T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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822.1 | <...> | DASMI1::CHERSON | always seek the higher ground | Mon Nov 06 1989 08:54 | 6 |
| re: .0
And who should pay for the services provided to the territories over the years,
which far exceeded the services ever provided by Jordan?
--David
|
822.2 | Tax revolt - try it anywhere else | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Mon Nov 06 1989 10:34 | 7 |
| Sounds like Massachusetts. The exercise is left to the doubter -
send them messages that you won't pay taxes because roads are poor,
and too much is spent on Massachusetts State Police. Better yet, try
and send a similar letter to the IRS, see what happens to your
business, wages, home and freedom.
DG
|
822.3 | Again ? | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Mon Nov 06 1989 12:54 | 6 |
| The "Tax Uprising" is another aspect of the complicated situation that prevails
in the so called "Occupied Territories" and the Israeli Palestinians struggle.
By dealing with the subject piece by piece (such as: Promised land, The Pop
and the.., and the current note) you might loose very quickly the real
perspective of the entire issue (see my reply in 813.17).
|
822.4 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Mon Nov 06 1989 15:47 | 21 |
|
Re: And who should pay for the services provided to the territories
over the years, which far exceeded the servcies ever provided
by Jordan?
Oh, thank you, massa. How could they be so ungrateful! Of course, you
ignore the fact that, before the Intifada, Israel was making a tidy
profit from the territories, an estimated $100 million in 1986 if
my recollection of the amount is correct. Not to mention having a
pool of cheap labor available to do the scut work Israeli Jews won't
do, namely the Palestinians who used to be farmers and whose farm
lands have been confiscated ay Israel. Nor did Jordan engage in
wholesale confiscation of Palestinian land and water resources in the
territories, as Israel has done. And, according to a friend of mine
who lived under
both occupations, even when the Palestinians were in active
revolt against Jordanian rule, the level of brutality of the Jordanians
never approached that of the IDF thugs.
|
822.5 | My data <> Your data | CASP::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Mon Nov 06 1989 16:36 | 25 |
| re: 822.4
> , before the Intifada, Israel was making a tidy
>profit from the territories, an estimated $100 million in 1986 if
>my recollection of the amount is correct.
It wasn't a one way deal; the Arab population benefited far more
economically than under Jordan.
> And, according to a friend of mine
>who lived under
>both occupations, even when the Palestinians were in active
>revolt against Jordanian rule, the level of brutality of the Jordanians
>never approached that of the IDF thugs.
That may be what your friend told you, but the casualty figures I've
seen don't bear it out.
Side note:
The gratuitous characterization of the IDF as "thugs" is a good
illustration of one of the major obstacles to progress; as long as people
insist on describing members of the other side in dehumanizing terms
(and I regret to say that I've heard it on both sides), the chances of
achieving effective communication are pretty small.
|
822.6 | She's back... | CARTUN::FRYDMAN | wherever you go...you're there | Mon Nov 06 1989 16:51 | 8 |
| re: 822.4
She's back....
Aaron, the use of the word "thugs" is nothing... you should read what
she uses in talk.politics.mideast.
|
822.7 | Facts are stubborn, look'em up Karen | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Mon Nov 06 1989 16:56 | 11 |
| Karen, I believe if you look at statistics such as roads/area,
# of schools and hospital beds, life expectancy and income levels,
you'll see an amazing improvement in the Palestinians' standard of
living. Both sides benefited, that's the whole idea.
As far as Jordanians' brutality, you've gotta be kidding. People
in Jerusalem still tell stories of the Jordanian Army shelling and
flattening whole quarters in disturbances in the 60's. Bodies were
bulldozed into piles... That same active revolt didn't have the press
coverage intifada does, or you'd listen twice to your friends' stories.
DG
|
822.8 | "welcome back" | DASMI1::CHERSON | always seek the higher ground | Tue Nov 07 1989 09:09 | 13 |
| >As far as Jordanians' brutality, you've gotta be kidding. People
>in Jerusalem still tell stories of the Jordanian Army shelling and
>flattening whole quarters in disturbances in the 60's. Bodies were
>bulldozed into piles... That same active revolt didn't have the press
>coverage intifada does, or you'd listen twice to your friends' stories.
And let's not forget the Jordanians turning our synagogues into barns, etc.
Re: "Darling" Karen, well well I was wondering where she had been hibernating
all this time. Aaron you are much too kind in your remarks, you should have
heard what I was saying under my breath...
--David
|
822.9 | Never Again! | SUBWAY::STEINBERG | | Tue Nov 07 1989 09:39 | 7 |
| > And let's not forget the Jordanians turning our synagogues into
> barns, etc.
Seven generations of my ancestors are buried on Har-Hazeitim. Only
one tombstone was intact upon liberation in 1967.
Jem
|
822.10 | The truth | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Tue Nov 07 1989 11:33 | 31 |
| I didn't want to response because I'm not sure whether the author of 822.4
is in "transmit only" mode or she is receiving anything too ,but because
some people might be mislead by her (and her good friends) I'll try to
add some of my "poor" knowledge.
Although I must admits that the Jordanian soldiers are one of the most moderate
among the Arabs, it is ridiculous to compare their attitude to the Palestinians
with the Israeli ones. Please ask your friends how many Palestinians were
slaughtered by the Jordanians during November 1970 (black November) - if
I'm not wrong much more than have been killed by Israelis during decades
of real conflict- and not to mention what the Syrians and the Lebaneses did
and still do to the Palestinians.
I just wonder how will the Boston or New York police will react if someone
will throw at them rocks or Molotov Cocktails (whatever cause he has).
As to the note topic itself, I have been in Biet Sachoor few times since
1967 including last summer and you will probably be surprised to know that
many houses there are much prettier than many even in Boston suburbia, not
to mention other neighborhoods in the country, and most of them are new
constructions.
Now, you probably wouldn't believe all of that, and if you want to know the
"holly truth" by yourself, I've got two suggestions: either go to Israel and
visit the west bank (it's a free country despite what many thinks) and you
will be able to visit all of this places (if your good friends will let you in),
or go to one of those "moderate Arab countries" and live there as a
Palestinian (not as an American), and if you do that I would very much like
to know who will be your friends when you come back (if at all).
-- Jacob
|
822.11 | spare it | DASMI1::CHERSON | always seek the higher ground | Tue Nov 07 1989 12:31 | 15 |
| >Now, you probably wouldn't believe all of that, and if you want to know the
>"holly truth" by yourself, I've got two suggestions: either go to Israel and
>visit the west bank (it's a free country despite what many thinks) and you
>will be able to visit all of this places (if your good friends will let you in),
>or go to one of those "moderate Arab countries" and live there as a
>Palestinian (not as an American), and if you do that I would very much like
>to know who will be your friends when you come back (if at all).
Considering that you're a relative new contributor to this conference you
don't know about Karen. In her mind (and her friends) the Jews have no right
to any land, and the only reality should be that great proposition of the
PLO, the "democratic/secular state of Palestine". Spare your fingers the work,
Jacob, it won't help.
--David
|
822.12 | | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Tue Nov 07 1989 13:15 | 8 |
| Thx David, I suspected that this is the situation but decided to respond
because there might be some other new readers who also don't know about Karen .
Besides , you probably know (if you read Maariv) that even some of
"karen best friends" Have been reconsidering their attitude lately realizing
the rising power of the fanatic "Hamas" movement and the execution of
136!! Palestinians during the uprising (according to last week Boston Globe )
by their "patriotic Arab brothers".
|
822.13 | Some facts... | SKIMAN::NASS | | Tue Nov 07 1989 14:31 | 101 |
|
>> Karen, I believe if you look at statistics such as roads/area,
>> # of schools and hospital beds, life expectancy and income levels,
>> you'll see an amazing improvement in the Palestinians' standard of
>> living. Both sides benefited, that's the whole idea.
For God sake!!! since when military occupation can be of any benifit
to the inhabitants.
Roads: Do you know the number of automobiles' accidents and
injuries caused by not building traffic lights in West
Bank. The military occupation says, no traffic lights
are permitted in any West Bank city. There is not even
one traffic light in any city.
Education: alas, go find out how much an Arab teacher in West Bank
gets paid ( around $200 a month ) compared to any teacher
in Israel. How about the military shutting down West Bank
schools for two years ! Very beneficial for the inhabitants !
>> As far as Jordanians' brutality, you've gotta be kidding. People
>> in Jerusalem still tell stories of the Jordanian Army shelling and
>> flattening whole quarters in disturbances in the 60's. Bodies were
>> bulldozed into piles... That same active revolt didn't have the press
>> coverage intifada does, or you'd listen twice to your friends' stories.
and from another note:
>>Although I must admits that the Jordanian soldiers are one of the most moderate
>>among the Arabs, it is ridiculous to compare their attitude to the Palestinians
>>with the Israeli ones. Please ask your friends how many Palestinians were
>>slaughtered by the Jordanians during November 1970 (black November) - if
>>I'm not wrong much more than have been killed by Israelis during decades
>>of real conflict- and not to mention what the Syrians and the Lebaneses did
>>and still do to the Palestinians.
I wonder what wrong the Palestinians did in the past that they getting
beaten, kicked, buried alive, demolishing entire homes, confiscating
their lands. This has been going on for years.
Everybody is inflicting damages to the Palestinians, and here some
are arguing who inflicted the least or the most !
By the way, speaking about the brutality of Black November, it was
mentioned in this notes file that the Israelis aided the Jordanians
military to do their task properly against the Palestinians. Also,
not to forget, the big military assistance in accomplishing the
Sabra and Shataila massacre against the Palestinian civilians.
>>I just wonder how will the Boston or New York police will react if someone
>>will throw at them rocks or Molotov Cocktails (whatever cause he has).
I didn't know that the Boston Police is occupying Boston city in
a military fashion :-). If it's then lets have an Intifada in Boston
too :-) !
>>As to the note topic itself, I have been in Biet Sachoor few times since
>>1967 including last summer and you will probably be surprised to know that
>>many houses there are much prettier than many even in Boston suburbia.
How about a short visit to Gaza ? did you notice the same pretty
houses or other parts of West Bank towns and refugee camps.
>>"holly truth" by yourself, I've got two suggestions: either go to Israel and
>>visit the west bank (it's a free country despite what many thinks) and you
>>will be able to visit all of this places (if your good friends will let you in),
>>or go to one of those "moderate Arab countries" and live there as a
>>Palestinian (not as an American), and if you do that I would very much like
>>to know who will be your friends when you come back (if at all).
Why is it every time the Palestinian question is debated, the Arab
countries are mentioned. Did the Palestinians shape or create these
countries ? Or these countries are mentioned to say that the Israeli
government is no better than the Arab government ?
>>Besides , you probably know (if you read Maariv) that even some of
>>"karen best friends" Have been reconsidering their attitude lately realizing
>>the rising power of the fanatic "Hamas" movement and the execution of
>>136!! Palestinians during the uprising (according to last week Boston Globe )
>>by their "patriotic Arab brothers".
It was mentioned here and reported in the past that "Hamas" movement
was encouraged by some Israeli officials. I wonder why ...
>> Seven generations of my ancestors are buried on Har-Hazeitim. Only
>> one tombstone was intact upon liberation in 1967.
I didn't know that occupying a land is now called liberation.
Maybe occupying the rest of the Middle East is also considered
the liberation of Great Israel.
|
822.14 | some more facts | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Tue Nov 07 1989 15:05 | 30 |
| The facts are still too stubborn. You try to twist them by
substituting a secondary effect for the primary - an old trick.
For example, when discussing the standard of living measurements,
you ignore the benefits that come from increased road mileage, and
concentrate on the lack of traffic lights. That's laughable, and is
akin to a starving man complaining about the lack of salt in his food,
all the while ignoring that starviation is the only alternative to this
"plain" bread of his. Education is another one - you ignore the
literacy rates rise over the last twenty years, the new schools and
universities, and complain that they were closed over the last two
years (due to intifada, so that makes it a circular argument to begin
with). Same goes for comapring teachers' salaries - why not compare
them to Jordanian teachers? For what it's worth, it's utter nonsense
to compare the standard of living between West Bank and Tel Aviv, all
the while trying to separate the two lands.
Finally, there are plenty of things the Palestinians have done over
the years to provoke today's harsh treatment. From the 20's and 30's
massacres of their Jewish neighbors, to the attacks in the War of Inde-
pendence, to blowing up planes and proclaiming Israel's illegitimacy,
the Palestinians have earned distrust and hatred of many Israeli Jews.
From attempting to take over Jordan and later Lebanon, they have earned
the mistrust and hatred of many of their Arab brethen. From terrorizing
the citizens and property of the Western Democracies, training and
helping all sorts of movements from Red Brigades to Japanese Red Army,
the Palestinians have earned mistrust and hatred of many in the West.
I am not saying anyone deserves to be buried alive for these
things, but it may provide some clues as to today's "harsh" treatment
of the Intifada...
DG
|
822.15 | | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Tue Nov 07 1989 15:36 | 22 |
| RE .13
Again, you are stating facts not in the right prospective.
A. Remember who did start with the comparison between the Israelis and the
Jordanians.
B. The Israelis backed the Jordanians in September 1970 (I think it was
September and not November) in order to avoid Syrian infiltration to Jordan
and it was done in a response for an explicit American request.
C. Yes, I have been in the refugee camps and almost no one in Israel denies
that they are suffering and that they have the right to live there, but
as it has mentioned before in this note the Palestinians have tendency
to shoot themselves in the foot and Israel is always being blamed for that
(we are only cousins not brothers).
By the way, just to put things in proportion I think -correct me if I'm wrong
- that there are more homeless in the U.S. then refugees in the West Bank
and they are suffering too.
D. The comparison with the Boston police was intended to show you that under
much more relaxed conditions some "security forces" in democratic countries
are seldom more brutal than the Israelis in a state of war.
|
822.16 | Palestinians over taxed | BOSHOG::YOUSEF | | Tue Nov 07 1989 16:21 | 27 |
| The bottom line to the whole question is that the Israelis are
collecting taxes to pay for their occupation, not to spend the money
on the roads or schools.
The notion that the Israelis are doing anything good for the
Palestinians is what the zionist supporters are trying to make the
world believe. You are trying to cover for what is really happening.
I am a palestinian American who cannot go back for even a visit,
whos land has been completely taken by the Israeli government under
the so called law of absent owner, I think you got my point, they
stop the Palestinians from getting back, and when they can't the
government cofiscate their land because they are absent. You see,
the Israelis possess all the powers and tactics to cover up for
what they do to the Palestinians for 41 yrs. They are double taxing
their exports to Europe and the Arab countries and getting over
$878 M a year, they are taxing the income at %14 more than that
of the Israelis, and they are triple taxing their imports to stop
them from getting the tools and equipment to improve their
manufacturing plants, their schools and their hospitals. Don't talk
to me about what the Israelis did so the people of Biet Sahoor could
have built the houses that they have, this was the efforts and the
ability of the Palestinian ingenuity to fight all odds and still
make it, the money that their sons and daughters send to them from
abroad and from the gulf area is what is helping them build more
schools , no thanks to the Israelis, and to the efforts of the
international relief and aid agencies go the credit of supplying
equipment and necessary medical needs that are helping in health
care keeping the Arab hospitals open.
|
822.17 | Some facts | GAON::jem | Eat, drink, and be... fat and drunk | Tue Nov 07 1989 16:51 | 66 |
| The following comes to you courtesy of Don Feinberg (who now ranks among the
occupying forces of Ra'anana.)
I have a few statistics on the "oppression" of the Palestinian Arabs
in Judea, Samaria, and Gaza:
o 100,000 Palestinian Arabs go to work daily in Israel. One third
of the net income in Judea, Samaria, and Gaza is derived from
this work in Israel. Industry, agriculture, commerce, and
export are not only fostered and improved under Israeli
administration, but were created out of nothing and now
represent an important factor in the economy of the Middle East.
o The state of education
Before '67 Today
Scholastic Institutions 897 1447
Classes 4,400 13,059
Pupils 174,406 475,345
Universities none 6
Technological Institutes none 1
Agricultural Schools none 2
Vocational Schools none 26
Since 1967, there has been an increase in school attendance of
85% in these territories. Teachers number 8,000, of which only
14 are Israeli. The level of enrollment and exams is much
higher than in Jordan.
o The sanitary conditions in Judea, Samaria, and Gaza before 1967
were characterized by sickness and mortality. Since then, as a
result of efforts by Israel, illnesses such as malaria, polio,
trachoma, and typhus have been eradicated.
Between 1968 and 1983, the population increased by 30%. The
infant mortality dropped by 60%, and life expectancy has grown
from 42 to 63 years.
o Status of women
Israel is the only country in the "Arab" world where women have
the right to vote. In the territories, 7,000 women are
teachers, school directors, and inspectors for the school
system. More than 55,000 are doctors, nurses and medical
personnel. 14,000 women work in agriculture, in local and
Israeli farms. More than 4,000 women are working in local and
Israeli factories in specialized jobs. More than 50,000 women
are active in social assistance groups. Of the wome working at
other jobs, 5,000 are employed in Israel, where they are paid
the same rates as Israelis for the same types of jobs, and have
a right to all social benefits, such as maternity pay, salary
increases for tenure, and paid annual vacations, according to
the law of the land.
Today, the illiteracy rate among women in Judea, Samaria, and
^L
Page 2
Gaza is around 30%, compared to Syria and Egypt where it
approaches 70%, and 90% in Saudi Arabia.
|
822.18 | | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Wed Nov 08 1989 10:18 | 22 |
| RE .16 .17
I think that these two responses reflect somehow the difference in the basic
approach between the Israelis/Jews and the Palestinian side. while the first
tries to show that both people can live side by side interact and benefit from
each other, the second side has been trying during decades to prove
the opposite, blaming Israel and "Zionism" for their ill fate. This idea,
of mutual beneficiary, was a corner stone of the Zionist ideology and I can
refer (who ever likes to) to some books that were written 100 years ago
(and not for the purpose of this discussion).
On the other hand, most of the people in the area are living and working
together ,they don't necessarily like each other, but should they ? (are
many whites like Blacks in the U.S.and vise versa) and many of them are
fighting together too , between 30-40% of the Border Police brigade are
Arab Druse and many Arab Bedowines are serving full service in the Israeli
Army.
To be in a permanent state of refugee and to blame Israel is sometimes not
an easy one but it probably serve the interest of some Palestinian and even
Arab leaders ,to be an American Palestinian refugee, for me, is not
only a benefit but a real substantial privilege (Re.16).
|
822.19 | It can't be solved by one side alone | CASP::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Wed Nov 08 1989 12:09 | 26 |
| RE: 822.16
There is a legitimate complaint here, although it is obscured by the
economic discussion. The real problem is not what the exact economic
benefits or penalties are, but who exercises control. As I have said
elsewhere, if I were an Arab in the territories, I would probably feel
pretty unhappy being subject to Israeli rule, particularly military
rule. Regardless of the economic benefits brought by the occupation, I
would want to control my own destiny and I suspect I would resent
people who expected me to be grateful for what they had done for me.
On the other hand, as a Jew with family in Israel, I have both
an emotional link with the land and concern for the safety of my kin.
Some of my cousins have had to do reserve duty in the territories and
they have not been happy about it. They are also unhappy about what
they see as the alternatives, since they are very much concerned about
the long-term safety of their families.
To Yousef, I would say that there are many of us who are not happy with
the occupation, but we are not at all convinced that we have any good
alternative. Our history has shown that we cannot rely simply on words
of goodwill. I need help from you in figuring out how to resolve this
issue.
Aaron
|
822.20 | "seeking a just peace" | PIGGY::YOUSEF | | Wed Nov 08 1989 15:14 | 24 |
| ref. reply 17,18 and 19
My mention of the hidden complaint in my reply # 16 was to get out
in the open the facts and if you need figures I can supply you with
referneces that give exact details on who is realy benefitting from
the occupation. However, if the interest is realy in finding a just
and peacefull solution to the Palestinian problem, that solution
is only good if the Israelis can stop for a moment and realize that
their claim to the land they have occupide in 67 can be exchanged
for the peace they want. Without a Palestinian state where the
Palestinian people can live and decide their own destiny, free from
the harrassment of the Israeli soldiers or the Jordanian Intelligence
or any none Palestinian entity. How could this be achieved you may
ask, well a complete autonomy for the Westbank and Gaza for 1 to
2 years followed by a program to return all the people who have
been exiled from the area. A local government that will be freely
elected by the Palestinians to choose whom they wish to govern them,
that can negotiate a completely independent state at the end of
the 2 years interim period. This state will be tied socially and
economically to the state of Israel with a set agenda to work out
the Palestinian refugees problem. Of course, this is not to say
that this is the solution, but this can serve as a base to move
the full peace process forward between the Israelis and all Arab
states.
|
822.21 | Need some answers, I am confused | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Wed Nov 08 1989 15:32 | 26 |
| Well, I am encouraged, we are discussing solutions now. However,
there are a couple of interesting point you bring up, Yosef. How can
Israelis be assured that the Plestinian state in Judea and Samaria and
Gaza will bring them peace? They don't believe now, PLO has proclaimed
the two-stage solution for years, the shebab now say their goal is more
than the Territories. The burden of earning the Israelis' trust is on
Palestinians. What do you propose on this point?
The second one is "return all the people who have been exiled from
the area". Do you mean return to the W. Bank and Israel proper? If yes,
how likely do you think is Israel to allow millions of Palestinians
to become Israeli citizens? We are talking real world now, and this is
a nonstarter. If you mean the West Bank, do you think it could support
4 million people economically? Or would it create additional pressure
on Israel, because it's so poor and overpopulated, located right on the
border, and full of people resentful of Israel in general?
How can such a state be tied socially and economically to Israel?
what is a "set agenda to work out the Palestinian refugees problem"?
Suppose Israel closed the border, because terrorists came and blew up
a bus in Tel Aviv or Jerusalem. What do you think would happen to this
state and its stability? As it is, Israel's shutting down the crossing
points is portrayed as bad in the media, as if there were some inherent
right of West Bank Palestinians to work in Israel. There isn't, you
know, and there would be none if there were two different countries
there...
DG
|
822.22 | I'd think twice about it | GAON::jem | Eat, drink, and be... fat and drunk | Wed Nov 08 1989 15:52 | 11 |
| Re: .20
I must comment that of all the pro-Palestinians, at least in this conference,
you seem the most "reasonable" (e.g, very little invective used). But because
of this very fact, I can't help but think that you are very lucky indeed not
to be in the Middle East now - you probably would have long ago joined
hundreds of your countrymen slaughtered by their less "liberal" compatriots.
Forget about Israel trusting the promises of these madmen... how could *you*
ever feel safe under a regime of avowed murderers?
Jem
|
822.23 | Let's talk about it... | CASP::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Wed Nov 08 1989 20:29 | 16 |
| RE: 822.20
> This state will be tied socially and
> economically to the state of Israel with a set agenda to work out
> the Palestinian refugees problem.
This is worth examining in more detail. On the Palestinian side it
addresses the desire to be self-governing, and on the Israeli side it
offers a possible mechanism for achieving security.
As you say, there has to be more to it than this, but let's look at
this more closely.
What are some of the mechanisms by which the two states might be tied?
Aaron
|
822.24 | | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Thu Nov 09 1989 01:02 | 45 |
| Re. 20
I'm also happy that we are once again talking about some kind of peaceful
solution (I think that the previous one was on 813).
I also think that it is a little bit premature and unfair to attempt to lay out
any detailed proposal, the situation is too complicated for both sides and
there are few possibilities to solve it, for example: the Israeli Jordanian
confederation model, the Palestinian self rule model and some variations of
those two (some models have been implemented under the same or even more
complicated circumstances in other places in the globe).
What we can talk about are the basic principals of any future peaceful
solution. I personally support the concept that currently it is better for
the two ethnic groups to be physically separated which means living side by side
and not within each other. It also requires (as I've tried to stress in 813.17)
that both side will have to give up dreams about returning to some Ancestors
lands.
What I'm really concerned about, and not fully understand, is why a big portion
of Palestinians are ultimately asking for an independent state?, It seems to me
that this approach is very risky for both sides and may be more for the
Palestinians than the Israelis (some of them was mentioned in 820.21,22 ).
Let try to be logical and not emotional about it. First of all I don't
understand what is the difference between the Palestinians and most of the
Jordanians. They have the same origin and religion, they speak the same
language ,they carry Jordanian passports and they study according the
Jordanian curriculum, and so on, O.K., may be they don't like the king but
this is true for many Jordanian citizens .
(will it make sense for Boston or Massachusetts to detach itself from the
rest of the country).
The other thing is what do they know about self rule and running democracy ?
What model are they going to adopt? there is only one in the middle
east and this the Israeli, but they don't like it. Will they become
the first Arab democracy in the world or we are talking about another
Lebanese model ? see what is going on now in the Gaza strip between
the fanatic Religious "Hamas" and the secular democratic PLO supporters.
Imagine what might happen when the Israeli forces will retreat, do you
think that you can switch overnight from a patriarchal tribal culture
to a western democracy?. O.K. you might say that it is better to be murdered
or oppressed by your Palestinians brother than being ruled by someone else
but this is not what I mean a logical approach.
Jacob
|
822.25 | Who is fighting moderate views ? | SKIMAN::NASS | | Thu Nov 09 1989 09:28 | 15 |
|
Re: .22
I also must comment that Mr. Yousef would have been deported from
West Bank by the Isreali government, or maybe blow up his house
for his moderate views. My knowledge tells that the officials in
Isreal encourage the views of the hardliners, like the "hamas".
I wonder why.
Or maybe the officials in Israel prevent him form traveling to Israel
becuase of his moderate views. Oh,, I see that are paying attention
to his safety !!!
|
822.26 | | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Thu Nov 09 1989 10:50 | 9 |
| Re: 25
I must admit that I also think that Israel made major mistake in their
initial attitude towards the "hamas" and they did other major mistakes and
may be still they are doing mistakes . It is not an easy situation,
the Israelis are amateur in this business of occupation and despite what many
might think they are not brought to do it, and most of them hate it.
I don't why Yuosuf can't go to back to Israel but if he was a security risk
I don't believe that he would be able to live here.
|
822.27 | "peace in the world" | BOSHOG::YOUSEF | | Thu Nov 09 1989 13:05 | 56 |
| I will try to respond to the replies 21-26 and sum up the thoughts
that some of you are bringing up.
.The views that I portrayed in here as a possible solution are my
own , and they are meant to give an example of how we can approach
solving the problem.
.For some of you who still call the Palestinian action terrorist
that is your opinion, one's freedom fighter is another's terrorist
.Trying to portray the Palestinians as not knowing what democrasy
is ,is again falls in the stereotyping campaign that the Israelis
are always spreading about them, contrary to this , the Palestinians
are just about the only true democrasy in the midle east and not
Israel. And Iam not talking about a specific group here, I am talking
about the Palestinian as an educated person who have a thirst for
his freedom and his own state. Israel is as a democracy as south
Africa is, democracy for one class of people only.
. If some one is asking for his basic human rights to be given to
him, and is denied that, one cannot help but to make his voice heard
through out the world, for fourty two years the Palestinians are
doing that and the world have ignored that because of the zionist
tactics and lobby within the world major powers, the Palestinians
have come to realize that may be the violence will make the world
pay attention. The price of freedom is very high and the Palestinians
have decided that they will pay it.
. The state of Jordan is for the Jordanians, they are not willing
to share it with the Palestinians, and even when the Palestinians
tried to live there and have some freedom, they were attacked,
imprisoned and suppressed. No confiderate state will be an alternative
to the Palestinian state.
.The basic solution that I mentioned in 822.20 was talking about
a Palestinian state in the Westbank and Gaza, the people who are
exiled to return to this state, the pre 48 refugee problem to be
worked out based on compensation and resettlement and give those
who wish to resettle in the Palestinian state the right to choose
so. If Israel can support 4 million people, the new Palestinian
state can support 3-4 millions.
. The social ties between this state and Israel will be in the form
controlled freedom of movement of civilians, workers and transportation
. The two states will have to guarantee each other sicurity and
peaceful existance and this will also have to be assured to both
states by the nieghbouring Arab countries and the wold powers.
.The Arab countries will help repatriate the Palestinians and support
economically the new state. This also have to be economically supported
by the US and Europe.
.As to my safety, I don't think I have to worry about that from
any Palestinian, the majority of us are calling for this to happen.
. As to my travel restrictions to the Westbank and that of my wife,
I would like to ask that question to the Israelis, I have never
done anything to cause that to happen, niether my wife,yet she was
stopped from crossing the bridge to visit her parents in 87 and
was returned on the next plane from the airport in June 89 with
no reason given on both cases, dispite the fact that we are US citizens
.I still believe that if the Israelis put aside the dream of having
to create the pure jewish state that stretches from the Nile to
the Euphrates and settle within a defined boarder and can guarantee
the Arabs that , there will be peace in the middle east.
|
822.28 | Kinda fishy | GAON::jem | Eat, drink, and be... fat and drunk | Thu Nov 09 1989 13:50 | 29 |
| Re: .27
> .For some of you who still call the Palestinian action terrorist
> that is your opinion, one's freedom fighter is another's terrorist
As soon as you make an absurd propoganda statement such as this, you lose
all hope for mutual understanding. If you don't realize that there is no
justification on Earth for blowing civilians up in the sky, machine-gunning
passengers in airline terminals, throwing school children out of windows,
throwing busses off cliffs... there is no basis whatsoever for discussion.
> . The state of Jordan is for the Jordanians,
A majority of whom are "Palestinian".
> they are not willing
> to share it with the Palestinians, and even when the Palestinians
> tried to live there and have some freedom, they were attacked,
> imprisoned and suppressed.
This complaint should be addressed to the Jordanians. They were in
possession of Judea & Samaria before 1967, and still control 76% of
British Mandate Palestine. A little curious why none of these "Palestinian"
issues were brought up then.
Jem
|
822.29 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Nov 09 1989 14:50 | 22 |
| re .27:
> .Trying to portray the Palestinians as not knowing what democrasy
> is ,is again falls in the stereotyping campaign that the Israelis
> are always spreading about them
I agree that portraying Arabs as ignorant of democracy is stereotyping,
but what about the response?
> Israel is as a democracy as south Africa is, democracy for one class
> of people only.
Israeli Arabs can vote. There are Arabs in the Knesset. Please
explain how this makes Israel like South Africa.
> .I still believe that if the Israelis put aside the dream of having
> to create the pure jewish state that stretches from the Nile to
> the Euphrates and settle within a defined boarder and can guarantee
> the Arabs that , there will be peace in the middle east.
Speaking of stereotyping... I've never *heard of* an Israeli that
has this dream.
|
822.30 | Who is a terrorist ? | SKIMAN::NASS | | Thu Nov 09 1989 17:08 | 24 |
|
Re: .28
What is it that make some Israeli officials as heroes and not
terrorist ?
Ex-prime minister of Israel Begin was a leader of the most
radical terrorist group in Palestine. I don't recall the exact
year when he was responsible for blowing up a hotel in Jerusalem
or how many died. In fact he was a WANTED MAN by the British
government/police.
The current prime minister, Shamir, wasn't he a head of a
military gang group prior to 1948 in Palestine. What was their
objectives ? murdering, blowing and chasing Palestinian
civilians and British.
How do the Israelis portray these individuals, as heroes !
Lets agree on one thing, killing any civilian is a terrorist act,
whether it's done by Israeli plane using cluster bombs, or by a
Palestinian using a Molotov.
|
822.31 | Look it up | IND::STEINBERG | | Thu Nov 09 1989 18:03 | 10 |
| Re: .30
You should check your facts alittle more closely before you make such
accusations. A wing of the King David hotel was blown up by Begin's
IZ"L group only *after* repeated warnings, which were ignored by the
British. There is *no* connection between an act such as this and
the cold-blooded, wanton butchering of civilians that the TERRORIST
Palestinians engage in routinely.
Jem
|
822.32 | | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Fri Nov 10 1989 13:26 | 44 |
| my reply in 822_33 was in a process of being written into the note file for
the last 12 hours so I'm submitting an enhanced version again.
Re 30-31
In July 1946 the "Irgun" - which was considered in those days as an extremist
Jewish military organization and was headed by Begin- blew up the southern
section of King David hotel in Jerusalem. This section was used as an
headquarters of the British military forces and civilian administration.
A warning was submitted in advance but the British first secretary who
was in command refused to evacuate the building. 80 people were killed
(among them 17 Jews) and 40 were injured.
The same "terrorist' Begin signed 32 years later the Camp David peace treaty
with the "late" Anuar Saadat.
Talking about Arab/Palestinian democratic tradition and terrorism ,see what
have happened to brave Arab leaders who dared to negotiate any peace agreement
with Israel.
The late king Abdaala (king Hussain's grandfather) was murdered in July 1951
by a Palestinian, Saadat Himself was murdered in 1981 by fanatic
Islamic group (who was encouraged by Palestinians leaders calling Saadat a
traitor), Bashier Joumail who was the Lebanese president was murdered
in 1983 probably by Syrian or Palestinian elements (and I would like to
just to mention Senator Bob Kannedy who was murdered in 1968 by a Palestinian
probably because of the similar causes - supporting Israel). I just wonder
who will be the next victim and I'm not joking about it, one of the major
obstacle for peace in the Palestinian/Arab side is the fear of moderate and
brave leaders (in all levels) who became an immediate target for assassination
whenever they express any desire for reasonable peace solution.
I don't recall the names and numbers but some of the local moderate
Palestinians leaders in the west bank has been assassinated during the last
years being accused by the "Shabab" or other groups as being "collaborates"
and "traitors" - a Palestinians terms for moderate and rational leaders.
As for the civilian Palestinian causalities from airplane raids Nass,
first of all you should know that no one in Israel happy about it,
but this is again part of the cruel behavior of the Palestinain terrorist
(or liberation fighters as you probably want to call them) towards their
own people. I allude to the fact that they are locating their headquarters
within crowded civilian concentrations (sometime nearby or attached to
hospitals) or sending and inciting young children to demonstrate
and throw rocks on Israeli soldiers and then it looks very convinced to tell
the world the "Israelis are killing women and children and we have the right
to do it also".
|
822.33 | | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Sun Nov 12 1989 17:49 | 4 |
| RE: .31, terrorism is terrorism, regardless of who perpetrated it!
Though the Irgun attack wasn't a "surprise", it was still as wrong.
Eric
|
822.34 | Arab/Palestinian democracy, who willbe the next? | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Mon Nov 13 1989 01:05 | 27 |
| Re: mine, .32
>I just wonder who will be the next victim.....
The following was reported in the Boston Globe, Nov 12,89 (and believe me that
I don't have connection with the Globe or with Abu Musa):
>>start quotation
ARAFAT ACCUSED OF HIGH TREASON:
Abu Musa, leader of a breakaway Palestinian group opposed to the aims of the
Palestine Liberation Organization's chairman, Yasser Arafat, said yesterday
his group would try Arafat for treason.
"Arafat committed high treason when he recognized the Israeli enemy and
abandoned the revolution's principles," Musa told reporters. "He will be
invited to defend himself or send anyone to defend him - (does anyone volunteer?
some of this note participants have a lot of expertise , J.G.).
If he does not do so he will be tried in absentia. The movement would be
committed to implement the verdict by all possible means." Other group
members said the usual sentence for treason is death. Abu Musa said his group
, known since its Syrian-backed rebellion against. Arafat's leadership in
1983 as Fatah Uprising, would in the future call himself simply "Fatah".
>>end quotation
P.S. I will be away from my desk during this next week, so if anyone will
bother himself to respond don't expect me to reply.
Jacob
|
822.35 | Peace for the world | BOSHOG::YOUSEF | | Mon Nov 13 1989 16:16 | 32 |
| In response to notes 29-34
First of all, my mention " one's freedom fighter is another's
terrorist" was to tell those who keep labeling the uprising and
the Palestinians as terrorists, that they were the invintors of
terrorism. The first massacre committed against civilians was Der
Yasin where Irgun butchered 251 children, women and old men in 48
and displayed the bodies in a very inhumain way to terrorise the
other villigers to flee the country.' Refer to Micheal lilenthal
Zionist Connection II'. The history has more than documented Begin
as the invintor of the LETTER BOMB. Sharon in his infamouse invasion
of Lebanon has directed the Lebanees Phalanges to carry out the
massacres of Subra and Shatella with him providing the cover up
and protection to his murderer gangs, siting that in 48 after Der
Yasin massacre the Palestinians fled the country, may be if Subra
and Shatella news will spread, the Palestinians will flee Lebanon
in the same way. Sharon was convected by his own collaporators.
Downing a Lybians Civilian airplane and killing all 198 passengers
on board was also justified by the Israelis as just act, but any
other it would be a horrific terrorist act.
The Israeli soldiers holding an 11 years old child and smashing
his arm on a rock was wittnessed by millions all over the world
(by the way since then, Israel has clapped down on any news coverage
so the world will not see the ugly picture of horror as it is committed
by them ) is again justified. The raid on a children school in Egypt
in 72 and the death of 180 children may be is not a terrorist act.
The illigal imprisonment of more than 35,000 Palestinian youths
and the conditions they are under in the concentration camps where
they are imprisoned is worse than any body can describe, and the
list goes on and on. So, may be now we should put all these labeling
aside and start talking about a solution, or is it every time a
serious discussion is started to concentrate on the solution, the
Jews and Israelis start creating diversions to avoid it.
|
822.36 | You disappoint me | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Mon Nov 13 1989 16:34 | 12 |
| Re .35 What a crock of one-sided shit. Propaganda mixed with
distortions and demagoguery thrown in for propery seasoning. And just
as I was getting my hopes up for a discussion of solutions in a
civilized manner :-( :-(
My info says that the Great Russian Aliya has begun as of three
weeks ago. It's not in the papers yet, but people are coming at the
rate of over 100 per day, and the flow is accelerating. If it's true,
the Israeli Government will soon have different priorities on its plate
and the Palestinian leadership will rue the day PLO stonewalled W. Bank
elections...
DG
|
822.37 | I fell like hitting a wall with my forehead | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool. | Tue Nov 14 1989 09:00 | 15 |
| Folks,
not that I think It'll matter you much, but my standards are that I
better stay out of polemical, sloganistic, uncooperative discussions.
Sounds like indoctrination reaches people even in the US.
Deeply boredly yours,
Chris
P.S.: Yousef: If I ever feel the need to test my indoctrination skills
on somebody, I hope you don't mind me contacting you... What a hopeless
situation. Sinister, really sinister...
|
822.38 | More crimes are commited agianst Palestinians | SKIMAN::NASS | | Tue Nov 14 1989 10:41 | 34 |
| > Re .35 What a crock of one-sided shit. Propaganda mixed with
> distortions and demagoguery thrown in for propery seasoning. And just
> as I was getting my hopes up for a discussion of solutions in a
> civilized manner :-( :-(
I know TRUTH HURTS....
> My info says that the Great Russian Aliya has begun as of three
> weeks ago. It's not in the papers yet, but people are coming at the
> rate of over 100 per day, and the flow is accelerating. If it's true,
> the Israeli Government will soon have different priorities on its plate
> and the Palestinian leadership will rue the day PLO stonewalled W. Bank
> elections...
So, more Jews are immigrating from Russia to Israel.
The following is what I call real TERRORISM....
How much of a Palestinian land are you going to CONFISCATE AND
STEAL to build homes and settlements to absorb all these people.
Or maybe how many Palestinian children are going to die in the
"uprising" to make room for the new immigrants.
Or maybe how many Palestinians are going to be deported from their
own home land to make room for the new immigrants. Or how many more
Palestinians are you going to through in Israeli persons.
Justice seem to have no place.
|
822.39 | Just what we need - another pissing contest :-( | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Tue Nov 14 1989 11:09 | 17 |
| If your TRUTH consists of propaganda, distortions and demagoguery,
it HURTS. Of course it hurts, seeing that rational, factual discourse
has so little chance when one side internalizes the lies so much.
So, real TERRORISM now includes land confiscation and deportations?
Perhaps we need a new word for terrorism then, one that denotes mainly
random car bombings, and bus seizures, and airplane crashes and hostage
taking. Then, we can get back to the issues instead of language games.
Finally, just because you put CONFISCATE and STEAL in caps, doesn't
make it any more believeable. It's still a lie.
Just because you claim that Intifada's victims and deportations are
a way of "making room", doesn't make it true. What with a few dozen
deported over the years, and all the rioters dead in the last couple of
years, it's a strange way to "make room' for the Aliyah of hundreds of
thousands, most of whom have no intention of living beyond Maaleh
Adumim or so.
DG
|
822.40 | what do you call it?? | WMOIS::SAADEH | Will there ever be peace over there | Tue Nov 14 1989 12:48 | 16 |
| Shalom DG,
>> Finally, just because you put CONFISCATE and STEAL in caps, doesn't
>> make it any more believeable. It's still a lie.
What are you saying then, That the Isreali Government is not
confiscating and/or stealing our land.
You tell us to be more clear and you make such a statement.
DG, how about coming to life.
Shukran,
-Sultan
|
822.41 | | BUILD::MORGAN | | Tue Nov 14 1989 13:22 | 22 |
| Being Irish-American I am not naive to internal conflict in one's
homeland.
I have a serious question regarding America's role in the United
Nations, and the result of votes regarding Israel which I read regularly
in the newspaper (the results of these votes never appear on news programs
which is where most Americans get their information. Therefore, the
vast majority of Americans are not even aware of this situation).
Serious question:
Why is it that whenever a vote regarding Israel (the most recent being
the Palestinian tax situation I believe) comes before the United Nations,
particularly the U.N. Security Council, the result of the vote is almost
always unanimous except for one dissenting country? The dissenting country
of course being the U.S. Do we (the U.S.) know what is best for those in
the Middle East, as some in our country say we do about the current mess
in Central America, or are there underlying reasons?
Please no flames. This has been bothering me for some time.
Steve
|
822.42 | It's clear | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Tue Nov 14 1989 14:17 | 13 |
| Saalam, Sultan.
I am, in fact, saying that the Israeli Government is not
confiscating, and most definitely not stealing any land. I thought it
was a clear statement I made.
Not one case exists of land with documented deed being taken by
eminent domain. Land with no papers to prove ownership - yes. Land,
legally bought by the early settlers and the Jewish Agency, then
confiscated by local Arabs (post 1948) - yes. But deeded, private land?
Prove but one case where a settlement is/was built on such property.
I can believe roads, or even military bases - that's done by eminent
domain in every country in the world anyway. Not settlements.
DG
|
822.43 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Nov 14 1989 16:00 | 9 |
| Suppose an Arab who owns property in the Old City gets a very lucrative
offer for it from a Jew. The Arab knows that if he sells his property
to a Jew, the PLO will kill him. If the Jew and the Arab agree to make
it look like the Arab was forced out, both get what they want. The Jew
gets the property. The Arab gets the money, and he can claim that he
didn't sell his property, it was stolen from him, so the PLO will leave
him alone -- in fact, he'll become a kind of martyr.
Of course, this is purely hypothetical.
|
822.44 | "land title" is irrelevant colonialism, c'mon! | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Do you, Mr. Jones? | Tue Nov 14 1989 18:48 | 21 |
| As a Jew, I am embarassed by foolishness like this, (.42) which serves to
discredit our legitemate right to share the Middle East:
> Not one case exists of land with documented deed being taken by
> eminent domain. Land with no papers to prove ownership - yes. Land,
> legally bought by the early settlers and the Jewish Agency, then
> confiscated by local Arabs (post 1948) - yes. But deeded, private land?
"Deeded, private land" refers to English land tenure, which is the
chain of title traced to the kings of England. We use it in much of
the U.S., except for some Spanish tenure, etc. In the "Palestine"
area, the Ottomans weren't trading land according to patents tracing to
English kings, or for that matter Turkish ones. During the British
rule, of course, English title was traded, but the Arabs didn't get
much of it. Much land was "public", but that was the norm for a lot of
what in America or England would be privately-owned.
The Troubles in Israel are largely a real estate dispute. As long as
we act as if English land tenure were all that mattered, of course the
Arab residents won't be on a fair footing!
q.v. "lev bronstein"
|
822.45 | Land Day | SKIMAN::NASS | | Wed Nov 15 1989 11:06 | 48 |
|
> I am, in fact, saying that the Israeli Government is not
> confiscating, and most definitely not stealing any land. I thought it
> was a clear statement I made.
> Not one case exists of land with documented deed being taken by
> eminent domain. Land with no papers to prove ownership - yes. Land,
> legally bought by the early settlers and the Jewish Agency, then
> confiscated by local Arabs (post 1948) - yes. But deeded, private land?
> Prove but one case where a settlement is/was built on such property.
> I can believe roads, or even military bases - that's done by eminent
> domain in every country in the world anyway. Not settlements.
Page 2
This is a classic example of how the Israeli Government
spreads propaganda about the crimes that are committed
against the Palestinian people. But alas, who is to listen,
the most powerful country in the world U.S.A can veto any
U.N resolution if it didn't serve the Israeli interests.
Anyway, back to the land confiscation. Is it a coincident
that most land that has no legal papers of possession so far
is land surrounds most West bank cities. As a matter of
fact, the settlements in West Bank are forming ring-shapes
around major Palestinian cities.
Do you know that there is a day in Israel called Land Day,
where Palestinians go on strike every year to comment land
confiscation. Do you think Palestinians enjoy getting shot
every year at that day.
Do you know about the law of absent owner. Does this low
apply to the Israelis. They make it so difficult for a
Palestinian to go home, when can't, the government take his
land away, while any Jewish can travel to Israel and become
an Israeli citizen.
Who is the judge anyway to decide whether the land has legal
papers or not ? The military government court headed by
Israelis.
You see, the Israeli government has all the power, they
twist and change all the rules and regulations to suit and
serve their interests. And this has been practiced too much
by the Israeli government.
|
822.46 | Seen the writing on the wall? | GAON::jem | Eat, drink, and be... fat and drunk | Wed Nov 15 1989 11:08 | 22 |
| Has anyone else noticed a change in Yousef's tone since the following was
noted in .22?
>I can't help but think that you are very lucky indeed not
>to be in the Middle East now - you probably would have long ago joined
>hundreds of your countrymen slaughtered by their less "liberal" compatriots.
>Forget about Israel trusting the promises of these madmen... how could *you*
>ever feel safe under a regime of avowed murderers?
For instance, he went into his little fairy tale in .35, the tone somewhat
less "moderate" than previous notes.
I guess he was being a little less than candid in .27 in proclaiming:
> .As to my safety, I don't think I have to worry about that from
> any Palestinian
No, you have nothing to fear as long as you reprint fantasy-laden propoganda
from Arabic comic books.
Jem
|
822.47 | Lets get back to the solutions, please! | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Wed Nov 15 1989 12:16 | 28 |
| Actually, I am sure there is quite a lot of legally unowned land
in the West Bank. I am sure only a portion of it gets used for
settlements. So what? I am sure the settlements are built with security
planning from the start. So what? Given the history of endless wars
that the Arab states wage(d) on Israel, plus the history of personal
harrasment and attacks by the West Bank Palestinians on the settlers,
that's to be expected. So what? Would you not put grates on your
windows, and avoid the first floor in a high-crime area in Boston?
You'd be a fool not to.
Land Day - the day of the riots. Anyone has a history book handy,
as to what incident exactly is commemorated?
Finally, mr. Goldstein, why are you "embarrassed as a Jew"? Do
you ffel responsible for my writings? Please don't trouble yourself so.
I believe that the Ottomans in fact did keep the land records, just as
the English did. Reasons for not registering the were: taxt avoidance,
squatters' rights (if any), etc. So what? How do you ever buy and sell
land in a modern society, if you drop validity for all such papers? How
would a West Bank villager ever sell any land to another one? It's
chaos. Besides, if you really had a free market over there, an Arab
would sell land to a Jew for the right amount. However, if they refuse,
you think that's OK? At the very least, it's like you not selling your
house to a minority candidate simply because you don't want them moving
into the neighborhood. Repugnant, illegal, immoral, requires corrective
action in the USA. How about in Israel? Are you implying that kind of
morality is not applicable there, because of tribal hatreds? Sounds
mighty condescending to me.
DG
|
822.48 | empires come and go, sheep graze | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Do you, Mr. Jones? | Wed Nov 15 1989 13:32 | 16 |
| Much to the contrary, it is more condescending to look for recorded
land tenure than to notice the social reality: NOBODY owns any land
over there without dispute! He who owns the Registry owns the land.
The peasant populations of many countries subsists on untitled land.
The United States was created when the English King superimposed his
tenure over the collective (unwritten) ownership of the nations that
already occupied the continent (such as the CHerokee, Algonquian,
etc.).
Clearly, it was not the norm for Palestinian peasants to hold royal
tenure to land they grazed their sheep on, raised crops on, etc. (HOw
does a nomadic shepherd own land?) THe bourgeosie held tenure.
The funny thing about .0 is that it's the bourgeoisie that's getting
stepped on now.
|
822.49 | fear no one for peace | BOSHOG::YOUSEF | | Wed Nov 15 1989 14:22 | 29 |
| To GD and those who replied to my reply # 822.35
Again I was trying to draw a parallelism between one sides righteous
actions and others terrorist actions. Self defense, sheer frostration,
and disparate attempts to defend one's homeland and rights are the
thing that drove the Palestinians to protest the Balfour declaration
of the 1917, and to the demonstrations and strikes that followed
the 1922 and the 1927 and the 1929 all the way up to the 1936 world
famous national strike, and all the way to the day of mass deportation
and expulsion of millions of Palestinians from thei homeland. Gd
mention the Arab states wars against the state of Israel..., Please
go and educate your self with some truth before you start spreading
lies in a form of an outraged replies-covering the truth that hurts-
with sheer fabrications and mixing subjects. The UN has recorded
that all the wars that brokeout between the Arabs and Israel, Israel
was the state that started the war..the Jewish historian Mikeal
Lilenthal has documented these facts in his work and research, please
refer to other writing by Jewish writers (Chumski and Wagner ) and
once in your life for a change read unbiased jewish opinion about
what really happened . Facts do hurt sometime but if you really
wants to talk the way you reply, to an invitation to start a dialogue
between people who are serious about working towards creating an
understanding to achieve peace for both Palestinians and Israelis
then I think I have no need to waste my time . By the way I have
not changed my ways to reply or discuss issues and still say that
I have nothing to fear from anybody, may be the only thing that
I might get hurt from is from your type of people and JDL who have
tried to silence those who have dared to speak their minds in the
US.
|
822.50 | There you go again | TAVENG::MONTY | LEGgers take it in their stride | Wed Nov 15 1989 16:24 | 30 |
| Re: -1
Huh,
>> The UN has recorded
>> that all the wars that brokeout between the Arabs and Israel, Israel
>> was the state that started the war
O.K. -- I'm not old enough to remember 1948, but I do remember the
build up to 67 and definetly 1973. The Yom Kippur war consisted of a
surprise attact, or has someone forgotten that. I presume according to
some people Israel was guilty of starting the war, by defending itself
:-) :-)
BTW, I thought both you and Sid Gordon in an earlier note agreed that
quoting the U.N. to prove a point was rather pointless.
>> ..the Jewish historian Mikeal
>> Lilenthal has documented these facts in his work and research, please
>> refer to other writing by Jewish writers (Chumski and Wagner ) and once
I am not acquainted with this statement. I would genuinly like to see
the reference to it.
I rather feel that whatever relevant point you do make are rather
destroyed by some of the statement which require one to suspend
disbelief completely.
|
822.51 | Check the facts before ....... | TAVENG::MONTY | LEGgers take it in their stride | Wed Nov 15 1989 16:38 | 18 |
| RE: <<< Note 822.45 by SKIMAN::NASS >>> -< Land Day >-
>> Do you know that there is a day in Israel called Land Day,
>> where Palestinians go on strike every year to comment land
>> confiscation. Do you think Palestinians enjoy getting shot
>> every year at that day.
Do you know what Land Day comemerates ??
In 1977 the government, using due course, took land in the Galilee area
for, what was to have been, new towns that were about to be built. It
is probably not well known to you, that the Interior Ministry took more
land owned by Israeli Jews than Israeli Arabs. There was a program
about it on Israel radio two weeks ago, were one of the Israeli Jews
complained that the land that was taken from him in 1977 in the Mt
Canaan area, was still not being used.
BTW : Galilee in in pre-67 borders.
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822.52 | If Gorby can.... | ABACUS::RADWIN | I think, fer sure | Thu Nov 16 1989 17:22 | 33 |
| As I read through the replies in this note, I am saddened by the futility of
the non-dialogue that occurs. In this and in similar notes, what happens:
each side levels its charges and dismisses those of the other. Horrors
are recounted; recriminations made. And beyond the ken of our notes file --
in the UN, in public forums -- the pattern is repeated: people talk past
each other, finding no common ground, and each side remains entrenched.
These repetitious, futile litanies of the Middle East stand in sharp contrast
these days to events in Eastern Europe. In bold and swift strokes, decades
worth of entrenchments -- of ideology, of economics, of borders are swept
aside. Old anatgonisms are undermined as political leaders and average
citizens take courageous steps, and in so doing redefine long standing
quarrels and oppositions,
And courage is what seems sorely lacking in the Middle East. Not the
courage to fight and die -- there's all too much of that. Rather what is
needed is the courage Sadat displayed and to which Israel responded -- the
courage to put old animosities aside and offer new possibilities. Only
through such an initiative -- bold, unambiguous, & symbolic -- can some form
of reconcilitation, acceptance, and peace grow.
We've seen such initiatives come from the unlikeliest places on the globe these
days. Perhaps, the Mid-East may follow suit. Without one side courageously
reaching out to the other, the Mid-East will remain stuck at best in a
contest in which neither side can accept the legitimacy of the other's claims.
Gene
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822.53 | The heat is on! | DNEAST::SPECTOR_DAVI | | Fri Nov 17 1989 07:38 | 18 |
|
Re:52
Well Said!
Thomas Friedman's book 'From Beirut to Jerusalem', one
of the best books on the subject that I have read, pretty much
states the premise. Courageous people on both sides with the power
to influence, will have to come foward. I also feel that the events
in Eastern Europe will have a profound effect on world opinion
regarding the middle east. There will be much more pressure put to
both sides from now on and less acceptance of foot dragging and
game playing.
David
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822.54 | Have a trip to the Harvard Library! | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool. | Fri Nov 17 1989 09:32 | 15 |
| >The UN has recorded that all the wars that brokeout between the Arabs
>and Israel, Israel was the state that started the war..
I am neither a Jew nor an Arab. therefore, I think I'm allowed to tell
you that your statement is far off, and in direct conflict with, any
recorded piece of journalistic documentation. When were you born? A lot
of the newspapers in Germany and Austria, at that time, and often in
these times, definitely cannot be counted amongst Israel's closest
friends. But even they had a different story than yours to tell.
Remember who asked the UN forces to leave the Israel-Egypt border in
Sinai? You've probably been told that it was Theodor Herzl... Oh, my...
Increduly yours,
Chris
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822.55 | Looking for alternatives | CASP::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Fri Nov 17 1989 13:42 | 30 |
| RE: 822.52
I confess that I share Gene's view. It seems that every time we begin
to have a discussion, it quickly deteriorates into a contest to see who
can assign the greatest amount of blame to the other side. That serves
only to move things away from any rational dialogue about solutions.
<FLAME ON>
If the Jewish contributers to this conference refuse to recognize that
the Arab population of the occupied territories have very legitimate
grievances, and that Israel has done some pretty awful things to them,
and
if the Arab contributors to this conference refuse to recognize that
the Jews of Israel have been the victims of some vicious terrorist
attacks, that there is a distinction between taking land and killing
people, and that Israel is not the source of all the problems,
I see no hope of ever talking to one another about possible solutions.
<FLAME SET-TO-LOW>
If there is anyone out there who would like to attempt a dialogue
(multilogue?), who would welcome an opportunity to talk with, rather
than at, each other about the Middle East, please send me mail.
Aaron
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822.56 | Throwing the baby out with the bath water | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Mon Nov 20 1989 12:30 | 24 |
| I must admit, I am puzzled. I think we all agree that both sides in
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have legitimate grievances. In fact,
the problem may be logically unsolvable. Land dispute appears to at the
bottom of it all - the Palestinians have lost much of their land, and
will not abide by it, while the Israelis will not be pushed off their
land. An irresistible force meeting an immovable object - possibly.
To the Palestinians, Israel appears to be the aggressor, since the
Jewish immigration started the conflict, and Israel has the upper hand
right now. To the Israelis, the Palestinians and other Arabs appear to
be the aggressors, since they have instigated the vast majority of the
violence since about mid-20's through today, and since the potential is
always there for the hostile Arab world to overwhelm Israel militarily,
politically and even economically.
Both sides have grievances - does not mean neither one has legitimate
beef. To refuse to hear both is short-sided, even if the mutual
incrimination sessions are tiring and bothersome. It's like you would
punish both a school bully and his victim, because you don't have time or
energy to find out who's at fault - unfair. If you happen to be the brother
of the victim - it's just plain stupid.
However, it may not be an appopriate forum for such frank discussions,
and that's another matter altogether...
DG
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822.57 | Trying to find the baby in the bathwater | CASP::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Mon Nov 20 1989 14:16 | 28 |
| RE: 822.56
My flame was directed at those on both sides who are unwilling to admit
that the other side has any legitimate grievance. If I gave the
impression that I was saying "a pox on both your houses," then I failed
to convey what I intended.
What bothers me is not dealing with hard questions or strong
differences in opinion or belief--I believe that I have demonstrated
elsewhere in this conference a willingness to engage in debate--but the
way in which contributors to these notes fail to debate.
The point is that I do want to discuss and debate the issues, but I
have reluctantly concluded that any attempt to do this in this
conference is doomed to failure--every attempt to do so has
deteriorated into a set of opposing monologues.
What I am trying to do is find another kind of forum in which those who
are interested can discuss the Middle East situation in a reasonably
intelligent way. There are a lot of difficult questions for which
there may be no answers; that does not mean they should not be
asked, but when we ask them we should be willing to listen to the
answers.
Again, I invite anyone who would like to join me in this endeavor to
send me mail.
Aaron
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822.58 | | ABACUS::RADWIN | I think, fer sure | Mon Nov 20 1989 16:04 | 51 |
| < Note 822.56 by TALLIS::GOYKHMAN "Nostalgia ain't what it used to be" >
-< Throwing the baby out with the bath water >-
>> Both sides have grievances - does not mean neither one has legitimate
>> beef. To refuse to hear both is short-sided, even if the mutual
>> incrimination sessions are tiring and bothersome. It's like you would
>> punish both a school bully and his victim, because you don't have time or
>> energy to find out who's at fault - unfair. If you happen to be the brother
>> of the victim - it's just plain stupid.
It is not a matter of refusing to hear both sides -- it is the fact
that many years of hearing both sides, hasn't got anyone closer
to a solution.
And the analogy to a school bully assumes that there is some external,
agnecy -- like a schol principal -- that can objectively "hear" the
case, that has the legitimacy to assign blame, and that has the power
to dole out punishment.
That's obviously not the situation. Instead, it's a situation in
which the most basic of assumptions (e.g., who was there first,
who started the hostilities, etc.) and realities are disputed by
the opposing sides.
>>I must admit, I am puzzled. I think we all agree that both sides in
>>the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have legitimate grievances. In fact,
>>the problem may be logically unsolvable. Land dispute appears to at the
>>bottom of it all - the Palestinians have lost much of their land, and
>>will not abide by it, while the Israelis will not be pushed off their
>>land. An irresistible force meeting an immovable object - possibly.
>>To the Palestinians, Israel appears to be the aggressor, since the
>>Jewish immigration started the conflict, and Israel has the upper hand
>>right now. To the Israelis, the Palestinians and other Arabs appear to
>>be the aggressors, since they have instigated the vast majority of the
>>violence since about mid-20's through today, and since the potential is
>>always there for the hostile Arab world to overwhelm Israel militarily,
>>politically and even economically.
This analysis, to me, is a cogent representation of why debates
that focus on assigning blame are useless. Each side has its claims;
each its suffering. To focus on these is to stay mired in a situation
that seems to worsen over time, not improve.
I can't pretend to have a magical solution, just a strong belief
that the tack which has and continues to be taken -- the "you started
it"/"but look what you did" tack -- offers no way out.
Gene
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