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- by Uri Avnery
We
Israelis need a scarecrow to frighten ourselves, one frightening
enough to pump adrenaline into our national bloodstream. Otherwise,
it seems, we cannot function.
Once
it was the Palestinian charter. Very few Palestinians ever read it,
even fewer remembered what it said, but we compelled the
Palestinians to abolish its paragraphs in a solemn ceremony. Who
remembers it today? But since this scarecrow was laid to rest, there
is a need for a replacement.
The
new scarecrow is the “Right of Return”. Not as a practical
problem, to be dealt with in rational terms, but as a hair-raising
monster: now the Palestinians’ sinister design has been revealed!
They want to eliminate Israel by this terrible ploy! The want to
throw us into the sea!
The
Right of Return has again widened the abyss, which seemed to have
been narrowed to a rift. We are frightened again. The end of our
state! The end of the vision of generations! A second Holocaust!
It
seems that the abyss is unbridgeable. The Arabs demand that each and
every Palestinian refugee return to his home and land in Israel. The
Israelis staunchly object to the return of even one single refugee.
On both sides, everything or nothing. There goes the peace.
In
the following lines I shall try to show that the scarecrow is indeed
a scarecrow; that even this painful problem can be resolved; that a
fair compromise can even lead to a historic conciliation.
The
Roots of the Conflict
The
refugee problem arouses such deep emotions because it touches the
root of the conflict between to two peoples.
The
conflict stems from the historic clash between two great national
movements. One of these, Zionism, sought to establish a state for
the Jews, so that, for the first time after thousands of years, they
could be masters of their own fate. In the furthering of this aim,
Zionism completely ignored the population living in the country. It
envisioned a homogenous national state, according to the European
model of the late 19th century, without non-Jews, or with at least
as few non-Jews as possible.
The
Palestinian national movement expressed the struggle of the native
Arabs for national freedom and independence. It vehemently opposed
the penetration of their homeland by another people. As Ze’ev
Jabotinsky, the militant Zionist leader, wrote at the time, any
other people would have reacted in the same way.
Without
understanding this aspect of the conflict, the events leading to the
creation of the refugee problem cannot be understood.
“Ethnic
Cleansing”
In
the war of 1948, the historic clash came to a head.
On
the eve of the war some 1,200,000 Arabs and some 635,000 Jews lived
in Palestine. During the course of the war, started by the Arab side
to prevent the partition of the country, more than half of the
Palestinian people, around 750,000 persons, were uprooted. Some were
driven out by the conquering Israeli army, others fled when the
battle reached their homes, as civilians do in every war.
The
1948 war was an ethnic struggle, much like the one in Bosnia. In
wars of this kind, every side tries to set up an ethnic state by
conquering as much territory as it can without the opposing
population. In fairness to the historical facts, it should be
mentioned that the Arab side behaved in the same way, and in the few
territories it conquered (the old city of Jerusalem, the Etzion
bloc) no Jews remained in their homes.
Immediately
after the war, the new State of Israel declined to allow the
refugees to come back to the territories it had conquered. The Ben-Gurion
government eradicated about 450 abandoned Arab villages and put up
Jewish settlements on their sites. The new Jewish immigrants –
many from Arab countries – were put into the abandoned houses in
the Arab towns. Thus the refugee problem was created.
Resolution
194
While
the war was still going on, the General Assembly of the United
Nations adopted Resolution 194 of November 11, 1948. It stated that
the refugees were entitled to choose between compensation and return
to “their homes”. Israel’s refusal to abide by this resolution
may have led it to miss the opportunity – if it existed – of
achieving peace with the Arab world as early as 1949.
In
the 1967 war, some events repeated themselves. Hundreds of thousands
of Palestinians were driven out, by force or intimidation, from
areas near the Jordan river (the huge Jericho refugee camps) and
near the Green Line (the Tulkarem, Kalkilia and Latrun areas).
According
to official UN statistics, the number of refugees is up to 3.7
millions by now, a number that is reasonable in view of the very
high rate of natural growth. They are mostly dispersed among the
countries bordering Israel, including the West Bank and the Gaza
strip.
Apocalypse
Now
On
the Israeli side, the refugee problem aroused deep-rooted fears,
stemming from the first days after the 1948 war. The number of Jews
in the new state had not yet reached a million. The idea, that 750
thousand Palestinian would return to Israeli territory and submerge
it like a deluge aroused panic.
This
apocalyptic vision has become a fixation in the Israeli national
psyche. Even today, when the demographic facts are quite different,
it hovers over every discussion of this issue. In this respect,
there is no difference between the “Left” and the “Right”.
It is enough to merely mention the refugee problem, for writers like
Amos Oz to react like Ariel Sharon, and for a “new historian”
like Benny Morris to voice opinions similar to those of an adherent
to the very same old myths that he himself helped to debunk.
No
wonder that raising the issue now is shaking many of the Israeli
“peace camp” to the roots of their soul. “We thought that the
problem had gone away,” many of them exclaim angrily, accusing the
Palestinians of fraud, as if they had suddenly sprung
earth-shattering demands, whereas until now they had presented only
“simple” problems, like the establishment of a Palestinian
state, borders and settlements.
This
attests to an abysmal lack of understanding. The Right of Return
expresses the very core of the Palestinian national ethos. It is
anchored in the memories of the Nakba, the Palestinian catastrophe
of 1948, and the feeling that a historic injustice was committed
against the Palestinian people. Ignoring this feeling of injustice
makes it impossible to understand the Palestinian struggle, past and
present.
Everyone
who really tried to bring about peace and conciliation between the
two peoples knew all the time that the refugee problem is dormant,
like a sleeping lion who can wake up any minute. The hope was that
this moment could be postponed until after the other problems could
be resolved, and both sides could start healing this wound in a more
congenial atmosphere. The hope was that after a good measure of
mutual trust could be created, a rational approach would be
possible. The Oslo Declaration of Principles of 1993 did not ignore
the problem, but postponed it to the “final status”
negotiations.
The
man who upset the cart was Ehud Barak. He kicked the sleeping lion
in the ribs. In a typical mixture of arrogance, ignorance,
recklessness and contempt for the Arabs, he was convinced that he
could induce the Palestinians to give up the Right of Return.
Therefore he demanded that the Palestinians sign a new declaration
of principles, in which they would announce the “end of the
conflict”.
The
moment these five words – “the end of the conflict” – were
uttered in the negotiations, the Right of Return landed on the
negotiating table with a bang. It should have been foreseen that no
Palestinian leader could possibly sign the “end of the conflict”
without a solution to the refugee problem.
Now
there is no escape from a courageous confrontation with this
problem.
A
“Truth Commission”
The
refugee problem is multi-layered, some layers are ideological and
concerned with basic principles, others are practical. Let’s
address the ideological first.
Israel
must acknowledge its historic responsibility for the creation of the
problem. In order to facilitate the healing of the wound, such
acknowledgement must be explicit.
It
must be acknowledged that the creation of the refugee problem was an
outcome of the realization of the Zionist endeavor to achieve a
Jewish national renaissance in this country. It must also be
acknowledged that at least some of the refugees were driven from
their home by force after the battle was already over, and that
their return to their homes was denied.
I
can imagine a dramatic event: the President or Prime Minister of
Israel solemnly apologizes to the Palestinians for the injustice
inflicted upon them in the realization of the Zionist aims, at the
same time he emphasizes that these aims were mainly directed towards
national liberation and saving millions from the Jewish tragedy in
Europe.
I
would go further and propose the setting up of a ”truth
committee”, composed of Israeli, Palestinian and international
historians, in order to investigate the events of 1948 and 1967 and
submit a comprehensive and agreed report that can become part of
both Israeli and Palestinian school curriculum.
The
Right of Return
The
right of return is a basic human right and cannot be denied in our
time.
A
short time ago, the international community fought a war against
Serbia in order to implement the right of the Kossovars to return to
their homes. It should be mentioned that Germany gave up the right
of evicted Germans to return to their homes in East Prussia, Poland
and the Sudetenland, but this was the result of the deeply felt
guilt of the German people for the horrible crimes of the Nazis. The
often-heard phrase “but the Arabs started the war” is irrelevant
in this context.
I
propose that the State of Israel recognize the Right of Return in
principle, pointing out that the implementation of the principle
will come about by way of negotiation and agreement.
Palestinian
Citizenship
After
the ideological aspect is satisfied, it becomes possible to address
the practical aspect of the problem.
The
solution of the refugee problem will coincide with the establishment
of the State of Palestine. Therefore, the first step can be the
granting of Palestinian citizenship to every Palestinian refugee,
wherever he be, if the State of Palestine so decides.
For
the refugees, this step will be of utmost importance, not only for
symbolic, but also for very practical reasons. Many Palestinians,
who have no citizenship, are denied the privilege of crossing
borders altogether, for all others the crossing of borders entails
suffering, humiliation and harassment.
The
granting of citizenship will completely change the situation and
status of the refugees in places like Lebanon, where refugees are
exposed to danger.
Free
Choice
A
basic element of the Right of Return is the right of every single
refugee to choose freely between return and compensation.
This
is a personal right. While the recognition in principle is a
collective right, its implementation in practice is in the realm of
the individual Palestinian. In order to be able to make his
decision, he must know all the rights accruing to him: what sums
will be paid to those choosing not to return and what possibilities
are open to those who wish to return.
Every
refugee has the right to compensation for properties left behind
when he was uprooted, as well as for the loss of opportunities, etc.
Without making any comparison between the Holocaust and the Nakba,
one can learn from the German method of compensating their Jewish
victims. This will enable every refugee to decide what is good for
him and his family.
The
compensations, which undoubtedly will entail great sums, must be
paid by an international fund, to which all the wealthier economies
must contribute. The Palestinians can rightfully demand this from
the member-states of the United Nations who voted for the partition
of Palestine in 1947 and did not lift a finger to prevent the
tragedy of the refugees.
Israelis
must not delude themselves that only others will pay. The Israeli
“custodian of absentee property” holds huge properties –
buildings, lands, movable property – left behind by the refugees,
and it is his duty to register and administer them.
Return
to Palestine
The
historic compromise between Israel and Palestine is based on the
principle of “Two States for Two Peoples”. The State of
Palestine is designed to embody the historic personality of the
Palestinian-Arab people and the State of Israel is designed to
embody the historic personality of the Israeli-Jewish people, with
the Arab citizens of Israel, who constitute a fifth of all Israeli
citizens, being full partners in the state.
It
is clear that the return of millions of Palestinian refugees to the
State of Israel would completely change the character of the state,
contrary to the intentions of its founders and most of its citizens.
It would abolish the principle of Two States for Two Peoples, on
which the demand for a Palestinian state is based.
All
this leads to the conclusion that most of the refugees who opt for
return will find their place in the State of Palestine. As
Palestinian citizens they will be able to build their life there,
subject to the laws and decisions of their government.
To
absorb a large number of returnees and provide them with housing and
employment, the State of Palestine must receive appropriate
compensations from the international fund and Israel. Also, Israel
must transfer the settlements intact to the Palestinian government,
after the return of the settlers to Israeli territory. When deciding
upon the just and equitable division of water and other resources
between Israel and Palestine, this large-scale absorption must also
be taken into account.
If
the border between Palestine and Israel will be open to the free
movement of people and goods, according to the principles of
peaceful co-existence between good neighbors, the former refugees,
as Palestinian citizens, will be able to visit the places where
there forefathers lived.
Return
to Israel
In
order to make the healing of the psychological wounds and a historic
conciliation possible, there is no way to avoid the return of an
appropriate number of refugees to the State of Israel. The exact
number must be decided upon by an negotiation between Israel and
Palestine.
This
part of the plan will arouse the strongest opposition in Israel. As
a matter of fact, not a single Israeli politician or thinker has
dared to propose it. The extreme opposition exists both on the Right
and the Left of the Israeli spectrum.
However,
such a limited return is the natural completion of the recognition
in principle of the Right of Return and the acceptance of
responsibility for the events of the past. As we shall see
immediately, the opposition to it is irrational and an expression of
old fears that have no basis in reality.
The
government of Israel recently offered to take back a few thousands
of refugees (3000 were mentioned) annually in the framework of
“family reunification”. This reflects a mistaken attitude.
Instead, it is the open return, in the framework of the Right of
Return, which is necessary as a symbolic act of conciliation. The
number mentioned is, of course, ridiculous.
Nobody
claims that Israel, which has just successfully absorbed a million
new immigrants from the former Soviet Union, is economically unable
to absorb a reasonable number of refugees. The argument is clearly
ideological and demographic: that the return of any number of
refugees will change the national-demographic of the state.
If
the irrationality of the argument needs proof, one need only mention
that the extreme Right in Israel demands the annexation of the Arab
neighborhoods of East Jerusalem and is quite ready to grant Israeli
citizenship to the quarter of a million Arabs living there. The
Right-wing also demands the annexation of big “settlement
blocs”, which include many Arab villages, without being unduly
worried by the increase in the number of Arab citizens of Israel.
It
is also worthwhile to remember that in 1949 the government of David
Ben-Gurion and Moshe Sharett offered to take back 100 thousand
refugees. Whatever the motives that inspired that offer, and even if
this was merely a diplomatic maneuver, the offer is an important
precedent. In relation to the Jewish population in Israel at that
time, this number equals 800 thousand today. In relation to the
number of refugees at that time, the number equals half a million
now.
The
decisive question is: How many can be brought back? Minimalists may
speak about 100 thousand, maximalists about half a million. I myself
have proposed an annual quota of 50 thousand for 10 years. But this
is a subject for negotiations, which must be conducted in a spirit
of good-will with the intent of putting a successful end to this
painful issue, always remembering that it concerns the fate of
living human beings who deserve rehabilitation after tens of years
of suffering.
1.1
million Palestinian-Arab citizens currently live in Israel. An
increase of that number to 1.3 or even 1.5 million will not
fundamentally change the demographic picture, especially when Israel
is absorbing more than 50 thousand new Jewish immigrants every year.
Yet
this concept arouses deep fears in Israel. Even the historian Benny
Morris, who played such an important role in exposing the expulsion
of 1948, is ready only for “perhaps a trickle of refugees being
allowed to return to Israel - a few thousand, no more.”
I am
aware that the offer far from satisfies the Palestinian demands. But
I am convinced that the great majority of Palestinians know that it
is the price that both sides have to pay in order to leave behind
the painful past and prepare for the building of their future in the
two states.
When
Will It Happen?
If
this solution is adopted, in the framework of a comprehensive peace
between Israel and Palestine that will bring with it peace between
Israel and the entire Arab world, it can be implemented in a few
years.
The
first stage will be, of course, the achievement of an agreement
between the two parties. Hopefully, this will not be a process of
bitter haggling, but a negotiation in good faith, with both sides
realizing that an agreed resolution will not only put an end to a
great human tragedy but will also open the way for real peace.
The
second stage will be the process of choosing. An international
agency will have to make certain that every refugee family will
thoroughly know its rights and the option available to it. The
agency must also make sure that every family can choose freely,
without pressure. There must also be an orderly process of
registering properties and submitting claims.
Nobody
can know at this moment how many refugees will choose each of the
options. One can assume that many will prefer to remain where they
are, especially if they have married locally or have businesses and
taken roots. The compensations will raise their situation
considerably.
Others
will prefer to live in the Palestinian state, where they will feel
at home within their nation and their culture. Others may wish to
return to Israeli territory, where they are close to the homes of
their families, even if they cannot return to destroyed homes and
non-existent villages. Others again may be disinclined to live in a
state with a different national and cultural background, after
seeing the reality there with their own eyes. A real choice will be
possible only when all the facts are clear, and even then not a few
might change their minds repeatedly.
Once
the great national issue, the symbol of the Palestinian sense of
injustice, becomes a personal issue of hundreds of thousands of
individual families, each one of them will reach an individual
decision.
At
the same time the international agency must come into being.
Experience shows that this will not be easy and that countries that
promise generous contributions for such an effort do not always
fulfill their promises.
The
third stage will be the implementation, which will certainly take
several years.
Clearly
the fear of many Israelis, that a catastrophe on the scale of a
natural disaster will suddenly engulf them, is without basis. The
solution of the problem will be a prolonged, controlled, reasonable
and logical process.
Historic
Conciliation
I
believe that this plan can achieve a moral, just, practical and
agreed-upon solution.
Both
sides will accept it, in the end, because there is no other. There
can be no peace without the solution of the refugee question, and
the only solution is one both sides can live with.
Perhaps
it will all be to the good. When both sides start on the path to the
solution, it may facilitate the conciliation between them. When they
sit together to find creative solutions, all kinds of interesting
ideas may turn up. For example: why not rebuild two or three
Palestinian villages which were destroyed after 1948, and whose
sites are still vacant? Many things that seem impossible today may
appear on the table once the atmosphere between the parties changes.
Perhaps
then the ancient saying of the Psalmist will apply to the refugees:
“The stone which the builders refused has become the head stone of
the corner.”
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