What follows is a
very hard-hitting article about the lack of proper attention in the United States
to the Palestinian side of the conflict in the Middle East.
Unfortunately, this
powerful and important document was not properly cited when I came upon it back
in November of 2000, so I cannot tell you any more about the author or the
article than what you see below. My professor
at the time,
What Americans need to
know -- but probably won't be told -- to Understand Palestinian Rage
By
As the Persian Gulf War was raging I had what I felt to
be the particular honor, as an American Jew, of being sponsored by the San
Francisco Bay Area Chapter of the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee
on a fact finding mission to investigate Israeli human rights abuses carried
out against Palestinians under emergency measures declared during the war. I
had been reporting on US policy in the Middle East for more than ten years on
KPFA and other California radio stations and I had been documenting and
lecturing on anti-Arab racism in American popular culture and the news media.
After the delegation's week of fact-finding was
completed, I decided to spend more time on my own to dig deeper into what
Israeli occupation meant for Palestinians.
In the next two weeks my travels would take me from the sandy back
roads, sweet smelling orange groves and fetid poverty ridden slums of Gaza to
meetings with Palestinian and Jewish activists in Haifa, Tel Aviv and
Jerusalem. And from the stifling heat of Jericho, where I interviewed
Coming back and talking with most Americans about what
I had seen and learned there made me feel as if had entered an episode of the
Twilight Zone -an episode in which the main character can see a dangerous and
foreboding presence that no one else can see. The protagonist points it out to
them but as soon as they look, it has disappeared. They cannot see it. And pretty
soon the increasingly desperate and frustrated character even begins to doubt
his or her own sanity.
But such was the gulf between what I had seen and
experienced and what the American public perceived through the lens of the
American news media. I couldn't help but conclude that the American public
wasn't even getting a fraction of the information it needed to comprehensively
understand and intelligently monitor it's own government's policies in the
Middle East. Now, almost ten years later, little has changed and the gulf in
perception is just as wide.
Perhaps that is understandable. The American news media
are probably the most pro-Israeli in the world. Even the Israeli news media are
more critical of the Israeli government than American journalists are.
Perhaps this isn't surprising since the US is Israel's
main benefactor and Israel receives more US aid than any other country in the
world. But it is still disturbing to see how uncritically US news coverage
seems to follow us foreign policy and how much the American news media protect
Israel. If one never leaves the United States or reads the foreign news media,
it is easy to be unaware of this incredible gulf between how the US media
perceive and report on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and how it is viewed in
much of the rest of the world. Even the next most pro-Israeli press, that of
Great Britain, shows sharp contrasts with American reporting on Israel and the
Occupied Territories.
In American coverage of the recent Camp David meetings
the American press obediently followed the Israeli and US government spin that
while Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak
made courageous concessions for peace, Palestinian unwillingness to compromise
caused the meeting to fail.
Never mind that Barak's
'courageous concessions' consisted of allowing the Palestinians to have joint
administrative responsibility over a couple or remote Arab neighborhoods of
Arab East Jerusalem - pathetic crumbs tossed on the floor which Arafat was
expected to gratefully pick up.
I had to read the British press to find out that,
according to documents leaked from Camp David, Arafat reportedly made so many
major concessions that they could endanger the possibility of a creating a
viable Palestinian state.
According to a British newspaper, The Independent,
Palestinian concessions at Camp David included the right of Israel to maintain
a permanent military presence in the Jordan Valley, the presence of Israeli
early warning stations on Palestinian territory, Israeli permission to fly over
Palestinian air space, the right of Israel to use its army on Palestinian land
if it fears a danger to the State of Israel, Palestinian agreement not to have
an army, and permanent Israeli sovereignty over existing Jewish settlements
-settlements which effectively cut off Jerusalem from the rest of the West Bank
and which, including the giant Jewish settlement of Ma'aleh
Adumim, effectively cut the West Bank into two pieces
separated by Israeli territory.
There are other important facts that I regularly see mentioned
in newspapers from other rarely mentioned, if at all, in American newspapers
and broadcasts.
In the British and European press, readers are often
reminded that the very existence of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and
Gaza is a clear violation of international law, specifically the Fourth Geneva
Convention, and that the continued occupation of Gaza, the West Bank and East
Jerusalem are in violation of UN Security Council Resolutions.
Readers of British papers are also reminded regularly
that what the Americans often characterize as an 'inflexible' and 'radical'
Palestinian demand for full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and the West bank,
including East Jerusalem, is exactly what is called for in United Nations
Security Council Resolution 242 which, according to the Oslo Agreement, signed
by Israel, is exactly the framework on which final resolution is supposed to be
based.
Reporting on Camp David, American reporters obediently
quoted Israeli Prime Minister Barak's statements
questioning whether Palestinians are negotiating 'in good faith' but failed to
report ongoing Israeli actions in Gaza and the West Bank that raise serious
questions about Israel's 'good faith': continuing demolitions of Palestinian
homes; confiscation of Palestinian water; expansion and construction of Jewish
settlements in occupied territory; denial of building permits to Palestinian
homeowners; and construction of Jewish 'security roads' which cut 1/4 mile
swaths through Palestinian land.
Not only have American reporters left out crucial
information necessary to a comprehensive understanding of the conflict and the
peace process, but for far too long they have demonstrated a mindlessly
uncritical acceptance of even the most absurd Israeli arguments against making
peace. Foremost of these is the oft-used Israeli argument that Palestinian
authorities must guarantee an end to terrorist attacks as a prerequisite to any
Israeli agreements. It has always been a laughable argument, except to American
journalists.
If the United States government
could not prevent the bombings at Oklahoma City and the World Trade Towers and
the Israeli government could not prevent the assassination of its own prime
minister, how can
There are other serious lapses in American coverage which make it difficult for Americans to understand, on an emotional level, the Palestinians' anger and frustration that are now boiling over in the streets of the Occupied Territories and even within Israel itself.
Recent violence has been attributed to Palestinian
anger about the visit by Ariel Sharon, accompanied by 1,000 police and hundreds
of supporters, to the sacred Islamic 'Noble Sanctuary' where the AI-Aksa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock are located. Although
Ariel Sharon was described as a right-wing opposition leader hated by Arabs,
Americans were offered little insight into exactly why he is so despised by
Arabs.
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What Americans are generally not told,
but what Palestinians cannot forget, is that Ariel Sharon was held responsible,
even by the Israeli Knesset, for the massacre of from 1,000 to 2,000 unarmed
Palestinian men, women and children in the Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and Chatila in Lebanon.
During the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, which
Not only did American news media fail to include this
critically important information, but many actually gave
It is difficult for Americans to even imagine the
frustration of Palestinians who see Jews arrive from the United States to act
out Jewish James Bond fantasies in the Occupied Territories, sporting yarmulkes
and 9mm submachine guns -weapons they would never be allowed to possess or walk
around with in the streets of American cities -at the ready to draw Palestinian
blood.
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American Jews, who left behind in the United States
more economic opportunity and religious freedom than most people in the world
can even imagine, and whose parents, grandparents and great, great great grandparents never set foot in Israel, are allowed
to invoke the Jewish "right of return" and claim land that
Palestinian families have been living on and working for centuries. And all
this while many Palestinians still carry the keys from the homes they lost in
the 1948 war, and to which they have little or no hope of ever returning. |
I sensed some of what Palestinians felt when I
interviewed more than a half dozen Palestinians whose homes had been dynamited
or bulldozed by Israeli tractors because a teenage member of the family had
tossed a rock at an Israeli troop carrier or because they tried to build an
extra room without the building permit they knew Israeli officials would never
provide.
I sensed some of the frustration and anger that
Palestinians feel when I spoke with a typical Palestinian farmer in the West
Bank whose well of precious water, which he needed to irrigate his crops, had
been confiscated by Israeli authorities so a nearby Jewish settlement could
fill its swimming pools and water its green lawns.
I experienced some of the frustration that Palestinians must be feeling when I interviewed numerous Jewish-American settlers in the West Bank during the Persian Gulf War. Many of those I spoke with were from New York, and talking about Arabs, spouted some of the most hateful, racist diatribes that I had ever heard. I was reminded of the racism against Black American that I witnessed growing up in the American south.
The images, often broadcast on American networks, of Palestinians chanting’ death to the Jews’ have given many Americans the impression that Arab hatred of Jews may be the greatest obstacle to peace. But that could be a wrong an dangerously misleading conclusion.
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It is almost ten years later and, again, the influx of
settlers, the expansion of Jewish settlements, the building of Jewish roads,
the demolition of Palestinian homes and the confiscation of Palestinian water
all continue. The factor of racism. American papers and American news networks
offer Americans little opportunity to understand how much racism remains as one
of the greatest obstacles to peace.
In spite of those chants, my experiences in Gaza and
the West Bank gave me some interesting insights into how deep those feelings go
in at least some Palestinians who would be described here as fanatic or
extremist.
Clearly there are virulently racist elements within the
greater Palestinian community... but I found a real difference between Israeli
racism against Arabs, based on a feeling of racial superiority, and Palestinian
hatred of Jews which is an understandable Palestinian response to the policies
of the Jewish government of Israel and a continuing Jewish occupation.
It is comparable to the difference between the hatred
of Black Americans by Southern white racists during the Civil Rights Movement
in the United States and the hatred many Black Americans felt towards whites as
the result of the racist oppression they experienced. It is an important
difference.
Making no secret of my Jewishness,
I traveled unarmed, without any police or military escort, and accompanied only
by a sole translator, into remote mountain and desert areas in Gaza and the
West Bank controlled by the militant Muslim organization called Hamas and where Israeli authorities told me I would
probably be killed.
I
still remember the amazement of Palestinians there when they learned that I was
a Jew investigating human rights abuses by the Israeli military and I was moved
by how quickly I was invited into their homes to share tea with them. And I
will never forget the tears of appreciation streaming down the cheeks of so
many Palestinians who were so genuinely happy to meet a Jew who simply saw them
as human beings and as equals and who was willing to acknowledge their
suffering and listen to their side of the conflict. The only Jews they had ever
seen in their villages were soldiers there to assert Israeli control.
Far away from any Israeli protection, in the heart of
areas controlled by Hamas, I felt no danger
whatsoever. It was difficult to return to Tel Aviv and talk to Jews who would
never allow an Arab to set foot in their homes, except perhaps to clean them,
and who would explain to me with no doubt in their minds that it was impossible
to reason with Arabs because they didn't share the same faculties of thought
and reason that "civilized human beings" possess. I left with the
sharp impression that anti-Arab racism in Israeli society was the much greater
obstacle to peace. And the evidence
indicates that, ten years later, it hasn't changed.
Judging by statements by the Shas
party's most prominent religious leader, not much has improved.
There is a slightly more subtle version
of anti-Arab racism that continues to permeate our news coverage of the Middle
East and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict to this day. It is
characterized in
I was introduced to Israeli racism before I even left
the grounds of Ben Gurion Airport outside
He had almost certainly never been to the YMCA on Nablus Street but he had assumed it would be dirty simply
because it was located in Arab East Jerusalem. That was just the first and
mildest of many exposures to Israeli racism towards Arabs. Traveling through
Israel I witnessed a deep, widespread and racist contempt for Arabs that I now
see as possibly the most serious, but seldom mentioned, obstacle to finding a
just and lasting peace.
The anti-Arab racism that exists in Israel is not
without its counterpart in the United States. During that 1991 trip I visited
the sacred Islamic site that includes the AI-Aqsa
Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. Just a few months before, in October of 1990,
19 unarmed Palestinian civilians had been shot to death by Israeli police. I interviewed eye witnesses and photographed
bullet holes left in the side of the mosque by Israeli gunfire. Victims even
included Red Crescent ambulance staff attempting to provide medical assistance
to the wounded.
In Great Britain, the conservative weekly news magazine,
'The Economist', used the term 'massacre' to describe the slaughter. They
called it a massacre on their front page, in their editorial, and in the
headline of their news story. The New York Times didn't report a massacre but
described an outbreak of violence about which there were "confusing"
and "contradictory" accounts.
But one of the most reprehensible
displays of anti-Arab racism was provided by Time Magazine which characterized
the massacre of 19 unarmed Palestinians with a headline which read
"Saddam's Lucky Break," This indefensible murder of Arab civilians
was described as a "propaganda victory" for Saddam Hussein and even
implied that he had more responsibility for the killings than the Israeli
police who had pulled the triggers.
This racism is reflected in the Sacramento Bee headline
"Riots Escalate in West Bank" with a smaller tagline mentioning
"12 dead, hundreds hurt", It is present in the SF Examiner headline:
"Death Toll Reaches 29 in Mideast Clashes."
In none of these samples is it made clear how people died and who did the
killing. Now we know, at the time of this writing, that more than 76
Palestinians have been killed. We should all know, deep in our hearts, that if
29 or 55 or 76 Israelis had been killed by Palestinians, the headlines would be
screaming at us from the headlines of almost every newspaper '29 Israelis
Killed by Palestinians' or 'Arabs Kill 76 Israelis', The headlines would
certainly not read 'Death Toll Reaches 29' or '76 Israelis Die in Mideast Violence' -headlines that fail to attribute any
direct responsibility for the killing. A SF Chronicle story carried a headline
which read, 'Palestinian Riots Spread Into Israel.' Three paragraphs into that story we are
informed that 12 Palestinians have been killed. In a particularly egregious
example, another Sacramento Bee headline reads, "Palestinian gunmen fire
on Israelis" over a story that tells us that twelve more Palestinians have
been killed."
This is something that happens repeatedly in the
American press and implicitly attaches one value to the lives of Israelis and a
lesser value to the lives of Arabs, Israelis are "killed" but
Palestinians "die," I am not alone in noticing these disturbing disparites that work to camouflage Israeli responsibility.
The results of America's imbalanced policy choices are
now playing out in the streets of Israel and the Occupied Territories and the
time has clearly come for an American President and his policy advisors to
realize the responsibility they share for the death of a 12 year old boy in his
fathers arms and the torrent of Palestinian blood that is now flowing.
He could also make continued US aid contingent on
Israeli compliance with international law and UN Security Council resolutions.
Then all that would need to be negotiated, apart from a Palestinian right of
return, would be when, not whether, Israel will return the occupied lands
seized in 1967.
Because of the major role that the United States plays
in life and death issues in the Middle East, American editors and reporters
have a special responsibility to constantly examine the fairness of their
reporting and how critically they examine information they present to the
American people. And they need to examine the possibility of their own racism
and begin treating Palestinians and other Arabs as equal citizens whose lives
carry just as much value as Jewish Israeli lives.
Israelis need to examine their own racism and their
arrogance in using their military superiority to wring yet more concessions
from a people who are struggling to keep a mere 20% of what was formerly
Palestine. They must realize that in forcing humiliating concessions on the
Palestinians they are only planting the seeds of continued resentment, hatred
and violence. Above all, Israelis need to realize that the creation of an
economically, politically and geographically viable Palestinian state is
inextricably linked with any prospect they might have of a peaceful and secure
future. The Israelis' apparent inability or unwillingness to recognize this
basic truth may be the greatest single obstacle to a just and lasting peace.