Former President Jimmy Carter has come under sustained attack for having
dared to use the term "apartheid" to describe Israel's policies in the West
Bank. However, not one of Carter's critics has offered a convincing argument to
justify the vehemence of the outcry, much less to refute his central claim that
Israel bestows rights on Jewish residents settling illegally on Palestinian
land, while denying the same rights to the indigenous Palestinians. Little
wonder, for they are attempting to defy reality itself.
Israel maintains two separate road networks in the West Bank: one for the
exclusive use of Jewish settlers, and one for Palestinian natives. Is that not
apartheid?
Palestinians are not allowed to drive their own cars in much of the West
Bank; their public transportation is frequently interrupted or blocked
altogether by a grid of Israeli army checkpoints -- but Jewish settlers come
and go freely in their own cars, without even pausing at the roadblocks that
hold up the natives. Is that not apartheid?
A system of closures and curfews has strangled the Palestinian economy in
the West Bank -- but none of its provisions apply to the Jewish settlements
there. Is that not apartheid?
Whole sectors of the West Bank, classified as "closed military areas" by
the Israeli army, are off limits to Palestinians, including Palestinians who
own land there -- but foreigners to whom Israel's Law of Return applies (that
is, anyone Jewish, from anywhere in the world) can access them without
hindrance. Is that not apartheid?
Persons of Palestinian origin are routinely barred from entering or
residing in the West Bank -- but Israeli and non-Israeli Jews can come and
go, and even live on, occupied Palestinian territory. Is that not apartheid?
Israel maintains two sets of rules and regulations in the West Bank: one
for Jews, one for non-Jews. The only thing wrong with using the word
"apartheid" to describe such a repugnant system is that the South African
version of institutionalized discrimination was never as elaborate as its
Israeli counterpart -- nor did it have such a vocal chorus of defenders among
otherwise liberal Americans.
The glaring error in Carter's book, however, is his insistence that the
term "apartheid" does not apply to Israel itself, where, he says, Jewish and
non-Jewish citizens are given the same treatment under the law. That is simply
not true.
Israeli law affords differences in privileges for Jewish and non-Jewish
citizens of the state -- in matters of access to land, family unification and
acquisition of citizenship. Israel's amended nationality law, for example,
prevents Palestinian citizens of Israel who are married to Palestinians from
the occupied territories from living together in Israel. A similar law, passed
at the peak of apartheid in South Africa, was overturned by that country's
supreme court as a violation of the right to a family. Israel's high court
upheld its law just this year.
Israel loudly proclaims itself to be the state of the Jewish people,
rather than the state of its actual citizens (one-fifth of whom are Palestinian
Arabs). In fact, in registering citizens, the Israeli Ministry of the Interior
assigns them a whole range of nationalities other than "Israeli." In the
official registry, the nationality line for a Jewish citizen of Israel reads
"Jew." For a Palestinian citizen, the same line reads "Arab." When this glaring
inequity was protested all the way to Israel's high court, the justices upheld
it: "There is no Israeli nation separate from the Jewish people." Obviously
this leaves non-Jewish citizens of Israel in, at best, a somewhat ambiguous
situation. Little wonder, then, that a solid majority of Israeli Jews regard
their Arab fellow-citizens as what they call "a demographic threat," which many
-- including the deputy prime minister -- would like to see eliminated
altogether. What is all this, if not racism?
Many of the very individuals and institutions that are so vociferously
denouncing President Jimmy Carter would not for one moment tolerate such
glaring injustice in the United States. Why do they condone the naked racism
that Israel practices? Why do they heap criticism on our former president for
speaking his conscience about such a truly unconscionable system of ethnic
segregation?
Perhaps it is because they themselves are all too aware that they are
defending the indefensible; because they are all too aware that the emperor
they keep trying to cover up really has no clothes. There is a limit to how
long such a cover up can go on. And the main lesson of Carter's book is that we
have finally reached that limit.
Saree Makdisi is a professor of English and Comparative Literature at UCLA and a frequent commentator on Middle East issues.
©2006 San Francisco Chronicle
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