Al-Ahram Weekly 9 - 15 March 2000 Issue
No. 472
by
Dr Salman Abu Sitta
The initial
euphoria of great expectations associated with the peace
process in September 1993 has quickly subsided. With
hindsight, there was no reason to expect such a happy solution
for the 100-year Palestinian-Israeli conflict, the last 50
years of which have been soaked in blood, usually Palestinian.
The Israeli side has not given an inch on its basic premise:
the confiscated Palestinian land, which comprises 92 per cent
of Israel's area, will not be returned to its rightful owners,
and the inhabitants of 532 villages and towns who were
expelled by Israeli forces in 1948 -- now known as Palestinian
refugees -- will not be allowed to return home. On the other
hand, these Palestinian refugees, now numbering five million,
who have endured 50 years of wars, destitution and exile,
refuse to accept this diktat and insist on their right to
return home.
They have strong bases for that claim. For them, the return
home is sacred. They have lived on this land for over 30
centuries. Their historical bond with the place moved an
Israeli writer to note: "Every people in the world lives in a
place. For Palestinians, the place lives in them." The
grandchild of a 1948 refugee, when asked, says he comes from
his original village, not from the refugee camp where he
lives. The Mukhtars (village heads) are elected on the basis
of their original villages. The schoolchildren are registered
in school accordingly. A recent study showed that 66 per cent
of all refugees moved to their exile in one of the five areas
of UNRWA operations (Gaza, West Bank, Jordan, Syria and
Lebanon) as a complete village unit, 25 per cent of the
villagers split into two UNRWA areas and only nine per cent
moved to more than two areas. It is remarkable to note that 87
per cent of the refugees are in Palestine (where 29 per cent
live) and in a 100km-wide ring around it. Only 13 per cent are
in other Arab and foreign countries. This proximity to the
homeland is indicative of the bond between the refugees and
their homes.
The right of return is legal. There is no precedent in UN
history to the universal, sustained and firm consensus
accorded to the right of the refugees to return to their
homes. It has been affirmed over 100 times by the UN. The
right to return home has been affirmed by the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and by similar European, American
and African charters. The rising political weight of NGOs --
in effect working as parallel parliaments -- has added
emphasis to the Palestinians' right to return. Today there are
200 websites and societies advocating the right of return for
the Palestinian refugees. From last summer to the next, there
were and will be over a dozen conferences, seminars and
workshops advocating this right.
The contrast in the attitude of Western powers between their
vigorous military and diplomatic efforts to ensure the return
of refugees in Bosnia, Kosovo, East Timor, Abkhazia and Kuwait
and their feeble, and sometimes obstructive, efforts towards
the Palestinian refugees is striking. No doubt this aggravates
the refugees and increases the prospects of instability in the
Middle East.
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If
Al-Ahram Weekly has chosen to publish Randa Shaath's
poignant picture, taken in 1998, for the second time, it
is because there may be no more powerful representation of
what the right of return really means for Palestinians.
Umm Saleh still holds the key to her house in Jaffa, which
she was forced to leave over half a century ago. She now
lives in Rafah, at the Sweden Camp. Her house, she knows,
is still there, its occupants the occupiers. So Umm Saleh
waits, and holds the key. Her grip is no looser now than
it was 50 years ago, when she left her life behind
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The
right of return is physically possible. This is contrary to
the myths and misinformation campaigns propagated by the
Israelis. Demographic studies show that 78 per cent of the
Jews in Israel live in 15 per cent of Israel.
Only 22 per cent live in 85 per cent of Israel, which is
largely Palestinian land. Of these, 19 per cent live in towns,
mostly Palestinian. This leaves three per cent of Jews, the
rural residents of the Kibbutzim and Moshav, in control of the
vast Palestinian land. The Kibbutzim, once tenets of Zionism,
are now ideologically and economically bankrupt.
They waste not only land, but 80 per cent of water (mostly
stolen Arab water) to produce agricultural products which are
worth three per cent of Israel's GNP. Thus we have here a tiny
minority of 200,000 Jews obstructing the return of five
million refugees, the rightful owners of the land they
exploit. It is impossible for peace to prevail without the
return of the refugees to their homes.
How could it be when a refugee in Gaza, with a density of
4,200 persons per square kilometre, looks over the barbed wire
and sees his land almost empty, with six Jews per square
kilometre wandering around?
The plight of the refugees in Lebanon is well known. Both they
and the Lebanese refuse their resettlement in Lebanon.
What is not well known is that if they returned to their homes
in Galilee (now mostly Arab), the effect on the Jewish density
in the centre of the country would not exceed one per cent.
Similarly, if the refugees in Gaza return to their homes in
the south of the country (now largely empty), the effect on
the Jewish density in the centre would not exceed five per
cent.
The irony is
that refugees in both Lebanon and Gaza are almost the same in
number as the Russian immigrants who entered Israel in the
'90s. This analysis shows that what is happening is a clear
case of ethnic cleansing whereby the rightful owners are
replaced by foreign immigrants whose only credential,
according to Israeli law, is that they claim to be Jews.
The fact that the right of return is sacred, legal and
possible has considerable implications. The refugees observe
with dismay, rising to anger, then to possible violence, the
pathetic performance of PA and the arrogant intransigence of
the Israelis. A concession follows another by the PA in the
charade called negotiations.
The rights of the refugees are pushed behind in their priority
list, lip service to affirming Resolution 194 in public
statements notwithstanding. There is now considerable
agitation among the refugees and anxiety that the right of
return, the raison d'être of the PLO and the pillar of the
past 50 years of struggle, is now reduced to such trivialities
as "token return" or "improvement of living conditions".
The pro-Israeli machine is busy producing studies, plans and
the like for the resettlement of the refugees anywhere in the
world except their homes. The much-touted Arzt plan, endorsed
by the (US) Council on Foreign Relations, is shown, after
careful analysis, to be nothing less than an ethnic cleansing
plan, punishable by international law. Donna Arzt would not
dare, on her admission, to advocate her scheme in a refugee
camp. A dwindling number of misguided or simply uninformed
Arab individuals parrot these ideas in the name of "peace
relations".
They publish articles or "studies" -- sometimes generously
paid for -- proposing schemes or suggestions which do not
withstand the slightest scrutiny. A sign of the changing times
is that such utterings are beginning to disappear from
respectable fora. The tragedy of the Palestinians and the
misrepresentation or neglect of their rights by friend and foe
alike prompted many Palestinians to call for a unified and
serious action. Academics, writers, activists, ordinary
refugees in camps, university students and others like them
saw the need to state their rights clearly and push for their
implementation. They have one thing in common: they are
non-political and their personal record and integrity are
impeccable.
They come from all areas of Al-Shatat (the Diaspora),
including Israel, where 300,000 are uprooted and declared
"present-absentees" by Israel. On Saturday 4 March, a
Declaration of the Right of Return was announced in Jerusalem,
Amman, Beirut, Damascus, Cairo, the Gulf and in Europe and the
US. This Declaration will be presented to the UN and the heads
of Western and Arab governments. Already there was an
outpouring of support from places as diverse as refugee camps
and Korean university campuses.
This new movement manifests itself everywhere, in the poor
refugee camps and in the comfortable life of academia in the
West. A recent poll conducted by the PA showed that 90.8 per
cent of respondents refused to accept a Palestinian state if
the price is to forfeit their right of return. If that is the
opinion of refugees who live on Palestine soil, one can
imagine the opinion of those outside it.
Imagine that a miracle occurs and 99 per cent of the refugees
agree to forfeit their right of return and only one per cent
decide to resist it. This means 50,000 determined people, or
10,000 in each of the five main areas of UNRWA operations.
This would be a cause of concern for all those who wish for a
just and stable peace. Imagine also that the PA is forced to
impose an unjust solution on the refugees in a contrived sort
of agreement with Israel. This will affect only 29 per cent of
the refugees who live in Palestinian territories, leaving 71
per cent free to respond to this agreement as they like. Many
of those living abroad have considerable skills. Some are now
citizens of European countries and the US, who could take
their case to their governments and human rights courts.
A recent example is the Council for Palestinian Restitution
and Repatriation (CPRR), incorporated in the US, which has
collected 15,000 signatures in favour of the right of return
and is affiliated to 130 similar organisations.
It is clear that such a swell of support for the right of
return will not be assuaged by PA assurances, Arab
complacency, European "humanitarian" gestures and total
US-Israeli disregard for the Right of Return. The plain fact
is there shall be no peace in the Middle East without the
return of the refugees to their homes.