Saturday, April 22, 2017

The Jewish Question: Part Four


Whose problem is it?
It may be true that every problem has a solution. In international politics, every problem has a solution provided those capable of solving it are willing to solve it. Whose problem is the Israel-Palestine conflict?

It is definitely the primary problem of the Palestinians. Since 1948, they are either refugees in exile, citizens with no civil rights in occupied territories or open-air prisoners in Gaza. With the growing anti-Islam sentiment in the non-Muslim world, rift between Iran and other Arab nations, and burning Syria next door; media space for the Palestine problem is shrinking.

It’s also Israel’s problem. The state of Israel is only partially recognised and partially legal. Jerusalem, its supposed capital, does not have a single embassy. Israel is prone to attacks from suicide bombers and smuggled rockets. When a democratic nation requires the continued presence of an army to maintain peace, there is something terribly wrong with it.

Americans may not realise it, but Israel is their self-inflicted problem created by its global interference strategy. On 09/11, nearly 3000 Americans- most of them civilians- lost their lives partly as a consequence of America’s support for Israel. Before planning the attack, Usama Bin Laden, a fairly logical man for a terrorist, had opened all his cards in a 1998 fatwa. Talking about the Crusader-Zionist alliance, the fatwa said: “If the Americans’ aims behind these wars are religious and economic, the aim is also to serve the Jews’ petty state and divert attention from its occupation of Jerusalem and murder of Muslims there.” UBL went on to accuse America of destroying and fragmenting Iraq and other Arab states in the neighbourhood to guarantee Israel’s survival. The fatwa asked the followers of Allah to kill Americans, civilian and military, to liberate the mosque in Jerusalem and to kick out American armies from the land of Islam. (In 2003, America quietly complied with one of the Fatwa conditions by removing its military bases from Saudi Arabia). Though UBL is dead, and Al-Qaeda weak, this anger and sentiment is shared by millions of Muslims.

Israel-Palestine is everybody’s problem, including yours and mine. We are now an indivisible part of the international community. Our daily lives are affected by international politics as never before. Some foreign power decides if I can carry my laptop or a bottle of water on a flight. All of us live in places which can be targeted by nuclear or ‘mother-of-all bombs’. Just because the Israel-Palestine issue is not located next door; our willingness to ignore it or pass superficial judgement based on whichever biased media we are exposed to, may result in our silent support for injustice. Mute (or dumb) support allows a precedent to be set. And then a similar injustice may be perpetrated on us. By then it will be too late to wake up and begin protesting.

Opinions are formed by a vocal minority, not by a silent majority.

Two-state solution
Since 1947, a two-state solution has been discussed for the Israel-Palestine issue. As mentioned in an earlier part, the UN had offered to split Palestine into three parts. (a) A Jewish state (b) An Arab state and (c) Jerusalem governed by an international body. This partition would have happened at the same time as the birth of Israel. In 1948, the offer, to give the Palestinians 44% of the land that was essentially theirs, was considered so outrageous that Palestinians had refused it. With the passage of time, and Israel’s continuous capture of land through war conquests, military encroachment, annexation and settlements, Palestinians regretted not accepting the 1948 offer.  When a thief tries to rob you, you must first try to recover whatever you can. In hindsight, Palestinians would have been better off accepting the 1948 partition, and then fighting for the remaining stolen land. Yasser Arafat woke up to that fact, pointed to the 1948 partition proposal, and declared Palestinian independence in 1988. This was only symbolic, as Arafat, Palestine’s first president, had to form a government in exile. The flip side of acknowledging the 40-year old partition proposal was that for the first time the Palestinians unwittingly accepted the existence, if not legitimacy, of the state of Israel. In 2012, the United Nations offered a “non-member observer status” to Palestine, a state that governs no geography.

What is the two-state solution?
The two-state solution has three critical elements:
a.      Return to pre-1967 borders
b.      East Jerusalem in Palestine
c.       Palestinians’ right of return.

Return to pre-1967 borders
Acceptance of the original partition plan (1948) means drawing the borders as they were in 1948. However, that is considered more unrealistic than a return to the 1967 borders. Since the six-day war in June 1967, Israel occupied the Palestinian territories including the West Bank and East Jerusalem. The occupation and the settlements are termed illegal. Israel must withdraw from the occupied territories and evacuate the settlements. This is the view of the United Nations and the Palestinians. Israel doesn’t agree with it.

In 1948, the population of Israel was 800,000. By 1967, it had grown to 2.7 million. Today, it is 8.7 million.

Israel has the highest fertility rate (3.1 children per woman) in the developed world. This, of course, can’t be an excuse for settling on Palestinian territories, where fertility rates are much higher. However, for Israel, immigration is as big a factor as biological growth. Since 1989, following the collapse of communism, nearly 1 million Jews have migrated to Israel from the former USSR. Between 1967 and today, Israel’s population has grown by 6 million. The West Bank has 600,000 settlers, with an enjoyable life. The settlements are not in tents or temporary housing. They contain posh apartments, shopping malls, schools, theatres, and clubs. Most Jewish immigrants have moved there because of the quality of life; a West Bank settlement looks like New Jersey, even better. Israelis and Palestinians are not clearly separated like East Berlin and West Berlin were. Israeli settlements are spread throughout the West Bank, many criss-cross with Palestinian villages. The notion of evacuating the settlements is scary for Israel. Where do you place the 600,000 residents of the West Bank?

Over the decades, the settler population has grown dramatically (settler colonialism), and Israel continues to build more settlements. It has now reached a number where the potential re-settling of the settlers may produce an unmanageable crisis for Israel. Ariel Sharon had once said: “Our finest youth live there. They are already the third generation, contributing to the state and serving in elite army units. They return home and get married, so then they can’t build a house and have children? What do you want, for a pregnant woman to have an abortion just because she is a settler?”

East Jerusalem in Palestine
The 1949 Armistice agreement at the end of the Arab-Israeli war split Jerusalem, keeping its west part with Israel and the East with Jordan (now Palestine). Israel occupied and annexed East Jerusalem, and it must be returned to the state of Palestine. East Jerusalem will become the capital of Palestine. The Muslim and Christian quarters and the temple mount (Haram esh-Sharif) will be under Palestinian sovereignty. This is the view of the United Nations and the Palestinians. Israel doesn’t agree with it.

From Israel’s viewpoint, Jerusalem is indivisible. It belongs to Israel. Jerusalem is the basis of the birth of Israel. Undivided Jerusalem is the capital of Israel. No question of giving part of it to the Palestinians.

Palestinians’ right of return
UN considers the right of return to the home from which you were expelled a natural human right. In the 1948 and 1967 wars an estimated 900,000 Palestinians were expelled from their homes. They and their descendents have been living as refugees abroad- many without any citizenship. The total number (surviving refugees plus descendents) is estimated to be 5 million. They have a right to return to their homes seized by Israel. Those who opt not to return should be monetarily compensated by Israel. This is the view of the United Nations and the Palestinians. Israel doesn’t agree with it. 

Israel thinks the notion of accommodating or compensating 5 million Palestinians is a fantasy, a blue sky negotiation tactic. It’s impractical to bring back to their homes people expelled fifty or seventy years ago. (It’s perfectly practical and legitimate to return to a land from which you were expelled 3000 years ago as stated in a story, but the same can’t be done if it happened factually 50-70 years ago).

The other argument is that 900,000 Jews were also expelled from the Arab lands during the Arab-Israel war. Nobody is talking about compensating them. This is, indeed, a valid argument – with one difference. Jewish refugees are now citizens of Israel (or USA), the Palestine refugees remain stateless.

*****
In relation to American politics, you may have recently heard the term “filibuster”, the right to an endless debate. You keep talking about a bill for so long, that it dies before it can be voted on. The two-state solution has been filibustered.

One state solution
If you can’t separate them, why not unite them?

The name of the unified state is not known or discussed. It could be called “Israelopalestine” (like Czechoslovakia), who knows. Palestinians are so desperate; I think they will accept Israel as a name for the combined state. In a single state, two of the three problems narrated above - going back to the 1967 borders and splitting of Jerusalem disappear. The Jewish settlers in the West Bank can continue to live in their settlements. Jerusalem becomes the capital of the unified state. Fences and walls can be removed; people can start moving freely across the entire territory of Israel and occupied territories. Israel is sandwiched between Gaza and the West Bank. That matters in a two state theory, where the Palestine state is split. A single state solves that problem.

Many supporters of this solution point out, de facto it’s a single state today, entirely controlled by Israel. This de facto single state and the one state solution are quite different, though.

Today, Arabs in West Bank and Gaza are under occupation. They have no voting rights, no citizenship, and no access to Israeli courts. The West Bank Palestinian villages don’t get permits to build gyms, whereas their illegal Jewish neighbours have posh sports facilities.

What is the one state solution?
a.      Israel and the Palestine territories (occupied by Israel) form a single bi-national democratic state.
b.      All citizens - Jews, Arabs or others, would be equal citizens of the state with equal voting rights.

Bi-national democratic state
Israel calls itself a “Jewish democratic state.”

By the end of 2017, the combined state will have 6.9 million Jews (Israel), and believe it or not 6.9 million Arabs (Israel+ West Bank+ Gaza strip). The fertility rate of Arabs is higher than that of Jews. In future years, Israel fears, Jews will be in minority. Israel can’t continue to be a Jewish state.

Equal rights
The alternative is to deny the Arabs equal rights, treat them as second-class citizens. Israel currently has 20% Arabs who are Israeli citizens. Though Israel claims to be a western democracy, it has no “civil” marriages; all marriages are “religious”. The groom and bride must belong to the same religion if they wish to get married. (Irish women must go abroad to get abortions done and mixed-faith Israelis must go abroad to get married). In this sense, the Jewish laws are stronger than secularism or democracy.

One state solution, therefore, dictates that Israel can be either Jewish (by denying Arabs equal rights) or democratic (no longer a dominant majority) but not both. Can Israel accept that?

*****  
In the final chapter next week, I will discuss why the Israel-Palestine problem is not solved till date, and whether it can be solved at all.

Ravi











Saturday, April 15, 2017

The Jewish Question: Part Three


In 30 years from 7% to 33%
One hundred years ago, through the Balfour declaration, the British declared Palestine to be the national home for Jews. At that time, 93% of the population were Arabs and only 7% were Jews. Following the announcement, 40,000 Jews migrated to Palestine from Eastern Europe (1919-23). Another 82,000 Jews came from Poland and Hungary following the introduction of Jew immigration quotas by the USA (1924-1929). In the following fifteen years, 250,000 more Jews (including 174,000 illegal immigrants) moved to Palestine to save themselves from the Nazi atrocities. They were mainly from Poland, Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia. The proportion of Jews in Palestine had rapidly grown from 7% in 1918 to 33% in 1947.

The local Arabs, stunned by this development, had revolted (1936-39), but they were no match for the British army and Jewish police. During the revolt, the British and Jews lost fewer than 500 soldiers whereas Arab casualties were high: 5000 Arabs died and 15,000 wounded.

The story of two partitions
After the Second World War, the weakened British Empire decided to finally leave the colonies. In 1947, two parallel processes were taking place. One was the formation of a new Jewish nation on Palestinian land, and a new Muslim nation on the Indian continent. Both India and Palestine would gain independence from Britain, but each would be partitioned on the same day while becoming independent.

I am always baffled by this “Rule and Divide” interpretation by the British. You first rule an area for a long time, and then break it up when leaving. Create a mess and let someone else manage it. Like a dying father, through his will, breaking up his family house for each of his two sons to lead an independent but bellicose existence.

India’s last viceroy Mountbatten, when asked about the safety of the Indian division, answered:
“At least on this question I shall give you complete assurance. I shall see to it that there is no bloodshed and riot. I am a soldier and not a civilian. Once partition is accepted in principle, I shall issue orders to see that there are no communal disturbances anywhere in the country. If there should be the slightest agitation, I shall adopt the sternest measures to nip the trouble in the bud.”

Following this assurance, the Indian continent witnessed Hindu-Muslim clashes on an unprecedented scale, an estimated 14.5 million were displaced, 1.5 million died, more than 100,000 women were abducted and raped.

*****
While announcing the Palestine partition between an Arab state and a Jew state, the UN Special committee on Palestine (UNSCOP) said the fundamental objective in the solution of the Palestine problem was to achieve a reasonable prospect for the preservation of peaceful relations in the Middle East.

Following this, in November 1947, a civil war started between the Jews and Arabs of Palestine. Some 5000 people died.

This was followed by a nine-month long Arab-Israel War in which Egypt, Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Yemen joined hands to fight against Israel. More than 25,000 people were killed. More than 700,000 Palestinian Arabs fled or were expelled from their homes. 900,000 Jews were expelled from Arab countries.

The Partition formula
The partition experiment was conducted earlier with Ireland. In 1921, the British had partitioned Ireland into Catholic (Republic of Ireland) and Protestant (Northern Ireland) while granting independence.

In all three cases; Ireland, India and Palestine, partition was ostensibly done to ensure peace. All three were followed by huge civil wars. All three partitions created chronic, violent conflicts. Divisions on religious or ethnic grounds don’t work, because free movement between the partitioned States stops. ‘Us’ and ‘them’ are created, giving rise to hatred and violence; minorities are displaced or killed.

Despite the three case studies, Britain has now initiated Brexit, a 21st century partition. If free movement of people between EU and UK is stopped as its result, Brexit will inevitably create another international conflict, more than 4 million people are likely to be expelled, Scotland may leave the UK, Good Friday agreement may go bad by IRA becoming violent again. Why is it so difficult to learn from history?

But then, I am digressing. Let me return to the history of the Palestine land.

Arabs reject the partition
The 1947 partition of Palestine proposed (a) A Jewish state (b) an Arab state and (c) Jerusalem, governed by a special international trusteeship. For the Jewish state, the name Israel didn’t yet exist, it was conceived in 1948.

The Jew state was given 56% of the Palestine land, and the Arab State 44%. Only thirty years before this proposal, this land had 93% Arabs.

Reminds me of a joke where a robber holds a millionaire at gunpoint. I am a gentleman, the robber says, I would like to strike an ethical deal with you. Let us split all your money 50:50 between you and me.

Partitions of India and Palestine were both illogical, but the partition of Palestine was far more absurd.

India had 25% Muslims before the creation of Pakistan, and Palestine had 33% Jews before the creation of Israel. Just imagine if Pakistan were given 56% of the Indian continent (instead of the 25% actually given), and Muslims from all over the world were authorised to migrate to Pakistan. Hindus would have been horrified. Well, the Arabs were horrified, and rejected the partition plan. Paradoxically, the state of Israel was formed. The Palestinians are still waiting for their full-fledged UN membership, proposed 70 years ago.

Jerusalem: Holy land of three religions  
Currently, three areas constitute the unofficial State of Palestine. (1) East Jerusalem (2) West Bank (3) Gaza strip.

Let’s first look at the city of Jerusalem, one of the world’s most historic and fascinating places. Jerusalem is the Holy city for all three: Jews, Christians and Muslims. I don’t know of any other such place.

Judaism was born seven centuries before Christ and Islam founded seven centuries after Christ. Though all three religions have violently fought one another, they have much in common. The Hebrew bible (Tanakh), Bible and Quran contain surprisingly similar stories. Abraham (Ibrahim), Moses (Musa), John the Baptist (Yahya ibn Zakariya) and Jesus (Isa) appear in all three scriptures. Broadly speaking, the Old Testament is a copy-paste of the Hebrew bible, whereas the New Testament has stories from the AD era. Since Islam was formed seven centuries after Jesus, Quran had even more material available to copy from.

Jerusalem is the holiest city and spiritual centre for the Jews. Like Muslims face Mecca, Jews face Jerusalem while praying. The historical Holy Temple in the old city was the birthplace of Adam, the first man. The altar in that temple was rebuilt by Noah after the floods. It was here that Abraham was asked to sacrifice his son, and was instead allowed to kill a ram. [Note: My short story BaqriId: Open diary week 50 (2008) was set in a Muslim household and referred to the Quran. I later learnt the same story exists in the Bible and Hebrew bible]. If justification must be found for Jews to establish a Jew State on Arab lands, the holy land of Jerusalem is that justification.

For Christians, Jerusalem is equally important. Jesus was brought here as a child to be presented to the same Holy temple. He preached, healed in the temple courts of this city. The famous Last Supper was in a room in a Jerusalem building. Crusades were Holy Wars sanctioned by the Christian church to recover Jerusalem from Islamic rule.

For Muslims, Jerusalem is the third holiest place after Mecca and Medina. Temple Mount, a hill located in Jerusalem’s old city is known to Muslims as the Haram esh-Sharif. The Quran tells a story about a flying horse taking Prophet Muhammad to a mosque in Jerusalem, where he prayed. After that he was flown to heaven, the entire journey to Jerusalem and from there to heaven happening in a single night.

Christians don’t appear to have political ambitions on Jerusalem any more. 1917 was the last year, when the British forces captured it by defeating the Ottoman Empire. Since the time the British left the territory in 1948, Jews and Arabs have fought over it.

In the 1948-49 Arab-Israeli war, Israel captured the West Jerusalem and Arabs held on to the East Jerusalem. In the June 1967 Six Day War, fought on a grander scale, between the same parties, Israel occupied East Jerusalem, and in 1980 annexed it. The world community condemned it, but condemnation rarely changes the ground realities.

Jerusalem (West and East combined) is the capital of Israel, according to Israel. However, because it is a disputed geography, Jerusalem doesn’t have any embassies. (Embassies are in Tel Aviv).

East Jerusalem is the purported capital of the State of Palestine. However, when the status of the state itself is ambiguous, who will recognise its capital? East Jerusalem is considered an Israeli occupied territory.

Donald Trump now wishes to make a statement by moving the USA embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. That endorsement, when it happens, is likely to ignite another Israel-Arab confrontation.

West Bank
West bank lies on the western bank of the Jordan river. In the 1948-49 war, Jordan annexed it and ruled over it until 1967. In the 1967 Six Day War, Israel won it back and established its military control. Since the 1993 Oslo peace accords, only 11% of the West Bank is officially controlled by the Palestinian Authority (with periodic Israeli incursions). In the first part of this article, I talked about the film five broken cameras. That film is a Palestinian narrative from the West Bank. Israel incessantly attempts to capture more land from West Bank to establish new settlements. Palestinian villages struggle to get enough water for their basic domestic needs. Next door, the unlawful Israeli settlements have swimming pools, well watered lush lawns and large irrigated farms. 

The population of the West Bank is nearly 3 million including 2.6 million Palestinians and 400,000 Israeli settlers. For economic reasons, many Palestinians work in Israel, legally or illegally. Many construction workers who build Israeli settlements are Palestinians. Israel offers them higher wages and more opportunities than the West Bank.

Gaza strip
West Bank and Jerusalem are adjoining areas. Geographically, if not politically, Jerusalem is part of the West Bank. Gaza Strip is away from it, on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea, to Egypt’s north. Its area is 365 sq kms, with a 51 km border with Israel and an 11 km border with Egypt.

Since 1959, Egypt had occupied the Gaza strip and administered it through its military governor. In the 1967 war, Israel captured it from Egypt. Israel military administered Gaza until 1994. After the Oslo peace accords, it was handed over to PLO, the Palestine Liberation Organisation. (Remember Yasser Arafat? He was its chairman for 35 years. His headquarters were in Gaza city).

Hamas, a fundamentalist organisation founded in 1987, makes PLO look like secular and saintly.  In the 2000 Second Intifada (uprising against Israel), Hamas used suicide bombing and rocket attacks. Hamas had a capacity to launch rockets to attack Tel Aviv and other Israeli cities. Sick of the Hamas terrorism, Israel evacuated all Jews from the Gaza strip and withdrew its military troops in 2005. In 2006, Hamas won the elections and threw off whatever remained of the PLO. Hamas continued the rocket attacks. Israel sealed the borders, and launched a massive air, land, naval coordinated counterattack in 2008-9.  Some 1400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed in that war.

2014 saw another war between Israel and Hamas. Hamas was joined by Islamic Jihad, and received armaments from Iran. Some 2300 Palestinians and 73 Israelis were killed.

Israel and Egypt have both created a blockade of the Gaza strip. Land, sea borders and air space are strictly controlled by Israel. On land, on both sides, there is a no-man buffer zone. Israel decides the quantities of food, fuel and medicines that can go in. Electricity supply (from Israel) is interrupted for seven hours a day on average. The sea blockade has significantly damaged Gaza’s fishing industry. The Gaza strip is variously described as a concentration camp, a crime against humanity, a collective punishment.

The Gaza strip has about 1.9 million residents, ever growing with a fertility rate of 4.4 children per woman. More than half the residents are UN-registered refugees, descendents of Palestinians driven out of their homes in the 1948 war.

The State of Palestine
The State of Palestine, therefore, consists of (a) East Jerusalem, occupied by Israel, (b) West Bank, occupied by Israel which builds settlements there. And (c) Gaza strip blocked on all but one sides by Israel. On the other border, Egypt has created a blockade.

The world, certainly the Muslim world, wants this 70-year old conflict to end. Two solutions, with not so innovative names, have been debated over the years. A one-state solution and a two-state solution. Next week, I will discuss what they mean.


Ravi 

Saturday, April 8, 2017

The Jewish Question: Part Two


Some people wrongly think Israel was created as a Jew homeland because of the holocaust in the Second World War. As part of Hitler’s strategy brutally named the ‘final solution’ to the Jewish question, 6 million out of 9 million European Jews were killed; many of them ghettoed, starved, tortured and gassed. It is natural to imagine the creation of Israel as a goodwill gesture to Jews who survived the holocaust. However, as we saw earlier, the Jew homeland was announced through the Balfour declaration in 1917, much before the rise of Hitler. Jews had been persecuted everywhere, for nearly 2000 years.

This is curious. I can understand the big religions wholeheartedly and militarily hating one another. But Jews are and have always been too small a number. Today Christianity has more than 2 billion followers, Islam more than 1.5 billion; there are more than 1 billion Hindus, but only 14 million Jews worldwide. At its peak, before the holocaust, Judaism had 17 million adherents, minuscule in comparison to the three big religions. Why, then, such strong feelings towards a minor community - so much so as to profile, persecute and annihilate it? Why create a special word, Anti-Semitism, to articulate Jew hatred. In my reading, I found four key reasons.

Responsible for the death of Jesus
For centuries, provoked by their religious zealots, Christians have believed that the Jewish people were collectively responsible for the death of Jesus Christ. The crucifixion story talks about Pontius Pilate who could have stopped the execution, but instead washed his hands – literally and metaphorically – to let Jesus be killed.

Saint Hippolytus (170-236 AD) in his Expository Treatise against the Jews has this to say:
“Now then, incline thine ear to me and hear my words, and give heed, thou Jew. Many a time does thou boast thyself, in that thou didst condemn Jesus of Nazareth to death, and didst give him vinegar and gall to drink; and thou dost vaunt thyself because of this. Come, therefore, and let us consider together whether perchance thou dost boast unrighteously, O, Israel, and whether thou small portion of vinegar and all has not brought down this fearful threatening upon thee and whether this is not the cause of thy present condition involved in these myriad of troubles.”

The king of Jews was crucified, and the religion formed in his name declared Jews to be responsible for the crucifixion.

Blood libel
The blood libel superstition insists that Jews kidnap and kill pre-pubertal Christian boys to bake special bread (Matzoth). This is a religious ritual during the Jewish holidays. An American historian Walter Laqueur says there have been 150 such cases (not to talk about thousands of rumours) reported in the Middle Ages. In those cases, Jews were arrested and usually killed by a mob.

My favourite author Fyodor Dostoevsky, in The Brothers Karamazov, has this passage. The girl is asking Alexie Karamazov (Alyosha), the priest:

“Alyosha, is it true that at Easter the Jews steal a child and kill it?”
“I don’t know.”
“There’s a book here in which I read about the trial of a Jew, who took a child of four years old and cut off the fingers from both hands, and then crucified him on the wall, hammered nails into him and crucified him, and afterwards, when he was tried, he said that the child died soon, within four hours. That was ‘soon’! He said the child moaned, kept on moaning and he stood admiring it...”

Conspiracy theories, when propagated by a Church, can influence masses for generations. Parents pass on these beliefs to their children. The beliefs are reinforced by what you read and trust. If you are told that a community executed the founder of your religion, you get a lifelong licence to hate that community.

Racial prejudice
Just by looking at a person, we can’t pinpoint his religion or language, because both are man-made phenomena. However, we can tell the gender and broadly speaking the race of a person. Sometimes, race and religion can be visibly distinct, e.g. the Bangladeshi Muslims and the Arab Muslims or the European Christians and the African Christians. Christianity and Islam, the two biggest religions, have expanded through large-scale conversions. Judaism is a small religion, and in most cases Jews were identified as belonging to another race.

Somerset Maugham, another favourite writer of mine, in his celebrated story Mr Know-all, describes the main character Mr Kelada as having a “hooked nose”. In the 17th century, English theatre often presented Jews as hideous caricatures with hooked noses and bright red wigs. In 17th century Venice, Jews were required to wear a red hat at all times in public. The punishment for not wearing a red hat was the death penalty. As we know, the Nazis required them to wear armbands. In short, the haters made sure Jews could always be identified so as to persecute them.

Moneylenders and usury
Christianity and Islam traditionally prohibited money lending for profit. Charging interest was a sin, if not a crime. Money lending for profit was the exclusive territory of Jews. Here again we can quote from literature, a well known example in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice.  The character of Shylock is capable of creating hatred towards Jewish moneylenders for ever.

The profiteering by the Jewish moneylenders seems like a realistic reason for the money-borrowers to hate them. (Even today, most of us distrust bankers).

Money and commerce are a part of the Jewish blood. When I lived in Poland, I took friends and relatives who visited me to the Auschwitz concentration camp. Feeling miserable and gloomy, we would then return to Krakow and visit the Jewish Kazimierz- the historical district of Krakow. (Spielberg’s Schindler’s list was shot here). In the synagogues, I was shocked by the crass commercialism shown by the Rabbi - pay for entry, pay for viewing of documentaries, pay exorbitant prices for the DVDs. Commerce rather than religion was the raison d'être of that synagogue, and its custodians didn’t hide it. 

Settler colonialism
Hated, ostracised and persecuted for 2000 years, later facing the threat of extinction in concentration camps, the Jews naturally fought for their own home. Zionism succeeded in getting that home in Palestine, and the settlements started.

Colonialism is of two types. When the British Empire ruled over India, it was only to plunder India’s wealth and exploit its labour, rather than for the British people to settle there by kicking the Indians off. This type of colonialism generally ends, as it ended in the case of India in 1947.

The settler colonialism, on the other hand, is to capture the land so as to settle there by throwing or destroying the original residents off that land. The United States of America and Australia are two well-known examples of settler colonialism.

The settlers go to the new place, depopulate the locals, start living there, and give the place names borrowed from their home country. Today’s New York was first captured by the Dutch in the 17th century. They named today’s Manhattan ‘New Amsterdam’ and the larger area ‘New Netherland’. At the end of the second Anglo-Dutch war of 1665-1667, the English captured it. They renamed New Amsterdam as ‘New York’ to honour the then Duke of York (who later became King James II). (Any place that has new in its name smells of settler colonialism). Over the next couple of centuries, Christian Europeans of all kinds emigrated and settled in America. Today, except a few historians and Wikipedia, nobody knows who the original people in that land were. It was as if a new (or additional) national home was declared for Europeans, and they all flocked to the new land called America.

The story of Israel is similar – the only difference being that it happened in the 20th century. Next week, in the third part, I will argue why this issue is important in predicting the Israel-Palestine future.

(Continued next week)

Ravi    

Saturday, April 1, 2017

The Jewish Question: Part One


This week I went to see a special screening of a Palestinian-Israeli documentary called 5 broken cameras. Shot over seven years by a filming-passionate Palestinian farmer, it tells the story of a West Bank village trying to resist, through non-violent protests, attempts by armed Israeli forces to grab their land. This grabbing exercise is known to the world as Israeli settlements.

Two days ago, on Thursday 30 March, Benjamin Netanyahu announced the first officially sanctioned settlements in the West Bank in more than 20 years.

5 Broken Cameras
Emad Burnat, a Palestinian farmer in a West Bank village Bil’in, got his first video camera in 2005, to film his just-born son. Bil’in happens to be located on the West bank border. Well armed Israeli forces, wearing masks and helmets, backed by the Israeli state, are on a mission to keep expanding Israeli boundaries by encroaching on the Bil’in land, bulldozing olive trees, building fences and new housing for Jewish settlers on a continuous basis. The villagers follow a Gandhian path of peaceful protests every week. The Israeli forces regularly shoot at the demonstrators with tear gas canisters and rubber bullets. It looks like a sci-fi scene between people from earth and aliens, a battle as asymmetric as it can be.

Since 2005, Burnat has been courageously filming the events. His brothers are arrested; he gets wounded, on one occasion a bullet that hits his camera saves his life. Every time a camera is destroyed by the Israelis, he desperately tries to get another camera. Over seven years (2005-2011), he shot more than 700 hours of footage. 5 broken cameras is a 94 minute edited version, directed and financed by an Israeli named Guy Davidi. The film was nominated for Oscars in 2013. This real first-hand and first-class documentation of the Israel-Palestine conflict didn’t win the Oscar. (Some people say it should be obvious why).

The film’s narrative has several human threads. Burnat’s son Gibreel is born in 2005, at the beginning of the filming. In the documentary, we watch him grow and celebrate his birthdays. The first words he utters are “wall” and “cartridge”. Adeeb and Phil are Burnat’s friends. They are at the forefront of the resistance. Adeeb goes to jail, and Phil is killed. This is a surreal experience for viewers. At the back of your mind, you usually know that the characters dying on screen are alive in real life. Here we see the gentle, laughing Phil, a man hugely popular with kids, appealing to Israeli soldiers without losing his smile, and later succumbing to a bullet. We see his death captured live by the camera.

The film is a chronicle of endurance, an emotional consequence of living under occupation. There are surprises for the uninitiated viewer. Strangely enough, Burnat, seriously injured, is carried to a hospital in Tel Aviv. He says if not for the Israeli hospital and doctors, he would have lost his life. The Supreme Court of Israel orders removal of the encroaching wire fence. Albeit with a four year delay, the fence is removed by the Israeli forces. It’s a small moral victory for the suffering villagers.

After watching the film, one wonders if Gibreel, the filmmaker’s son, when he grows up, would follow in his father’s non-violent footsteps or join some group like Hamas. It’s unlikely any of us would go to West Bank as tourists. I would unhesitatingly recommend watching this film to get an idea of what goes on there.

The screening was followed by a discussion. A man who looked like a Palestinian, but was an Israeli, came on the stage. He appealed to the audience: “What you saw was true, but it’s only a very small part of the story. Please, please you can’t judge Israel based on this one-sided viewpoint.”

Jews in my life
Fifty years ago, one of my neighbours in Bombay was a Jewish man named Abraham Mazel. A dark, moustachioed man, he owned a large black Doberman. I remember his grown-up sons getting into a brawl with the ground-floor neighbours. They threw soda-water bottles at the neighbours from above. The following morning, a police van took the sons away for a brief period. The Mazel family left our building in my childhood; it was rumoured they migrated to Israel.

Once I started living in Russia, suddenly I was surrounded by Jews, Jew stories and Jew jokes.

My ex-wife was Russian. A few years before we met, she was planning to marry a Jewish guy. Her family was fine with that, but the Jew boy’s family refused a non-Jewish bride.

When I worked for a tobacco company, the company’s Russian customers were mostly Jews. Judaism is not only a religion, but a race. I began to notice their facial features were different from Slavic people. The company’s first importer, Vladimir Ainbinder, told me disturbing stories about how he was ill-treated in his school and career.

In Moscow, we worked in an open office. Once I was speaking to Mr Ainbinder over the phone, and he asked me who Mr Dreitsen (another customer) was. I said, “He is a Jew, just like you.” I meant that as a single-word-compliment to their community’s business acumen. But the Russians in the office, who overheard the phone conversation, were stunned. Later, they would quote that as an example of my outspokenness or insensitivity. If I told a Buddhist that another man was also a Buddhist, I don’t think that would be considered insensitive. But in Russia, Jews have a special place – not a dignified one.

Mr Ainbinder told me horror stories about discrimination at school. Later, as a programmer, he was denied promotions in the company. The appointment of a Jew boss lifted his spirits. But his Jew boss refused to promote him. I can’t be seen favouring another Jew, that’ll ruin my career, he said.

Soviet Passports had the infamous ‘fifth line’ called ‘nationality’. Here Russians wrote “Russian”, Ukrainians “Ukrainian”, but Jews had to write “Jew”. Regardless of geography, Jews were outcasts. In the Soviet Union, this fifth line ensured that Jews could be identified irrespective of their features and accents.  Only in 1997, ‘nationality’ was deleted from Russian passports.

During Soviet times, the United States offered ‘Refugee Passports” to Soviet Jews. Mr Ainbinder, a successful businessman (he made a fortune by trading in cigarettes), along with his family emigrated to the USA on “Refugee Passports.” After the collapse of the Soviet Union, America stopped this scheme. Jews were no longer expected to be persecuted.

Judaism vs Zionism  
Zion is the hill of Jerusalem. Jews lived there 3000 years ago, and were periodically defeated and driven away from it. We learn about that period from the Hebrew bible and history books. But when you talk about events 3000 years old, it is difficult to distinguish between history and mythology. The return to Zion is a biblical story that talks about the return of Jews from Babylonian exile to the land of Israel. Inspired by this story, Jews have aspired to return to their homeland for centuries.

Theodor Herzl, a Hungarian Jew, is considered to be the founder of Zionism. In 1896, in his book Der Judenstaat (the Jews’ State) he wrote:  The Jewish question persists wherever Jews live in appreciable number. Wherever it doesn’t exist, it is brought in together with Jewish immigrants. We are naturally drawn into those places, where we are not persecuted, and our appearance there gives rise to persecution. This is the case, and will inevitably be so, everywhere, so long as the Jewish question is not solved on a political level.... The Jews who wish for a State will have it. We shall live at last as free men, and die peacefully in our own homes.

Herzl was opposed to the infiltration of Palestine by Jews migrating there sneakily. He wanted a dignified homeland. In the early 1900s, the ambitious Herzl identified Uganda (modern day Kenya) as one of the options. The British, the colonial masters of Uganda then, offered him 13000 sq kms surrounded by virgin forest. Though suitable in terms of weather, the area was found to be full of dangerous lions and unwelcoming natives. The Uganda plan was abandoned. Herzl died in 1904, without knowing the Uganda proposal was cancelled.

Balfour declaration, 1917
In the First World War the British defeated the Ottoman Turkish forces and occupied Palestine, Syria and Lebanon. Baron Walter Rothschild, of the well-known Rothschild family, was a leader of the British Jewish community, a banker, politician and a Zionist. He had financially helped Britain in their war efforts. He, along with other Zionists, actively lobbied for a Jewish homeland.  As a result of the activism, Britain’s foreign secretary Arthur Balfour finally sent him a letter to confirm the British government favoured the creation of a “national home” for Jews in Palestine. After much debating over political correctness and nuances, the final draft of the declaration proclaimed:

“His Majesty's government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.”

The British had their geopolitical reasons for initiating the move. The main reason was control over the Suez Canal. The opening of the Suez Canal had miraculously reduced the distance between England and India, the empire’s jewel crown, by 7000 kms. This was important for trade and management. A Jewish national home in Palestine was thought to be a safeguard to secure control over the Suez Canal.  

In 1920, the British Empire sent Herbert Samuel, a Zionist, as the first High Commissioner of Palestine. He was the first Jew to govern the historic land of Israel in 2000 years.

A British census of 1918 counted 700,000 Arabs (93%) and 56,000 Jews (7%) in Palestine. (Compare that to 6.4 million Jews in Israel today).

This action was mind-boggling. A European power (Britain) offered a non-European territory (Palestine) completely ignoring the presence or wishes of 93% of its natives (Arab population) as home to a third religion (Judaism) and to its foreign followers (worldwide Jews).

It was like a man enslaving a woman, and then offering her to strangers to rape.

Balfour declaration, 1917, by the British Empire is considered to be the trigger for the formation of a Jewish state on Arab territory thirty-one years later.
*****
(To be continued next week)
Ravi