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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, October 10, 2016
Israel's Self-Obsession Obstructs the Path to Peace

Photo: The Nobel Peace Prize
laureates for 1994 in Oslo. From left to right: PLO Chairman Yasser
Arafat, Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin. Credit: Saar Yaacov, GPO - Government Press Office,
Israel | Wikimedia Commons
LUND, Sweden (IDN-INPS) - The many world leaders who gathered in
Jerusalem on September 30 for the funeral of Shimon Peres, the former
president of Israel, are safely ensconced back home. They will not
bother much to think about Israel again until the next Palestinian
uprising. But the Israelis will continue to only think about themselves.
The Israelis are obsessed with themselves, with their history, with the
present time and with their destiny. Every nation has some of this but
Israeli navel gazing is something else. At this level of intensity it
makes compromise difficult and condemns Israel to political paranoia and
limitless inflexibility.
The Israeli notion that they can have this land and no one else can is
so anachronistic by any contemporary standards that it is amazing that
outside powers, whether they be the U.S., the EU or Russia, have given
its arguments the time of day.
If every ethnic group in the world asserted so vigorously truly ancient
yearnings to exclusive possession the world would become totally chaotic
in short time. Where would the white North Americans or South Americans
be?
Should Russia return to the rule of Mongolia, the seat of Genghis Khan’s
Mongols? It was they who laid down the boundaries, more or less, of the
modern Russian state. What if China grabbed back Taiwan?
If the Israelis want to believe that Temple Mount (on which Islam’s
sacred Dome of the Rock is built) is “the focal point of creation” and
that in the centre of the hill lies the “foundation stone” of the world,
and that here “Adam came into being”, they may be allowed to believe
it.
But that the arbiters of the United Nations could go along with this
myth for decade after decade at the expense of traditional Palestinian
centuries-old occupancy rights is almost impossible to digest.
Even worse is that many of the most liberal voices in the Western and
Russian political world who do call for Israel to hurry up and
compromise appear to accept that a deal would probably mean that the
Palestinians would end up with only 22% of the land that was Palestine
under the British mandate, (which ended in 1948).
The Jews and Muslims over a long history did not go to war with each
other, until the creation of Israel in 1948. This was the first time in
their joint history that they struggled over the same piece of land.
(The ancient Jewish struggle for an independent Jewish territory was
waged against the Egyptians and then the Romans, long before Mohammed
was born.)
The Jews left what we now call Palestine, Israel and Jordan two
millennia ago. In AD 70, after the Jewish insurrection, the Roman
occupiers destroyed the Jerusalem Temple and the majority of Jews fled
to Babylon in modern Iraq. Other Jews went to Egypt. The Romans enslaved
many and others were dispersed by war and catastrophe to Italy, Spain,
Gaul and Eastern Europe. The Jews had lived by the sword, even
slaughtering women and children, (see the Bible’s Books of Exodus and
Numbers), and were dispersed by the sword.
In subsequent centuries the Jews were dwarfed by the almighty and
ubiquitous Christians and Muslims. The Christians surged to dominance
because a powerful Roman emperor in the fourth century, Constantine,
made their faith the state religion. The Muslims later surged because of
their prowess on the battlefield.
Nevertheless, over Islam’s 1,400 years the Jews were reasonably
protected by their Muslim rulers. Like Christians they were accorded the
status of dhimmi (protected minority) which gave them civil and
military protection. The Jews were rarely persecuted and there was no
tradition of anti-Semitism like what developed in the second millennium
in the Christian world.
Until the Middle Ages the Jews in Christian Europe lived rather
securely. It was only after the turn of the millennium there were some
intense periods of persecution culminating in the 19th century
expulsions and pogroms in Poland and Russia and the “Final Solution” in
Nazi Germany.
Even so in most of Europe for most of the centuries anti-Semitism was
subdued. After the Reformation it was Christians persecuting each other.
Protestants and Catholics were often at war with each other while the
Jews were usually left alone.
All this perspective was lost because of the Nazi genocide. But Nazi
Germany was defeated, and most Western anti-Semitism with it. Come 1948
there was truly no good reason for a “Jewish state”.
But Israel does exist. Now it is its turn to be tolerant and magnanimous. [IDN-INPS – 04 October 2016]
Note: Jonathan Power syndicates his opinion articles. He forwarded
this and his previous Viewpoints for publication in IDN-INPS.
Copyright: Jonathan Power
Photo: The Nobel Peace Prize laureates for 1994 in Oslo. From left to
right: PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat, Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. Credit: Saar Yaacov, GPO -Government Press Office, Israel | Wikimedia Commons

