any of the land of Israel, relentlessly altering place names and
substituting Muslim ones. The ferocity of the campaigns in every aspect of
society, saturating Palestinians in false beliefs – and hatred – make the
prospects of normalization almost impossible to imagine. Indeed, the content of
the invective against Jews and Israel is so violent – one Gazan speaker urged
the harvesting of Jewish skulls – that many in the West seem prone to averting
their gaze from what is clearly genocidal rhetoric with vague claims that
progress in the peace talks will help do away with the unpleasantness.
But the
cycle of indoctrination and violence cannot be broken without facing up to its
existence, to the need for Western media attention and, above all, to the
necessity for the Palestinians’ own leadership to halt the hatred and declare
clearly in Arabic to Arab audiences that Israel and its people have a rightful
place in the Middle East.