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Transforming Israel
Miko Peled, The Electronic Intifada, 25 March 2008

The apartheid reality: A boy holds a Palestinian flag atop a destroyed building in
Gaza City. (Wissam Nassar/MaanImages)
Now that
Kosovo
is the
newest
independent
state to
emerge
out of
the
ruins of
the
former
Yugoslavia
parallels
are
being
drawn
between
the
Balkans
and the
Middle
East.
One
response
to this
development
came
from
Israeli
Foreign
Minister
Tzipi
Livni
who said
that as
she does
not mind
if the
Palestinians
follow
the
Kosovars
and
declare
statehood;
what
worries
her is
that
Palestinians
will
demand
equal
rights
with
Israelis.
Adding
to
Israeli
fears of
the
impending
demand
for
equal
rights,
in an
article
published
recently
in
The
Guardian,
Ahmad
Khalidi
wrote
that the
state
now
being
offered
to the
Palestinians
is less
attractive
than
ever and
that
Palestinians
may just
opt to
"evoke
Olmert's
worst
nightmare"
and call
for a
"genuine
partnership
of
sharing
the
land."
Both
Livni
and
Olmert
have
stated
that the
possibility
of
equality
keeps
them
awake at
night,
and with
good
cause.
Once the
discourse
moves
from
"self
determination
to that
of
freedom
and
democracy"
as Ahmed
Khalidi
puts it,
the
Zionist
brand of
apartheid
will
have to
fold and
a
secular
democracy
will
have to
emerge
in its
place.
Three
things
will be
argued
here
regarding
the
issue of
transforming
the
racially
segregated
state of
Israel
into a
secular
democratic
state on
all of
historic
Palestine/Israel:
1. In
order to
achieve
a
lasting
resolution
to the
Israeli
Palestinian
conflict,
Israel's
domination
over the
land,
the
people
and the
discourse
must be
brought
to an
end, and
the
parties
must
negotiate
as
equals.
At the
same
time,
any
effort
to bring
about
such a
solution
needs to
take
into
account
that
Israel
will not
permit
such
parity
willingly
and will
use all
of its
power to
maintain
its
domination.
2. As
long as
the main
efforts
to
resolve
the
conflict
focus on
the
partition
of
historic
Palestine/Israel
there
will
never be
a
resolution.
The idea
of
partition
has
become
bankrupt
and
promoting
it
allows
Israel
to
dominate
the
discourse
and to
continue
its
brutal
control
over
Palestinians
and
their
land.
3. What
is known
as the
one-state
solution
is no
longer
one
option
out of
several,
it has
become a
reality;
the
efforts
and the
discourse
must now
focus on
transforming
the
racist,
segregationist
system
in place
today
into a
secular
democratic
system
of
government.
The
resolution
of the
conflict
lies not
in
partition
and more
segregation
but in
severing
the
institutions
of
government
from the
single
identity
of
either
side.
The
state
needs to
serve
and
represent
all
Israelis
and
Palestinians
who live
between
the
Jordan
River
and the
Mediterranean
Sea.
In order
to reach
a
sustainable
resolution
to the
Israeli-Palestinian
conflict,
parties
representing
the two
sides
need to
be able
to
negotiate
as
equals
and to
decide
together
which
solution
would
best
serve
the ten
million
inhabitants
of
Palestine/Israel.
But
Israel's
success
in
maintaining
domination
over the
discourse
has
blocked
any
serious
attempt
at
meaningful
discussion.
Israel
refuses
to allow
any
parity
between
itself
and the
Palestinians,
and will
not
permit
any
serious
discussion
on the
transformation
of the
racist
segregation
that
exists
today
into a
real
democracy.
Israel
has from
its very
founding
worked
relentlessly
to
trivialize
everything
that
took
place
between
the
destruction
of the
Second
Temple
and the
founding
of the
state of
Israel.
This
effort
is
focused
particularly
on
erasing
the
1,400
years of
Arab and
Muslim
presence
in
Palestine.
As far
as
Israelis
are
concerned,
that
presence
was
nothing
but an
historical
misfortune
that was
remedied
upon the
establishment
of the
Jewish
state
and the
return
of Eretz
Israel
to its
rightful
owners
in 1948.
This
effort
was
hugely
successful:
Even
with the
existence
of major
Arab and
Islamic
monuments
still
standing,
and a
significant
Palestinian
presence,
both
Muslim
and
Christian,
few
Israelis
know or
care to
know
about
the
historical
and
cultural
significance
of the
last two
millennia.
From an
Israeli
viewpoint
the
moral,
historical
and
religious
superiority
of the
Jewish
claims
to the
land are
absolute.
Since
the
notion
of
Israeli
supremacy
is deep
rooted
among
Israelis
and it
is a
major
factor
in
Israel's
position
vis-a-vis
the
Palestinians
we can
see why
Israel
has
never
agreed,
and it
is not
likely
that any
Zionist
government
will
ever
agree,
to
negotiate
with the
Palestinians
as
equals.
The
following
example
demonstrates
that
irrespective
of
political
party
and even
among
the
Israeli
peace
camp,
parity
is
frowned
upon. On
the core
issue of
the use
of
force,
Israel
maintains
that
Palestinians
must
refrain
and
refuse
to use
what
meager
military
means
they
posses
in their
struggle
for
their
rights,
and has
succeeded
in
painting
the
Palestinian
struggle
for
freedom
as
terrorism.
(Hence
the
absurd
question
repeated
often by
people
in
Israel
and the
West:
"Where
is the
Palestinian
Gandhi?"
hinting
that the
problem
is the
Palestinians
predisposition
to
resort
to
violence).
Since
there is
no
parity,
and
Israel
maintains
that it
holds
the
moral
high
ground,
it has
the
right to
use
military
force
against
Palestinian
"terrorism."
Israelis
who
refuse
to serve
in the
armed
forces
are not
recognized
by the
state as
conscientious
objectors
but
treated
like
common
criminals;
and even
the
so-called
"peace
camp"
does not
recognize
the
right of
those
refusing
to serve
in the
Israeli
military
(since
Israel
possesses
the
moral
high
ground
there is
no need
for an
Israeli
Gandhi).
Israel's
approach
towards
any
resolution
of the
conflict
is based
on the
premise
that
Israel
will
determine
the
nature
of the
solution,
and the
Palestinians
must be
resigned
to
accept
it or
suffer
the
consequences.
Israel
will
permit
the
Palestinians
a level
of
independence
that
Israel
will
determine
based on
its own
perception
of
Palestinian
compliance
with
Israeli
interests.
The best
Palestinians
may
expect
is that
Israel
will at
some
point
permit a
limited
autonomy
on
selected
areas of
historic
Palestine,
areas
selected
by
Israel
alone.
The
possibility
that the
two
parties
need to
reach a
solution
as equal
partners
is, as
was
mentioned
earlier,
not
acceptable.
Why the
Palestinians
have
thus far
agreed
to be
led by
Israeli
interests
and to
be
dominated
by
Israeli
politics
is
beyond
our
scope
here,
but what
is amply
clear is
that the
best
interests
of the
Palestinians
count
for
nothing.
Israel
has no
intention
of
willingly
allowing
for a
solution
that is
good for
both
parties,
and
insists
on
pushing
its own
narrow
and
shortsighted
interests
to the
limit.
The
absurd
situation
where
partition
is
regarded
as the
only
viable
solution
to the
conflict,
and at
the same
time it
is
clearly
not a
viable
solution,
allows
Israel
to
continue
to
impose
its will
on all
ten
million
inhabitants
under
its
rule,
and it
renders
any
struggle
to end
Zionist
domination
over
Palestine
useless.
When the
efforts
to bring
an end
to the
conflict
focus on
transforming
the
militant
Zionist
regime
currently
in place
into a
free and
pluralistic
democracy,
it is
likely
to
develop
more
impetus
and
eventually
succeed,
even in
the face
of
Zionist
resistance.
History
has
shown
that as
long as
the
effort
to end
Israeli
domination
over
Palestine
remains
focused
on the
notion
of
partition,
or the
two-state
solution,
it is
doomed
to be
ineffective.
The
two-state
solution
is a fig
leaf
that
Israel
uses to
cover
its
policies
of land
confiscation
and
brutal
oppression.
Israel's
policies
of
segregation
are
firmly
linked
to the
chauvinistic
notion
that
Israel
should
remain
in
control
of the
land and
its
resources.
We would
do well
to note
that the
notion
of
partition
serves
only the
shortsighted
Zionist
policies
of power
and
domination,
but does
not take
in to
consideration
the long
term
interests
of
Israelis
and
Palestinians.
Since
Israel
claims
security
to be
its top
priority,
it will
always
claim
that for
security
reasons
it
cannot
give up
a
certain
hill or
valley
only to
secure
more
land for
its
illegal
settlements
in
Jerusalem
or the
West
Bank.
Israel
also
maintains
the sole
right to
determine
who will
represent
the
Palestinians
as
Israel's
negotiating
partner,
using
once
again
so-called
"security"
considerations.
Israel
has and
in all
likelihood
will
continue
to
delegitimize
(not to
say
assassinate
or at
least
arrest)
anyone
who is
unwilling
to
accept
its
right to
total
domination
of the
land and
the
discourse.
This is
at the
root of
the why
real,
good
faith
negotiations
are yet
to take
place.
The
arguments
against
a single
state
may have
their
merit,
but they
fail to
acknowledge
one
thing:
that the
single
state is
not one
of
several
options
to be
considered
in the
future;
the
single
state is
already
a
reality.
Even
though
the
state of
Israel
denies
it
vehemently,
all ten
million
people
who live
between
the
Jordan
River
and the
Mediterranean
Sea are
subjects
of the
Jewish
state.
Israeli
insistence
that a
Palestinian
state is
in
Israel's
own best
interest
and that
Israel
is
committed
to the
creation
of a
Palestinian
state is
a poor
smoke
screen
and in
light of
the
facts on
the
ground
this
argument
barely
holds
water.
The
different
sets of
laws and
the
travel
restrictions
that
separate
Palestinians
from
Israelis,
allow
Israel
to
create
the
illusion
that
there
are two
(or
perhaps
three,
counting
Gaza)
political
entities
that
govern
the two
people.
Sadly,
the
reality
is that
different
arms of
the
Israeli
government,
not
separate
independent
governments,
govern
the two
people.
Palestinians
are
governed
by the
behemoth
called
the
Israeli
security
system
that
Israel
has
created
and
maintains
at high
cost for
the sole
purpose
of
governing
a
population
against
its
will.
Israelis
are
governed
by a
radical,
chauvinistic
and
racially
discriminatory
regime
that
pretends
to be
democratic.
In order
to avert
the
possibility
of
losing
its
power,
Israel
has in
effect
placed a
veto on
any
discussion
of the
transformation
of the
Jewish
state
into a
secular
democracy
that
would
serve
all of
the
people
living
within
it.
Furthermore,
Israel
will not
engage
in any
discussion
on the
atrocities
it
committed
during
the war
of 1948,
nor will
it
engage
in
discussion
on the
reversal
of the
exile
forced
upon
Palestinians
in 1948.
Israelis
have
been
taught
that
even
mentioning
the
refugees
and the
events
of 1948
constitutes
treason,
and few
are
willing
to
discuss
this,
much
less
place
the
responsibility
on
Israel.
The
official
line is
that the
"Arabs"
rejected
the UN
partition
and the
"Arabs"
convinced
the
Palestinians
to leave
their
homes
and
their
land and
none of
this has
anything
to do
with
Israel.
By
ignoring
the
refugee
issue,
Israel
has in
fact
deliberately
shut the
door on
a
solution
that is
both
pragmatic
and
just.
But it
is hard
to
imagine
that any
resolution
regarding
Palestine
can be
reached
and
sustained
unless
the
refugees
are
represented
and
unless
they are
part of
the
solution.
The
oppressor-oppressed
relationship
between
the two
nations
takes a
heavy
toll on
both
Israelis
and
Palestinians,
albeit
in
different
ways.
Only
once the
two
sides
are
freed
from
this
burden
will
they be
able to
find a
solution
that is
acceptable
and has
a chance
to
withstand
the test
of time.
This is
a tough
challenge
and to
overcome
it will
require
both
people
to defy
the
occupation
and
demand
that the
occupation
apparatus,
the
Israeli
"security
system,"
be
dismantled.
As
things
stand
today,
Israelis
are
either
oblivious
to
Palestinian
suffering
or they
condone
it. The
Palestinians
for
their
part are
overwhelmed
by the
magnitude
of the
brutal
force
used
against
them.
The
nature
of the
solution
must
naturally
be
linked
to the
efforts
to reach
it. As
things
stand
today,
Israel
makes
sure
that any
efforts
placed
towards
the
resolution
of the
conflict
are
targeted
towards
the
partition
of
Palestine,
which in
all
likelihood
will
never
occur.
Even
though
these
efforts
yield no
results
the West
stands
behind
Israel
and
mention
of a
secular
democracy
is
deemed
anti-Semitic.
While
the
official
stand of
the two
parties
is in
favor of
this
solution,
in the
case of
Israel
at least
this
stand is
clearly
disingenuous.
While
Israeli
rhetoric
claims
to favor
the
partition
of the
land,
Israeli
governments
have
clearly
acted in
a way
that
negates
the
possibility
of a
Palestinian
state to
ever
emerge,
and has
in fact
sealed
the fate
of the
two
nations
to live
in one
state,
ruled by
a single
government.
Israel
has
acted
quite
deliberately
to
achieve
this,
and it
has done
so in
two
ways:
education
and
infrastructure.
If one
takes a
look at
textbooks
taught
in
Israeli
schools,
one will
be hard
pressed
to see a
map of
Israel
in which
any
Palestinian
territory
is
delineated.
Israeli
students
learn,
and
quite
accurately
so, that
the
whole of
"Eretz
Israel"
is
included
in the
state of
Israel.
Palestinian
monuments
and
institutions
are
rarely
marked
and
Palestinian
towns,
the ones
that are
found in
these
books,
are
described
simply
as
"non-Jewish."
The
Palestinians
are
portrayed
as
either
refugees
or as
poor,
backward
people
who are
not
modern
and
educated
like the
Israelis
and the
proof
for
their
backwardness:
they are
unable
to step
out of
their
own
dusty
and
congested
villages
into the
modern
world.
Palestinian
national
aspirations
are
ridiculed
and
their
identity
as a
nation
is, so
the
official
line
claims,
a new
phenomenon
that
emerged
only
after
the 1967
War.
Palestinians
who are
citizens
of the
state
are
referred
to as
"the
Arabs of
Israel,"
a term
that
serves
two
purposes:
to
disassociate
them
from the
Palestinians
who live
in the
lands
occupied
in 1967,
and from
any
national
aspirations
they may
have.
The
second
purpose
is to
portray
the
Palestinian
citizens
of
Israel
as
people
who have
no
unique
national
identity
other
than
being
Arabs
whose
existence
in "our"
country
is
coincidental.
This
lends
itself
to the
claim
that the
"Arabs"
have 22
states
and Jews
only
one,
therefore
if they
don't
like it
they
should
leave
and go
live in
some
"Arab"
country.
As for
the
infrastructure,
just as
Israel
had done
in the
aftermath
of the
1948
War,
towns,
neighborhoods
and
highways
are
being
built
for Jews
only on
Palestinian
land.
Having
continued
this
policy
of major
expansion
into the
West
Bank,
Israel
has
blurred
the
lines
that
used to
delineate
between
the West
Bank,
where a
possible
Palestinian
state
might
have
been
established,
and the
rest of
Israel.
Towns
with
massive
housing
projects,
and
industrial
complexes
along
with
modern
highways
connecting
them to
each
other
and to
Israel
proper
were
built at
a huge
expense
and
represent
a
massive
investment.
Although
the
mainstream
Israeli-left
still
holds
that
these
may be
removed
one day
when the
illusive
peace is
achieved
through
partition,
they
give
permanent
status
to the
existence
of the
Jewish
settlements
on land
occupied
in 1967.
In order
to avert
any
attempt
to cut
these
areas
off from
Israel,
Israel
also
invests
in a
massive
defense
apparatus
on the
one hand
and
public
relations
campaigns
on the
other.
The two
work in
unison
to
protect,
legitimize
and as
mentioned
before
give
permanent
status
to this
expansion.
The
Zionist
education
system
and the
massive
investment
combined
have
been a
huge
success,
but now
the
Jewish
state
has to
deal
with a
segregated,
disenfranchised
"minority"
that
makes up
half of
the
population.
Accepting
the
transformation
the
Israel
into a
democratic
state as
the
preferred
solution
to the
conflict
will
allow
for a
more
effective
struggle
to end
the
occupation,
which is
the
de facto
apartheid
regime
that
Israel
has in
place.
There is
a need
to move
away
from the
default
position
of so
many
peace
groups
that
claim
the
two-state
solution
is the
ultimate
solution.
Even if
at one
point
this was
a
realistic
solution
it is no
longer
the
case;
and even
if it
is, as
many
sincere
peace
activists
claim,
the
preferred
solution,
because
of
Israel's
shortsighted
expansionist
policies
it has
become
defunct.
Peace
activists
would do
well to
recognize
this and
unite
behind
an
anti-apartheid
movement
to
transform
Israel
into a
secular
democracy.
One
constantly
hears
talk of
ending
the
impasse
in the
peace
process,
talk
that is
based on
the myth
of the
existence
of such
a
process,
the end
of which
will be
a
Palestinian
state
living
in peace
alongside
Israel.
But what
is it
about
this
seemingly
perfect
solution
that
makes it
so
elusive?
From the
1947 UN
resolution
to
Partition
Palestine,
to the
more
recent
Road
Map,
every
plan to
separate
the land
into two
political
entities
has not
only
failed
but also
fueled
more
bloodshed.
As we
look at
the
various
proposals
we see
that
each one
has
allowed
for
greater
Israeli
domination
of the
discourse
and of
the land
at the
expense
of
Palestinians
while
demanding
Palestinian
acceptance.
In other
words,
every
so-called
"peace
plan"
has
deepened
the
Zionist
hold on
the land
and its
resources.
The 1947
partition
plan was
a poorly
designed
plan
that had
no
chance
of ever
surviving
forcing
a
solution
that
would
give the
majority
of the
land to
what was
then the
Jewish
minority.
As
though
this was
not
folly
enough,
close to
400,000
Palestinians
would
have had
to live
within
the
boundaries
of the
state
designated
for the
Jewish
population.
As it
turned
out, the
Zionist
leadership
had a
plan and
at the
first
opportunity
the
Israeli
militia
began to
force
these
people,
who had
no say
in
determining
their
future,
out of
their
homes
and away
from
their
land.
The more
recent
proposals
offer
the
Palestinians,
who
today
comprise
about 50
percent
of the
population
somewhere
between
10
percent
to 15
percent
of their
historic
homeland.
The
latest
census
published
in
Haaretz
in
February
2008
states
that the
total
population
of the
West
Bank and
Gaza
combined
is now
up to
four
million;
the
Palestinian
population
within
the
state of
Israel
proper
is close
to 1.5
million.
The
total
population
of
Israel
without
the
Palestinians
citizens
is
around
five
million.
Still
the five
million
Jewish
citizens
are
given
domain
over
more
than 90
percent
of the
land and
resources,
and if
the
Palestinians
want
"peace"
they
must
settle
for the
rest.
Besides
all of
this
there
are the
Palestinian
refugees
whose
voices
and
their
rights
have
been
silenced
with
brutal
force
over the
years,
but
without
whom no
resolution
can be
achieved.
A mutual
struggle
for
equality
within a
single
state
holds
the
promise
of a
resolution
to the
Israeli-Palestinian
conflict.
The
bloody
conflict
between
Israel
and the
Palestinians
who they
rule
with
brutal
force,
can be
brought
to an
end
through
defiance
of the
Israeli
security
apparatus
that is
charged
with
enforcing
the
oppression.
The
defiance
of the
occupation
through
a joint
struggle
with a
dedicated
focus
towards
the
transformation
of
Israel
into a
secular
democracy
holds
the
promise
of a
great
future
for both
nations.
The idea
of
Israelis
and
Palestinians
living
in a
single
democracy
is
considered
by many
people
to be
naive,
and
perhaps
it is.
But one
has to
wonder:
Does the
current
Zionist
brand of
apartheid,
breeding
as it
does
fear and
suspicion,
offer
any
future
at all?
The
transformation
of
Israel
into a
democratic,
pluralistic,
secular
state
that
will
offer
equal
citizenship
to all
ten
million
people
who
reside
within
historic
Palestine
can
provide
a sound
solution
to the
conflict.
Furthermore,
though
morality
is
seldom
mentioned
as a
political
objective,
it is
morally
right to
turn
Israel
into a
state
that is
a
function
of the
will of
the
people
rather
than it
being
the
enforcer
of its
own will
on the
people.
It is
morally
right to
bring
the two
nations
to a
place of
equal
opportunity
and give
them an
equal
voice in
determining
their
shared
future.
When
Israelis
and
Palestinians
work
together
for the
benefit
of their
own
future
and the
future
of their
children
there
will be
no
problem
they
cannot
solve.
Both
people
have
proven
that
they are
capable
of great
things,
and one
may
expect
that the
democracy
they
create
will
serve
them
both
well.
Together
the two
nations
will
secure
their
mutual
rights,
their
shared
destiny
and
their
rich
heritage.
On a
personal
note I
want to
add the
following
thoughts:
As an
Israeli
that was
raised
on the
Zionist
ideal of
a Jewish
state, I
know how
hard it
is for
many
Jews and
Palestinians
to let
go of
the
dream of
having a
state
that is
exclusively
"our
own." In
my
opinion
there is
something
that is
greater
than
that
dream:
living
in peace
and
raising
our
children
in our
shared
homeland;
teaching
children
about
the rich
traditions
of this
land and
the
heritage
left to
them by
their
ancestors.
Every
church,
mosque
and
synagogue
across
the
country
tells a
story;
ancient
cities
and
citadels
are
everywhere,
and
every
corner
in the
land
bares
the mark
of great
kings
and
philosophers.
All of
these
make up
the rich
mosaic
of our
homeland,
and I
emphasize
our
homeland,
whether
we are
Palestinian
or
Israeli,
Muslim,
Jewish,
or
Christian.
Miko
Peled is
an
Israeli
peace
activist
and
writer
living
in the
US. He
is
co-founder
of the
Elbanna
Peled
Foundation
in
memory
of
Smadar
Elhanan
and Abir
Aramin.
Peled is
the son
of the
late
Israeli
General
Matti
Peled.
Please
direct
all
correspondence
to
mikopeled
A T aol
D O T
com.
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