Looking for alternatives to failure: An answer
to Uri Avnery
Ilan Pappe, The
Electronic Intifada, 26 April 2007
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article6836.shtml
The following is Ilan Pappe
Uri Avnery accuses the supporters of the one-state solution of forcefully
imposing the facts onto the "Bed of Sodom". He seems to regard these
people at best as daydreamers who do not understand the political reality
around them and are stuck in a perpetual state of wishful thinking. We are all
veteran comrades in the Israeli Left and therefore it is quite possible that in
our moments of despair we fall into the trap of hallucinating and even
fantasizing while ignoring the unpleasant reality around us.
And therefore the metaphor of the Bed of Sodom may even be fitting for lashing
out at those who are inspired by the South African model in their search for a
solution in
The South African model is good subject matter for a comparative study -- not
as an object for a hollow emulation. Certain chapters in the history of the
colonization in
But above all the South African model inspires those concerned with the
Palestine cause in two crucial directions: by introducing the one democratic
state, it offers a new orientation for a future solution instead of the
two-state formula that failed, and it invigorates new thinking of how the Israeli
occupation can be defeated -- through boycott, divestment, and sanctions (the
BDS option).
The facts on the ground are crystal clear: the two-state solution has dismally
failed and we have no spare time to waste in futile anticipation of another
illusory round of diplomatic efforts that would lead to nowhere. As Avnery
admits, the Israeli peace camp has so far failed to persuade the Israeli Jewish
society to try the road of peace. A sober and critical assessment of this camp
Avnery ignores these facts and alleges that the one-state solution is a
dangerous panacea to offer to the critically ill patient. All right, so let us
prescribe it gradually. But for God
For the sake of peace, it is important to expand our research on the South
African model and other historical case studies. Because of our failure we
should study carefully any other successful struggle against oppression. All
these historical case studies show that the struggles from within and from
without reinforced each other and were not mutually exclusive. Even when the
sanctions were imposed on
It is also very difficult to understand why Avnery underrates the importance of
world public opinion. Without the support this world public opinion gave to the
Zionist movement, the Nakba (catastrophe)
would not have occurred. Had the international community rejected the idea of
partition, a unitary state would have replaced Mandatory Palestine, as indeed
was the wish of many members of the UN. However, these members succumbed to a
violent pressure by the
The call for a one-state solution, and the demand for boycott, divestment and
sanctions, has to be read as a reaction against the failure of the previous
strategy -- a strategy upheld by the political classes but never fully endorsed
by the people themselves. And anyone who rejects the new thinking out of hand
and in such a categorical manner, may be less bothered
by what is wrong with this new option and far more troubled by his own place in
history. It is indeed difficult to admit personal as well as collective
failure; but for the sake of peace it is sometimes necessary to put aside one
But in order to stifle any debate on the one-state solution or the BDS option,
Avnery draws from his magic hat the winning card:
Avnery is right when he asserts that
Avnery is also convinced that Adam Keller debunked most successfully the
argument for a boycott by pointing out that the Palestinians in the occupied
territories did not give in to boycott. This is indeed a fine comparison: a
political prisoner lies nailed to the ground and dares to resist; as a
punishment he is denied even the meager food he
received hitherto. His situation is compared to a person who occupied illegally
this prisoner
The boycott will not happen, states Avnery. He should talk with the veterans of
the anti-Apartheid movement in
Moreover, adds Avnery, in places such as
Towards the end of his article, Avnery sketches the features of the one-state
solution out of the present reality. And thus because he does not include the
return of the refugees or a change in the regime as components of the solution
he describes today
We need to wake up. The day Ariel Sharon and George W. Bush declared their
loyal support for the two-state solution, this formula became a cynical means
by which
Moreover, not only are there no stones left in the occupied territories with
which to build a state after Israel ruined the infrastructure there in the last
six years, a reasonable partition is not offering the Palestinian a mere 20
percent of their homeland. The basis should be at least half of the homeland,
on the basis of the 181 partition route, or a similar idea. Here is another
useful avenue to explore, instead of embroiling forever inside the
And finally, there will be no solution to this conflict with a settlement of
the Palestinian refugee problem. These refugees cannot return to their homeland
for the same reason that their brothers and sisters are being expelled from
greater
They are entitled to opt for return because it is their full human and
political right. They can return because the international community had
already promised them that they could. We as the Jews should want them to
return because otherwise we will continue to live in a state where the value of
ethnic superiority and supremacy overrides any other human and civil value. And
we cannot promise ourselves, as well as the refugees, such a fair and just
solution within the framework of the two-state formula.
Ilan Pappe is
senior lecturer in the University of Haifa Department of political Science and
Chair of the Emil Touma Institute for Palestinian
Studies in Haifa. His books include, among others, The Making of
the Arab-Israeli Conflict (London and New York 1992), The
Israel/Palestine Question (London and New York 1999), A History of Modern Palestine (Cambridge
2003), The Modern
Middle East (London and New York 2005) and his latest, Ethnic
Cleansing of Palestine (2006).
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