Op-Ed: Let´s Make This Clear: Jordan is Palestine (INN) ISRAEL NATIONAL NEWS) Matthew M. Hausman, Att´y 03/30/12)
Source: http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/11460#.T3YKnWGO2So
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Listen, Palestinian Arabs, If you want to march, march on Jordan.
The “Jordan-is-Palestine” option for resolving the Arab-Israeli
conflict is an idea that, despite history and logic, was beaten into
silence by Israel’s enemies and detractors. Critics denounced the
concept as preposterous, reactionary and counterproductive.
And yet, the idea has been resurrected from within Jordan itself.
There can be no dispute that Jordan was created in a sovereign vacuum
on land that had comprised most of the Palestine Mandate. However,
its creation as Transjordan in 1921 satisfied a geopolitical need
unencumbered by a Palestinian national myth that had not yet been
invented.
In contrast, the Oslo peace process was based on the false premise
that an ancestral population was indiscriminately displaced by
Israel’s establishment and now must be repatriated at her expense.
Because Jordan embodies the concept of Arab self-determination as
contemplated by the San Remo Conference and the Palestine Mandate,
and because most Jordanians already identify as Palestinian, it is
high time to recognize it as the Palestinian homeland and scrap the
current peace process.
The Oslo Process was heavily weighted against Israel from the start
because it demanded validation of the Palestinian narrative and,
thereby, the delegitimization of Jewish historical claims. After
cajoling the country into accepting the farce of Oslo, the Israeli
left made it politically incorrect to assert traditional Jewish
claims or to mention that the Palestinians have no ancestral
connection to the Land of Israel. The peace process was focused on
resolving the plight of Arab refugees and perpetuating the artifice
that they originated in ancient Israel while the Jews were merely
colonial interlopers.
The truth – that Jews have the longest history of continuous
habitation, that they preceded the Arab-Muslim conquest by thousands
of years, and that the Palestinians are largely descended from an
immigrant population that grew during the late Ottoman and British
Mandatory periods – was suppressed under layers of Freudian self-
denial.
One need look no further than the operational definition
of “refugees” employed by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency
(“UNRWA”) to see past the façade of Palestinian nationality. Unlike
relief organizations that seek to ameliorate the condition of wartime
refugees through resettlement, UNRWA’s sole purpose is to maintain
the statelessness of Arabs who became refugees in 1948, regardless of
whether they now live in Judea, Samaria, Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon or
Syria (and irrespective of whether their forebears came from Egypt,
Algeria or elsewhere), and thereby to reinforce their stature as a
people though they possess none of the ethnic, cultural or
institutional hallmarks of nationality.
According to UNRWA, Palestinian “refugees” are those Arabs who
established residency within the Mandate between June 1946 and May
1948, who lost their homes and means of livelihood during Israel’s
War of Independence, and who now reside in areas where UNRWA services
are available. To put this in perspective, no similar agency was
created to serve the needs of the nearly 800,000 Jewish refugees who
were summarily expelled from Arab-Muslim lands and dispossessed of
whatever assets they owned in 1948, and who subsequently were taken
in by Israel.
The improbable definition employed by UNRWA begs the question of how
Palestinians could be designated as refugees based on a minimum
residency requirement of only two years if they are truly descended
from people who continuously inhabited the land for hundreds of
generations.
These “refugees” clearly were not required to be native born or
descended from indigenous ancestors, and in fact many were either
immigrants themselves or the progeny of immigrants. Moreover, they
were not expelled from an existing country with recognized borders
that was innately “Palestinian” or that ever exhibited the trappings
of sovereignty or national character. Indeed, no sovereign nation
existed between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea from the
time the Romans conquered the Kingdom of Judea until Israeli
independence in 1948. There was, however, a continuous Jewish
presence in the Land of Israel, including Judea, Samaria and Gaza,
dating back to antiquity, and a Jewish majority in Jerusalem for
generations.
Given that the proponents of Oslo sought to suppress this history and
ignore away the authenticity of traditional Jewish claims, the peace
process from its inception was on a collision course with Israeli
autonomy and national integrity. Moreover, the basic premise of
Oslo, i.e., that the Jewish homeland should be further divided after
much of its territory had already been taken to create an autonomous
Arab state in Jordan, was repudiated by the Arabs when they rejected
the U.N. Partition Plan in 1947 and launched a genocidal war against
Israel and her people.
The peace process was doomed to failure because it demanded that
Israel relinquish historically Jewish land, but did not insist with
equal vigor that the Arabs recognize Israel’s right to exist as a
Jewish nation or take meaningful steps to eliminate antisemitic
incitement. The conceit of Oslo was that it validated apocryphal
Palestinian pretensions even as it denigrated verifiable Jewish
claims and treated Israel as a colonial aberration.
The architects of Oslo paid lip service to the need for mutual
recognition, but they never chastised the Palestinian Authority for
failing to amend its charter calling for Israel’s destruction (which
it had agreed to do as a precondition under the Oslo Accords), for
continuing to engage in terrorism and antisemitic incitement, or for
stating repeatedly that it would never recognize a Jewish State.
Although American and European meddlers insisted that Israel consider
hot-button issues like the Arab “right of return,” it became
increasingly clear as the process wore on that matters of existential
concern to Israel could not really be negotiated, and that she was
expected simply to capitulate to all Palestinian demands – no matter
how expansive or outrageous.
It was assumed, for example, that Israel would give up Judea, Samaria
and East Jerusalem without question, although these were historically
Jewish lands and though Jerusalem was never the capital of any Arab
or Muslim nation, and certainly not one called “Palestine.” Most
galling was the continual promotion of the Palestinian Authority as
moderate despite its oft-stated goal of the phased destruction of
Israel, the starting point of which was to be the much ballyhooed two-
state solution.
The inconvenient truth is that most Palestinians in Judea, Samaria
and Gaza do not want two states living side by side, but rather a
single state built on the ruins of Israel.
At its very core, Oslo constituted a rejection of established
international precedent recognizing the Jews’ aboriginal connection
to the Land of Israel. It ignored, for example, the import of the
San Remo Conference of 1920 and the League of Nations Mandate for
Palestine of 1922, which recognized the right of close settlement and
of the Jews to live anywhere in their homeland. The goal was
unrestricted Jewish habitation west of the Jordan River. There was
no discussion of a Palestinian homeland because there were no
Palestinians at the time. Rather, Arab self-determination was
addressed by the establishment of the French Mandate in Lebanon and
Syria and the British Mandate in Mesopotamia (Iraq) and Transjordan.
In contrast, the San Remo Resolution and Palestine Mandate
recognized “the historical connection of the Jewish people with
Palestine and ... the grounds for reconstituting their national home
in that country.” Unfortunately, historical reality never fit the
Oslo scheme.
The San Remo Resolution applied to lands designated for inclusion in
Mandatory Palestine on both banks of the Jordan River. Nevertheless,
before the Mandate was signed in 1922, the British gave Transjordan
to the Hashemites after they were forced out of the Arabian Peninsula
by the Saudi royal family. Indeed, the Hashemites were the ancestral
rulers of Mecca, said to be descended from the tribe of Mohammed, and
had no connection to that portion of the former Ottoman Empire that
would become Jordan. But they were installed nonetheless as a
foreign ruling class over a population that was composed largely of
immigrants from other parts of the Arab-Muslim world who were
complete strangers to Hashemite sovereignty.
Jordan today is governed by a Hashemite minority that engages in
apartheid-like discrimination against the Palestinian majority.
Though Palestinians are accorded nominal citizenship, they are
effectively disenfranchised through electoral gerrymandering and are
in many ways treated as aliens whose residency is only temporary. In
addition, thousands have been stripped of their citizenship in order
to perpetuate the fiction that they are stateless vagabonds whose
rightful place is a country that never existed.
The Hashemites enforce the Palestinians’ separateness in this way to
make them yearn for the liberation of “Palestinian Arab lands”
from “the Zionists.” Nevertheless, there is growing recognition
among them that they will never “return” to “Palestine”; and
accordingly many now desire full citizenship and equal rights in
Jordan.
There is also an increasing sense that whatever the Palestinian
leadership’s ultimate strategy may be in Judea, Samaria and Gaza, it
is not for the benefit those living in Jordan and elsewhere, even
though they constitute the bulk of the Palestinian population.
There are roughly five million Arabs now living in Jordan, Lebanon,
and Syria and elsewhere who identify as Palestinian, compared to only
1.5 million in Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem. Giving heed to this
arithmetic reality, a growing number of Palestinians recognize that
Israel will not accept an Arab “right of return” that would destroy
her as a Jewish state, and instead believe their homeland should be
established in Jordan.
Proponents of this idea include Mudar Zahran, a Palestinian-Jordanian
expatriate writer who now lives in the UK.
Zahran has written extensively about the Palestinians and their place
in the Mideast, and about how their present leadership – whether the
PA in Judea and Samaria or Hamas in Gaza – has no interest in
mitigating the conditions of Palestinians living elsewhere. He
understands that this leadership will not accept a two-state solution
or permanent peace with a Jewish nation. He also acknowledges
certain demographic and historical factors militating in favor of a
homeland in Jordan, including that it already has a predominantly
Palestinian population and comprises most of the territory originally
included in the Palestine Mandate.
The rest of the world should do the same. (IsraelNationalNews © 2012
03/30/12)
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