Editorial Article
Israeli Academic Extremists Outside Israel - Dorit Namaan (Queen’s
University) Leads a Panel of Israeli Academic Traitors that
Call for the Dissolution of Israel as a Jewish State
To see the original article,
go here
Canada Conference Plans Israel’s Demise
By P. David Hornik
FrontPageMagazine.com
November 03, 2008
One of the perks of being Israeli is that
people in far-off places seem to take an interest in your problems.
For instance, Queen’s University and York University of Canada are
planning a conference for June 1, 2009, on “Israel/Palestine:
Mapping Models of Statehood and Paths to Peace.” There’s already a
website
that’s issuing a call for papers and setting forth the “vision” of
the conference.
“The purpose of this conference,” the “Welcome”
to the website informs us, “is to explore which state model would be
the best to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.” It refers to
the recent “failure” of the “two-state model” to “bring peace to the
region” and says: “The conference seeks to systematically measure
the two-state model against the promise of alternatives; very
specifically the potential in the model of a single binational
state.”
The “Vision Statement” chimes in: “a number of
factors…are generating skepticism about the ability of the two-state
model to resolve enough of the outstanding issues…to make a
negotiated peace possible…. The conference will thus open avenues
for those interested in exploring the possible constitutional
dimensions of a single state.”
Let’s translate this: The “two-state solution”
is not exactly news and no one would take the trouble of sponsoring
a conference to discuss it. No, the real raison d’être of this
conference is the “one-state solution”—i.e., dissolving the Jewish
state of Israel into some sort of state combining Arabs and Jews
and, while having an ethnic or federal Jewish component, no longer
having a Jewish identity as France has a French one and China has a
Chinese one.
In other words, there would no longer be a
single Jewish state in the world; and in addition to the already
existing twenty-two Muslim Arab states, there would be another, “one
state” that would presumably have enough of a Muslim-Arab profile to
qualify as the twenty-third member of the Arab League. The Jews,
after two thousand years of dispersion and a sixty-year experiment
in statehood that many of the participants in this conference will
undoubtedly judge a failure, would thus revert to statelessness most
likely for eternity.
And what would life be like for the Jews in the
“one state”? Not to worry--“the conference will explore the
potential of a state shaped by federalism, equal citizenship and
respect for linguistic, cultural and religious rights to protect the
rights and security of its inhabitants and to serve as a political
framework for the amelioration or even resolution of protracted
conflicts.” Canada on the Mediterranean!
The website is also kind enough to introduce
the Advisory Committee for the conference. There’s Ali Abunimah,
cofounder of the radically anti-Israeli website Electronic Intifada
and coauthor of the book The Palestinian Right of Return. There’s
Leila Farsakh of the University of Massachusetts at Boston, author
of a 2006 article in Journal of Palestine Studies called “The
One-State Solution: A Breakthrough for Peace in the
Israeli-Palestinian Deadlock”--wonder which side she’s on.
And there’s Dorit Namaan of Queen’s University
itself, whose opuses include the article “Brides of Palestine/Angels
of Death: Media, Gender and Performance in the Case of the
Palestinian Female Suicide Bomber” and a book in progress “on the
visual representation of Palestinian and Israeli women fighters”
(let’s see, that will probably discern equivalencies between female
members of the Israel Defense Forces and Palestinian women who blow
up pizza parlors). And also Elia Zureik of Queen’s University, who
in 2000 called in a Los Angeles Times op-ed for…the Palestinian
right of return.
That’s not to say, of course, that the Advisory
Committee isn’t “balanced”--in addition to the ex-Israeli Dorit
Namaan it has four currently-Israeli members: left-wing author and
journalist Meron Benvenisti, left-wing research associate Daphna
Golan-Agnon of Hebrew University, left-wing law professor David
Kretzmer of Hebrew University, and left-wing sociology professor
Sammy Smooha of the University of Haifa.
Who knows, some of these might even stick up
for the old “two-state solution” where Israel retreats to
indefensible borders but at least--for however long it still has to
survive--remains the Jewish state. But in allowing themselves to be
professionally associated with this conference, these Israelis are
affirming that the “one-state solution”--the dissolution of
Israel--is a legitimate idea worthy of discussion in the ostensibly
civilized world, and that is to their unending shame.
P. David Hornik is a freelance writer and
translator living in Tel Aviv. He blogs at
http://pdavidhornik.typepad.com/. He can be reached at
pdavidh2001@yahoo.com.
========================================
Op-Ed articles appearing on IsraCampus.Org.il are those of the writer and
do not necessarily represent the opinion of IsraCampus.Org.il
|