The
Palestine Romney doesn’t know
By Zahi Khouri, Published: August 9
Zahi Khouri is a Palestinian American businessman and founder of
PalestinianNational Beverage Co.
This article was was first published by the Washington Report on
Middle East Affairs. It can be accessed at http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-palestine-romney-doesnt-know/2012/08/09/5de0bcdc-e235-11e1-98e7-89d659f9c106_story.html
The e-mail by which it was sent had the following note:
During his recent visit to Israel, Republican presidential
candidate Mitt Romney offended Palestinians around the world on July 30 by
suggesting that cultural differences explain why the Israelis are more
economically successful than Palestinians. We highly recommend today’sWashington Post op-ed, “The
Palestine Romney Doesn’t Know,” by Palestinian- American businessman and Washington Report subscriber
Zahi Khouri
Here is the article:
I am a proud
American. I am a hardworking businessman and job creator. I am a faithful
Christian.
And I am Palestinian.
Much as my multiple
identities might drive Mitt Romney to head scratching, it is he who needs a
lesson in, to borrow his recent words, “culture and a few other things.”
Were he to spend a
day with me in the Holy Land, I could take him to the Jerusalem neighborhood
where my family home has stood for five centuries. I could show him the orange
trees in Jaffa that my family helped introduce to the world in the 1930s.
That’s right: Jaffa
oranges are a Palestinian, not Israeli, trademark. Yet like so many “cultural”
markers claimed by the self-professed Jewish state, even the fruit trees my
people have tended for centuries have been expropriated.
Romney might be duped
into thinking that oranges, falafel and hummus — staples of Palestinian cuisine
for generations — are Israeli products. But how dare he claim that a state
built at the expense of another people’s history and accomplishments is guided
by “the hand of providence”?
Israel did not make
the desert bloom. Instead, thanks to a deal struck with the British viceroys of
Mandate Palestine, it made away with a land, a set of institutions and, indeed,
a culture that was not its own.
It did so at the
expense of my people. Like more than three-quarters of Palestine’s population,
my family was forced to leave this land after Israel’s creation in 1948. Even
though we had to abandon our successful businesses and centuries-old homes,
however, we did not become the “uncultured” victims that Romney’s caricature
suggests.
Most of us went to
other Arab countries, where Palestinians became known for our business acumen
and management know-how, and helped to build nascent private and public
sectors. Ask our fellow Arabs in Lebanon, Jordan or elsewhere in the Persian
Gulf region and they will tell you: Palestinian culture, with its premium on
education and hard work, has been a force for hope, development and prosperity.
Despite their
circumstances, Palestinians living under Israel’s brutal occupation share the
same culture and proudly claim the same remarkable achievements. I, for one,
returned to Palestine in 1993 to launch the first Coca-Cola
bottling plant in the West Bank. It was granted a Best Country Bottling Operation award in
May by Coca-Cola, a testament to my colleagues’ ingenuity and determination.
But these traits alone cannot overcome the stifling effects of Israel’s
occupation.
If Romney got one
thing right, it’s that Israelis far outdo Palestinians in net wealth. In fact,
his estimates of the disparity were too conservative: Israel’s per capita gross
domestic product is roughly $32,000 to the Palestinians’ $1,500.
Remarkably, that
$1,500 figure is roughly half of what Palestinians claimed in 1993, when the
Oslo accords were signed. In other words, the U.S.-sponsored peace process has
made us poorer.
How is that possible?
Palestinians have no
say in our economic development. Every resource — water, land, soil, minerals,
airspace, humans — is controlled and commandeered by Israel, which then deigns
to sell us back a small portion.
In the West Bank, for
example, Israeli settlers consume on average 4.3 times the amount of water as
Palestinians. In the Jordan Valley alone, some 9,000 settlers in Israeli
agricultural settlements use one-quarter the amount of water consumed by the
entire Palestinian population of the West Bank, about 2.5 million people.
Palestinians have no
control over our borders. This means we cannot import or export without being
subject to discriminatory measures by our occupier. It also means that, without
Israeli permission, we cannot hire experts to enhance our employees’ skills or
send employees for overseas training.
Worse, we are
restricted within the territories ostensibly under our “control.” At any given
time, there are more than 500 Israeli checkpoints, roadblocks and other
barriers to movement within the occupied West Bank — an area smaller than
Delaware — hindering Palestinians and their goods from moving between their own
towns and cities and the outside world.
Palestinian
development of all kinds is severely hindered by the Israeli occupation. Yet
Palestinians have not given up. Palestine has one of the highest literacy rates
in the Arab world. Our youth continue to graduate from our universities,
opening businesses and gaining skills. Our private sector innovates and grows.
All of this is
happening on the 22 percent of historic Palestine that is the West Bank and
Gaza. If Romney had any historical perspective, he would dispose of his racist
judgments about Palestinian culture and instead imagine our potential without
Israel’s imposed hindrances
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