Palestine/Israel: A Single State, with Liberty and Justice for All, Regardless of Religion

Prior to the establishment of Israel, Palestine had been a multi-religious and multi-cultural country. Christians, Muslims and Jews, Armenians, Greek Orthodox, to name a few, all had a place there; and all lived in relative harmony. Other nations fought wars and waged epic struggles to attain the kind of coexistence that was already a reality in Palestine.

Prior to the establishment of Israel, Palestine had been multi-religious and multi-cultural. Christians, Muslims and Jews, Armenians, Greek Orthodox, to name a few, all had a place there; and all lived in relative harmony. Other nations fought wars and waged epic struggles to attain the kind of coexistence that was already a reality in Palestine. But while the world strives toward the noble truths that we are all created equal, Israel legislates the notion of a Chosen People with exclusive rights and privilege for Jews. Where countries have worked to integrate their citizens to create the richness of diversity, Israel is working in reverse, employing racist policies to “Judaize” the land whereby property and resources are confiscated from Christians and Muslims for the exclusive use of Jews. Where there is consensus that certain human rights are inalienable, Palestinians have lived subject to the whims of soldiers at checkpoints; of airplanes and helicopters raining death onto them with impunity; of curfews and restrictions and denials; and of violent armed settlers who fancy themselves disciples of God. Living under Israeli occupation, in refugee camps or in exile, we Palestinians have endured having everything callously taken from us – our homes, our heritage, our history, our families, livelihoods, freedom, farms, olive groves, water, security, and freedom.

In the 1990s, we supported the Oslo Accords two-state solution even though it would have returned to us only 22% of our historic homeland. But Israel repeatedly squandered our generosity, confiscating more Palestinian land to increase illegal Jewish-only colonies and Jewish-only roads. What remains to us now is less than 14% of Historic Palestine, all of it as isolated Bantustans, shrinking ghettos, walls, fences, checkpoints with surly soldiers,and the perpetual encroachment of expanding illegal Israeli colonies.While the Palestine Authority has led us into a shrinking land mass, less water, more restrictions, ominous walls and merciless slaughter, notable individuals and popular movements have mobilized for Palestine as once happened for South Africa. Moral authorities like former President Jimmy Carter, Nobel Laureates Desmond Tutu and Mairead Maguire, and former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mary Robinson have condemned Israeli Apartheid.

Organizations supporting the Divestment and Boycott Campaign against Israel include religious institutions such as the Presbyterian Church, The World Council of Churches, United Church of Christ, Evangelical Lutheran Church, the Anglican Church, the Federation of European Jews for a Just Peace, among many others. It includes civil and professional organizations such as the National Lawyers Guild, the Irish Municipal, Public and Civil Trade Union in Ireland, as well as labor unions in Canada, Britain, and other nations. An academic boycott of Israel has spread throughout the UK and other parts of Europe and taken root in US universities across the country. The International Solidarity Movement has seen thousands of individuals come to the Occupied Territories to protect Palestinians from the violence of settlers during the olive harvest; to protect children on their daring daily journeys to school; and to bear witness to the inhumanity of military occupation.

The Free Gaza movement has transported by boat hundreds of people willing to risk their lives to bring greatly needed supplies to the besieged people of Gaza. This Christmas, internationals will march to the Egypt/Gaza border to break this siege. These are but a few examples of growing popular support for the Palestinian struggle.

When compared with the accomplishments of these grassroots movements, the futility of “negotiations” becomes painfully apparent. It is clear that we cannot look to our leaders (elected or imposed) to achieve justice. Just as only the masses could bring South Africa’s Apartheid to its knees, it will be the masses who will also bring Israel’s Apartheid crashing.

The continued expansion of international action demanding the implementation of Palestinian basic human rights is inevitable. The notion of religious-ethnocentric entitlement and exclusivity for one people at the expense of another has been rejected the world over. Palestinians reject it and we assert that we are human beings worthy of the same human rights accorded to the rest of humanity; that we are worthy of our homes and farms, our heritage, our churches and mosques, and our history; and that we should not be expected to negotiate with our oppressors for such basic dignities. The two-state solution was and remains an instrument to circumvent the basic human rights of Palestinians in order to accommodate Israel’s desire to be Jewish. Polls show that Palestinians refuse to be the enemies of our Jewish brothers and sisters anywhere, just as we refuse to be oppressed by them.

It is time for our shared land to be the inclusive and diverse country it had been. It is time for leaders to follow the people’s determined movement toward a single democratic state, with liberty and justice for all, regardless of religion.

Susan Abulhawa is the author of Mornings in Jenin (Bloomsbury, 2010); and Ramzy Baroud is the author of My Father was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, 2009). Read other articles by Susan Abulhawa.

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  1. MeMyself said on December 27th, 2009 at 9:16am #

    “Prior to the establishment of Israel, Palestine had been a multi-religious and multi-cultural country.”
    Palestine was never a country.

    “Prior to the establishment of Israel . . . all lived in relative harmony.”
    My guess is that the author never heard of the anti-Jewish pogroms of 1929 which established the Arab quarter in Jerusalem by forcing out Jewish residents, or of the riots that same year in Hebron which forced out the majority Jewish population. Nor has the author heard of the Nazi inspired violence by Arabs against Jews during the 1930’s and early 1940’s.

    “. . . Israel is working in reverse, employing racist policies to ‘Judaize’ the land whereby property and resources are confiscated from Christians and Muslims for the exclusive use of Jews.”
    Basically a lie. And having been to Israel, I can tell you that if you are worried about Judaizing the land, you are 3000 years too late.

    And what occupation? Palestinians in the West Bank live totally under the control of the Palestinian Authority. There are no Israelis in Gaza. And if you worry about the checkpoints, how about a word on Hamas’ policy of genocide against Jews? (Read their charter. I have.)

    What about both Arafat and Abbas turning down offers which included 95-98% of the West Bank, part of Jerusalem, and land within the Green Line (making up for the 2-5% of the West Bank Israel would keep)? You won’t get a better deal than that.

    As for a one-state solution, that state would eventually have a majority Muslim population. Does anyone know of a single majority Muslim country where Jews and Christians are treated as equals? Judging from the way Muslims have treated Jewish holy sites in the past, such a state would be hell for the Jews.

    This article is nothing but the same old fascist bunk.

  2. Mulga Mumblebrain said on December 30th, 2009 at 4:40am #

    You’ve got a nerve, being an archetypal Judeofascist liar, to accuse others of ‘fascist bunk’.
    I must say I love the arrogance of the land being Judaised 3000 years ago. This, of course, is an assertion of that narcissistic, messianic, and evil gibberish that the land was given to the Jews by their Invisible Friend, forever, and to the exclusion of all others. It is the excuse for the Zionazis’ extreme racist laws where a Jew, born anywhere, with no connection whatsoever to Palestine, coming from a branch of Jewry rooted in conversion, can settle in Palestine, while Palestinians, with undisturbed roots in the region for thousands of years longer than any Jew can claim, and, in many cases, descended from Jews who remained in Palestine, may be murdered, terrorised and dispossessed by the Herrenvolk. What’s more, the Judaic God does not exist, being simply a projection of Judaic narcissism and antagonism towards the rest on non-Jewish humanity. There followed another couple of oleaginous lies, so often exposed as such as to make their continued utterance a sure sign of pathological arrogance and contempt for the truth, the true stigmata of the Zionazi.