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Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv
University - On anti-Semitic web site, TAU's Ran HaCohen (Dept of Comparative
Literature) explains that Israel is "Colonizing" ... Israel
'One horrifying incarnation of this are settlers who now colonize
Israel itself. In Israel’s mixed towns – from Tel Aviv (of which
Jaffa is part) to Acre – settlers from the West Bank establish nests
of hatred in the form of Jewish-Orthodox groups living together and,
disguised as “Torah schools” and “social work,” incite and spread
the word: Jews in, Arabs out. Palestinians are harassed and
sometimes physically attacked. The riots in Acre in 2008 were the
result of such settlers’ activity; tensions are now rapidly growing
in several mixed towns, including Jaffa, where settlers recently
broke into a Palestinian home, attacking its owner and telling her
that they “will force all Arabs out of Jaffa.”'
http://original.antiwar.com/hacohen/2010/05/09/from-two-states-to-one/
From Two States to One
by Ran HaCohen,
May 10, 2010
Last week in Tel Aviv, a judge imposed a $25,000 fine on three
tenants who extended their balcony illegally by annexing 23 sq.
meters (250 sq. ft.). Well, that’s not really a scoop. Illegal
construction is a punishable offense everywhere, even if there are
no immediate victims like in this case. Israel is a law-and-order
state; you can’t just take an area and keep it.
Unless you are in the occupied territories, of course. There,
taking possession of land and building temporary or stationary flats
without any permission – and not just flats, but houses,
neighborhoods, entire settlements – is not an offense but a Zionist
and Jewish-religious duty. If it is done without any immediate
victims, that’s fine. If it forces some Palestinians out of their
homes or fields, that’s even better. Just like the tenants in Tel
Aviv, the West Bank occupants will soon be paid a visit by the
state; but whereas in Tel Aviv the visitors would take them to
court, in the West Bank they would connect them to running water and
electricity, and leave a few soldiers behind just to make sure the
owners of the stolen land do not harm their security, or even their
sense of security. (These soldiers need accommodation too; and so
on.) And whereas in Tel Aviv the occupants, if they happened to be
civil servants, might lose their job for their offense, quite a few
Israeli officers live in illegal outposts throughout the West Bank,
and the military “has
no policy” regarding such cases. Akiva Eldar, who exposed this
story in Ha’aretz, wonders “how an officer who breaks the law
and ignores court orders can serve as a model for his soldiers.” I
myself don’t see the problem: the soldiers are in the territories
for the very same objective as their law-breaking officers – to
dispossess the Palestinians. I think such officers should get a
raise. In fact they do get a raise, since settlers pay less taxes
(for better services) than normal Israelis.
The Two Jewish States
All that isn’t much of a scoop either. Critical Israelis – the
last of the Mohicans – know that there are two Jewish states in the
Land of Israel: the state of Israel, and the Occupied Territories.
The former is rather democratic, the latter is a dictatorship. The
former is ruled by a government and police who impose law and order,
the latter is a Wild East ruled by the military and terrorized by
settlers. A crime on this side of the Green Line is a patriotic deed
beyond it. We have been living this way for more than four decades.
Most of us have never known anything else. In fact, it should not
surprise anybody. Didn’t the British do the same in India and in
their other colonies? The French in Algeria? The Dutch in Indonesia?
Only conscientious people can’t live with it; most people can. You
cross a line and you become a different person.
Merged Into One
But the right-wing Israeli governments – and all Israeli
governments are right-wing or worse – have never liked this way of
looking at things, symbolized by the Green Line. The Green Line
makes the wrong impression: someone might err to think that the
territory beyond it isn’t ours. So Israel, the older Jewish state,
has been doing its best to erase the line. You take the highway from
Tel Aviv to Petach Tikva, for example – a town within Israel – and
on your way you see a big signpost directing you to “Ariel.” The
signpost is of the same form, size, and color as any other. No one
bothers to tell you that Ariel is an illegal Israeli settlement at
the very heart of the West Bank, that by going there you rely on,
and thus are complicit in, the Israeli occupation. You cannot tell
when and where you have crossed the Green Line and moved from the
first Jewish state to the second, from the one with a Jewish
majority and democratic institutions to the other, where the Jewish
minority imposes its military dictatorship on a Palestinian
majority.
Last week, to give another example, I was taken by taxi from Tel
Aviv to Jerusalem. It was early morning, and I took a little nap.
Suddenly the taxi stopped. Admittedly, I do my best to avoid (West)
Jerusalem – a tense, poor, and ugly city, plagued by a mixed crowd
whose only common denominator is mutual resentment – but I do know
the way there, and the taxi had no reason to stop when it did. I
opened my eyes and saw an unfamiliar view. The taxi driver took the
notorious
apartheid highway stretching through the West Bank. He didn’t
feel he had to consult me about crossing the Green Line. That’s
normal.
Indeed, the legal status of the occupied territories is still
different; the Israeli law is “exported” into them by legal
casuistry that bothers only a few legalists and lawyers; in fact,
every Israeli soldier and citizen, so to speak, carries the Israeli
law with him while crossing the Green Line; the rest is done by
military decrees. But for all practical considerations, as far as
Jews are concerned, the two Jewish states are in fact one.
But Which One?
The idea behind erasing the Green Line was to annex the second
Jewish state and incorporate it – that is, its Jewish citizens and
its land and resources, but not its Palestinian inhabitants – into
the first Jewish state. But what is happening now is that the two
Jewish states are turning into one not in the predicted way. The
occupied territories are not swallowed by Israel – they are
swallowing it. Symbolically, Israel’s bestial Foreign Minister
Avigdor Lieberman is a settler. In fact, the logic of the occupied
territories takes over Israel proper. The phony solidarity
exclusively among Jews (as long as they are politically conformist),
the xenophobia and open racism toward non-Jews, the intolerance
toward any kind of criticism and dissent, the insular culture of a
beleaguered citadel, all turn Israel into a magnified West Bank
settlement, surrounded by a high-tech fence and united by the
imagined ocean of anti-Semitism all around it. It’s not just the
over-representation of settlers in the military and in politics.
What’s on the rise are norms of lawlessness and dehumanization of
the other (be it Palestinians, migrant workers, or African
refugees), religious extremism in a distorted form of Judaism, and
above all, perhaps, the ideology and the historical narrative of the
settlers, regarding anything from what Zionism means to the
interpretation of recent events like the withdrawal from Gaza or the
Lebanon war, that spreads far beyond the limited circles of the
actual settlers.
One horrifying incarnation of this are settlers who now colonize
Israel itself. In Israel’s mixed towns – from Tel Aviv (of which
Jaffa is part) to Acre – settlers from the West Bank establish nests
of hatred in the form of Jewish-Orthodox groups living together and,
disguised as “Torah schools” and “social work,” incite and spread
the word: Jews in, Arabs out. Palestinians are harassed and
sometimes physically attacked. The
riots in Acre in 2008 were the result of such settlers’
activity; tensions are now rapidly growing in several mixed towns,
including
Jaffa, where settlers recently broke into a Palestinian home,
attacking its owner and telling her that they “will force all Arabs
out of Jaffa.”
While the entire Arab world is willing to compromise and accept
Israel more than ever before, and while wise heads in Israel and
outside are still chewing the eternal “One State vs. Two States”
debate, a One-State Solution is being implemented, as Israel is
turning from a state with a colony to a colony with a state.
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