History On A Billboard –
Fanaticism On The Ground
An Analysis by Lawrence Davidson
August 1, 2012
Editor’s note: History on New York billboards! Times are a changing. The unbelievable is beginning to happen.
Mr. Henry Clifford, a Connecticut resident, chairman of the area’s local Committee for Peace in Israel/Palestine, purchased billboard space so as to educate readers to what really is happening under the Israeli regime of occupation so generously supported by U.S. dollars.
The billboards appear on train platforms and are aimed at the elite in the New York suburbs coming into Manhatten.
The lesson comes in the form of four aligned maps showing the absorption of Palestinian land by Israel from 1946 to the present, along with a declaration that “4.7 million Palestinians are classified by the U.N. as refugees.”
What appears below is
Copyright © 2010 tothepointanalyses. and is reproduced here courtesy of the
author.
It was first published at http://www.tothepointanalyses.com/1662
Part I – History On A
Billboard
For the past few weeks, those
taking local trains from New York City’s wealthier suburbs into Manhattan have
encountered a succinct billboard history of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. The lesson comes in the form of four aligned maps showing the
absorption of Palestinian land by Israel from 1946 to the present, along with a
declaration that “4.7 million Palestinians are classified by the U.N. as
refugees.” In all respects, the ad is historically correct.
This was made possible thanks to
the efforts of Mr. Henry Clifford, chairman of the area’s local Committee for
Peace in Israel/Palestine, who purchased the billboard space so as to educate
readers to what really is happening under the Israeli regime of occupation so
generously supported by U.S. dollars.
Immediately the ads were labeled
“anti-Semitic” by area rabbis and Jewish community leaders. Here is the
reasoning of Dovid Efune, “editor of the Manhattan-based Jewish newspaper, The
Algemeiner.”
“This is anti-Semitic
because when people think of the Jews they think of the Jewish state. Jews
have seen this happen many times. It always starts with messaging that says Jews
are committing a crime.”
Three things are to be said
about Mr. Efune’s reaction: 1) On the one hand, he seems not to care that the
map display and UN statistic are real and accurate and what that means for the
lives of millions of people. 2) On the other, and no doubt quite
inadvertently, he does infer that what the ad reveals is criminal
behavior. 3) Finally, if there is any truth to the assertion that
“when people think of the Jews they think of the Jewish state” it is because
Zionist propagandists have, for over 64 years, incessantly insisted on that
identification. Those Jews who have publically denied the connection have
been abused and libeled. So, to the extent that Jews in general are
identified with Israel’s “committing a crime,” you can thank the Zionists for
that.
Rabbi Joshua Davidson (no
relation of this blogger), senior Rabbi of Temple Beth El in northern
Westchester, N.Y., says the map ad presents “a distorted and skewed view
of a complicated conflict.” Actually, that is untrue. The ad simply puts
forth historical truth. In addition, the conflict really is not as
complex as Zionists say it is. It is the consequence of a rather
straightforward, post-World War I, imperialist land grab that, in the
case of Palestine, is on-going even now. It was and continues to be
justified by religious mythology on the one hand and the history of
anti-Semitic persecution on the other. The land grab was originally
abetted by the British imperial politicians, some of whom imagined that they
were helping to fulfill biblical prophecy, and others who saw a Jewish homeland
in Palestine as a way of solving the “Jewish problem” in Europe. The
Palestinians, being seen as inferior natives, were then and are now still,
pushed aside.
Part II – Fanaticism On
The Ground
Rabbi Davidson might object to
such simplicity, but Dani Dayan would not. Dayan is the leader of the
“Yesha Council of Jewish Communities” a leading organization espousing Israeli
settlement of the West Bank. Unlike Rabbi Davidson, Dayan does not
seek refuge in historical complexity. He lays it on the line in a recent New York Times Op-ed.
“Arabs called for
Israel’s annihilation in 1967, and Israel legitimately seized the disputed
territories, and the right of Israelis to call them home today, is therefore
unassailable.”
Unfortunately, the days when
conquest automatically resulted in a transfer of sovereignty ended with World
War II. The primary rationale for the creation of the United Nations and
the expansion of international law was to prevent just the sort of behavior
Dayan describes.
Also, like the statement of
Dovid Efune, Dayan’s argument is logically confused. He is claiming that
the hyperbolic rhetoric of Arab leaders in the run-up to the 1967 war somehow
frees Israel from its obligations as a signatory to such international treaties
as the 4th Geneva
Convention. Article 49(3) of that treaty prohibits an occupying power
from “transferring parts of its own civilian population into the territory it
occupies.” Successive Israeli governments, both of the left and the
right, have energetically violated that law by transferring civilians into
these conquered lands. Dani Dayan now proudly points out there are some
350,000 of these illegal squatters (the number goes up by 200,000 if we include
the Israeli transfers into Jerusalem). And, because this now constitutes
the new “status quo,” Mr. Dayan proclaims that Israelis have the “right…to call”
such territories “home.” Where did he get that right? From his god?
From very ancient history? From the fact he walks about the area with an Uzi
submachine gun strapped over his shoulder? There is certainly
no basis for it in international law.
Dayan presents these
illegally accomplished facts on the ground as “irreversible” and the
two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as
“unattainable.” He challenges his readers to understand the
“realpolitik” truth of his position. And, according to Richard Falk,
United Nations Special Rapporteur for Palestinian Human Rights, it is hard to “doubt the force of Dayan’s reasoning on this central
issue.” Well, if not the settler leader’s reasoning, which is
faulty, then certainly one cannot doubt Israel’s physical possession of
increasing amounts of Palestinian land. Apparently, the governments of
the world have capitulated to Dani Dayan and vigilante squatters.
Hamas, which would gladly defy them, is confined, also with international
blessings, to Gaza, the world’s largest outdoor prison. Thus, there is no
military presence on the ground that can gainsay Mr. Dayan. So what does this imply,
that might makes right? Is that Mr. Dayan’s version of Israel acting as a
“light unto the nations”? Apparently so.
Part III – The Need for
Outside Pressure
However, Dani Dayan and his
settler movement have not written the final act in this tragedy. Even if
we take note of his present position in the West Bank, and also admit that the
“peace process” is a pitiful fraud, it is premature for Dayan to proclaim that
he has won the struggle and we must all accept his “status quo.”
Colonialist ventures can be defeated in more than one way. The “usual”
way is through prolonged and bloody armed struggle. Thanks to the
world-class military machine the United States has helped Israel create and
maintain this is not a likely path to success. But such regimes have also
been forced to transform themselves into more equitable, more democratic, and
less repressive ones through concerted outside pressure. And such
pressure is now as real and growing as Dayan’s squatter movement.
A major effort at outside
pressure is the worldwide BDS (boycott, divestment and sanctions) campaign
against Israel. Ilan Pappe, an Israeli born professor at Exeter
University in England, notes that this
“campaign’s elasticity has made it into a broad process powerful enough to
produce a new public mood and atmosphere….” As someone who has spent the
last 35 years espousing the Palestinian cause, I can testify to the truth of
that statement, even here in the United States.
It might very well be that
Israel is here to stay. But that does not mean that it will always be the
racist, oppressive society it is now. Consistently applied outside
pressure, growing in scope and strength, can wear down support for ideologues
such as Dani Dayan and his backers both in and outside of today’s Israel.
It can, slowly but surely, convince ordinary Israelis that they have a choice:
go along with their expansionist leaders and face increasing international
isolation or, as Pappe puts it, cooperate willingly in “finding a formula for
joint living” – that is creating a better society that is tolerant and mindful
of the need for justice, first and foremost for Israel’s victims, the
Palestinian people. Also a nation that can be trusted to honor their
obligations under international law.
Part IV – The Fate of
International Law
It should be clearly understood
that it is not just Israel’s future or that of the Palestinians that is at
stake here. All of us have to ask what value we place on international
law. What value do we place on a world that recognizes the primacy of law
born sane human reason, rather than religious mythology, apocalyptic
fantasies, and tribal nationalism? It is all wrapped up together; as goes the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, so goes the viability of international law.
It is ironic that in the
aftermath of the Holocaust international law was strengthened and now, as is so
simply demonstrated on Mr. Clifford’s billboards, it is the Israelis
who choose to cast it aside. If we allow this to happen, the world
becomes more dangerous for all of us.
About
the author:Lawrence Davidson is professor of history at West Chester University
in West Chester PA. His academic work is focused on the history of American
foreign relations with the Middle East. He also teaches courses in the history
of science and modern European intellectual history.
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