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By Maurice Harris
My love for Israel has not blinded me to Israel’s impact on the Palestinians.
I’ve studied the conflict and traveled to Gaza and the West Bank to see
things for myself. I’ve witnessed, but thankfully never had to endure, the
depressing reality that is life under the Israeli occupation. Neither my Jewish
nor my Zionist ideals support this wholesale restriction of the Palestinian
people in the occupied territories. I believe in the right of self-defense, but
the occupation has done little to reduce terrorism, and it has been more
about building and supporting new settlements than it has been about self-
defense. My opposition to the occupation and to the settlement movement,
with its messianic-fundamentalist interpretation of Jewish sacred texts, is as
deep as my commitment to Zionism. My views are part of what is known in
the Jewish world as progressive Zionism.
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Progressive Zionism is a movement that advocates an end to the Israeli
occupation, the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, the
sharing of Jerusalem, and the resolution of the Palestinian refugee issue
through a compromise that preserves Israel as a Jewish homeland.
Progressive Zionism is partly grounded in values of peace and justice, and
partly grounded in the practical concern that if Israel can’t get itself out of
the West Bank and find its way to a two-state solution, ethnic demographics
will be the state’s undoing within the next half century.
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The “one-state solution” would turn the clock back to before World War II,
when Jews were condemned to always be a minority group wherever they
lived, and when democratic states failed to save them from mass murder.
It’s also worth noting that the kind of multi-religious secular democracy that
these advocates want to see replace Israel is a type of state that doesn’t
exist anywhere else in the Middle East. Their solution would create a secular
democracy in the one part of the Middle East where there is a concentration
of Jews, thus disempowering Jews as a group, while leaving over 20 other
states throughout the region that officially enfranchise Islam or Arab national
identity as part of their constitution.
When I bring up Mizrahi Jews, I sometimes hear the comment made that
these Jews were doing just fine under Islamic rule and had no need of a state
of their own. The truth is that while Jews fared better overall historically
under Islamic rule than Christian rule, they still faced periodic pogroms,
expulsions, special taxes, and other forms of religious humiliation and
persecution under Islam. And like their European brethren, Mizrahi Jews also
faced potential annihilation during World War II. For example, when the
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Nazis conquered Morocco, they deported several thousand Jews to rural
concentration camps. Had the Allied invasion of Morocco taken place later
than it did, Moroccan Jews may not have survived. And in 1941, the Mufti of
Jerusalem, a key Palestinian leader, signed an agreement with Mussolini
planning for the extermination of the Jews living in Palestine should the Axis
forces defeat the British there. In fairness, there were also heroic Muslims
who took great risks to protect Jews from the Nazis. But the overall condition
of Mizrahi Jews was precarious and disempowered. As in Christian Europe,
Jewish safety and survival under Muslim rule ultimately depended on the
good-will of the leaders of the moment. After 1948, Islamic governments
began persecuting Mizrahi Jews sharply, and most of them fled. 800,000 or
more Jews, including my grandparents and mother, became refugees, most
resettling in Israel. These refugees are rarely mentioned in the Israeli-
Palestinian debate.
Another view I’ve heard in left-wing circles says, “OK, the Jews deserve a
homeland. But why not have it be somewhere uncontroversial?” I’d like to
explain why. Jews are not a foreign infection in the Middle East. Jews are an
unusual people in that we’ve been spread out thinly in many parts of the
world, where we’ve lived continuously for centuries. The Mizrahi part of our
population is indigenous to the Middle East, and the rest of our people has
deep roots there. Except for deserted places, every place in the world is
somebody’s home, so sending Jews to have a homeland outside of Palestine
would still have created issues of conflict and compromise with some native
population. Palestine was the only part of the world where Jews had an
historical connection. I ask those who would have liked to send Jewish
refugees from Hitler somewhere deserted to consider that this sounds an
awful lot like a wish to just send the Jews “away.” There is no “away.” Jews
are a part of the world, and it was in Israel that Jews birthed the religion that
forms the foundation of Christianity and Islam. Judaism is an integral part of
the Middle East’s history and religious life, and Jews have a place in the
Middle East. The moral test for the world following the Holocaust wasn’t,
“How can we find somewhere blank on the world map so that we can send
these Jews away?” The test was, “How can we re-conceive of how the
community of nations lives with the Jews so that Jews have true safety and
dignity?” Israel is part of that answer.
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* * *
Maybe the politicians will usher in a peace agreement soon. It’s unlikely, but
possible. If it happens, it will likely be a cold peace, more a truce than a
grassroots peace among peoples. For a deeper kind of peace to take hold,
honesty needs to replace propaganda and misinformation.
Over the last two decades, Israeli society has been growing more honest
about its own birth, and this has been emotionally difficult for Jews
worldwide. A group of Israeli historians began speaking publicly about what
they learned as they researched the Israeli War of Independence and the
flight of 700,000 Palestinian refugees that ensued. They shattered one of
the Jewish community’s comforting myths about 1948 – namely, that we
Jews didn’t expel Palestinians from their homes during the War of
Independence; rather, the Palestinians supposedly left of their own choosing
in an effort to assist the invading Arab armies.
If there is ever to be a grassroots peace between Jews and Arabs, the final
peace agreement needs to acknowledge this truth and include a limited right
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of return to Israel for a number of Palestinians that is demographically
calculated so that Israel remains a Jewish homeland. Israel also will need to
pay compensation to those Palestinian families who left in 1948 and who are
not allowed, or who choose not, to return. Finally, a state apology from
Israel for its share of the responsibility in the Palestinian refugee crisis would
be healing and help deepen peace.
Honesty also requires that the Arab and wider Muslim world tell the full,
nuanced truth about the past. This includes telling the real, not the rosy,
story of Jewish life historically under Islamic rule. It also means teaching
about the Holocaust, including Jewish vulnerability in Arab lands during
World War II, and it means repudiating Holocaust denial. It means taking
responsibility for the systematic education of tens of millions in anti-Semitic
treatises like The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and in cartoonish imagery
depicting Jews as conspiratorial money-grubbers scheming to take over the
world.
Honesty also means Arab and Islamic nations allowing their own historians
and journalists to question freely their own mythic narratives about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the same way that Israel has allowed. And
honesty means the Muslim world telling the truth about the 800,000 Mizrahi
Jewish refugees. If a grassroots peace is to take hold, Arab states will need
to offer some kind of option of return or monetary compensation to these
Jewish refugees, many of whom lost their homes and all their resources when
they fled. An official apology would mean a lot to these communities, too.
Things are so discouraging right now that it looks like only a miracle will help
both sides achieve the kind of peace I’ve described above. But every effort
towards this kind of peace has influence, and hopefully the best aspects of
the human spirit will rise up and help the peoples of the region transform. I
will celebrate Israel’s 60th this week because there is so much to celebrate,
and because I love the country and its people. That love leads me to be both
a defender of, and a critic of, the remarkable place my people calls home.
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