Yesterday I was speaking with a young graduate student in Islamic
studies, an orthodox Jew, who told me that the question arose in one of
his courses, "Where is Safed?" to which the professor replied, "In
Palestine."
His story reminded me of the one told by the Palestinian-American, Ahmed
Moor, who, when telling a fellow undergrad that he and his family were
from Palestine, met with the reaction, "Palestine doesn't exist."
Well, Palestine, from the Mediterranean to the Jordan river, does exist
and will continue to exist, even if the State of Israel is recognized by
the entire world -- including the Palestinians themselves -- as a
legitimate and sovereign state. And the first people to understand this
should be the Jews. For Jews have called the same land that the
Palestinians call "Palestine" Eretz Yisrael/the Land of Israel,
even when their communities in Palestine were tiny. For homeland and
political sovereignty are two distinct concepts.
For the Palestinians, the State of Israel will always be at best a
political entity whose founding ideology was foreign to Palestine,
whose founders conquered Palestine and expelled most its inhabitants,
and who allowed the remaining inhabitants to remain as second-class
citizens under a military government while their lands were taken away.
Israeli Jews at best will be legitimated as Jews of Palestine.
And there is historical precedent. Poland remained Poland for the Poles,
despite disappearing after it was partitioned by Austria, Prussia, and
Russia. I am not referring merely to the Kingdom of Poland, I am
referring to the homeland of the Poles, "the sacred landscape," to use
Meron Benveniste's term.
People of good will on both sides recognize that their narrative is not
shared by the other. But that does not mean that each should be
compelled to give up their narrative. As an Israeli Jew, one sympathetic
and supportive of the Palestinian cause, I recognize the continuing
existence of Palestine, not on some truncated spots of the West Bank and
Gaza, but on the entire land of Palestine. LIke Benveniste, I feel
saddened by the Israelis who don't know what they have lost by
attempting to wipe this Palestine off the map. Fortunately, that attempt
is doomed to fail, as long as Palestine continues to be remembered.
From a purely visceral standpoint, it is sometimes difficult for me to
hear references to Palestine, because I was raised to believe that
anybody who talked about "Palestine" wanted to drive my people into the
sea. That, of course, is rubbish. I don't thing it is wrong or not
politicallly correct to talk about Eretz Yisrael, or to treat it as the
promised land of the Jews. That has nothing to do with the regime that
governs the Holy Land.
As a religious Jew, I believe that the Jew qua Jew has three homes: the
state of which she is a citizen; the Jewish community of which she is a
participant, and the land of Israel. Jews do not need political
sovereignty in an exclusivist ethnic state in order to feel at home in
that land. In fact, increasingly I am feeling less at home in the State
of Israel, then in the United States.
But I do feel at home in my home in Jerusalem in Eretz Yisrael, and I
would like to be welcomed by Palestinians as a Jews, and, yes, as an
Israeli, living in Palestine. In fact, I would like both homelands to be
shared homelands.
Recognizing the State of Israel, and recognizing the rights of Israeli
citizens of that state, does not mean -- should not mean --
relinquishing the notion that the State of Israel occupies part of the
historic homeland of the Palestinians. As an orthodox Jew I believe that
the West Bank is part of Eretz Yisrael, as is southern Lebanon and
parts of Syria and Jordan.But that means nothing with regard to the
question of the best political regime(s) for Eretz Yisrael and
Palestine.
As for the Zionists, despite all their efforts to wipe all traces of
Palestine off the map, and to replace it with the State of Israel, they
were successful only in getting rid of mandatory Palestine. Palestine as
homeland remains as long as the Palestinians and others honor it in
their collective memory.
http://www.jeremiahhaber.com/2013/02/recognizing-palestine-as-homeland-of.html
Sunday, 3 February 2013
Recognizing Palestine as the Homeland of the Palestinians (Muslims, Christians, Jews, etc.)
Posted @ 16:39
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