Hollow visions of Palestine’s
future
Peace will need more than David Grossman -- or Uri Avnery
By Jonathan Cook in Nazareth
11/17/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- David Grossman’s widely
publicised speech at the annual memorial rally for Yitzhak
Rabin earlier this month has prompted some fine
deconstruction of his “words of peace” from critics.
Grossman, one of Israel’s foremost writers and a figurehead
for its main peace movement, Peace Now, personifies the
caring, tortured face of Zionism that so many of the
country’s apologists -- in Israel and abroad, trenchant and
wavering alike -- desperately want to believe survives,
despite the evidence of the Qanas, Beit Hanouns and other
massacres committed by the Israeli army against Arab
civilians. Grossman makes it possible to believe, for a
moment, that the Ariel Sharons and Ehud Olmerts are not the
real upholders of Zionism’s legacy, merely a temporary
deviation from its true path.
In reality, of course, Grossman draws from the same
ideological well-spring as Israel’s founders and its
greatest warriors. He embodies the same anguished values of
Labor Zionism that won Israel international legitimacy just
as it was carrying out one of history’s great acts of ethnic
cleansing: the expulsion of some 750,000 Palestinians, or 80
per cent the native population, from the borders of the
newly established Jewish state.
(Even critical historians usually gloss over the fact that
the percentage of the Palestinian population expelled by the
Israeli army was, in truth, far higher. Many Palestinians
forced out during the 1948 war ended up back inside Israel’s
borders either because under the terms of the 1949 armistice
with Jordan they were annexed to Israel, along with a small
but densely populated area of the West Bank known as the
Little Triangle, or because they managed to slip back across
the porous border with Lebanon and Syria in the months
following the war and hide inside the few Palestinian
villages inside Israel that had not been destroyed.)
Remove the halo with which he has been crowned by the
world’s liberal media and Grossman is little different from
Zionism’s most distinguished statesmen, those who also
ostentatiously displayed their hand-wringing or peace
credentials as, first, they dispossessed the Palestinian
people of most of their homeland; then dispossessed them of
the rest; then ensured the original act of ethnic cleansing
would not unravel; and today are working on the slow
genocide of the Palestinians, through a combined strategy of
their physical destruction and their dispersion as a people.
David Ben Gurion, for example, masterminded the ethnic
cleansing of Palestine in 1948 before very publicly
agonising over the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza --
even if only because of the demographic damage that would be
done to the Jewish state as a result.
Golda Meir refused to recognise the existence of the
Palestinian people as she launched the settlement enterprise
in the occupied territories, but did recognise the anguish
of Jewish soldiers forced to “shoot and cry” to defend the
settlements. Or as she put it: “We can forgive you [the
Palestinians] for killing our sons. But we will never
forgive you for making us kill yours.”
Yitzhak Rabin, Grossman’s most direct inspiration, may have
initiated a “peace process” at Oslo (even if only the
terminally optimistic today believe that peace was really
its goal), but as a soldier and politician he also
personally oversaw the ethnic cleansing of Palestinian
cities like Lid in 1948; he ordered tanks into Arab villages
inside Israel during the Land Day protests of 1976, leading
to the deaths of half a dozen unarmed Palestinian citizens;
and in 1988 he ordered his army to crush the first intifada
by “breaking the bones” of Palestinians, including women and
children, who threw stones at the occupying troops.
Like them, Grossman conspires in these original war crimes
by prefering to hold on to what Israel has, or even extend
it further, rather than confront the genuinely painful truth
of his responsibility for the fate of the Palestinians,
including the hundreds of thousands of refugees and the
millions of their descendants.
Every day that Grossman denies a Right of Return for the
Palestinians, even as he supports a Law of Return for the
Jews, he excuses and maintains the act of ethnic cleansing
that dispossessed the Palestinian refugees more than half a
century ago.
And every day that he sells a message of peace to Israelis
who look to him for moral guidance that fails to offer the
Palestinians a just solution -- and that takes instead as
its moral yardstick the primacy of Israel’s survival as a
Jewish state -- then he perverts the meaning of peace.
Another Israeli peace activist, Uri Avnery, diagnoses the
problem posed by Grossman and his ilk with acute insight in
a recent article. Although Grossman wants peace in the
abstract, Avnery observes, he offers no solutions as to how
it might be secured in concrete terms and no clues about
what sacrifices he or other Israelis will have to make to
achieve it. His “peace” is empty of content, a mere
rhetorical device.
Rather than suggest what Israel should talk about to the
Palestinians’ elected leaders, Grossman argues that Israel
should talk over their heads to the “moderates”,
Palestinians with whom Israel’s leaders can do business. The
goal is to find Palestinians, any Palestinians, who will
agree to Israel’s “peace”. The Oslo process in new clothes.
Grossman’s speech looks like a gesture towards a solution
only because Israel’s current leaders do not want to speak
with anybody on the Palestinian side, whether “moderate” or
“fanatic”. The only interlocutor is Washington, and a
passive one at that.
If Grossman’s words are as as “hollow” as those of Ehud
Olmert, Avnery offers no clue as to reasons for the author’s
evasiveness. In truth, Grossman cannot deal in solutions
because there is almost no constituency in Israel for the
kind of peace plan that might prove acceptable even to the
Palestinian “moderates” Grossman so wants his government to
talk to.
Were Grossman to set out the terms of his vision of peace,
it might become clear to all that the problem is not
Palestinian intransigence.
Although surveys regularly show that a majority of Israelis
support a Palestinian state, they are conducted by pollsters
who never specify to their sampling audience what might be
entailed by the creation of the state posited in their
question. Equally the pollsters do not require from their
Israeli respondents any information about what kind of
Palestinian state each envisages. This makes the nature of
the Palestinian state being talked about by Israelis almost
as empty of content as the alluring word “peace”.
After all, according to most Israelis, Gazans are enjoying
the fruits of the end of Israel’s occupation. And according
to Olmert, his proposed “convergence” -- a very limited
withdrawal from the West Bank -- would have established the
basis for a Palestinian state there too.
When Israelis are asked about their view of more specific
peace plans, their responses are overwhelmingly negative. In
2003, for example, 78 per cent of Israeli Jews said they
favoured a two-state solution, but when asked if they
supported the Geneva Initiative -- which envisions a very
circumscribed Palestinian state on less than all of the West
Bank and Gaza -- only a quarter did so. Barely more than
half of the supposedly leftwing voters of Labor backed the
Geneva Initiative.
This low level of support for a barely viable Palestinian
state contrasts with the consistently high levels of support
among Israeli Jews for a concrete, but very different,
solution to the conflict: “transfer”, or ethnic cleansing.
In opinion polls, 60 per cent of Israeli Jews regularly
favour the emigration of Arab citizens from the
as-yet-undetermined borders of the Jewish state.
So when Grossman warns us that “a peace of no choice” is
inevitable and that “the land will be divided, a Palestinian
state will arise”, we should not be lulled into false hopes.
Grossman’s state is almost certainly as “hollow” as his
audience’s idea of peace.
Grossman’s refusal to confront the lack of sympathy among
the Israeli public for the Palestinians, or challenge it
with solutions that will require of Israelis that they make
real sacrifices for peace, deserves our condemnation. He and
the other gurus of Israel’s mainstream peace movement,
writers like Amos Oz and A B Yehoshua, have failed in their
duty to articulate to Israelis a vision of a fair future and
a lasting peace.
So what is the way out of the impasse created by the
beatification of figures like Grossman? What other routes
are open to those of us who refuse to believe that Grossman
stands at the very precipice before which any sane peace
activist would tremble? Can we look to other members of the
Israeli left for inspiration?
Uri Avnery again steps forward. He claims that there are
only two peace camps in Israel: a Zionist one, based on a
national consensus rooted in the Peace Now of David
Grossman; and what he calls a “radical peace camp” led by …
well, himself and his group of a few thousand Israelis known
as Gush Shalom.
By this, one might be tempted to infer that Avnery styles
his own peace bloc as non-Zionist or even anti-Zionist.
Nothing could be further from the truth, however. Avnery and
most, though not all, of his supporters in Israel are
staunchly in the Zionist camp.
The bottom line in any peace for Avnery is the continued
existence and success of Israel as a Jewish state. That
rigidly limits his ideas about what sort of peace a
“radical” Israeli peace activist ought to be pursuing.
Like Grossman, Avnery supports a two-state solution because,
in both their views, the future of the Jewish state cannot
be guaranteed without a Palestinian state alongside it. This
is why Avnery finds himself agreeing with 90 per cent of
Grossman’s speech. If the Jews are to prosper as a
demographic (and democratic) majority in their state, then
the non-Jews must have a state too, one in which they can
exercise their own, separate sovereign rights and,
consequently, abandon any claims on the Jewish state.
However, unlike Grossman, Avnery not only supports a
Palestinian state in the abstract but a “just” Palestinian
state in the concrete, meaning for him the evacuation of all
the settlers and a full withdrawal by the Israeli army to
the 1967 lines. Avnery’s peace plan would give back east
Jerusalem and the whole of the West Bank and Gaza to the
Palestinians.
The difference between Grossman and Avnery on this point can
be explained by their different understanding of what is
needed to ensure the Jewish state’s survival. Avnery
believes that a lasting peace will hold only if the
Palestinian state meets the minimal aspirations of the
Palestinian people. In his view, the Palestinians can be
persuaded under the right leadership to settle for 22 per
cent of their historic homeland -- and in that way the
Jewish state will be saved.
Of itself, there is nothing wrong with Avnery’s position. It
has encouraged him to take a leading and impressive role in
the Israeli peace movement for many decades. Bravely he has
crossed over national confrontation lines to visit the
besieged Palestinian leadership when other Israelis have
shied away. He has taken a courageous stand against the
separation wall, facing down Israeli soldiers alongside
Palestinian, Israeli and foreign peace activists. And
through his journalism he has highlighted the Palestinian
cause and educated Israelis, Palestinians and outside
observers about the conflict. For all these reasons, Avnery
should be praised as a genuine peacemaker.
But there is a serious danger that, because Palestinian
solidarity movements have misunderstood Avnery’s motives,
they may continue to be guided by him beyond the point where
he is contributing to a peaceful solution or a just future
for the Palestinians. In fact, that moment may be upon us.
During the Oslo years, Avnery was desperate to see Israel
complete its supposed peace agreement with the Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat. As he often argued, he believed that
Arafat alone could unify the Palestinians and persuade them
to settle for the only two-state solution on the table: a
big Israel, alongside a small Palestine.
In truth, Avnery’s position was no so far from that of the
distinctly unradical Oslo crowd of Rabin, Peres and Yossi
Beilin. All four of them regarded Arafat as the Palestinian
strongman who could secure Israel’s future: Rabin hoped
Arafat would police the Palestinians on Israel’s behalf in
their ghettoes; while Avnery hoped Arafat would forge a
nation, democratic or otherwise, that would contain the
Palestinians’ ambitions for territory and a just solution to
the refugee problem.
Now with Arafat gone, Avnery and Gush Shalom have lost their
ready-made solution to the conflict. Today, they still back
two states and support engagement with Hamas. They have also
not deviated from their long-standing positions on the main
issues -- Jerusalem, borders, settlements and refugees --
even if they no longer have the glue, Arafat, that was
supposed to make it all stick together.
But without Arafat as their strongman, Gush Shalom have no
idea about how to address the impending issues of
factionalism and potential civil war that Israel’s meddling
in the Palestinian political process are unleashing.
They will also have no response if the tide on the
Palestinian street turns against the two-state mirage
offered by Oslo. If Palestinians look for other ways out of
the current impasse, as they are starting to do, Avnery will
quickly become an obstacle to peace rather than its great
defender.
In fact, such a development is all but certain. Few
knowledgeable observers of the conflict believe the
two-state solution based on the 1967 lines is feasible any
longer, given Israel’s entrenchment of its settlers in
Jerusalem and the West Bank, now numbering nearly half a
million. Even the Americans have publicly admitted that most
of the settlements cannot be undone. It is only a matter of
time before Palestinians make the same calculation.
What will Avnery, and the die-hards of Gush Shalom, do in
this event? How will they respond if Palestinians start to
clamour for a single state embracing both Israelis and
Palestinians, for example?
The answer is that the “radical” peaceniks will quickly need
to find another solution to protect their Jewish state.
There are not too many available:
* There is the “Carry on with the occupation regardless” of
Binyamin Netanyahu and Likud;
* There is the “Seal the Palestinians into ghettoes and hope
eventually they will leave of their own accord”, in its
Kadima (hard) and Labor (soft) incarnations;
* And there is the “Expel them all” of Avigdor Lieberman,
Olmert’s new Minister of Strategic Threats.
Paradoxically, a variation on the last option may be the
most appealing to the disillusioned peaceniks of Gush
Shalom. Lieberman has his own fanatical and moderate
positions, depending on his audience and the current
realities. To some he says he wants all Palestinians
expelled from Greater Israel so that it is available only
for Jews. But to others, particularly in the diplomatic
arena, he suggests a formula of territorial and population
swaps between Israel and the Palestinians that would create
a “Separation of Nations”. Israel would get the settlements
back in return for handing over some small areas of Israel,
like the Little Triangle, densely populated with
Palestinians.
A generous version of such an exchange -- though a violation
of international law -- would achieve a similar outcome to
Gush Shalom’s attempts to create a viable Palestinian state
alongside Israel. Even if Avnery is unlikely to be lured
down this path himself, there is a real danger that others
in the “radical” peace camp will prefer this kind of
solution over sacrificing their commitment at any price to
the Jewish state.
But fortunately, whatever Avnery claims, his peace camp is
not the only alternative to the sham agonising of Peace Now.
Avnery is no more standing at the very edge of the abyss
than Grossman. The only abyss Avnery is looking into is the
demise of his Jewish state.
Other Zionist Jews, in Israel and abroad, have been
grappling with the same kinds of issues as Avnery but begun
to move in a different direction, away from the doomed
two-state solution towards a binational state. A few
prominent intellectuals like Tony Judt, Meron Benvenisti and
Jeff Halper have publicly begun to question their commitment
to Zionism and consider whether it is not part of the
problem rather than the solution.
They are not doing this alone. Small groups of Israelis,
smaller than Gush Shalom, are abandoning Zionism and
coalescing around new ideas about how Israeli Jews and
Palestinians might live peacefully together, including
inside a single state. They include Taayush, Anarchists
Against the Wall, Zochrot and elements within the Israeli
Committee against House Demolitions and Gush Shalom itself.
Avnery hopes that his peace camp may be the small wheel that
can push the larger wheel of organisations like Peace Now in
a new direction and thereby shift Israeli opinion towards a
real two-state solution. Given the realities on the ground,
that seems highly unlikely. But one day, wheels currently
smaller than Gush Shalom may begin to push Israel in the
direction needed for peace.
Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in
Nazareth, Israel. His book,
Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish and
Democratic State
is published by Pluto Press. His website is
www.jkcook.net
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