Recorded Interview with Jeff Halper, Head of the Israel Committee for House Demolitions (ICHD)

Media analyst Allan Polak conducts recorded interview with Jeff Halper on March 24, 1999. (Halper, an anthropologist, is the head of the ISRAEL COMMITTEE FOR HOUSE DEMOLITIONS and a candidate to be the new director of the TOURGEMAN MUSEUM in Jerusalem)

Question: The name of the organization you head… it is the Israel Committee Against House Demolitions?

Answer: The Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions. And there is a reason for that. If you want a deconstruction of our name. First of all, the focus of our activities is house demolition; we’re obviously against house demolitions. But house demolitions are like a focal point in a wider campaign we have against the Occupation in general. But you know, the other aspects of the Occupation like settlements, bypass roads, land expropriation, uprooting of olive trees and things like that… closure, they’re all very abstract. House demolitions is really a very powerful focus because it brings in stories of people… you know, through its film, television, demonstrations, bringing people out to build houses, emails and so on… you can really help people understand the issue by linking them directly with people that they can really see, and they can understand and get to know. There’s a whole story… they can follow what happens. So house demolitions is in a way an important issue in of itself. But it also captures both the human and wider political dimension. We’re a committee because we don’t want to be just another organization. We try to be lean and mean, in that we’re just a few people. We’re able to mobilize hundreds of people. Something like five hundred people came for those two days that we did not last weekend, but the weekend before. And what we try to do also is to coordinate and to network with all the other peace organizations. Not to be in competition with anybody but to try to… So this campaign we had, there were fourteen, fifteen organizations that joined in. And we’re Israeli because, first of all we’re Israelis that oppose the Occupation. But second of all, you know, it gives a lot of, a certain credibility to other people that are always afraid to criticize Israel because they might be accused of being anti-Semitic, or anti-Israel, or anti-Jewish… whatever. So this is a way of letting them join the bandwagon. They can all turn around and say look, we’re just following the lead of all these Israelis. So it helps in terms of their being able to feel free. So those are the different pieces of the name.

Question: How long has the committee existed?

Answer: The committee has been in existence now, for about two years. Ever since Netanyahu’s government started the whole process of demolishing houses again.

Question: What was the status of house demolitions under the governments of Rabin and Peres?

Answer: Well, it was going down. In the last year that Peres was Prime Minister there were 96 demolitions, which is still a lot. But a year later it was about it was about 233. The pressure was on again. One of things that happened was that… you know, house demolitions is simply a very effective tool for creating facts on the ground, confining Palestinians to bantistans, to little cantons or enclaves. And so it has been used by all the Israeli governments. But when Oslo was signed and the peace process was happening, Israel loosened up, and towards the end of his term Peres even said there wouldn’t be any more house demolitions. And in that whole euphoria after Oslo, a lot of Palestinians began to buy land, began to build houses, because they hadn’t been able to build all those years. Most of them understood that the land was going to be given back to the Palestinians. The Civil Administration, it’s like the government that runs the West Bank, never really said anything, but it led them to understand also, that it was going to be okay; it’s all part of the whole peace process. And even hundreds of people began to come back from Jordan… a lot of Palestinians. So that’s why you had a tremendous surge in building. There was a whole kind euphoria, a kind of optimism, an expectation that things were going to work out. So a lot of people began to feel even though the peace wasn’t there, they could begin to live normal lives and build houses. So what happened is that thousands of people began to build in that context. And then all the sudden Netanyahu got elected. And all the sudden the rules of the game changed. Now you have thousands of people that in a sense, took a chance on peace, and they got screwed. That’s one of the reasons why the issue of house demolitions is so important. Because on the one hand it’s used as a very effective way to create a whole structure of control. On the other hand, it’s really directed against poor people, who are the people that are building mainly. At least in the areas in Area C which Israel has control over. And it’s also in a sense a whole betrayal for them of the peace process. So for all those reasons I think it’s a very good issue.

Question: Were you involved in the formation of the committee?

Answer: I was one of the founders of it. There were a couple of other people on the committee. I’ve been involved with other people for many years in the peace movement. And in fact, to be honest, we were all coming from different peace groups partly because we were all dissatisfied with what our own groups were doing. A feeling that the left, the peace movement, had become very moribund and wasn’t really active in terms of what Netanyahu was doing. And we got into the house demolitions because that was one of the burning issues. We didn’t really realize at that time what it was going to mean to us. It’s a whole different issue, it’s a whole different thing than other peace work. All the other peace work all the groups had done these years, has been were Israelis set the agenda. In other words, Peace Now, or any of the groups will say, “Okay we’re going to demonstrate against a settlement expansion; alright we’re going to go in two weeks. We’re going to go and meet at 10:00. We’ll call some Palestinians to be there.” They all get their people together, they get their signs, they go, they demonstrate for an hour or two, they go home. And that’s it. There’s no expectation on the part of the Palestinians that they’re going to do anything, that they’re going to be effective, that they can deliver. There are no promises made, there’s no real involvement. And at the same time the Israelis set the time table. Now, when we got into the house demolition thing, all the sudden it was a whole different dynamic; now you’re dealing with real people. You go to a family who’s got a house demolition order… you can’t just say, “We’re here in solidarity” and go home. The people are saying “Why are you in my living room? What are you going to do for me?” Even if it’s not said, sometimes it is said, there is expectation. And then of course the army starts to harass them. So they say, “Can you help us, can you get us a lawyer? What can you do?” And then if the bulldozers show up in the morning and you get a call you can’t say “Well I’m busy. I have a lecture today.” You’ve got be there. You have to deliver. And that brought us into a whole different way of working in relationship with the Palestinians than any of the other groups have had. And at the same time what it also made us do of course, was to work very close with the Palestinians. Because most other Israeli groups just come in as Israeli, and again, they set the agenda. We work with several Palestinian groups like LAW, which is a Palestinian human rights group, and Al-Hok which is another group in Ramallah. But the main group that we work with is called the Palestinian Land Defense Committee… which is… there are Land Defense Committees all through the West Bank and in East Jerusalem as well. And actually, they are really from the communist party. The communist party has now changed its name, its now the people’s party. The communist party among the Palestinians has always been, since the 1920s at least, very strong on the ground. They’re the ones that are most in touch with the people. They’re the group that really has the most, I think, credibility among the Palestinian people. So that’s the group that we work with. So in other words, in terms of a working relationship, a relationship of equality, being there, having to deliver, and so on, our group has had a completely different history to it than any of the other groups.

Question: There are fourteen other organizations affiliated with ICAHD?

Answer: Yeah, that we can mobilize. There’s others that we can get out as well. Those are all peace groups, some of which are on paper, some of which are a little more alive. A lot of them don’t really have an agenda or don’t know what to do. We’re like the avant guard, we’re the force that gets them out there and so on. There’s other groups that also support us, like B’tselem, which is the Israeli human rights organization, or the Association for Civil Rights in Israel which is a legal human rights organization. They support us but because they are human rights organizations, they are not political, they don’t come in. There are religious organizations which support us. For example, different Jewish religious groups support us. Or let’s say the CPT, the Christian Peacemaker Teams. But you know, there’s a lot of groups that support us that can’t come out and join the list because they are not Israeli political groups.

Question: Do B’tselem and the Association for Civil Rights come to house demolition activities?

Answer: They come to demolitions; they help us prepare law suits against the government or the Civil Administration. They help us with press conferences, we share information with each other. There’s a lot of ways that we work together.

Question: You mentioned groups which support ICAHD but “haven’t signed on”. Could you name these groups?

Answer: Any group basically that supports us in different ways, but it doesn’t want to be identified as a political group. For example the Association for Civil Rights in Israel. It’s also Amnesty is like that. In other words, you’ve got to work with the government. You’ve got to work with the courts. You don’t want to be so identified with any particular group that you lose your effectiveness. And so they say, “Look, were for human rights, or civil rights, and were very much with you.” And they do, for example, speak out and file law suits. It’s not that they’re hiding who they are. But they don’t want to be put in the category of “Okay, that’s the political organization and that’s where they are,” because they have other issues. They deal with issues of foreign workers, issues of women… they deal with all kinds of different things. So they don’t want to be just identified with one particular issue.

Question: Could you name one of these groups?

Answer: Besides B’tselem, you have.. there’s a group called Hamoked, which is also a legal based civil rights organization. Then you’ve got political parties… Meretz party, their lawyers are at our disposal, they finance things, we use their office. But as a political party… and you know, it’s mutual as well, we don’t want to be identified with them and they don’t want to be just with us because they also have a wider constituency. And we try to lobby very much with Knesset members for example, of all the parties. Because you can deal with the issue of house demolitions like I do mainly in a very political way… But there is also a human dimension to it. So that in some ways there is no reason why a Knesset member on the right or a very religious Knesset member shouldn’t be opposed to house demolitions, just on a human level. What we find is that the Israeli public just isn’t very aware of it. Our success has been that we have succeeded in the last year or so in really turning house demolitions into an issue where it wasn’t an issue before. It was on the news once in awhile but nobody cared, nobody cared, nobody paid attention. It could have been a famine in Uganda, Rwanda… it could have been something that happened in Thailand. But now people are paying attention. For example, we were on a talk show, a popular political talk show. You see, what we managed to do with this program, this talk show, was that we managed to break out of the news. We’ve gotten good press coverage in terms of what we do newsy. But this was all of the sudden… you get into a popular entertainment thing. There you’re with settlers, you’re having an argument, people are watching. It’s not Ricky Lake exactly, but it’s a Larry King type of thing. So there… now what’s happening I think, is that we’re managing to get the issue out into the public domain where people are talking about it. Not just another news story that flashes by. That’s, I think, a significant thing, if we can push that. We were on, not myself, from one of the organizations, was on the early morning talk show. I was just interviewed on Los Angeles radio show the other day.

Question: What, do you believe, is the Israeli justification of house demolitions?

Answer: The justification is that houses are illegal because there is a planning process. The Civil Administration has a department of planning with architects and urban planners, and so on. And they’ve got new laws and regulations and there’s zoning. And they would say “Look, in every country you have laws of zoning, you can’t build wherever you want to build and we do to. And therefore, when Palestinians build illegally,” and there are thousands building illegally, “then we have a right and responsibility to uphold the laws.” But that doesn’t hold water if you look at where the basis of the law is. In other countries you have the law… first of all, in Western countries at least, you have laws that are made by parliament or congress, people make the laws. It’s not a military government. If you have an occupation you don’t have no say in making the laws. They’re not represented the Palestinians, they don’t vote, there are no planning committees. In 1976 there was a term the Israeli government liked to used, `enlightened occupation”. So in 1976, they allowed the Palestinians to hold municipal elections on the West Bank. And they voted PLO… so the next year Israel came in and nullified the elections and fired all the mayors, and since then there are no mayors of cities. And in ’77 the mayors are dismissed. So in other words, since 1977 there is no legal mechanism in which Palestinians can influence planning or anything in law. So what happened, is that law, is used in a very cynical way. There are three parts of the law. One is the law itself. But the law doesn’t stand by itself because anyone can make a law; the Nazis made laws, the South Africans made laws. There are a lot of unjust laws. There are two other components that are essential. One, that the law has to be connected to justice; it’s not a law that is made arbitrarily to serve one community and has no justice. An unjust law is a law that should be opposed. And that’s what civil disobedience is about. And the other part of it is democracy, that laws reflect the will of the people. So, if you have a situation in which one population is cut out of the democratic process and has no part in making the laws, then the law is like a stool missing two of the legs; justice is missing and democracy is missing. All you’re left with is a law made by a military government… really a dictatorship on the West Bank whose purpose is occupation… is not to give any rights. The problem is that people don’t dig into that very much. The minute they hear its illegal “alright its illegal” and that’s it, that stops the discussion. What we’re trying to do is get the people to understand what legality means. And in fact, if you go one step further, Israel is in violation of international human rights covenant. And starting with the fourth Geneva convention human rights covenant, that it has actually signed on, that guarantee a basic human right is a right to shelter. Every occupying power has a responsibility to ensure the welfare of the civilian population. The way Israel gets around that, and that it doesn’t see those human rights covenants applying to it, is that it says it’s not an occupying power, to be an occupying power you have to occupy another country, and there never was another country on the West Bank, is what they would say. Before that there was Jordan, before that it was British Mandate, and before that it was Ottoman Empire. So it’s a technicality. No country in the world accepts their legal line, but that’s the legal basis on which Israel justifies its… that it’s not an occupying power, that it’s simply administrating. For example, it’s never called occupied, it’s called administrated… Israel saying we’re administrating it, which we should do. We respect the Jordanian law that was there, even though there’s more than a thousand military laws and therefore, we’re being responsible not oppressive.

Question: What do you feel is more important, going to the courts or to the streets?

Answer: They’re both important. We go to the courts all the time. There’s never been a case though, in which a Palestinian has won in terms of house demolition, even at the supreme court. Do you know Kafka? The writer? I don’t know if you’ve ever read the “Trial”. In the trial a man wakes up one morning and he’s arrested and goes through the whole trial. In other words, what Israel has set up… because legal is very important for Israel… it has to give some pretext. It can’t come out and say “We’re oppressing the Palestinians”. Its got to give a legal kind of a thing. That was very important for South Africa too by the way. And it was very important for the Nazis, that everything went through a parliament and so on. So that what you have is a whole system… in a real system that has good faith, where the procedures and laws and zoning are all coming from real considerations and coming from the people, coming from democracy, you’ve got a thing where you go to the city hall. There’s an office that says its for housing permits, and that you go in good faith, and you say ok there’s rules and regulations and zoning, and I can’t do whatever I want to do. I have to understand. They tell me I’ve got to do this, and I do this. But eventually this system is built that you get a housing permit. You might not be able to build the ten stories you thought of building, or bright orange, or whatever, there are certain zoning laws. But there’s a rationale. There’s a justice, there’s a system that makes sense and the laws were made by the people basically, so you say, “Ok, I accept that framework and I’m willing to work within it.” And then what the system says is, “Ok,” and in the end you get a building permit. Here you got a whole different situation where you have the same window, it says building permits, and you’ve got a clerk and you’ve got forms and you’ve got procedures and you’ve got allocation fees and there’s a whole thing. But the whole system is built to frustrate, to not to give you a building permit… you see, that’s the whole point of it. But you have to do it because if you don’t play the game then your house is illegal and they’ll come for sure. Now, what they do, is they let a certain number of people through, because if nobody ever gets a building permit than people just say, “Fuck it, I’m not going to play this game.” But you give some, so that you never know if you’re going to be the one that gets the permit or not. So that sucks you into the system. But the entire system is structured in a way… its not the good faith thing, it doesn’t give you the permit. Because its not a real thing, its really an occupation. The clerk that is taking your form is wearing a uniform. So what happens is that you have the fa?ade of a legal system. Now, what we do of course, is we also play with that because it has a power. So we go to the courts. Once in awhile you get a judge, you get a case where you get a delay or you get an injunction or something happens. We do that. We always say the law is very important, but we just don’t have a real legal system on the West Bank. But at the same time you can’t stop at that because the real name of the game is occupation. What’s really behind this legal fa?ade is politics. So if you just stop at the legal system assuming, like you would assume in another country, that the court system and laws are there to serve you as a citizen… well the people on the West Bank aren’t citizens. It’s not their legal system, they don’t haven’t anything you see. And the whole basis of it is again occupation. So you can’t just stop at the laws because that’s not what’s really happening, so you’ve got to be out on the streets. And one of our jobs, and this is where house demolitions is so powerful, is to expose this dishonesty. To expose the fraud of what’s being presented as a legal system and really isn’t a legal system, and people see it. And that’s the power of what we do… because I don’t have to convince you. I just say, “Here’s a guy in Anota, here’s Salim Shawarmre, you follow him, I’m not going to say a word, here he is, you follow what happens to him. He’s going to go and apply and you watch what happens to him.” So that it’s very strong because you see that it’s unjust. This guy just wants a house and they’re coming in and bulldozing for no reason. He applies for permits and they give him a thousand different answers. The last thing we heard, about six months ago, it was in the newspaper, was that he was missing two signatures. So we’ve been trying to trying for six months now to get the two signatures and now they lost the file. You see, in other words, the system can’t function the way it should, and if you can just show people that its not functioning then the emperor all the sudden is naked.

Question: I don’t want to put words in your mouth, but it seems that you believe that civil disobedience is a means of both helping the person and bringing attention to an issue.

Answer: Yes, that’s right. And it’s true everywhere. It’s also true in democratic countries. That sometimes the majority can be very oppressive. Civil disobedience is always an option. Civil disobedience doesn’t say we don’t respect the law, or that we’re against the law, or that we have our own laws or whatever. Civil disobedience means that we accept there’s a legal framework. We accept the laws, now we’re choosing to disobey the laws because we feel they’re unjust. But we pay the price if the police come; we understand we may be arrested. The point isn’t to break the law, to get away with it. It’s not like I’m robbing crabapples off the neighbors tree and I sneak away. The whole point is that you break the law in the open and you have the system arrest you for doing… And the whole point is that in that way you’re confronting the system. And you’re not undermining the laws but you’re challenging unjust laws. It happens in the States for example, with environmental things for example. Where a law is made in a state because you have very powerful lobbies, you’ve got some coal lobby or some lumber lobby that wants to cut down all the redwood trees. And you say it’s unjust because this is one group that has managed to have legislation that is good for it, but it screws everyone else. And so in civil disobedience you don’t allow them to cut the trees down. You’re not saying we don’t recognize those laws, what you’re saying is we want those laws changed because they’re unjust. Here it’s more up in your face, the whole thing, but in every country you have situations in which civil disobedience is called for.

Question: Do you expect an escalation in the amount of civil disobedience which is now occurring?

Answer: Maybe. First of all, we’re non-violent. We’re a non-violent group. We’re not taking up arms or anything. We’re non-violent. But we’ve been in battles with the army. It doesn’t happen often but we’re certainly in favor of confrontation. We stand in front of bulldozers, we push their guns away if we can. We lob hand-grenades back at them when they throw hand-grenades at us… percussion grenades. We confront and we fight. But we fight in a non-violent way. In other words, we don’t go attack the army, but we try to paralyze the army. We try to stop it by sitting down, or not obeying orders, or by getting in their way. Now hopefully… I mean, it would be great if there was a whole civil rebellion. I’d love to have a hundred thousand Israelis get up and say, “Hey, stop this we’re not going to let you demolish houses and we’re going to march on the Civil Administration and throw all their computers out the window.” That would be great; it’s not going to happen, but I would love to see an escalation like that.

Question: Do you feel that the people involved in ICAHD activities should have an understanding of the basic issues before participating in actions such as house rebuildings?

Answer: First of all, on the surface of it, if something is unjust you can find it. It’s not very hard to see why house demolitions are unjust. But if you develop an analysis of why it is unjust, then what can you do, you can be more effective in stopping it. If you’ve noticed from what I send out… you see what most of the peace movements do is they’ll say we have a demonstration against a settlement on Saturday at 10:00 at the park and they go. What I try to do is, I always try to have a part that’s background. And I’ve gotten a lot of criticism from Israelis that say… I used to put it up front and they say, “Don’t do that, just tell us where to go.” But I do it anyway. And I’ve gotten a lot of feedback from people who say they appreciate that. Because why are they demolishing this house, why this particular village, why now, what’s going on? I really try with everything we do to have a background… so that it’s not only in terms of that problem, but if you keep reading over the weeks and months you begin to put together a picture of what’s going on. Or for example, this campaign that we had, we really set out in all the literature what the components were. It’s very academic, it’s very Friends Worldy in a way. Because the idea is to inform action with knowledge and with context, context is very important. And you try to give enough information for people. And I’m very happy when people say, “Look we don’t agree,” or when people ask a question and they wan to understand it, that’s good. So that’s another way in which we’re different from the other groups; we really try to explain, because it’s very complicated what’s going on. It’s not an easy thing.

Question: Would discourage a person from attending an activity if they had no knowledge of the situation?

Answer: No. It’s an experience, everything’s an experience. I wouldn’t discourage them from going and visiting the settlers in Hebron either. There’s only one way to learn and that’s to go out and experience. What you hope is that, that will be an opening, raise a lot of questions, raise a lot of issues and they’ll go on and try to figure out what’s going on. That’s in a sense what we do. That’s exactly what we do and I’ll tell you why; because Israelis don’t know what’s going on. So one way to raise consciousness is to get an Israeli out of Tel-Aviv, who’s never been out of Tel-Aviv, you get him to go to the West Bank where he’s afraid to go, he’d never go to an Arab village on the West Bank. You go out and you have him meet some Palestinians and meet the wives and the kids and we build and we eat and we talk. What it does is it gives an opening. You can do with that whatever you want to do, you can go on or you can say, “Ok, I did my thing and now I feel good and I’m going to go home.” Or you can say, “I think its terrible what these guys did.” We don’t oppose anything. That’s really what experiential learning means. You structure learning situations for people. You help empower them by giving them information. By structuring interaction, by raising an issue. And then it’s up to them. They have to be the active partner and draw their own conclusions.

Question: Do you receive any support from American organizations?

Answer: Not really, no. We have individuals. One of the groups that works with us is Rabbis for Human Rights. There’s Rabbis that are very supportive. There are certain Jewish social action groups like there’s Jewish groups on college campuses for example, that work with us that pass our messages around, that have demonstrations there and so on. The Jewish community is very conservative when it comes to Israel. One of the things we’re working on is to try to open a dialogue. We’ve worked for example, I’ve written for… we have a lot of support from Tikun magazine. You know Tikun? That’s a very liberal intellectual sort of… a very influential Jewish magazine that I write for, and they help us as well. But you know, it’s true in general. First of all, this is the `90s, as people keep reminding me, fortunately we’re almost out of the `90s. So in general everybody is conservative and politics are backburner stuff. And in general if you talk about Israel to Jews you get all this emotional stuff. And I think people are getting more critical. Certainly Netanyahu helps. But on the other hand I’m Israeli, we’re Israelis, and we’re not anti-Israeli, we’re Israelis. And that’s our message really. We’re not doing this only for the Palestinians. We’re doing this for the Palestinians from the point of view that they’re living in an unjust situation, occupation, and we have a moral responsibility to do something. Just as much, we’re doing this for ourselves because you can’t develop a normal healthy country if you’re occupying somebody else. It makes your own democracy a sham and it brutalizes your own kids. All these kids who go to the army, and what are they doing in the army, they’re going and knocking down Salim Shaarmwe’s house at 5:00 in the morning and throwing his kids out… that’s what are kids are doing in the army? It’s terrible. We realize that in order to live in this part of the world and have a normal flourishing society we’ve got to have peace. So this is really pro-Israel, but it’s saying that Israel’s interests are very different from what a lot of American Jews and a lot of Christians, a lot of fundamentalist Christians…. you know they really talk about the Jewish lobby, but Falwell and the fundamentalist lobby, the Christian lobby, is much more influential. Most of the senators and congressman that are really supporting the right come from Kansas, Utah, they don’t come from places that have big Jewish populations. So we’re trying to change those frames of reference. Because there’s a whole concept of a `Friend of Israel’. And a `Friend of Israel’ has always been defined by the government as a senator, a congressman, a president, and ambassador, whatever, who is uncritical, who just supports the government blindly, and usually with a right wing twist to it. And what we’re saying is, if you want to be a real friend of Israel be critical, support the forces of peace. It’s a real country and it needs peace. We’re saying now… how you can be pro-Israel and against the government and fight the army, it’s a whole process, those are the kinds of jumps that are sometimes hard for people to follow. Tikun magazine has a whole campaign now, we helped them to frame it with the words. To try to sign thousands of American Jews on a statement saying we welcome the establishment of a Palestinian state that lives in peace with Israel. American Jews… they’re not Israeli, its not they’re government and so on. But in terms of being Jewish- Americans and so on, they have to find their own ways to express what’s happening. Just like an American would speak out against Tibet. So there’s a degree of being closer to Israel, further from Israel… but in a way, you can speak out, but you don’t speak out in the same way we do. We have a lot of support from the European community. That’s another whole organization I didn’t mention. The European community. As a matter of fact we’re supposed to be getting about 150,000 dollars from them for our activities. The problem is there’s a big scandal, if you read about it in the last week or so. The whole European commission resigned… I don’t know when that’s going to come thorough, but they’re very supportive. The consuls, the embassy staffs, are very supportive, they even come to demolitions. The American consulate is very supportive. I would say in her own way Madeline Albright is very… the whole issue of house demolitions really pisses her off. Every time she opens her mouth in the Middle East she mentions house demolitions. Clinton talked about it in Gaza. He mentioned house demolitions explicitly. So its ramifying. It’s an issue they might not have talked about a year ago. So you have that support. We have support of all kinds of people on our email networks all over the world that demonstrate, that write letters, that send us donations and stuff. We’ve got one Israeli guy whose our angel in our sense. He wouldn’t want me to… he’s Annie Lennox’s husband. You know Annie Lennox? She’s married to an Israeli. And he’s very moved by this whole thing and he sends us a lot of money. Because of him in a sense… we get money from other sources, from donations, I just got a thousand dollar check in the mail from some guy… but he really in a sense has bankrolled us. He’s allowed us to do a lot of this stuff. Because you know, building a house, its also expensive what we do. It’s not like going out and holding up a sign… you know you go out and build a house… we build three houses in one day, each of those houses is four thousand, five thousand dollars and then they are knocked down. In other words, what I am saying is, that the press has been very supportive… but I think the Israeli public… a lot of people have been drawn into this especially by the human contact. So, you know that I’d say that we touched a nerve. Whether it is political or more human based, or whatever, we touched a nerve and a lot of people have responded and it has very much upset the right wing… you know more than others because we… you see the right wing in Israel whether it’s religious or secular the basis of it’s strength… it’s high moral ground… to hear Netanyahu say that we want to make peace with the Palestinians, we need reciprocity, we’re doing and they’re not. That self righteousness is a very important part in the whole legal system of, “We are the only democracy… there are terrorists and all that.” We are the only group that is piercing that fa?ade and saying wait a minute, you know… state terrorism is worse that… I mean yeah, it’s terrible and it’s true you have a guy that gets on a bus and blows up a bus and thirty people are killed. It’s a terrible thing, but if you look and accumulate what Israel has done over the past thirty years… I mean six thousand houses have been demolished… I mean six thousand families that don’t have houses… what’s that? That’s not the equivalent of a bus. It’s a different kind of a thing, but state terrorism is a form of terrorism too. That really, that just drives them out of their mind because… the whole thing that Clinton said in Gaza was that… you couldn’t believe the Israeli action. When he said Israelis do not have a monopoly over, over being victims and suffering and so on, and having a portion of the blame. That they brought this little girl, and this girl has a right to see her father… Palestinians… that was… you wouldn’t believe the rage that was in the right wing in Israel because that’s the whole point because, “We are right and we are good,” so on, “and they’re the bad guys.” I think what our campaign is doing is piercing that, and that’s where it’s really effective.

Question: I want to jump back to something quickly, you said that some consulate members come to the demolitions?

Answer: Yeah

Question: Two questions concerning this. Which consulates, and do they come in an official manner?

Answer: Yeah, I mean they don’t come to build. I don’t want to be too… all the consulates do.

Question: American?

Answer: The American, she wanted to come, but she didn’t get permission.

Question: Who was this?

Answer: A woman named Adrian, who is the… she is the woman in the American Consulate who is responsible for monitoring what goes on. I tell you, the Europeans are freer, for two reasons, than the Americans. One is that they are not pretending to be honest brokers. The States is trying to be an honest broker somehow, and so if the American Embassy people or the consulate people go out and identify too closely with what’s happening, that doesn’t serve their political functions. And beyond that… you know, the United States is trying to, has a pro-Israel constituency, Jews and Christians and all that stuff. Europeans are much freer because Europeans don’t pretend to be neutral. Europeans are really pissed off at Israel. I mean they’re supportive… I mean Israel gets a lot of money from Europe and favored status in trade and all kinds of things. It’s not that they’re anti-Israel, but they’re much freer, just pissed off… they’re really pissed off at Israel. And they’re critical and they come to demolitions, they don’t build, but they’re there. And actually, the European community, we have a thing that every time… it’s not often that we hear of demolitions actually happening because they happen early in the morning and they’re scattered and it’s, it’s very hard to get there. But they say, anytime you hear of a demolition that’s going to happen, call us and we’ll be there.

Question: Exactly which European consulates are you referring to?

Answer: All of them… including not just Europeans; Australians, South Africans. South Africans have been very good… some of the Latin American countries. I mean it’s uh, you know, nobody supports it, nobody supports it, except our famous joke here. You know the one country that always supports Israel besides the States? Micronesia. There was one vote of censuring Israel that the United States and Micronesia and Israel voted against.

Question: Where is Micronesia?

Answer: Exactly! So everybody said, who and where, where the fuck is Micronesia? It was a whole thing… it was so funny, a couple years ago when this happened. And they sent a couple a couple of Israeli journalists to go find Micronesia. And they found a bunch of scattered atolls in the middle of the Pacific. In Micronesia there’s no newspaper, there’s no newspaper there. And so, finally the Israelis found it and they asked the Micronesians,”Why, why?” And they said, because our… a hundred percent of our national budget comes from the United States; so whatever the United States says, we do. Now there’s a whole thing… they have a satirical show on T.V., I don’t know if you’ve ever seen it, with the puppets. Its like the British splitting image program. And at different times there’s a little figure that’s about this tall, who’s a Micronesian. Sometimes they’ll have Sharon on… you know, as the puppet of Sharon as giving a talk to the foreign minister. And this little tiny voice comes out, little tiny Micronesian, “I’m for you guys,” and he runs across the screen, this little tiny… he’s like a microguy. And Israel’s become a joke… Micronesia. But except for Micronesia, you know, no embassy is here of any country, except Elsalvador and Costa Rica, in Jerusalem. Everyone else is in Tel Aviv, here there’s just consulates.

Question: Please explain the figure of 6,000 destroyed houses?

Answer: What we do, the way you usually do it because there’s no figures really, I mean in terms of how many people. You assume the Palestinians… most Palestinian families, if you go in, have eight, nine, ten kids, the parents, the grandparents, you know, a lot of them are fourteen, fifteen people in a family. On the other hand, some of the buildings that are demolished, people haven’t moved in yet, or they’re shells of buildings… So what we do, is we take a figure of five, which is much lower than the average family, but it takes into account that not all the buildings… So we figure there’s five… there’s six thousand houses and other structures that have been demolished since ’67. And you multiply by five, which is fair, it might even be low, but its, it’s fair, it’s reasonable. You know, you get to thirty thousand people.

Question: The mayor of Jerusalem is planning on building 15,000 houses in East Jerusalem, where you aware of this?

Answer: Not for Palestinian. It depends on what East Jerusalem is. Ras-Alamoud, the Moslem Quarter, and Har-Choma; all those places are East Jerusalem. I don’t know what he means, if he means for Palestinians, or if he means building for Jews in East Jerusalem. If they built for Palestinians… I mean, it would be great, that’s what they announced when the Har-Choma project was on, that they were going to build five thousand homes, but I would doubt it. First of all who’s going to give him the money to do it, who’s going to give him the money? The government’s going to give money to build houses for Palestinians? And second of all, I don’t think… You know, it’s a declaration, I don’t believe it would ever happen. Besides which, it’ too low. Jerusalem, even the city itself says, that the Arab sector of Jerusalem is lacking twenty-five thousand houses. You know, there’s no building for thirty years. Twenty five thousand, they’re lacking, alright, now ten thousand that exist, are defined by the city as illegal. You know, it’s illegal building. So in other words they’re lacking thirty five thousand places that are legal or don’t exist. So, even if they build fifteen thousand it’s a drop in the bucket. Between the declaration and the actual product is a big… there’s years and uh, it doesn’t happen.

Question: Earlier, you mentioned David Rosen. What is his involvement?

Answer: David, what does David do, he has an institute or something, he was the chief rabbi of Ireland once. He, uh, I don’t think he works for an organization, I think he runs a… I’m not sure exactly, I know him pretty well, I think he runs some religious organization, study center, or something like that. He’s also, he’s not American, so he’s not with one of the American groups.

Question: What kind of assistance has he been able to provide?

Answer: No, David’s not so… David’s not very active, it’s more… He might have come to one of our activities, but um, he’s not one of the active…. We have a whole group, we have two religious groups, Jewish religious groups active with us. One is Rabbis for Human Rights. The other one is a group called N’tivot Shalom which is much more orthodox. The Rabbis is more Reform and Conservative Jews. N’tivot Shalom is more orthodox, but they’re involved. N’tivot Shalom means the pathways of peace. That’s one of the groups that’s on the lists. I don’t know if David is really a member of any of those groups, so much. His participation was more individual with us.

Question: What are the long term goals of ICAHD?

Answer: I think there’s three goals that I see. Not everybody… you know I tend to look, to see bigger than a lot of other people. Some people would say save Salim’s house, hah, hah. I think there’s three things. One is to end the Occupation. The second is to work for reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians, and the other is to provide Palestinians with economic reparations.

End of Transcription

As I exited Halper’s home I posed one final question. If there is to be an armed conflict between Israelis and Palestinians where would Mr. Halper find himself standing. “I would stand with the Palestinians,” answered Halper, “not necessarily on the battle field but I would support them.” “Would you encourage others to do so?” I asked. Halper replied yes, citing the “unjust policies of the Israeli regime”.


I have enclosed a full transcription of an interview conducted with Jeff Halper, head of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions and recently appointed director of the Tourgeman Museum.

Mr. Halper contacted me by phone requesting that he be allowed to publish a comment in the same newsletter that I distribute his interview; I have consented to his request.

Halper’s letter appears below.


As I told you on the phone, I was extremely upset — angry? betrayed? used? — to find the entire conversation we reported verbatim over the Internet. Not that I don’t stand behind everything I said, or that I didn’t know that you might use the material (although I did think it was a more academic talk than a journalistic interview), but that you weren’t up-front about who you were, what your agenda was and HOW you would use the material — and you didn’t give me a chance even to look over the transcript and “clean it up.” We use language on tape that we don’t use in written formats, and some of the material — in particular about our funders — I would have left out. Or more accurately, I would have answered if you had asked me but would have left some personal meterial out.

I understand that you feel you got a “scoop” — someone very candid about a highly controversial issue and activity, and I now understand where you were coming from politically and why you were digging so much about our sources of support and funding… But use of that material in its raw form without even extending me the courtesy of reviewing it is, in my view, unethical and dishonest… I don’t know what your agenda is, but its unethical and dishonest in both journalistic and personal senses. I have been interviewed by hundreds of journalists and others and I have spoken to them as candidly as I did to you because I operate out of a basic trust of the other person. This is the first time I’ve been “stung”…

I ask you, then, to place these comments on the same e-mail/Internet forum where my interview appeared — and I would like to get copies. If you use the material again I ask that you remove all names and references of donors. I stand behind everything I said, but I regret it if I compromised people or organizations through my wanting to help you understand who we are and what we do.

In Peace,

Jeff Halper

Al-Ahram Weekly: 1st-7th April, 1999

Corruption Cover-Up in UNWRA?
by Zeina Khodr

Heading:
“An UNWRA report proves that some officials have been mishandling funds. But, as Zeina Khdor reports from Beirut, Palestinian officials are worried that delays in tackling the scandal could have adverse effects on refugees.”

Excerpts:
The Palestinian Popular Committee at the Ain Al-Helweh refugee camp in the southern city of Sidon has for years been complaining about corruption and mismanagement within the administration of the UN Relief and Works Agency, UNWRA.

But the relevant authorities only began to take their allegations seriously last November when the director general of UNWRA in Lebanon, Wolfgang Plaza, vowed to uncover the “truth”. Plaza had urged the UN to launch a thorough investigation into reported acts of embezzlement and squandering of funds at UNWRA.


A few days later, Plaza was forced to relocate to Brussels. He said he was “summarily dismissed” because he did not meet deadlines to reply to requests by UNWRA for information about the corruption allegations he had made. Palestinian sources said Plaza was given an “administrative holiday” to prevent him from uncovering a scandal at the agency.

Two investigations were launched in December 1998: one ordered by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and the other by UNWRA’s Commissioner General Peter Hansen.


Upon the request of the German government, UNWRA officials in Gaza investigated three German-funded projects in Lebanon.


The final report charged that senior UN officials changed the terms and conditions for a tender to build a school. By doing so, the contract was won by an under-qualified construction company.


“The final report admits clearly that there was corruption and mismanagement at all managerial levels in the Lebanon office and the UNWRA headquarters in Gaza,” Ghazi Al-Assadi, another member of the Palestinian Popular Committee at Ain Al-Helweh, told Al-Ahram Weekly….. “… so far, no action has been taken,” Al-Assadi said. “We demand the commissioner general and the director of UN affairs in Lebanon take immediate disciplinary action,” he said.

It is believed that measures will not be taken until a report by an international investigating team from New York is made public. But the Palestinian committee is worried that the delay in releasing that report may be an excuse to cover up the charges.

“The team left Beirut six weeks ago. They were supposed to present their report three weeks ago,” Al-Assadi said.


The Weekly contacted the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services in New York to find out what had happened to the report, but there was no one available at the office.

Furthermore, the Palestinian committee has criticised what it sees as the failure of the Gaza report to assess work carried out in one of the camps accurately.


Projects have now been put on hold, following reports of corruption that made donor nations question how their money was being spent…. Palestinian officials say the refugees will lose out further if there are any more delays in tackling the corruption scandal.


“The money sent by international donors for the Palestinian people is not reaching them and this cannot be allowed to continue,” Makdah said.

The Root of the Evil

Full Text:
Sir
Ever since Mr Netanyahu came to power in Israel, I have been following the strange way he has been conducting Israeli policies towards the Arabs with great apprehension and disappointment, undoubtedly like many other Egyptians.

I cannot help wondering just how valid today is what Sir John Nicholls, British ambassador to Tel Aviv from 1954 onwards, said after a few months at his post: “The centre of infection in the region is Israel and I believe that we must treat the Israelis as a sick people.” The quotation is from Keith Kyle’s admirable book: Suez, 1991, p.67, published by Mamdouh El-Dakhakhni in Alexandria, Egypt.

Translations by
Dr. Joseph Lerner,
Co-Director IMRA (Independent Media Review & Analysis)
P.O.BOX 982 Kfar Sava
Tel: (+972-9) 760-4719
Fax: (+972-9) 741-1645
imra@netvision.net.il

Al-Ahram Weekly 25th-31st March, 1999

Contents:


Prostitution in Israel
Should This be an Accepted Norm for Young Women – or Should We Fight It?

by David S. Bedein, MSW,
Media Research Analyst
Bureau Chief: Israel Resource News Agency
Beit Agron International Press Center, Jerusalem

In early March, 1998, Diane Sawyer at CBS ran an investigative news item that exposed widespread prostitution in Israel.

Sawyer focused on women who are being lured into the “profession” to Israel from the former Soviet Union, conveying the impression that the only prostitutes in Israel are those who are “imported” from abroad – no one knows how many. And the recent few news stories that have appeared in Israel on prostitution have also focused on women “imported” from abroad

However, yet another worrisome phenomenon concerns the increasing number of homegrown native Israeli women and adolescent girls who are lured into the trade.

A 1970 study on Israeli prostitution, The Mark of Cain, by the respected Israeli criminologist, Shlomo Shoham, explored how young women and girls in Israeli development town girls had used the profession to “advance themselves in society” and to work themselves “out of the rut of development town life”. Israeli social service professionals in Israel’s three dozen outlying development towns continue to report that the “export” of development town prostitutes to Israel’s big cities and to Arab villages in the Galilee region continues to this day on a wide scale.

Most recently, a social work professional walked me through a ten block area in the heart of Tel Aviv, passing by embassies, luxury hotels, coffee shops and businesses. My colleague pointed out more than thirty places where prostitutes now run their business. She confirmed that, yes, while there were some immigrants involved in the trade, the vast majority of Tel Aviv brothels employed hundreds of native Sabras, which involves the widespread corruption of minors, the increased spread of sex-related diseases and narcotics use, the acceleration of organized crime.

Israeli prostitution has become an integral part of a “cottage industry”, with an interlocking network of those who stand to earn something – hotel clerks, coffeeshop owners, waitresses, building contractors of foreign workers & tour operators who seek women to provide customers with “perks”. Who ever said that crime does not pay?

Young Israeli teenagers who are enticed by the promise of instant wealth to modeling schools and cosmetics parlors. Today, ads appear in discos and areas frequented by teenagers of 16, 17, and 18 are “encouraged” to join the “escort services” throughout the country.

The option of joining a local “escort service” for a handsome remuneration seems quite tempting. Some of these “services” advertise for students from Tel Aviv University to ” work their way through college” with an easy job on the side. Pimping is a sophisticated industry in a country where there is just too much cash flow, when people can sell hovels in any major Israeli city for hundreds of thousands of dollars. And even though illegal pimping and prostitution occur in broad daylight, the Israeli police seem to be turning a blind eye to the subject.

And whenever there is a crackdown, police tend to focus more on the immigrants – and so so does the press.

Most people in Israel are not aware of the extent of the problem. The subject is hardly mentioned on the news, nor on any of the dozen investigative news features that dominate the Israeli print and electronic media.

Part of the reason that the Israeli media are not “hopping” on the issue lies in the fact that major owners of the Israeli media have placed themselves in a situation of conflict of interest that prevents them from covering the subject in any depth. How has that happened?

You see, the major Israeli media have joined this cottage industry.

Each of the major news syndicates in Israel carry hundreds of ads each day that openly advertise prostitution services throughout the country.

Even HaAretz, which prides itself as being a “clean” publication, runs a Tel Aviv weekend supplement, known as “HaIr”, which runs prostitution ads with an additional feature nude pictures of the young women seeking business. HaAretz does not ask its readers whether they want to read HaIr – It gives it out for free every week. Most recently, the Israeli edition of THE International Herald Tribune also began to include HaIR wrapped up in its Friday edition, again, without asking its readers.

The three major families who own the major media in Israel, including a controlling interest in Israel Commercial and cable TV networks, prefer to advertise for prostitution rather than cover the subject.

The two daily Israeli tabloids run as many as 100 prostitution ads a day. Each tabloid demands upfront payment for such advertisements. A policy that sounds appropriate for the “profession”?

That means that each major Israeli paper grosses $10,000 a day in cash receipts this source of advertising revenue alone. At a time when the Israeli small businesses are in a slump, logic would that you do not you “bite the gland that feeds you”?

And in the late-’90’s atmosphere in Israel that lavishes in neuvau riche freedom conspicuous consumption No politician, civil rights organization, or “women’s organization seems to have courage to fight Israel’s media moguls. Instead, the left-wing Meretz/Peace Now political faction in Jerusalem’s city council suggested that the Israeli police protect prostitution, not stop it.

At this point in time, the entire matter of prostitution and pornography are often portrayed by the Israeli media as an obsession of Orthodox Jews.

Perhaps the time has come to coordinate a new coalition who could influence the police to do their job. This new group could be compromised of anyone who cares about the issue.

One legal action in the Israel High Court of Justice would be enough to order the Israel State Prosecutor to take criminal action against anyone who promotes or advertises for prostitutes.

Yes, coalitions on moral issues can work in Israel.

An encouraging precedent About ten years ago, a certain Israeli media mogul tried to “pioneer” an Israeli version of Penthouse, which she promised would be on every newsstand and in every corner of society. A creative community organizer colleague of mine raised the funds to hire a staffer who organized a unique coalition of traditional Orthodox Jews and Israeli feminists to threaten a consumer boycott of selected Penthouse advertisers. Israel’s first national porno rag never made it past two issues.

Yet one need not be a feminist or an Orthodox Jew to get involved. Nor do you have to be a social work professional. I guess that some of my passion for this subject has to do with being the proud father of three daughters (and two boys). As a responsible parent, can I sit back without challenging a norm in Israeli society that suddenly and sanctions and encourages prostitution?

I find it ironic that the first letter of concern that I received from my grandmother when I first came to Israel as a student in 1970 was about her worry over prostitution in Israel. She had seen something about it in the Jewish Advocate of Boston. “You should fight such a thing in Jewish country”, she wrote me. She was right.

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A Battle, Not A Massacre

Pro-Arab Lobby Now Admit 100, Not 254, Arabs Died During 1948 Battle of Deir Yassin

NEW YORK– A pro-Arab lobby group which has always claimed that 254 Arabs died during the 1948 battle of Deir Yassin has quietly changed its story, and now admits that about 100, not 254, were killed. The change comes just weeks after the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) released a study showing that the number of Arabs killed in Deir Yassin was less than half of what has been claimed, and that they were not massacred.

The “Deir Yassin Remembered” group, which is headed by Daniel McGowan of Hobart & William Smith Colleges (NY), had repeatedly claimed that 254 Arabs died at Deir Yassin. For example, in the April 1996 issue of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, McGowan wrote of “254 innocent men, women and children who were systematically slaughtered.” A February 1998 posting on the group’s web site, the “Deir Yassin Remember Online Information Center,” claimed that “In all, 254 men, women, and children were systematically slaughtered.”

But during the past week, the “Deir Yassin Remembered Group” has twice revised the death toll downwards. In a press release on March 22, 1998, McGowan wrote that “an estimated 100-250 Arab villagers were slaughtered.” Then, in a listing of forthcoming activities, released on March 25, 1998, McGowan reported that “over 100 Palestinian men, women and children were killed.”

The changes in the death toll count come in the wake of the ZOA’s publication of a new study, Deir Yassin History of a Lie, a 32-page analysis (with 156 footnotes) by ZOA National President Morton A. Klein. (For a free copy, please call (212) 481-1500.)

Among other things, the ZOA study shows that the original claim of 254 dead was not based on any actual body count. The number was invented by Mordechai Ra’anan, leader of the Jewish soldiers who fought in Deir Yassin. He later admitted that the figure was a deliberate exaggeration in order to undermine the morale of the Arab forces, which had launched a war against the Jews in Mandate Palestine to prevent the establishment of Israel. Other eyewitnesses to the battle estimated that about 100 Arabs had died. Despite Ra’anan’s admission, the figure 254 was circulated by Palestinian Arab leader Hussein Khalidi. His claims about Deir Yassin were the basis for an article in the New York Times claiming a massacre took place–an article that has been widely reprinted and cited as “proof” of the massacre throughout the past 50 years.

The ZOA study describes how in 1987, researchers from Bir Zeit University, an Arab university in Palestinian Authority territory, interviewed every Arab survivor of the battle and concluded that the number of civilians who died in Deir Yassin could not have been more than 120. Despite the study, the “Deir Yassin Remembered” group continued using the figure of 254 dead.

ZOA president Klein said “Now that the ZOA has publicized the Bir Zeit University findings and proven that far fewer Arabs died than was always claimed, the pro-Arab propagandists have been forced to quietly change their story. Our booklet proves not only that the death toll was falsely inflated, it also proves there was no massacre, rape, or mutilation.”

Meanwhile, Dr. Hussein Khalidi is at the center of a startling new report, in which several Arab eyewitnesses to the Deir Yassin battle admitted that some of their original claims about Jewish atrocities were fabricated. The latest issue of the Jerusalem Report (April 2, 1998) reveals that in a forthcoming BBC television program, Hazem Nusseibeh, an editor of the Palestine Broadcasting Service’s Arabic news in 1948, admits that he was told by Hussein Khalidi to fabricate claims of atrocities at Deir Yassin in order to encourage Arab regimes to invade the Jewish state-to-be.

According to the Jerusalem Report, Nusseibeh “describes an encounter at the Jaffa Gate of Jerusalem’s Old City with Deir Yassin survivors and Palestinian leaders, including Hussein Khalidi… ‘I asked Dr. Khalidi how we should cover the story,’ recalled Nusseibeh. ‘He said, “We must make the most of this.” So we wrote a press release stating that at Deir Yassin children were murdered, pregnant women were raped. All sorts of atrocities.'”

The BBC program then shows a recent interview with Abu Mahmud, who was a Deir Yassin resident in 1948, who says that the villagers protested against the atrocity claims “‘We said, “There was no rape.” [Khalidi] said, “We have to say this, so the Arab armies will come to liberate Palestine from the Jews.'”

Nusseibeh, who is a member of one of Jerusalem’s most prominent Arab families and presently lives in Amman, told the BBC that the fabricated atrocity stories about Deir Yassin were “our biggest mistake,” because “Palestinians fled in terror” and left the country in huge numbers after hearing the atrocity claims.

In 1948, Labor Zionist leaders initially claimed there was a massacre, in order to score points against the rival Irgun Zvai Leumi and Stern Group, the fighters who conquered Deir Yassin. But Israel’s Labor-led governments have, over the years, gradually rescinded the massacre accusation. A little-known 1952 Defense Ministry judicial court ruled that Deir Yassin was a legitimate military target. Official Israeli government statements about Deir Yassin, in 1960 and 1969 (under Foreign Ministers Golda Meir and Abba Eban), formally rebuked the Labor Zionist officials who had made the false massacre accusation in 1948, describing the “massacre” charge as a “fairy tale” and a “big lie.”

Meanwhile, the “Deir Yassin Remembered” group intends to hold a “50th Anniversary Memorial Conference” at the Hakawati theater in Jerusalem on April 9, 1998. On the same day, in Los Angeles, Arab activists intend to hold a “vigil” outside the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Museum of Tolerance, which commemorates the Holocaust. They will also be holding a vigil at the University of California at Davis, and a rally in Washington, D.C. on May 15, 1998, the 50th anniversary of the establishment of Israel.

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International Policy Institute for Counter-Terrorism Website

The International Policy Institute for Counter-Terrorism in Herzliya, today (Sunday), 29.3.98, announces the opening of its new website at www.ict.org.il.

The site consists of a database on issues of terrorism, including terrorist organizations in the Middle East and the world, attacks, countries supporting terrorism, connections between terrorism and crime, the use of non- conventional weapons and counter-terrorism measures taken by Israel and other countries. The site is available to all interested parties.

For further details, please contact the institute at (+972-9) 952-7277 or fax (+972-9) 951-3073.

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PLC Jamal Shati al-Hidi
No Deal Without Return of ’48 Refugees

by Aaron Lerner

Jamal Shati Al-Hindi is a Fatah Jenin representative in the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) where he is Chairman of the PLC Refugee and Diaspora Committee.

IMRA: interviewed Al-Hindi in Hebrew on March 24, 1998

IMRA: I understand that you say that Israel should allow the 1948 refugees to return to their homes inside Israel.

Al-Hindi: Yes. In Israel.

IMRA: The Left in Israel which supports the Palestinian cause – Yossi Sarid, Shulamit Aloni, etc. say that if you allow the refugees to return to their homes then there will be a situation that there may be more Palestinians than Jews in the Knesset. That this will be a problem because if Israel is a democracy then there won’t be a Jewish majority in Israel so the whole effort was for naught. How do you react to this – that even among the Israeli Left the view is that allowing the right of return wrecks the whole exercise.

Al-Hindi: This is a right of the Palestinian people for two thousand years. They lived in the land and lived in their homes. Why shouldn’t they return to their homes?

There is also UN Resolution 194 calling for them to return to their homes.

The UN allowed Israel membership so that it could fulfill 194 and Israel can’t take this away.

IMRA: All Israelis – I am not talking about Netanyahu – the Israeli Left including Yossi Sarid oppose this. Even if they were in power they would not allow the refugees to return within Israel.

Al-Hindi: Why wouldn’t the Left say that all the refugees should return to their homes. There are Palestinians living within Israel but not in their original homes. Why shouldn’t they be permitted to return to their homes.

IMRA: When I ask the Israeli Left they tell me that the Palestinian demand for the right of return is for negotiations. That in the end they will accept a compromise. Is this really just an opening position?

Al-Hindi: This is the right of the Palestinian refugees and they do not have to say yes now. There is time. A hundred years.

IMRA: What does that mean?

Al-Hindi: It may take much time for us to return to our homes. We want to live in our villages.

IMRA: So there can’t be peace without this?

Al-Hindi: Maybe there will be peace if the Palestinians get the right of return.

IMRA: And if they don’t?

Al-Hindi: Then there won’t. There are four million Palestinian refugees who want to return.

IMRA: Israelis may say that they are willing to have a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza but only if the Palestinians give up on the right of return of the refugees to Israel. Don’t give up on the right of return and the negotiations fall apart. Are you ready to have the negotiations fail just because of the right of return?

Al-Hindi: Israel didn’t give us houses in Israel. They are Palestinian houses. Why can’t we return to our homes. Would the Jews agree to the Arabs getting their homes?

IMRA: I am asking a practical question. If there is a way for you to get now a Palestinian state it is at the price of giving up on the right of return. Are you willing to pay this price?

Al-Hindi No. I won’t agree to this. Nor will all the Palestinian refugees.

Dr. Aaron Lerner,
Director IMRA (Independent Media Review & Analysis)
P.O.BOX 982 Kfar Sava
Tel: (+972-9) 760-4719
Fax: (+972-9) 741-1645
imra@netvision.net.il

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Did Israel Inject “AIDS” to Palestinian Children?
by Moshe Zak
Op-Ed in Ma’ariv

Israel cannot allow the Palestinian Authority’s incitement methods to go unchecked.

Nabil Ramlawi, the PLO’s representative in Geneva, apologized last week to the UN Committee on Human Rights for the libelling the Israeli government, and retracted the complaint that he had submitted to the committee, which said that “Israel has, over the past year, injected the AIDS virus into 300 Palestinian children.” However, he has still not retracted his complaint that the [Israeli] health minister “permitted Israeli pharmaceutical companies to conduct dangerous tests on more than 4,000 Palestinian prisoners.”

The AIDS story has been going circulating in the committee since its last session, a year ago. Its chairman, the Czech ambassador, cast doubt on the veracity of the facts on which the complaint was based and did not allow a vote. The PLO representative responded with a letter that he sent last July “My declaration is not exceptional and it is based on various sources, including the media.” However, the media was not enough of a foundation for Nabil Ramlawi, and he was forced to retract his accusations. There is reason to assume that had the committee chairman been a diplomat from an Arab or Muslim country, and not from the Czech Republic, the committee would have voted on the resolution to condemn Israel, without giving time for the PLO representative to apologize for the libel, since that is the routine for UN votes. There is an automatic majority for any condemnation of Israel. Therefore, there is still no assurance that the UN committee will not condemn Israel in the wake of the libel about dangerous medical experiments being performed on Palestinian prisoners.

Israel’s ambassador in Geneva and the Foreign Ministry executive are, apparently, doing their best to stave off the Palestinian attack, but the specific handling of the libel is not enough. The government would do well to deal with this phenomenon at the root level, by presenting the libel as an overt violation of the Hebron Accord, in which the Palestinian Authority undertook to stop all incitement against Israel.

How can the government conduct quiet and substantive negotiations with the Palestinians on the arrangements for the safe passage from Gaza to Judea and Samaria, when it is constantly being forced to defend itself against Palestinian initiatives in the international arena which incite against Israel? How can Israel calmly consider the American mediation proposals on the scope of the IDF withdrawal from Judea and Samaria, when at the same time students in the schools under PA guidance are being educated to wage war for the return of Jaffa and Ramle, Lod and Haifa? And how can the government give up its demand for appropriate security arrangements at Gaza port and the airport at Dahaniya, which would prevent the infiltration of hostile elements to Israel, when at the PA’s television station young Palestinians sing and declaim their readiness to be “martyrs” in the war to liberate the despoiled homeland?

These “educational” activities perpetuate the hostility for the coming generations as well, and they frequently receive support in reports about UN condemnations of Israel. The condemnations signal to Arafat that he does not have to seek dialogue with the [Israeli] government. The countries which vote against Israel, on the erroneous argument that the construction on Har Homa violates the Oslo Accords, promise Arafat that they will convince the United States, which voted against the resolution condemning [Israel], to join the international pressure on Israel. And after they ensured, with their votes and declarations, that Arafat would be convinced to delay progress in negotiations, the countries cry foul over the freeze in the political process.

At the same time, Arafat succeeds in extracting from the Iranian president a declaration of support for his demands. In fact, this is not an unequivocal assurance of a halt of Iran’s support for terrorism, but rather a handing of the key to Arafat, which says that only an agreement acceptable to the Palestinians can lead to a change in Teheran, which the United States so greatly desires. We should not be surprised if this Iranian bait spurs the United States to publish its mediation proposal on the question of the scope of the IDF withdrawal.

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Palestinian Christians Win U.S. Political Asylum
by Yossi Klein Halevi
Jerusalem Report

American courts have for the first time granted political asylum to two West Bank evangelical Christians on the grounds of religious persecution. And more West Bank Christians are about to file asylum requests in American courts.

The courts – one in Chicago, and the other in North Carolina – accepted the asylum-seekers’ claims that the Palestinian Authority was persecuting Christian evangelicals, after the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service reversed its earlier skepticism and endorsed their claim. The two asylum-seekers – who won’t allow their names to be published, for fear of PA retaliation against relatives still in the territories – are both converts from Islam to Christianity, who had practiced their new faith in secret.

Meanwhile, Muhammad Bak’r, a West Bank convert to Christianity who had been in a PA prison since June, was released on bail in late February. The PA accused Bak’r of selling land to Jews, though sources close to Bak’r insist the real reason for his imprisonment was his activity as a Christian missionary.

Bak’r says he was tortured in prison, at one point hung by his hands from the ceiling for two consecutive days. His release followed intervention by the Norwegian government.

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Are Stolen Cars More Important Than Escaped Killers?
Killer Watch

“Killer Watch” notes that Kahalani “neglected” to ask Arafat to arrest the killers whom Arafat has welcomed to the Palestine Authority. Are cars more important that killers?”

Spring, 1998

A new advocacy group, “Killer Watch”, has emerged in Jerusalem.

It was founded by American-Israeli citizens, Joyce and Stanley Boim of Jerusalem.

David Boim, the teenage son of the Boims, was machine gunned to death at a school bus stop on May 13, 1996.

The two Arab gunman who murdered David Boim immediately sped into the area under the control of the Palestine Authority.

Within a few weeks, their identity and whereabouts were known to the Israel Defense Forces, and to the Palestine Authority.

The American embassy informed the Boims that David’s killers were in custody of the PA.

The PA denied this.

It was not until the Boims sued the Israeli Minister of Justice in July 1997 that the Israeli government issued a demand that the PA arrest the murderers of David Boim.

On September 4, 1997, one of David’s killers blew himself up on the Ben Yehudah Street Mall in Jerusalem, killing four high school girs and one young bank clerk who had taken his ten year old boy for ice cream.

Only after Joyce Boim testified in the US Congress and conducted a speaking tour throughout the US, did US President Clinton personally order Arafat to arrest David’s other killer, whose name is Amjad Hanawi.

In February, 1998, Hanawi was finally arrested and convicted of accessary to murder in the Jericho Palestine Authority court.

Hanawi was sentenced to ten years of hard labor.

The question posed by the Boims and others remains How long will Hanawi serve? Will the PA release Hanawi after a few months, as they have in other capital crimes?

Killer Watch will keep an eye on Hanawi, to see if the PA indeed keeps him in jail.

Killer Watch will also monitor the whereabouts of thirty three other admitted killers who have found refuge inside the Palestine Authority, and keep the issue alive in the public domain of the Israeli media and political arena.

During the month of March, 1998, the Israeli police, under pressure from Israeli insurance companies, conducted widespread searches for vehicles that had been stolen and smuggled to the areas under the jurisdiction of the Palestine Authority.

The Israel Minister of Police and Public Security, Avigdor Kahalani, met with PA chairman Yassir Arafat on March 29 to demand that the car thefts cease and that the Pa hand over stolen vehicles.

Killer Watch notes that Kahalani “neglected” to ask Arafat to arrest the killers whom Arafat has welcomed to the Palestine Authority. Are cars more important that killers?

It will be the task of Killer Watch to see to it that Kahalani and other Israeli leaders feel the pressure of justice for those who have been murdered, while the killers have simply crossed the line to the safe haven of the Palestine Authority.

Otherwise, the kill and run precedent of the Oslo process will remain.

Killer Watch is now developing a systematic strategy to influence Israeli and world public opinion.

Mailing Address of KILLER WATCH
POB 2265
Jerusalem, Israel
Tel: (02) 625-7303
Fax: (02) 625-9239

Killer Watch will appreciate contributions, active support and voluntary efforts on its behalf.

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Palestine Broadcasting Corporation Children’s TV Program

Video is available from “SHALOM LEDOROT” – Address listed below.

This video was shown at the March 11, 1998 hearings at the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee

“All means of… education”

The P.L.O. Covenant – Article 7

What you are about to see are clips from Palestinian Authority’s Children’s Club – a Sesame Street like T.V. show. These excerpts come from programs the P.A. has broadcast in recent weeks.

U.S. AID funds this T.V. children’s program in a “Sesame Street” format
Palestinian Authority Television
The Children’s Club, 29th January, 1998

Palestine! Amidst the shooting of the revolution, I turn to you with my blood and the blood of my brother and of the son of my neighbours. My heart will cleanse your image. Allah is great! Allah is great!

The Children’s Club, 6th February, 1998

When I wander into the entrance of Jerusalem, I’ll turn into a suicide warrior in battledress! In battledress! In battledress! Thank you ‘Bravo! Bravo! Bravo!’

The Children’s Club, 13th February, 1998

I am the voice of the exalted martyr. I am the voice of the exalted martyr and his green fire. Oh, my homeland…. And like my father I’ll live in the shadow of the heroes and echo his voice, with my blood, and his image will be upon my eyelids.

Each and every part of your soil I have drenched with all my blood. And we shall march as warriors of Jihad (Holy War). Oh, my exalted martyr, you are my example. Oh, my companion, you are beside me. Oh, my sister, sing constantly about my life as a suicide warrior how we remain steadfast. Oh, my country, you are my soul. Oh, my dawn, you are my heartbeat.

The Children’s Club, 20th, 24th February, 1998

My heartfelt conviction to launch a Jihad (Holy War).

A teacher’s poem ‘The shout’, 26th February, 1998

Oh, to those who achieved eternal glory and to the lovers of exalted martyrdom.
Oh, steadfast leaders, we bless you with the most fitting tribute of all, for you have reached the highest summit, together with the righteous and the prophets.
Do we say to you Good-bye? No, instead we declare, see you again in heaven!
For this is the meeting place, the loving faithful one.

Chairman Yasser Arafat, honoring the exalted martyrs especially Yihyeh Ayaash 19 January, 1998

Our collective goal is to continue in their path. Indeed we are all candidates for holy martyrdom! Candidates for holy martyrdom in memory of the noble and brave exalted martyrs Abu Iyaad, Abu Alhol, and before them Abu Jihad and before them Yihyeh Ayaash and after them Yihyeh Ayaash.

All means of information and education must be adopted in order to acquaint the Palestinian with his country in the most profound manner….
He must be prepared for the armed struggle and ready to sacrifice his wealth and his life in order to win back his homeland….

The P.L.O. Covenant – Article 7


Peace for Generations
Chairman – Daniel Yosef
National Coordinator U.S. – Ferne Hassan

8 Eliash Street,
Jerusalem, Israel

Jerusalem Mailing Address
P.O. Box 1941,
Jerusalem, 91022

Tel (02) 530-0123
Fax (02) 625-7121.

U.S.A. Mailing Address
Post Office Box 55
Union, NJ 07083-0055

Tel: (908) 624-9090
Fax: (908) 851-2498
E-mail: peace4gen@aol.com

Damascus to Rearm Saddam

A secret deal has been agreed between Syria and Iraq for the supply of military equipment to Baghdad, according to Middle East intelligence sources.

Relations between the two countries have been improving significantly in recent months, with agreements already signed to develop both political and economic co-operation.

Now, after a new deal between the Syrian and Iraqi intelligence services, military equipment valued at about œ60 million is to be shipped across the border, the intelligence sources said.

Since the 1991 Gulf War, President Saddam Hussein has faced a severe shortage of spare parts for his army because of the international arms embargo. Under the Damascus agreement, Syrian spare parts for military equipment would be converted for use by the Iraqi Army, the sources said. The parts would include engines for Russian-made tanks and tracks for armoured fighting vehicles.

Syria is also expected to supply spares for anti-aircraft radar facilities – hit by recent American and British bombing – lorries, aircraft and helicopters, and ammunition.

Cold Peace Encouraged at Palestinian Israeli Social Workers Workshop?

Monday March 9, by invitation of Dr. Elia Awwael, I attended the Palestinian-Israeli Social Workers Workshop held at the Nativity Hotel located in Bethlehem. The stated goals of the workshop included allowing Israelis and Palestinians the opportunity to discuss current “social” cases as well as identify the needs of social workers on both sides. These goals though, however important, were secondary to the supreme expectation of the workshop; to allow Palestinians and Israelis to begin forming a friendly and trustful relationship, or as the official workshop agenda stated: [To introduce] participants at the personal and professional level. The issue of whether or not this was achieved, or more so, whether or not an environment existed in which it could be achieved, is of extreme interest.

My entrance into the “Nativity Hotel” occurred at approximately 9:30 am. I was immediately greeted by Dr. Elia Awwael and then left to mingle with the approximately thirty social workers who were in attendance. I stood contently near a food-laden table and observed the workshop participants. The number of Israelis and Palestinians in attendance was closely matched. At 10:00, the group was asked to move from the reception area into the conference room.

The workshop began with a brief introduction of the three coordinators as well as a history of the program. According to Dr. Awwael the current meeting was the fourth of its kind and received funding from the American Embassy and Palestine Council of Health. The purpose of the workshop was described as providing the framework for Palestinians and Israelis to examine social welfare.

Following opening remarks participants were instructed to introduce themselves to one another with the emphasis on Israelis and Palestinians coming together. I placed myself within a group of five social workers: one Israeli man, two Palestinian men, and one Israeli woman and a Palestinian woman. The Israeli woman, who identified herself as a head member of the Israeli social worker union, spoke with a Palestinian man and woman, both of approximately 25 years of age. Their discussion, which was dominated by the Israeli woman, dealt primarily with the concept of a social workers union. Adjacent to this three person sub-group sat the remaining Israeli and Palestinian men whose heated conversation contained such proclamations as: Palestinian- “Some kinds of Jews hate us and some of us hate them”. Israeli- “We came and Arabs were here; I know this wasn’t good. I don’t know what to do about this”. In a moment of silence within the ‘union group’ the Palestinian man recognized my presence and encouraged me to introduce myself.

A Palestinian woman faced me and expressed her anger at being denied entrance to Jerusalem, citing her brother’s stay in prison as the reason. Ghadi Rahil, a resident of Bethlehem, and currently a student of social work expressed anger towards Israelis but stated her ability to meet with Israelis in a professional context. Her feelings were echoed by another Palestinian woman who seated herself amongst the group in the midst of the conversation. [They take our land, look at what they did. I can work professionally with the Israeli but this is it]. The meeting of participants lasted one hour twenty-two minutes and was followed with a lecture by Dr. Bernard Sabilla of Bethlehem University.

The speech began rather academically, citing figures and current problems facing contemporary Palestinians. Dr. Sabilla quickly began to form the thesis of the lecture; Peace cannot exist between Israel and Palestine until the economic and educational gaps which exist among the two nations are closed. Recognizing the high birthrate of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank (Gaza – 49 per 1,000, West Bank – 37 per 1,000) as a severe hindrance to the economic growth of a Palestinian state, the lecturer predicted a future Palestinian state composed of a small upper class and large lower class, similar to the class structure of Jordan.

Dr. Sabilla’s uncertainty of the peace process and the ability of Palestinians and Israelis to relate personally became evident as the speech continued. “Now we don’t have peace,” explained Sabilla, “We have the peace process”. The future Sabilla went on to say “Is not as rosy as some politicians would like us to believe.” As the speech continued Sabilla made clear his inability and disinterest in forming friendships with Israelis; To make peace from people to people “its not possible, in my view its not possible”, “Certainly Israeli policies in terms of employment have not been fair.” Referring to the current dire status of the Palestinian people Sabilla claimed, “Yes, Israel is to blame for this thing.” If on the economic level Israeli is not allowing him to breath, asked Dr. Sabilla, how can he ask his students to work towards peace.

Further on in the lecture Dr. Sabilla discussed strategies the Palestinians must adopt in order to compete economically with Israel. The main strategy, according to Sabilla, heavily relies on “using Israelis”; “In my relationship with Israel I am not looking for love or friendship, only for Palestinian interests.”

Additional comments made by Dr. Sabilla included a reference to the settlers, “Settlers have taken a lot of land from us, we have no land.” The Israeli participants, perhaps in disbelief at Sabilla’s provocative words, began laughing at what they determined to be a joke, although I have no doubt judging by the manner in which the sentence was delivered that it was meant to be a serious statement. Continuing in this mode it was explained that Palestinians are now becoming capable of making individual decisions, a trend according to Sabilla, which is not popular amongst Israelis. The speech closed with a reaffirmation that friendship was not being sought with Israelis although it was acceptable for Palestinians to deal with Israelis in a way which served the Palestinian interest.

If there had been any misunderstanding of Dr. Sabilla’s opinions, I believe the question and answer period thoroughly clarified his position. Two Israeli participants expressed their surprise at the pessimism of the speech challenging the notion that friendship could not exist between Israelis and Palestinians. The response; “I try for Palestinians to get whatever they can from Israelis, I will not change my political view.” Another Israeli woman questioned the use of stereotypes within the speech; her remarks were disregarded. The attitude of Sabilla became strengthened as he admitted that “[He] cannot fly with Israelis because [he] cannot deal with them.” “I come from a history of conflict with you,” Sabilla proclaimed, later adding “What matters is what I can learn from you.” Palestinian participants also spoke during the question-answer period focusing their comments on the anger they still hold and the problems they face when travelling within Israel. A participant also voiced his opinion of being fed up with all these meetings which “Do nothing in the end.” Shortly before the Q+A session ended Dr. Degaulle S. Hodali spoke of the alleged Israeli practice of distributing spoiled food to poor Palestinians.

I accompanied Dr. Hodali to the hotel-provided lunch sitting with him and two Israeli women. Notable topics of discussion included the refugee problem, settlers, and the issue of East Jerusalem, which Dr. Hodali believes must be given back. While Dr. Hodali theorized that the settlers, many of whom he believes exist primarily for economic reasons because as he stated “Jews love money”, can be relocated following monetary compensation, the Israeli social worker insisted the “Settlers are crazy” and that millions of dollars would not persuade them to leave. Lunch ceased at 1:30 and the group ventured back to the conference room.

Reseated, the participants were told that they would now engage in group work which would involve “Identifying social cases of adults, women, disabled people, and elderly at home and at the local community.” Participants returned to the reception hall to complete this task. I remained seated and began a discussion with Turi-Therese Schoder, a Norwegian woman visiting Bethlehem as part of a social worker exchange program. Ms. Schoder, who currently works with the Children Cultural Center of Bethlehem, identifies with the Palestinians and considers herself to be “half-Palestinian”.

Ms. Schoder related to me that she found the Israelis attending the workshop offensive and saw Dr. Sabilla’s speech as realistic. When asked why she viewed the behavior of the Israelis as offensive she explained that Israelis who, following Sabilla’s lecture, insisted that friendship was an important part of a professional relationship were naive and disrespectful of the Palestinians. Our conversation continued and Schoder told me of a day when she accompanied a group of Palestinians on a car trip. “I understand”, she said, “why some Palestinians are suicide bombers”. Also in reference to the lecture, she told me that the Palestinian women she had sat with at lunch would only make one comment, “There are bad feelings”.

Although her sympathy clearly lies with the Palestinians and she admitted that there are many Israelis she “doesn’t even want to get to know” it was still her expectation that the workshop would allow Israelis and Palestinians to get to know one another and that she didn’t expect to hear “negative things” said, as was the case. Her reference to hearing negative comments most likely referred to what she perceived as Israeli aggression but it may be possible that had it not been for Sabilla’s speech a more positive atmosphere would have existed.

At this time the group began to reenter the conference room and present their findings. Presentations were extremely brief and it was obvious that the majority of participants had not met the suggested criteria and were unclear of what this criteria was. The coordinators paid little attention to the presentations, instead talking amongst themselves. The presentations complete the participants quickly dispersed.

Turi Schoder invited me to tour the Cultural Center where she works, I accepted. Before exiting the conference room though, I approached Dr. Awwael and asked his opinion of the workshop; “I believe we succeeded at least to get both sides to explore how to work together.” I then began to exit the building but not before approaching an Israeli social worker and inquiring his view of the meeting. Doron Rabu appeared disappointed at the content of the workshop which he had, before attending, assumed to be an opportunity to “meet the neighbors” although he had no concrete expectations besides this. “It makes me angry,” exclaimed Rabu, “I felt like the only point of [Dr. Sabilla] about relationships with Israelis is about his needs. What happens when they don’t need us anymore?”

A Successful Launching of Our Campaign Against the Perpetuation of the Occupation

On Friday and Saturday, March 12th and 13th, some 500 Israelis, joined by dozens of Palestinians, launched the Israeli Campaign Against the Perpetuation of the Occupation, notice of which you received earlier. Together we rebuilt three homes demolished by the Israeli authorities on the West Bank and planted 300 olive trees in farmers’ field from which hundreds were uprooted by the Israeli authorities two weeks ago. Through these actions we sought to call attention to the furious Israeli efforts to complete the annexation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem. These threaten to foreclose the possibility of a just peace forever by creating irreversible “facts” on the ground, while confining the Palestinian population to an apartheid-like existence of poverty, dependency and limited freedom of movement. Our activities, beginning with a press conference in Jerusalem on March 10th, received wide press coverage in Israel and abroad. Our e-mail campaign – YOU – generated hundreds of letters, e-mails, faxes and phone calls to Israeli, European and North American governments protesting Israel’s unilateral actions, and we ask you to continue to actively support our Campaign. Through organizations such as Rabbis for Human Rights and Christian Peacemaker Teams, and many individuals — including critical support from an Israeli funder living in England — we have effectively spread the word of our Campaign.

We have just begun. As of this writing (Sunday night), the three houses are still standing. We have small groups sleeping at the sites ready to resist the bulldozers if they appear (usually about 5:50-6 AM) and to alert the press. If the houses are still standing by next weekend, we plan to return and continue the finishing work. If they have been demolished, we will rebuild yet again – and keep rebuilding until the injustice of the Occupation is fully revealed. We are also organizing a demonstration against the opening of a large industrial park on the West Bank near Ramallah (for Israeli factories only), to be attended by Prime Minister Netanyahu. Other groups, such as environmental and human rights organizations, are preparing their own activities in conjunction with our Campaign.

We appreciate your support and ask you to continue to speak out and lobby at this critical juncture of an almost moribund peace process. For your information, we are sending along (1) a copy of the ad that appeared in Hebrew and English in the Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz and in Arabic in the Israeli/Palestinian newspaper al-Ittahad; (2) a short description of the families, sites and activities where our actions took place this last weekend; and (3) a synopsis of the major elements of the Occupation.

We invite you to stay in touch, and ask that you forward these materials on.

In Peace,

Jeff Halper,
Coordinator, ICAHD


Don’t let the bulldozers demolish the peace!

Join Us In Opposing The Perpetuation Of The Occupation

  • 6,000 Palestinian houses demolished on the West Bank and East Jerusalem
  • 30,000 people left homeless
  • Tens of thousands of acres of agricultural land confiscated
  • Hundreds of thousands of fruit and olive trees uprooted
  • More than 90% of the Palestinians confined to isolated cantons
  • 180 settlements established – 13 in the last few weeks – 180,000 settlers
  • A massive system of by-pass roads carving up the West Bank and foreclosing peace

In the last few weeks Netanyahu’s government has escalated its policy of settlement and displacement in the Occupied Territories in a last-minute attempt to frustrate any peace settlement. Hundreds of bulldozers are at work 24 hours a day in a desperate attempt to create irreversible “facts” on the ground.

The time has come to act! Come build with us Palestinian houses demolished by the Israeli authorities on the West Bank and in East Jerusalem. Come plant with us olive trees in place of those uprooted by the settlers and the Civil Administration. Come join us in protesting by-pass roads designed to close Palestinians into small and disconnected enclaves. Now – before its too late.

When and Where

[Buses left from Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and Haifa]

Participating Organizations

The Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions
Shomrei Mishpat – Rabbis for Human Rights (Friday only)
Gush Shalom
Bat Shalom
The Alternative Information Center, Yesh Gvul
Netivot Shalom – Oz v’Shalom (Friday only)
The Student Committee for Human Rights of the Hebrew University
Women in Black
The Committee for Solidarity with Hebron
The Arab Student Committee of the Hebrew University
Campus, Tel Aviv University
Action Committee of Jaffa
A Bridge to Peace
The Committee for the Arabs of Jaffa.


The Campaign Against Perpetuating the Occupation

Our campaign against the perpetuation of the Occupation calls attention to all the diverse yet interlinking components of Israel’s current efforts to complete its de facto annexation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem: house demolitions; massive land expropriation; destruction of Palestinian crops, the closure and other forms of economic warfare, harassment of the Palestinian population; settlement expansion; the construction of a massive system of by-pass highways; and other policies.

The Al-Shawamreh Family of Anata

Salim al-Shawamreh, his wife Arabia and their six children live in the village of Anata, which is divided between Jerusalem and the West Bank (part in Area B, Salim’s house in Area C under full Israeli control). About a third of its population of some 12,000 hold Jerusalem identity cards, while the other two-thirds are classified as West Bank residents, with no access to Jerusalem — including “Jerusalem” parts of Anata. 20,000 dunams were expropriated from Anata to build the settlements of Alon, Kfar Adumim, Almon and Ma’aleh Adumim; an Israeli by-pass road is currently being constructed around the village.Crowding in Anata has become chronic. Some 23 demolitions orders have been served on Anata residents by the Jerusalem municipality, the Ministry of Interior and, where Anata expands into “Area C”, the Civil Administration.

After several attempts to obtain a permit, the Shawamreh family house, built on privately-owned land, was demolished amid great violence in July of 1998, and after being rebuilt by ICAHD and other Israeli organizations was demolished again in August. The price was high: besides losing their house, Arabia Shawamreh fell into a deep depression and had to be hospitalized. Salim says: “Together with Israelis who seek a just peace, we will build here a House of Peace.”

The Abu Yakub Family of Kifal Harith

Kifal Harith is a Palestinian village of some 5,000 people in the West Bank, very close to the Israeli settlement of Ariel. In late December, 1998, the Civil Administration demolished with a large show of force the three-room house of Husam Abu Yakub and his family, uprooting olive trees and gardens of village residents on the way. The Abu Yakubs pleaded with the soldiers not to destroy the house, and when they refused to leave, the army threw in a canister of tear gas. Their six-month old child was taken from the house unconscious. The Civil Administration contractor then sent his African guest workers to quickly remove the family’s belongings, and the house was bulldozed.

The Abu Dahoud Family of Hebron

Hassan Dahoud is a 60 year-old worker who lived with his wife and 12 children in a modest house on the rural outskirts of Hebron, far from any Israeli settlement or by-pass road. His applications for a building permit were rejected because his land – as most of the West Bank — is zoned by the Israelis as “agricultural” (although that does not prevent the construction of thousands of Israel housing units in Kiryat Arba and other settlements in the area). Last year the Dahoud family’s home was demolished.

Tree-planting in Beit Dajan

A major problem facing the Palestinian economy in general, and that of individual farming families in particular, is the wholesale destruction of orchards and crops by the Civil Administration. Harassment of farmers and attempts on the part of settlers to prevent them from planting or harvesting their crops are also common. Just three weeks ago, 675 olive trees were uprooted from the fields of Beit Dajan farmers near Nablus, on the basis of a 1985 expropriation order that has been in legal dispute for years. Between 1987-97, some 250,000 olive and fruit trees have been uprooted or cut down by Civil Administration personnel for the purposes of land expropriation, settlement expansion or by-pass roads or by settlers seeking to harass and intimidate local farmers while driving them from their land. In 1998 alone 16,780 trees, most of which were olive trees. 3,200 trees were uprooted and burnt by settlers and 13,580 trees by the Israeli army.


An Israeli Campaign Against Perpetuating the Occupation

The two months left before the Israeli elections in May will be among the most momentous in the modern history of the Middle East. For over twenty years Israeli governments, guided by the steady yet quiet work of Ariel Sharon, have been “creating facts on the ground.” A structure of occupation, displacement and apartheid has been systematically constructed around the Palestinian population of the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem. It is designed to ensure Israeli control and de facto annexation of more than half the Occupied Territories, while confining its three million Palestinians to an archipelago of small, crowded, impoverished and disconnected bantustans.

The structure of annexation has been constructed in a piecemeal fashion over many years, so that the overall conception could not be comprehended. The final pieces are now being hastily put into place, and we find ourselves confronting nothing less than an entrenched system of occupation, apartheid and the prospect of continued conflict. Rather than focusing on each component of the Occupation, we must look at the whole picture. The major intertwining components are:

  • Land Expropriation: Since 1967 Israel has taken control of 70% of the Occupied Territories. Tens of thousands of acres of agricultural land have been confiscated, hundreds of thousands of fruit and olive trees uprooted.
  • Settlement Blocs: 180 settlements have been established on the West Bank, home to 180,000 settlers — 350,000 if one counts the Israelis living in “neighborhoods” of “Greater” Jerusalem beyond the Green Line. Thirteen new settlements have been established in the past few months following Sharon’s call to “grab the hilltops.”
  • Home Demolitions and Cantonization: 6,000 Palestinian houses have been demolished on the West Bank and East Jerusalem since 1967, leaving some 30,000 people homeless. In 1995, “only” 43 houses were demolished on the West Bank, 25 in Jerusalem. In 1996 the numbers went up to 140/17; in 1997, 233/16; and in 1998, 150/25 – a drop attributed to influence of political pressure. More than 90% of the Palestinians confined to small and disconnected cantons besieged by Israeli army checkpoints.
  • Massive Networks of By-Pass Roads: Twelve new by-pass highways are being furiously constructed, part of a massive system of 29 by-pass roads. Each highway is 50 meters wide with “sanitized” margins of 300 meters wide, which serve to limit the growth of Palestinian towns, cities and villages within constricted cantons. By-pass highways prevent the territorial contiguity needed for a viable Palestinian entity, and link individual Israeli settlements into “blocs” that surround and “swallow” Palestinian communities;
  • Environmental Pollution: Industrial pollution is caused by the moving of highly polluting Israeli industries to the West Bank — aluminum, batteries, leather tanning, textile dyeing, fiberglass and other chemical industries producing hazardous waste. Under-regulated industrial parks severely damage the area’s delicate environment.
  • Closure and Economic Warfare: For the past five years Palestinians have been unable to move freely without passes, including into Jerusalem for reasons of religion, employment and residency, or move their goods.
  • Human Rights Abuses and Psychological Warfare. Israel refuses to recognize the binding nature of human rights covenants on which it is a signatory as they relate to its actions in the Occupied territories. It also uses intimidation, collective punishment, denial of residency and work rights and the criminalization of Palestinian daily life.

We are now witnessing the completion of the annexation and apartheid process – indeed, a brazen attempt by the Netanyahu government to “steal” the elections by making them irrelevant. We cannot permit bulldozers rather than negotiations and the ballot box to decide the fate of our peoples.

The Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions
Rehov Tiveria 37, Jerusalem, Israel
Tel: (02) 624-8252, (052) 673-467
Fax: (02) 566-2815
e-mail: halper@iol.co.il, rhr@inter.net.il

A State in the Making: Rights and Duties

President Arafat’s mention of a possible confederation with Jordan has stirred numerous comments. The president’s remarks, however, need to be understood in the context in which they were spoken.

At the time he made the reference, President Arafat was in Hebron, leading what can be considered a major effort in laying down the foundations of popular democracy. He was participating in a regional conference held by Fateh to elect its cadre for that area, in advance of the elections to be held locally for the village and municipal councils.

In a speech he delivered at the conference, President Arafat emphasized the right of the Palestinian people to declare a state on May 4, 1999, in accordance with international legal resolutions. The world has agreed on our right to self-determination — to our right to a state with Jerusalem as its capital.

President Arafat’s speech was the first he had delivered in Jordan after the death of King Hussein, and so it was quite natural to refer in it to the brotherly relations between the two peoples of Jordan and Palestine. In fact, an agreement to establish a confederation between the Jordanian and Palestinian states was first reached in 1985, a year after the Palestinian National Council (PNC) met in Amman. The possibility was reaffirmed in 1991, before the joint Jordanian/Palestinian delegation was chosen to attend the Madrid Conference.

The president’s remarks were interpreted by some, including some Jordanian officials, as an invitation to hold immediate consultations about a possible future confederation. These officials made it clear that they felt that such consultations would be premature.

In our view, the May 4 declaration will not qualify Palestine to be part of a confederation with Jordan, whose political and economic institutions are now coming of age. Palestine, in contrast, faces the formidable task of freeing the Occupied Territories in accordance with UN Resolution 181, which calls for the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, and in accordance, also, with UN Resolutions 242 and 338, which hold that lands occupied in 1967 are not lands in dispute, but rather, territories occupied by force, and therefore not the rightful property of the occupier. Palestinian insistence on actualizing the state has been paralleled by Netenyahu’s dogged efforts to portray our dream as delusion. “You can dream every night of a Palestinian state,” Netenyahu has boasted to us, “but when you wake up in the morning, you will discover that your state never existed, and that it never will”. When Netenyahu rejected the US initiative, it was clear that all issues relating to both interim and final-status negotiations were badly threatened. Since then, it has became painfully clear that the Oslo peace process has passed away. All that remains now is to bury the corpse, but Netenyahu, in a grotesque charade, insists on keeping the body above ground, leaving it to decompose, with all its attendant foul odors, as he persists with his rhetoric on “reciprocity”.

While confronting the difficulties resulting from Israeli intransigence, the Palestinian side has done its utmost to keep the terms of the Oslo Agreement. In this spirit, the Palestinian leadership agreed to the US initiative despite the pro-Israeli bias it involved. Then came the Wye River negotiations and the resulting Wye Memorandum, even as Palestinians continued to insist that May 4, as agreed in the Oslo Accords, must mark the end of the interim agreement.

All of these developments require that institutions which either played a role in or grew out of the Oslo Agreement have recourse to the PLO, whose existence, of course, preceded that of the Palestinian National Authority. The PNA, of course, was set up for the interim period only, with the understanding that it would be replaced at the end of that time by a sovereign national government. After May 4, then, the role of the PNA will be taken over by the PLO’s Executive Committee in conjunction with the Palestinian National Council, in order to prevent the occurrence of any power vacuum that might result from the declaration of the Palestinian state.

Both the Central Committee of Fateh and the Palestinian leadership emphasize the importance of May 4 as the date for our declaration of statehood. However, some colleagues, both in the PLO and outside it, view the decision to declare a state as no more than a PNA tactic for immediate political gain. This view is mistaken; the May 4 date has long been the date set for statehood, and our insistence on holding to that date was the reason it was mentioned in the Wye Memorandum as the date on which the interim negotiations were to end. The fact that the date was included in the Wye Memorandum was a victory for the Palestinian leadership, since it showed their critics, who had been trying to exploit the people’s frustration, that the Palestinian leadership was, in fact, acting with resolve and in good faith with the Palestinian people.

Any time a gap exists between an organization’s theoretical position and its readiness to transform a theoretical goal into reality, the opponents will benefit. Pointing to the gap between goal and reality, our accusers will call into question our resolve. Thus political slogans must be backed up by a clearly defined schedule of actions, if we are to demonstrate to our people that we are now engaged in constructing our state-to-be.

The Palestinian leadership has established a special committee consisting of President Arafat, as head of the PNC, and of members of the Executive Committee and the PNA. The aim behind the creation of this committee is to arrive at a consensus on the essence and form of the state to be declared at the end of the interim period on May 4.

In order to achieve our rights, we must undertake certain duties. Although serious efforts are being made to ensure the support of Arab and international parties, self-determination is a purely Palestinian affair and not to be negotiated, even through efforts by another party that may wish us well. We are fully aware of the kinds of pressure that are being brought to bear on the PNA by the USA, Israel, and other countries, both in this region and in Europe to delay the declaration of our state. But this pressure does not serve the cause of peace. Israel continues to oppose the establishment of a Palestinian state under any conditions; to surrender to the pressure being exerted on us now, would mean postponement of our state for the foreseeable future. Among the duties, then, that both the PNA and the PLO must carry out if we are to protect and realize our dream are the following:

  1. The Executive Committee of the PLO should meet at such a time and place as to allow all committee members to participate. The meeting should result in the establishment of the working program we will need to prepare for May 4.
  2. The Central Council should then be convened to list and prioritize all the tasks necessary to create to help create a Palestinian consensus.
  3. A national dialogue should take place in which we evaluate the experience of the past five years. This dialogue will help us to formulate a clear position vis-a-vis the interim and final-status issues. Our position will be based on all resolutions issued by the United Nations Security Council and UN General Assembly, including: 242 and 338 and the principle of trading for peace the land illegally occupied by military force; 194 and 234, granting Palestinians the right of return to their land; 446 and 452, which declare Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Gaza to be obstacles to peace; and 181, which guarantees us the right to establish a Palestinian state.
  4. The PNA must provide for local elections before the expiration of the interim period. These elections will strengthen democracy and ensure increased public support as we forge our independence and create our national institutions.
  5. The PNA should gradually implement the civil service law and raise the funds necessary for doing so. It must assure our people that the legislative and executive branches will work together in complementary roles, so that people will not continue to live with the frustration created by inept administration.
  6. The PNA should release all political prisoners who have not acted against the law. Doing so will foster our national unity by reaffirming those principles which unite us. Doing so may also help to prevent those acts of anti-Israeli vengeance, which would work against our cause if they provided impetus for Netenyahu’s re-election.
  7. The PNA must address the deteriorating economic situation. Overspending and corruption must end, and those responsible must be held accountable. Only in this way can we ease the people’s frustration.
  8. More emphasis should be given to the creation and strengthening of our national institutions, both governmental and civil.
  9. We must prepare at all levels to respond to any moves Israel might make after our declaration of statehood on May 4.

Our declaration of statehood is not intended to be, as some fear, a declaration of war. Rather, it is the key to peace, a peace based on justice for all countries in the area. The world should know, however, that if our state should be attacked by an aggressor, we will be prepared to defend it.

Revolution until Victory!

Hezbollah Takes Another Step Toward Jerusalem

Last Monday, the South Lebanon-based terrorist group Hezbollah, funded and armed by Syria and Iran, set off a roadside bomb that killed an Israeli brigadier general in command of Israel’s Lebanon operations, along with a leading Israeli journalist and two other officers.

It is easy to speak of Hezbollah, as a New York Times article recently did, in terms of its “low-level war to push Israel out of South Lebanon.” Yet Hezbollah’s own rhetoric proclaims a fuller agenda. “Another victory on the way to liberating Jerusalem and Palestine” cried Hezbollah radio the morning after the attacks, while TV clips of the funerals of Hezbollah fighters the morning after Israeli Air Force attacks featured crowds chanting, “By our blood and by our soul, we will liberate you, Palestine.”

The push to get Israel out of Lebanon is not the goal but merely the first step to a final push of Israel out of Jerusalem and out of what Hezbollah defines as “Palestine.”

Yet the threat from Hezbollah is not adequately understood, even in Israel. Some suppose that the Hezbollah program begins and ends in the Lebanon Security Zone, and that after an Israeli withdrawal, Hezbollah will be satisfied and Israel will live happily ever after.

One reason for Israelis’ lack of comprehension is that Hezbollah – like other Arab groups – flaunts its true intentions in Arabic. Few people in Israel understand Arabic, and fewer follow the pronouncements Arab leaders make to their own people. Israeli newscasts and newspapers rarely cover these statements or translate them into Hebrew, much less into languages accessible to Western journalists and policymakers.

Of those who do understand, even those who serve in Israeli or Western intelligence services, many dismiss this rhetoric as meant “for internal consumption.”

Most Israelis do not grasp that religious conviction can inspire wars of destruction. It would seem that average secular-minded Israelis do not realize that the nuances of a language and religion that mean nothing to them could be a galvanizing force to others.

This blurred perception might be traced to the early days of Zionist building, when there was inadequate attention to the growth of Arab-Muslim nationalism after World War I. Since then, anti-Zionism has been fed on stories of an imagined Arab-Muslim pseudo-Zionist nationalism and a generation passionately ready to go to war for an all-Arab Palestine.

In the 1980s, I lived in Upper Galilee, the sparsely settled northern region of Israel, where 100,000 Israeli Jews and Arabs dwell in an area within rocket range of Southern Lebanon. Residents of other regions of Israel often seem to have little communication with Israelis on the northern border and less empathy. My acquaintances in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv always seemed to view attacks on border settlements as our security problem, not theirs.

If we heed the words and intentions as well as the deeds of Hezbollah, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Fatah and other militant Arab Muslim groups, it should be clear that no security problem is merely regional. All Israel remains the target, and no Israeli anywhere should feel complacently free from threat.

With elections scheduled for May 17, Israeli politicians compete with one another with promises to leave the unpopular battlefield of Lebanon if they are elected. Opposition candidates Ehud Barak and Yitzhak Mordecai have so promised, as has incumbent Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

No matter the promises, a dedicated enemy is making ready to launch the march to Jerusalem. Some still ignore that agenda.

Their awakening may be rude indeed.

Am Echad: Preserving One Jewish Nation

Sunday’s Mass Prayer Gathering

The Sunday, 14th February, prayer gathering of a broad cross-section of Orthodox Jews — media estimates of the crowd ranged between 250,000 to 500,000 participants — and was descibed by the Israeli media as the largest such gathering in the Israel’s history. The widespread predictions of possible violence and bloodshed proved to be utterly baseless. The gathering, which lasted more than two hours, passed without incident, and when it was over the huge crowd dispersed quietly.

The prayer vigil was called against a backdrop of escalating hostility to religious observance in Israel and the usurpation of representative government by the judicial branch, in particular the Israeli Supreme Court.

I. The World’s Most Activist Court

In the opinion of many commentators, there is no more powerful supreme court in the world than the Israeli Supreme Court. No other supreme court has assumed such responsibility for resolving all the problems of society, says Hebrew University’s Ruth Gavison, one of the directors of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel. There is no area, in the words of another leading commentator, “too political, too contentious, or too trivial to escape [the Supreme Court’s] vigilant eye.” In recent years, the Supreme Court has repeatedly entered areas in which there are no traditional legal materials to guide it: neither statute or judicial precedent.

‘The Barak Court’s judicial activism has thrust the Supreme Court into the center of many of the value conflicts that divide Israeli society, a role for which it is completely unsuited. The Supreme Court is totally unrepresentative of Israeli society. In a country in which over 50% of the population is of Middle Eastern origin, there is not one justice of Middle Eastern descent. In a country, in which 20-25% of the population is religiously observant, only one permanent member of the 15-member Court is religious. (Justice Barak and his colleagues largely control the selection of their successors, with little input from the Knesset and the executive branches.)

Not only is the Supreme Court highly unrepresentative, but it has followed an explicitly elitist vision in its value choices. In Justice Barak’s words, a judge should be guided in those cases involving broad value choices by the values of “the enlightened society in whose midst he dwells.” “The values of the enlightened society,” he has made clear, does not mean a social consensus, but only those values which are, in his words, universal — i.e., neither Jewish nor non-Jewish — progressive, and worthy of enlightened nations.

In no area involving conflicting societal values has the Court’s unrepresentative nature and its elitist vision been so keenly felt as that of religion and state. The Barak Court has consistently failed to acknowledge that the affirmation of Israel as a “Jewish state,” in both the Declaration of Independence and the Basic Laws is not meaningless verbiage. Rather Justice Barak has simply defined “Jewish” as synonymous with “democratic,” which he then defines in terms of rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.

Justice Barak’s vision, while consistent with that of a very small minority of Israeli society, which would define Israel as merely a “state of its citizens,” is far from that of Ben-Gurion and the other signatories to the Declaration of Independence, as well as the majority of citizens today.

Israel’s founders viewed the creation of the State as the fulfillment of a 2,000-year-old dream. And they recognized that Jewish identity would be the glue holding society together. To preserve a single Jewish identity, for instance, they placed all issues of personal status under the supervision of the Chief Rabbinate.

By refusing to treat the term “Jewish” as an independent source of values, the Supreme Court has left itself vulnerable to the charge, voiced most recently by former Justice Tzvi Tal that it “has completely cut itself off from the tradition of the Jewish people.” Under Justice Barak, every aspect of the fifty year status quo arrangement on matters of religion and state has been eroded, with a resulting loss of identifiable Jewish character to the State. Laws against commercial activity on the Sabbath have been undermined, the jurisdiction of the religious courts restricted, the importation of non-kosher meat permitted, and the Chief Rabbinate’s authority over conversions dramatically reduced.

The Supreme Court has ordered hearings on a suit to bar ritual circumcision in Israel. Over the ages, tens of thousands of Jews have died rather than give up circumcision, the first commandment given to the Jewish people. Yet for the Israeli Supreme Court it is not unthinkable that the first self-proclaimed “Jewish state” in nearly two millenia might outlaw ritual circumcision. Nor has the Court acknowledged that it has no authority to prevent parents from circumsizing their children.

Here are a few other examples of the Court’s appropriation of broad policymaking functions from the Knesset and the executive branch and of its creation of new rights out of whole cloth:

  • Two years ago, the Supreme Court overruled the decision of the Supervisor of Traffic to close a two-block stretch of Bar Ilan Street in Jerusalem on the Sabbath. Such routine decisions about the direction of traffic are never subjected to judicial review. Justice Barak then went on to appoint a commission to study the entire issue of Sabbath street closings on a national level, a remedy far beyond the narrow case in front of the Supreme Court and involving the type of policy-making normally associated with the other branches.
  • Last year the Supreme Court ordered Educational TV to screen a film celebrating teenage homosexuality, without citation of one statute or judicial precedent mandating such a result. The Supreme Court thereby effectively created a new right to promote one’s lifestyle on public broadcasting.

II. Delegitimization of the Religious Population

As part of an escalating campaign of delegitimization of religious Jews and religious observance, major parties have based both local and national campaigns around the slogan “Stop the Chareidim” or “Stop the Blacks.”

In response to the opening of a national religious kindergarten in Kfar Saba, signs appeared advocating “exterminating the chareidim at birth.” Yet no protest was heard. Ssimilarly Justice Barak himself did not protest when a Beersheba magistrate likened religious Jews to “huge lice” in his presence. Indeed Barak praised the speech, and only three weeks later, after complaints from religious leaders, was the magistrate reprimanded.

A leading journalist savors the idea of tying the beards of all the “weird chareidi rabbis together and setting them on fire” and another — a former Knesset member — declares his greatest national service would be to go into Mea Shearim with a submachine gun to “mow them all down,” and again there is no outcry.

In Tzoron a new religious school opened last September, with twenty first-graders. For more than a month, these little children had to run had to run a daily gauntlet of forty to sixty demonstrators, some accompanied by attack dogs, to enter the school. The school building was regularly pelted with stones, with the children inside, and defaced. These demonstrations were encouraged by Meretz leader Yossi Sarid, who came to Tzoron to urge the local population to resist the scourge of religion.

Am Echad is an umbrella organization designed to ensure an accurate portrayal of Orthodox Jews and Judaism in the media and to serve as a resource for journalists seeking a greater understanding of the Orthodox community.
Tel: (+972-2) 652-2726

Al-Ahram Weekly: Jordan Rejects Confederation with Arafat

Arafat’s Ladder
by Graham Usher

Heading
“With the dust barely settled on his father’s grave, last week King Abdullah was confronted with the one issue he almost certainly would have preferred to have stayed buried, at least during the opening months of his reign”.

Excerpts

… Palestinian President Yasser Arafat revived the debate over the form of the political association between Jordan and any future Palestinian entity. “We want [King Abdullah] to know that the Palestinian National Council has agreed to a confederation with Jordan,” said Arafat. More alarming still — as far as Jordan was concerned — were the comments by PA spokesman, Nabil Abu Rdeineh, that discussions on a “confederacy” between Jordan and the Palestinians should happen sooner rather than later.

In 1985, the Palestinian National Council (PNC) endorsed the idea of a confederation between Jordan and any future Palestinian state. Never set out in detail, the decision had been taken in the context of a rapprochement between Arafat and King Hussein following the PLO’s eviction from Beirut in 1982. Following a souring in relations between the PLO and Jordan in 1986, however, the confederation idea, though never formally abandoned, was quietly shelved. Since then, the unspoken status quo — shared by both King Hussein and Arafat — was that the issue of a confederation should only be raised after a Palestinian state had been established “on Palestinian soil”. It is this status quo that Arafat and Rdeineh’s comments have thrown into doubt.

In recent weeks, the Palestinian leader has been under inordinate pressure to publicly postpone his “right” to declare unilaterally a Palestinian state when Oslo’s interim period expires on 4 May. As part of the Wye River Agreement, the US gave Israel a written pledge that it “opposes and will oppose” any unilateral declaration of Palestinian statehood. Last month, the European parliament also made it known that a “premature” Palestinian UDI would create a “complex situation” in the region. Israel’s Labour and Centre parties have also stated that a Palestinian state should be “a result of negotiations” rather than an independent Palestinian action.

The unspoken assumption behind this chorus of restraint is that any attempt by Arafat to go it alone would almost certainly help Binyamin Netanyahu’s election prospects rather than those of Ehud Barak, especially if the Israeli leader, in retaliation, carries out his threat to annex those parts of the Occupied Territories under Israel’s control. Such an action would bury whatever tenuous hopes the US and Europe have about resurrecting Oslo in the wake of the Israeli elections.

It is a scenario Arafat probably shares. His problem is that having climbed the tree of threatening a unilateral declaration of statehood on 4 May, he needs a dignified way to descend from it. By floating the confederation idea, he could mount a retreat in the name of “coordination and discussion” with Jordan rather than climbing down meekly due to American and European pressure. Should the confederation idea also receive a positive response internationally — and especially in Washington — Arafat could also claim this as another implicit recognition of a Palestinian state.

So far, the international response to his call has been led by Jordan. “As for confederation or any other future relation between Jordan and the Palestinians,” commented Jordan’s information minister, Nasser Joudeh, on 14 February, “we will cross that bridge when we come to it”. For now, “the most important thing… is that Jordan concentrates… on helping and supporting Palestinians win their full rights on Palestinian soil, meaning the establishment of their national state.”

This is a polite way of saying that confederation should stay on the shelf and that Arafat, having climbed the tree of 4 May, should not look to Amman to provide him with a ladder.

No Takers in Amman
by Khaled Dawoud

Heading
“The Jordanian government and opposition parties alike reacted angrily this week to the proposal by Palestinian President Yasser Arafat for a confederation with Jordan, Khaled Dawoud reports from Amman.”

Quotes from text
“Arafat’s proposal… would only help Israel’s declared intention of establishing Jordan as an alternative homeland for the Palestinians.” [IMRA: Israel simply has no such intention.]

“Abdul-Majid Zuneibat, supreme guide of Jordan’s main opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood, told Al-Ahram Weekly that Arafat’s proposal at this particular junction was an invitation to Judaise Jordan and an attempt to avoid declaring an independent Palestinian state by solving his problems at Jordan’s expense. We vehemently reject this call.”

Full Text

The Jordanian government and opposition parties alike reacted angrily this week to the proposal by Palestinian President Yasser Arafat for a confederation with Jordan.

Jordanian Prime Minister Fayez Al-Tarawneh immediately declared that the topic was not up for discussion at this particular time and that there could be no talk of confederation before the creation of an independent Palestinian state was complete.

Several parliament members also issued statements expressing “dismay and surprise at Arafat’s proposal”, describing it as an attempt by the Palestinian leader to add to Jordan’s problems at a time when the country is struggling to overcome its grief at the death of King Hussein.

George Hadad, a columnist at the daily Dastour newspaper, said that not long ago the late King Hussein had publicly asked Arafat to refrain from raising this issue until the occupied Palestinian territories had been liberated. Hadad said that Arafat’s proposal, made only four days after Hussein’s death, would only help Israel’s declared intention of establishing Jordan as an alternative homeland for the Palestinians.

With the expiry date of the Oslo Agreement signed between Israel and the Palestinians approaching on 4 May without any hope of a breakthrough in the peace process, Jordanian officials and opposition groups fear that the proposed confederation may be meant as an alternative to Arafat’s threat to unilaterally declare an independent state, thus giving Israel the justification to transfer hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to Jordan. If this were to come about, it would seriously aggravate Jordan’s economic problems. The country is already suffering from a lack of economic resources and sky-rocketing unemployment.

Abdul-Majid Zuneibat, supreme guide of Jordan’s main opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood, told Al-Ahram Weekly that Arafat’s proposal at this particular juncture was “an invitation to Judaise Jordan and an attempt to avoid declaring an independent Palestinian state by solving his problems at Jordan’s expense. We vehemently reject this call.”

Like other Jordanian commentators, Zuneibat said that Jordanians and Palestinians have been united by force of circumstances over the past decade, “but any talk of a confederation should be left until after the establishment of a Palestinian state. That way, the union would take place voluntarily between two independent nations.”

An Old Card
by Sherine Bahaa

Heading
“Yassar Arafat surprised the international community by reviving the old call for a Palestinian-Jordanian confederation. Sherine Bahaa spoke to analysts about the possible reasons behind the proposal”.

Full Text

“A confederation with Jordan” was former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres’ answer, when asked what came next, following the signing of the 1995 interim agreement between Palestine and Israel.

Today, four years later, observers agree that a confederation remains the most likely scenario. In the words of one Arab analyst, “The current situation proves that establishing a Palestinian entity is inevitable, but it also proves this entity will not amount to an integrated state.”

Khalil Shkaki, head of the Palestinian Research Centre in Nablus, believes that a majority of Palestinians support the idea of a confederation for “historical, strategic and social reasons.” According to Shkaki, Palestinians think that some form of unity between the two populations might be useful. “It might well be asked whether a Palestinian state without some form of unity with Jordan would be viable,” Shkaki told Al-Ahram Weekly.

At a regional meeting of his mainstream Fateh faction in Hebron last Friday, Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said that the Palestine Liberation Organisation’s (PLO) parliament in exile favoured a confederacy with Jordan, if the country’s newly crowned King Abdullah approves of the idea.

“Arafat wanted to confirm earlier positions and reassure Jordanians that Palestinian policy remains unchanged despite the death of King Hussein,” said Shkaki.

The timing of Arafat’s announcement of the revival of the proposal is one considerable source of controversy. Though some analysts point to his need to find a solution before the 4 May Oslo agreement deadline which is now looming, others regard his statement as an attempt to influence, if not preempt, the Jordanian decision. Abdel-Wahab Elmessiri, an expert on Zionist affairs, inclines to the first opinion. “The confederation with Jordan would represent a way out for him,” said Elmessiri, who sees the Palestinian leader as essentially pragmatic. “Arafat’s position is very difficult. The Arab states are divided. He is confronting Israel on his own, and he has to rely on his wits to work out a solution for himself.”

Political analyst Mohamed Sid-Ahmed subscribes to the second point of view. Sid-Ahmed believes that it is the precarious nature of the regional situation which has induced Arafat to bring the confederation proposal forward once again. “There is a new power structure in Jordan, and it is a vulnerable one,” Sid-Ahmed said. He attributes this vulnerability to a number of reasons. A much-loved heir to the throne, who had held that position for 35 years, was suddenly removed, and replaced by an inexperienced young man, who now finds himself king. As Sid-Ahmed points out, it is obvious that not everybody in Jordan is pleased with Hussein’s choice of Abdullah as his successor.

Sid-Ahmed believes that Arafat saw an opportunity to raise the matter again, especially as Netanyahu has been obliged to call for early elections. “Netanyahu cornered inside the country, and the Jordanians in a weak position: this is a golden opportunity to put everybody on the defensive with a step of that sort,” he explained.

Meanwhile, the United States have unveiled a plan by President Bill Clinton which had been shelved due to the Monicagate trial. The Americans are proposing a tripartite Israeli-Palestinian-Jordanian confederation. According to US officials, the Clinton scenario would commit the three partners to a plan which would ensure stability in the region. It would also serve to reinforce the American-Jordanian relationship. An invitation has already been sent to the new Jordanian monarch, King Abdullah, to visit the US and address the Congress.

This is a scenario which does not appeal much to Elmessiri, who views the Americans as inveterate pragmatists. “They never address fundamental issues. That’s why they keep cooking up new ‘solutions’ for the Arab-Israeli conflict,” he said. “Will this mean the implementation of the 1948 UN resolutions? Can this confederation solve the problem of the refugees of 1967, or of sovereignty over the West Bank and Gaza?” Elmessiri believes that the Palestinian issue has gone beyond political endeavours and pragmatic solutions. For him, Israel was always determined to separate the land from the people, so as to achieve at least a partial fulfillment of the Zionist slogan, “A land without people, that would be modified to read, A land divorced from the people.”

He continued: “Unfortunately for Israel, the Palestinians are growing in numbers, they are highly educated and they have the support of the Arab and Islamic peoples. This leaves the Israelis with a problem which so far has no answer in the Zionist lexicon.”

However, this does not mean there are no benefits to be drawn from a three-way confederation, should it ever materialise. “It would strengthen relations between the Jordanians and the Palestinians, strengthen the new regime being set up in Jordan and also create a better bulwark against any intrigues or conspiracies that might be hatched at this juncture by people like Ariel Sharon,” Sid Ahmed commented. “Moreover, a confederation would put an end to the criticisms now emerging from within the ranks of the Palestinians of the Palestinian Authority.”

An Alliance of Equals
by Mahgoub Omar
Expert on Palestinian affairs and a columnist at Al-Ahaab newspaper

Quotes from text
“… Arafat… has forced Jordan, as represented by the new king, Abdullah, to reject the proposal, at least temprarily…. the new monarch still feels that his success depends on a domestic Palestinan majority, yet cannot be sure of this constituency’s loyalty.”

“Shimon Peres has announced that, if Labour wins the forthcoming elections, he will back the declaration of a Palestinian state, and welcome the establishment of a confederation…. Netanyahu… has refused the idea categorically.”

Full Text

The late King Hussein had proposed that Jordan join a confederation with the Palestinian authority set up after Israel’s withdrawal. The Palestinians had always opposed this suggestion; some requested that it be postponed until after Israel had withdrawn from occupied territory and a referendum on the question had been held; others refused altogether, for reasons related to the Palestinians’ experience in Jordan under Hussein. Now Arafat, by turning the tables, has forced Jordan, as represented by the new king, Abdullah, to reject the proposal, at least temporarily. It has not been long since King Hussein’s death, and the new monarch still feels that his success depends on a domestic Palestinian majority, yet cannot be sure of this constituency’s loyalty.

The rapid refusal is probably due to the fact that the effective players in Jordan — King Abdullah’s power base — are the tribes, the army and the ruling family. Former Crown Prince Hassan’s followers are also in favour of distancing the Palestinians. In any case, it is now up to the EU, and especially Britain, to make a move. The creation of a confederation, of course, would imply that a Palestinian state has been recognised — precisely Arafat’s intention.

Shimon Peres has announced that, if Labour wins the forthcoming elections, he will back the declaration of a Palestinian state, and welcome the establishment of a confederation. As for Netanyahu, he has refused the idea categorically.

Translations by
Dr. Joseph Lerner,
Co-Director IMRA (Independent Media Review & Analysis)
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