The politics of Jerusalem (JERUSALEM POST OP-ED) By MORDECHAI NISAN 03/29/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=263867
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A satisfactory and consensual political resolution of the question of
Jerusalem has eluded diplomats and statesmen. The British Peel
Commission of 1937 recommended a two-state solution in the land that
included a Jewish state and an Arab state, with greater Jerusalem to
be administered by the British authorities. In 1947 the United
Nations Partition Resolution also proposed that Jerusalem be a
separate entity under international trusteeship, thus excluded from
the sovereign domain of the Jewish and Arab states as proposed. When
the Israeli-Jordanian fighting ended in Jerusalem in late 1948, the
city was effectively divided between Jewish west Jerusalem and Arab
east Jerusalem. This was a result of war and not a prescription for
peace.
The division of the city did not prevent the Israeli government from
declaring it the capital of the state, nor obstruct Jewish
demographic growth which doubled to 200,000 by 1967. Jordan meanwhile
proved to be the serial violator of its obligations under the
Armistice Agreement, destroying Jewish synagogues and desecrating the
Mount of Olives cemetery, denying Jewish access to the Western Wall
while sniping at Jewish residents and buildings adjacent to the Old
City in western Jerusalem.
The liberation of east Jerusalem in the Six Day War led to the
unification of the city under Israeli sovereignty and subject to
Israeli law. To solidify Jewish control and presence across the
former armistice lines dividing the city, we can detect two periods
in construction projects and Jewish demographic expansion.
Mayor Teddy Kollek, fulfilling a vision of prime minister Levi
Eshkol, promoted the reconstruction of the Jewish Quarter in the Old
City and the development of large new Jewish neighborhoods, like Gilo
and Armon HaNatziv at the southern end of the city, Ramat Eshkol and
French Hill adjacent to the former frontier boundary, and Neve
Ya’akov and Pisgat Ze’ev in the north. This urban planning manifested
on the ground the incorporation of the expanded borders of united
Jerusalem, but without altering the character of separate Jewish and
Arab residential neighborhoods.
Under successive mayors – Olmert, Lupolianski and Barkat – an
additional and alternative conception guided the Jewish spread
throughout the city, through establishing a Jewish presence in Arab-
inhabited areas: facilitating Jewish property acquisition or
sometimes reacquisition of former Jewish homes in the Muslim and
Christian quarters of the Old City, developing the City of David in
Silwan/Hashiloah, as in Sheikh Jarrah/Shimon Hazaddik, with small
groups of Jews in A-Tur/Mount of Olives, Abu Tor, Beit Orot/Mt.
Scopus, Ras al-Amud/Ma’ale Zeitim, and Beit Nissan Beck/Giorgia
quarter opposite the Damascus/ Shechem Gate of the Old City.
These and additional locations were designed to have Jews in east
Jerusalem politically hinder the possibility of a future Israeli
withdrawal from parts of the eastern city areas.
By 2012 the population of Jerusalem approximated three quarters of a
million people, some two-thirds of which are Jews and a third Arabs.
The Jewish demographic dominance in Jerusalem was paralleled and made
more possible by Palestinian political weakness. The Arabs of the
city, while enjoying resident status and an array of social benefits
and opportunities for a reasonable livelihood, never mounted an
effective campaign against what they disingenuously disparage
as “Israeli occupation.” As for the Palestinian Authority, the Oslo
Accord denied it any political role in east Jerusalem, while the
separation wall has effectively cut off Jerusalem’s Arabs from their
West Bank hinterland.
Israel’s multi-faceted policy toward Jerusalem and the geo-
demographic processes of the last decades have established the city
as a single political and administrative unit. The Arab population
chooses not to vote in municipal elections for fear of providing
legitimacy to Israeli rule, yet this enables Israel to actually
imprint its political monopoly over the entire city. This dialectical
development affords insight into the subtle dynamic of things. Israel
exercises de facto sovereign rule over the city, no less consistent
with the 1980 Jerusalem: Basic Law, yet concedes daily authority to
the Muslims over the Temple Mount. The Palestinians for their part
enjoy the full range of liberty of movement and expression, though
they have succumbed to a numbing state of collective de-
politicization.
The municipal infrastructure and services, including access roads and
the water system, operate in a unified and centralized fashion. The
mixing of populations, the proximity of Jewish and Arab
neighborhoods, Arabs visiting the shopping malls and Biblical Zoo all
attest to daily human contact between the two peoples and the air of
normalcy which has ascended over the city.
The prospect is therefore one of continued Israeli control for the
foreseeable future. For Israel to withdraw from any part of Jerusalem
and allow a Palestinian capital in the city would be a depletion of
the soul of the Jewish people. Palestinian sovereignty in east
Jerusalem, no less any official recognition of Islamic control over
the Temple Mount, would spark Muslim militancy and bellicosity
throughout the country, and beyond.
For Israel to withdraw from any part of Jerusalem would expose the
Jews of the city to grave security threats and terrorism. The
physical welfare of Jewish residents, though targeted here and there,
depends on Israel’s full police presence throughout Jerusalem, in
both the eastern and western sides. If not, Arab shooting from
Shuafat to Pisgat Ze’ev, or stone-throwing from Issawiya at Jewish
traffic on the road to Ma’ale Adumim, could not be prevented or
contained.
A Palestinian attacker on Jaffa Road could not be apprehended if
Israel security forces were not operating in the eastern side of the
city, to which the terrorist would flee. The murderer of the eight
students in 2008 at the Merkaz HaRav Yeshiva in west Jerusalem was
later arrested in the Jebl Mukaber neighborhood that borders Armon
Hanatziv in east Jerusalem. The compelling conclusion is that in
order to secure west Jerusalem as the focus of vibrant Jewish life,
Israel must maintain its control over east Jerusalem as well.
There is moreover another aspect to the vulnerability of Jewish
interests and that concerns ancient religious sites, like the Mount
of Olives cemetery. Palestinian vandalism, already insufferable,
would in the absence of any Israeli presence turn into a fury of
destruction.
The Jewish people have come home to their historic and spiritual
capital, and Israel is fulfilling its national mandate in governing
and developing Greater Jerusalem. This is a blessing which many
curse, but a blessing whose splendor spreads its light to all peoples
and faiths – inhabitants, tourists, and pilgrims – to enjoy the
freedom and security, prosperity and poetry, of the Holy City.
The writer is a retired lecturer at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem and his most recent book is Only Israel West of the River,
2011, available at Amazon.com This article is based on a talk
presented at the Begin Heritage Center on March 14 at a conference on
the theme of “How Important is Jerusalem to Islam?” (© 1995-2011, The
Jerusalem Post 03/29/12)
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