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From:
David Griffin <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The philosophy, work & influences of Noam Chomsky
Date:
Fri, 22 Mar 2002 20:41:54 EST
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Published on Thursday, March 21, 2002 by Common Dreams
A Jew Seeking Justice
by Jennifer Balkan

As a Jewish American, I feel it is finally my responsibility to opine
on behalf of my Palestinian sisters and brothers:

Imagine if a group of strangers marched into your home and told you
that you couldn't live there anymore. This is the home that your
parents inhabited; your grandparents bequeathed to them. These
strangers told you that thousands of years ago, their ancestors had
populated this area, albeit for a short while. Now they have come to
take what's rightfully yours and call it their own. When you don't
voluntarily leave, they threaten you with violence. Fearing imminent
danger, you take your children and flee. These people pay you a
pittance of the value of your land without your consent and label you
an 'absentee landlord'. When you return to reclaim your home, your
land, the strangers argue that because you separated yourself from
your belongings, they are no longer yours. Because they have attained
the title to your home and land, you no longer have the right of
possession.

This is the story of Israel - a stolen land taken from the
Palestinians. The Zionist movement was founded on the principle that
the Jews deserved a land; a land that they could call their State;
their home but they would only be able to identify themselves as a
wholly Jewish state at the expense of uprooting an existent
civilization, the indigenous Arab population.

The Jewish claim to Palestine is based on the existence of a kingdom
that reigned for only 414 years (Beatty, I: Arab and Jew in the Land
of Canaan.) The Jewish kingdoms were only one of many periods of
nti-Semitism. Tensions
between Arabs and Jews began after Zionist settlers arrived in the
1880s and had bought land from absentee Arab owners. This led to the
dispossession of land that had been cultivated by peasants. In
effect, the Zionists were colonizing Arab land.

The Zionists probably could not have been so successful in their
acquisitions if it weren't for strong support from the British and
later the Americans. The Balfour Declaration was instituted in
November 1917 by the British Government to secure a Jewish Homeland
in Palestine. It is easy to be skeptical of such a declaration as it
was fashioned by a European power; about a non-European territory;
and completely discounted the presence and desires of the indigenous
majority residents of the territory.

When Israel was declared a state in 1948, it owned a bit more than
six percent of the land of Palestine. The UN charter envisages a
peoples' right to self-determination based upon the democratic
requirement of consent for the majority of the people - the Palestine
Arabs had composed a 2/3 majority at that point it time. Thus, the UN
Partition of Palestine in 1947 violated its own law.
Since the inception of a codependency between Israel and the U.S.,
the U.S. media has done everything in its power to taint the struggle
of the Palestinians. President Truman stated in 1947 "I am sorry
gentlemen, but I have to answer to hundreds of thousands who are
anxious for the success of Zionism. I do not have hundreds of
thousands of Arabs among my constituents" (Pres. Harry Truman, quoted
in Anti Zionism, ed. By Teikener, Abed-Rabbo & Mezvinsky).

Arabs have only responded to an unlawful, undeserved expropriation of
their land. They became refugees in their own villages. Over 750,000
Palestinians became refugees on their own land during the winter of
1947. But Israel was not satisfied with its allocation. In violation
of international law, Israel seized over 52 percent of the land in
the West Bank and 30 percent of the Gaza Strip for military use or
for settlement by Jewish civilians.

Israel has an historical record of invading surrounding countries,
and currently occupies Lebanese, Syrian, and Palestinian territory
against international law. It has been Zionist policy to kill
anywhere from 50 to 100 Arabs for every Jewish fatality. But the U.S.
media have never criticized Israel of inciting the ensuing Islamic
terror. Instead, Israeli soldiers who participate in cruel acts of
torture are labeled "security forces" whereas Palestinians are all
perceived as terrorists.

Currently, violence in the Middle East is as high as it has ever
been. Israeli deaths are reported to us whereas Palestinian losses
are dehumanized and go faceless in our news.
Our unconditional support of Israel and its practices portray us as
unsympathetic to a robbed people.
Fundamentalist Halacha, or Jewish law, is what is propagating
violence - it condones murder in the pursuit of Zionist expansion.
Much like other sects of religious fundamentalism, it is dangerous
and should be feared and mistrusted.

We can no longer sit idly and watch an indigenous population become
dispossessed. It has taken a couple hundred years for Americans to
look at our ancestors with disdain - those who decimated the original
inhabitants of our land - the once thriving American Indians. We
still feel guilt for what our forefathers stole. Will disclosure of
facts and revision of our textbooks in the secular classroom and in
the synagogue someday reveal the truth about Israel? And will it be
too late then?

Jennifer Balkan lives in Austin, TX and can be found via email at
[log in to unmask] Jennifer grew up in Short Hills, New Jersey
and worked her way around the U.S. until finding a permanent home in
Austin where she lives with her husband Jeff and cat Lotus. She
received her B.A. in neuroscience from Lehigh University in 1992 and
later went on to finish a Ph.D. in 2001 in sociology with a focus in
demography. Jennifer completed her dissertation fieldwork in Chiapas,
Mexico where she undertook a research project on rural human
migration. Currently she works in Austin as a demographer during the
day and paints at night.
###


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