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Perspective on The Palestinian Tragedy
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by Charles A. Homsy
"Only then will the young and old in our land realize how
great was our responsibility to those miserable Arab refugees in
whose towns we have settled from afar; whose homes we have
inherited, whose fields we sow and harvest; the fruit of whose
gardens, orchards and vineyards we gather; and in whose cities that
we robbed, we put houses of education, charity and prayer." Martin
Buber, 1961
Origins
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1840: Lord Ashley writes to UK’s foreign secretary Lord
Palmerston, his step-father, that the latter had been "chosen
by God" to "return the Jews to their inheritance in the
land of Promise". Ashley, a fervent evangelical Christian,
was convinced that the Scriptures were soon to be literally
fulfilled.
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Until recently, the history of ancient Palestine has been
ignored and silenced by biblical studies whose object of interest
has been ancient Israel conceived and presented as the taproot of
Western civilization. Biblical studies have been dominated by
Christian theology’s focus on the history of ancient Israel as
revealed in the Hebrew Bible. This is because Christianity is
conceived of as a religion based on revelation through history.
Thus, "ancient Israel is the domain of Religion or Theology
and not of history. The "ancient Israel" of biblical
studies is a scholarly construct based on misreading of biblical
traditions and divorced from historical reality (emphasis
added).
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Recent archeological studies, for example, show that pork was
not consumed by most of the ancient peoples of Palestine. Pig
prohibition was not unique to the Israelites and was a sensible
reaction to the large amounts of scarce water needed to raise
them. In the book of Joshua, entire Canaanite villages are
eradicated by a victorious Israelite army of tribes that had been
freed from slavery in Egypt to march in and conquer the land.
Except, that’s not how it happened. All the latest evidence
indicates no swift invasion around 1250-1225 B.C.E., the time
attributed to Israelite settlement in Canaan. "It is
difficult to tell an Israelite from a Canaanite because the
Israelites and the Canaanites were one and the same people."4
Complete study of the Dead Sea Scrolls clearly showed that
over the course of centuries the stories of the Bible had been
intentionally reworked—updated, many scholars speculated, to
reflect current concerns.
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Nevertheless, "it was some shock to realize that the
narratives in Deuteronomy 7.1-11, 9.1-5, 11.8-9, 23.31-32 and
20.16-18 present "ethnic cleansing" as not only
legitimate, but as required by the deity".11
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Last half of 19th century: "According to the
German theory, people of common descent….should form one common
state. Pan-Germanism was based on the idea that all persons if the
German race, blood or descent, wherever they lived or to whatever
state they belonged, owe their primary loyalty to Germany and
should become citizens of the German state, their true
homeland". Analogous assumptions informed the distinctive
Zionist approach to the Jewish Question. In effect this
analysis duplicated the reasoning of anti-Semitism.2 In
fact, in 1867 many of Austria’s Jews were the most ardent
representatives of the Anschluss idea.
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1896: Zionism-the Herzl plan, responded to European
mal-treatment of Jews (in part stimulated by the new nationalism)
and called for a Jewish state. The Jews should recognize that they
were not a religious group merely, but a true nation waiting to be
reborn. His idea startled Jewry and shocked many Jews. Jewry as a
whole was not converted to Zionism until the atrocious Nazi
attempt at genocide.1 Once it became a serious
enterprise, Zionism became patently a colonial enterprise. The
time was the 1890s, the heyday of European imperialism; Africa
partitioned and Kipling urging the Americans "to take up the
White Man’s burden" in the newly acquired Philippines.
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In 1903, the British Foreign Secretary told the Zionists that
Britain was prepared to discuss a suitable site in East Africa
"for the establishment of a Jewish colony or settlement, on
terms which will enable the members to observe their national
customs".1 This was "the Uganda offer"
in which the Ugandans had no apparent role. Argentina was also
posited, again, I suspect without asking the Argentineans
Targeting Palestine
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British Foreign Secretary Balfour (of the Declaration)
introduced an Aliens Bill in 1905 to control immigration; the Bill
was directed against the flood of Jews from Eastern Europe. (The
Jewish population in the UK expanded from 65,000 in 1880 to
300,000 by 1914).1 There was also up to the end of WWI
a strong Jewish anti-Zionist position. In the June 1917 NYT Henry
Moskowitz described the curse of nationalism which hung over the
world as its most terrible war raged "in which the idea of
domination has given certain nations a form of megalomania".
He had no wish for the Jews to join the game and argued against
Jewish nationalism; instead, Jews needed a revival of the Hebraic
spirit which gave birth to Israel’s vision, to David’s psalms,
to Spinoza’s God. Quite apart from injustice in
Palestine itself Jewish nationalism was a direct threat to
assimilated Jews everywhere.1
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Furious political warfare finally led to Balfour’s declaration
, 2 November 1917: "Her Majesty’s government…favors…a
national home for the Jewish people, and will use its best efforts
(for this objective), it being clearly understood that nothing…may
prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish
communities in Palestine". It was inspired by high idealism
and cynical calculation.1 One historian wondered
whether "Lloyd George and Balfour merely took their knowledge
of Palestine from the Bible, which in this respect happened to be
out of date".1 The Declaration stored up trouble
for the future, as did the contradictory promises of independence
made to Arabs in 1916-1917 who were urged to and did rebel against
the Ottoman Turks. Not everyone was deluded. Lord Curzon pointed
out that the half million Arabs in the proposed home "will
not be content either to be expropriated for Jewish immigrants or
to act as mere hewers of wood and drawers of water for them".
1
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As for the US, one of President Wilson’s 14 points addressed
"nationalities now under Turkish rule (Syrians, Jordanians,
Palestinians)" who were to be "assured an undoubted
security of life and an absolutely unmolested opportunity of
autonomous development".1 In the 1948 presidential
election year, President Truman hastily recognized the newly
declared State of Israel. Truman, like his predecessor and
successor, was …happier for Jews to enter Palestine,…than for
renewed Jewish immigration to America on the scale known before
1914.1
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The standard Zionist position is that they showed up in
Palestine to reclaim their ancestral homeland in the late 19th
century. Jews bought land and started building up a Jewish
community there. They were met with increasingly violent
opposition from Palestinian Arabs, presumably stemming from the
Arabs’ inherent anti-Semitism. The Zionists were then forced to
defend themselves and in one form or another, this same situation
continues up to today. The problem with this explanation is
that it is simply not true (emphasis added)."
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What really happened was that the Zionist movement executed a
complete dispossession of the indigenous Arab population so that
Israel could be a wholly Jewish state. In short, Zionism was based
on a colonialist world-view that the rights of indigenous
inhabitants didn’t matter. The Arabs’ opposition was not
anti-Semitism but based on fear of the dispossession of their
people which eventuated. The mythic "land without people for
a people without land" was already home to 700,000
Palestinians in 1919.7
Israel’s Statehood and Palestinian Expulsion, 1948
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The UN with strong US backing proposed partition of Palestine
in November 1947. The Palestinians rejected the plan because ,
while the population of the Jewish state was to be [only half
Jewish] with Jews owning less than 10% of the Jewish state land
area, the Jews were to be established as the ruling body.7
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In April, 1948, a month before the declaration of statehood,
Jewish soldiers slaughtered in a cold and premeditated fashion
(250) civilians at Deir Yassin. According to the former director
of the Israeli army archives, ‘in almost every occupied Arab
village, acts which are defined as war crimes, such as murders,
massacres, and rapes were committed’. Every skirmish ended in
a massacre of Arabs. Consequently, the Arabs fled.7
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When the UN accepted the partition resolution in 1947, Jews
constituted 32% of the population and owned 5.6% of the land. By
1949, largely as a result of paramilitary operations such as the
Haganah, Irgun, and Stern gang, Israel controlled 80% of
Palestine and 770,000 non-Jews had been expelled from
their country. (Faisal Bodi writing in The Manchester Guardian,
January 3, 2001).
Israel has negated the right of refugee return that has been
affirmed by UN General Assembly resolution 194 since December
11,1948 and reaffirmed 28 times.7 Under Section 11 of
UNGAR194, Palestinians not wishing to return home should be paid
just and equitable compensation. In November 1967, UN Security
Council Resolution 242 called for the withdrawal of Israeli
forces from the Occupied Territories and a just settlement of
the refugee problem. On December 22, 2000, Human
Rights Watch called on Israeli and Palestinian leaders engaged
in final status negotiations to uphold the right of return for
Palestinian refugees who should be allowed to choose: 1)
returning to their country of origin; 2) integrating into a
country of asylum; or 3) resettling in a third country. www.hrw.org/press/2000/12/isrpac1222.htm
On September 17, 1948, Count Folke Bernadotte, of Sweden, who
had saved thousands of Jews from destruction by the Nazi , and now
the Mediator appointed by the UN General Assembly, was
assassinated by the Israelis.Muitiple references
The Israeli/Arab Wars
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The 1956 coordinated attack on Suez by Israel, Great Britain
and France was neither, as first claimed by the Israel, a
preventive war nor a retaliatory raid, but a well planned
attempt to expand into the whole of the Sinai Peninsula and the
Gaza strip. Menachem Begin leader of the Herut (later Likud)
party and later Prime Minister spoke before the the Israeli
parliament in October 1955: "I deeply believe in launching
preventive war against the Arab states without further
hesitation. By doing so, we can annihilate Arab power, and
secondly, expand our territory (emphasis added).8
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Israel was the aggressor in the 1967 war. After the war, in
violation of international law, Israel confiscated over 52% of
the West Bank and 30% of the Gaza Strip for military use and for
settlement of Jewish colonists (400,000 at latest count, 70,000
of which moved in since the start of the Oslo process. see
below). Vast settlements housing nearly 200,000 colonists have
been built on confiscated Palestinian land around East
Jerusalem. From 1967 to 1982, Israel demolished 1,338
Palestinian homes on the West Bank and detained 300,000
Palestinians without trial. All Jewish settlements in
the Occupied Territories since 1967 violate the Geneva
Conventions of 1949 (Article 49) which Israel signed.7+others
Israel continues to violate UN Security Council resolution 242
which has been accepted by the Palestinians.
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The October 1973 war (Yom Kippur) resulted from Israel’s
refusal to swap land (back to the 1967 borders—UNSCR 242) for
peace. With diplomatic settlement blocked, Egypt’s president
Sadat chose war. The Gulf States chose the oil embargo. Egypt’s
performance forced a cease fire based on UNSCR 338: 1)
implementation of UNSCR 242; 2) Negotiations for peace; 3) just
settlement of the Palestinian Problem.8 Sadat went to
Jerusalem in November 1977. Egypt made peace for return of its
land with the condition that there be justice for the
Palestinians under UN Resolutions 242 and 338. Israel has paid
lip service to the conditions. But the negotiations were called
off because of Israel’s inflexibility.8
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This moved President Carter to call Sadat and Begin to Camp
David. Both Camp David I and II failed to provide just relief
for the Palestinians. Israel complicated matters seriously by
placing Jewish settlements on confiscated Arab lands in the
Occupied Territories and transferring Jews to become permanent
residents. In so doing Israel violated the 1907 Hague Convention
on Laws and Customs of War on Land, and the 4th
Geneva Convention of 1949 Relative to the Protection of Civilian
persons in Time of War.8
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In The Washington Post on November 26, 2000, President Carter
writes that the underlying reason for the failure of diplomacy
and continued violence has been that Israeli leaders continue to
"create facts" by building settlements in occupied
territory. He continues that these settlements directly violate
the Camp David accords which agreed to the pre-1967 borders.
The Intifadas and the "Peace Process"
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Abba Eban, the former UN Representative from Israel, wrote in
the New York Times of November 9, 1986: "The Palestinians
live without a right to vote or be elected, without control…over
the conditions of their lives, exposed to restraints and
punishments that could be applied if they were Jews. It is a
bleak, tense, disgruntled existence…this condition can not long
endure without explosion."9 And so it did explode
with the first intifada in December 1987. Young Palestinians rose
in protest, not with arms but with stones, knowing full well that
they could not compete with Israeli bullets and more sophisticated
weapons supplied by the United States. In the first three years
892 Palestinian men, women and children were killed by Israeli
soldiers and settlers, while the number of wounded is estimated to
be over 106,000.
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Yasser Arafat appeared before the UN meeting at Geneva in
December 1988 and outlined Palestinian proposals for a permanent
solution to the conflict. These included: 1) convening a peace
conference under UN auspices; 2) UN assuming administration of the
West Bank and Gaza pending final settlement; 3) PLO condemned all
forms of terrorist activities, including state-terrorism; and, 4)
PLO accepts Security Council resolutions 242 and 338 (even though
the Israel and not the PLO was the subject of those resolutions).9
This abandoned once and for all the long nurtured Palestinian
dream of a democratic and secular state in all of Palestine.
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The settlement question took on new urgency from 1989 on as
events in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union produced a flood of
Soviet Jewish emigrants. Most wanted to go to the US but
Washington imposed preventive immigration quotas.9
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Through it all horrifying massacres occurred. One was that at
the Haram Ash-Sharif and Al-Aqsa Mosque in October 1990. This
pre-saged the massacre on September 28, 2000 when Israeli soldiers
fired on a crowd on the sacred square above the Wailing Wall from
which stones had been thrown. This massacre set off Intifada II.
Relevant to both massacres is the similar clash between Moslems
and fanatical Zionists in September 1928. Consequently an
investigation committee was formed under the League of Nations in
January 1930 which heard the claims of both parties and concluded:
"To the Moslems belongs the sole ownership of, and the sole
proprietary right to, the Western Wall…an integral part of the
Haram Ash-Sharif area, which is a ‘Waqf’ [pious foundation]
property."
"To the Moslems also belongs the ownership of the pavement
in front of the Wall and the adjacent Moroccan Quarter in as much as
the latter was made a "Waqf", being dedicated to
charitable purposes"
This verdict gave Jews the unhindered right to place near the
Wall the Table on which the Ark containing the Scrolls of the Law
could stand and be read on certain specified occasions. No
restriction was placed on individual Jews performing their usual
devotions at the Wall. In 1982 when I visited the Haram Ash-Sharif I
found it surrounded by Israeli property; indeed, modern apartment
buildings for absentee Jews to view the Wall during visits faced the
Wall.
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Only when Zionism is being evaluated are normal rules of
morality suspended. Whatever the pangs of conscience one might
have about the expulsion of the Palestinians and destruction of
their villages, the Bible is called on to salve it. Zionism, a
program originally despised by Orthodox Judaism as anti-religious
and by Reform Judaism as contrary to the mission of Judaism is now
at the core of the Jewish credo. And credulous Christians
allow themselves to be sucked into the vortex. Nevertheless, I
continue to be impressed by the number of distinguished writings
by Orthodox and more liberal Jews that deplore the Zionist project
and the horror it has inflicted on the Palestinian people.
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When Ariel Sharon guarded by about 1000 Israeli police strode
into Jerusalem’s Haram al-Sharif (the "Noble
Sanctuary") on September 28, 2000, the area had been sealed
off before, during and after his visit, scarcely ensuring freedom
of access. The next day the Israeli army shot eight Palestinians
dead some of whom had been hurling stones at police. The world
news media ignored that international law entitles the natives of
a place under military occupation—which East Jerusalem has been
since 1967—to resist by any means possible. All European
countries had their resistance fighters during WWII who are lauded
as heroes not as terrorists. The Israeli human rights organization
B’tselem confirmed eye-witness reports that stones were aimed at
the armada of Israeli police whose presence on the Aqso precinct
was a provocation. The police did not use tear gas to stop the
stone throwing but immediately opened fire with rubber-covered
bullets which kill at close range. (Amira Hass, correspondent for
Haaretrz (Tel Aviv) in the Palestinian Territories as reprinted in
Le Monde Diplomatique, November 2000). Thus, Intifada II began.
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The Intifada I with its remarkable self-discipline and courage
was an indigenous uprising, including, in fact, highly organized
non-violent resistance in addition to more spontaneous stone
throwing. It was neither initiated nor controlled by the PLO
leadership in exile—indicating that Arafat no longer spoke for
the Palestinian people. Thus, it came as a surprise when Arafat
joined Prime Minister Rabin in signing the September 1993 Oslo
Accords.
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Francis Boyle, Professor of International Law, Illinois State
University. was Legal Advisor to the Palestinian delegation during
the 1991-1993 peace negotiations. He was asked by the Palestinian
Peace Team what was the closest historical analogue to the Israeli
peace offer. He reported: "A bantustan, they are offering you
a bantustan, akin to those forced by the apartheid Afrikaaner
regime on its black people". The Palestinian delegation
rejected this proposal. But the Israeli government took this
proposal and opened up a secret (to almost all the leadership of
the Palestinian people let alone the people themselves) channel of
negotiations. This Bantustan proposal became the Oslo Agreement.
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And what of this vaunted "peace process"? The
miserable condition of the Palestinians and loss of life has
become much worse since the signing. 110,000 Jews lived in illegal
settlements in Gaza and the West Bank before Oslo. This number has
increased to 195,000, not including more than 150,000 Jews who
have since taken up residence in Arab East Jerusalem.12
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These settlements, more appropriately labeled
"colonies", whose presence even the US had always
considered a violation of international law—increased more
rapidly under Ehud Barak than under right-wing Benjamin Netanyahu.
Moreover the settlements were linked with permanent, multi-lane
highways running through Palestinian lands, orchards and homes
confiscated for the purpose. 13 These settlements make
the Palestinian part of Gaza and the West Bank (now only 22% of
pre-1948 Palestine) into a bantusan of 15 cantons in a sea of
Israeli occupation and settlement. Thus Palestinians have been
crushed into 64% of the 22%.
NOW
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Thus far, in Intifada II 350 Palestinians have been killed and
14,000 wounded.14 Forensic experts of the U.S. based
Physicians for Human Rights reported that the Israeli army
"has used live ammunition and rubber bullets excessively
and inappropriately to control demonstrators, and that based on
the numbers of head and thigh injuries, soldiers appear to be
shooting to inflict harm and not in self-defense".
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United Nations Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson
visited Israel/Palestine during the Fall of 2000 and reported
that Israel is guilty of "excessive use of force"
against the Palestinians and called for a halt to the
construction of Jewish colonies in the Occupied Territories. A
third of the 2000 Palestinians killed have been children (1995
UNICEF report). Since September 2000, over 100 Palestinian
children have been killed with special aiming at the head
(Jordan Times, 14 December).
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For seven years, Arafat has been signing peace agreements with
Israel which gave away hope for a viable statehood. Camp David
was meant to be the last but Arafat seems, at last, to have
woken up to what he has signed away. Now the hope of refugees
has been put on the table. It appears that Arafat is more
interested in being ruler of a Palestinian State, whatever its
condition, than in continuing to seek a just solution to the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict.13
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Young Palestinians have had enough, and despite Arafat’s
feeble efforts to control them, have taken to the streets to
throw stones and fire slingshots at Israeli Merkavas and Cobras.12
Why is it that more Israelis do not realize—as some already
have—that a policy of brutality against Arabs in a part of the
world containing 300 million Arabs and 1.2 billion Muslims, will
not make the Jewish state more secure?12
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Israel's A mild-mannered refugee born in Haifa, Palestine
simply states: "Anyone who signs [away the right of return]
will be killed by the Palestinian street". London
Financial Times, January 6/7, 2001 own historians have in
recent years documented that the Palestinians were expelled.
This truth underpins the guarantees given to Palestinians of
their right to return by the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, the Geneva Convention of 1949 (signed by Israel), and UN
General Assembly resolution 194 made December 11,1948 and
reaffirmed 28 times. Any abrogation of these guarantees would
set a disastrous precedent in international human rights law,
and provide a clear signal that ethnic cleansers who expel
civilians from their homes, steal their property, and prevent
refugees returning for long enough can expect to have their
illegal territorial conquests blessed with international
legitimacy. In the event, the civilized world will find the
price of peace too costly.
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Through it all, since 1967, the US has disbursed more that
$200 billion dollars in unconditional financial and military aid
to Israel, while offering blanket political support.12
This aid continues at the level of $ 5 billion per year and
more. This obsequiousness to Israel’s illegal and morally
bankrupt behavior is insufferable. It must be changed by a
better informed public blitzing the media, the Congress and the
President with reasoned calls for a new policy. This policy
should rein in Israel and impose a settlement based on: 1)
removing Israeli colonies from the Occupied Territories of the
West Bank and Gaza; 2) releasing West Bank water to the
Palestinian inhabitants; 3) inviting refugees to return to their
stolen property or to have reasonable compensation; and, 4)
dividing sovereignty in Jerusalem.
References and Bibliography
(other than those identified in the text)
1.
Wheatcroft G., "The Controversy of Zion",
Sinclair-Stevenson, London 1996
2. Whitelam K.W., "The
Invention of Ancient Israel and the silencing of Palestinian
History", Routledge, London, 1996.
3. Davies P.R., "In Search of
‘Ancient’ Israel", Journal for the Study of the Old
Testament, 1992.
4. Marcus, A.D., "The View from
Nebo, How Archeology is rewriting the Bible and Reshaping the
Middle East", Little, Brown, Boston, 2000.
5. Hans Kohn quoted in "Image
and Reality of the Israel-Palestine Conflict", N.
Finkelstein. Verso, NYC and London, 1995.
6. Said E.W., "The Politics of
Dispossession, The Struggle for Palestinian Self-Determination,
1969-1994. Vintage Books, NYC, 1995
7. "The Origin of the
Palestine-Israel Conflict", 3rd edition, published
by Jews for justice in the Middle East, PO Box 14561, Berkeley, CA
94712 ******
8. Khouri, F.J., "The
Arab-Israeli Dilemma", Syracuse University Press, NY, 1985
9. Hadawi, S., "Bitter
Harvest, a modern history of Palestine", 4th
Edition, Olive Branch Press, NYC, 1991
10. Finklestein N.G., ‘Image
and Reality of the Israel-Palestine Conflict’. Verso, London, NYC,
1995
11. Roman Catholic priest Michael
Prior, "Confronting the Bible’s Ethnic Cleansing in
Palestine", in The Link, Volume 33, No.5, Americans for
Middle East Understanding, Inc., NY, December, 2000. *******
12. Said, E., "Palestinians
under Siege", London Review of Books, 14 December 2000.
14. Khalidi R.I., "The
New Parameters of Reconciliation", NYTimes, December 27,2000
*********
15. Richburg, K.B., Washington Post
Foreign Service, November 30, 2000. Page A01. ***********
Source:
by the same author:
Antidote
for US Media Offal
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