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The
following is a full transcript of an interview with Azmi Bishara by Jane Dutton
in Qatar
on Talk to Al Jazeera, which took place following the partial lifting of a gag order on information about the Israeli legal investigation on 25 April:
Al
Jazeera: You
are being investigated by Israeli police for unpublished charges. You have been
in this situation before. Do you think that, being an Arab member of the
Knesset, you are being targeted?
Bishara:
Well, yes, I have been targeted. It is a reality now because, in the last few
years, I was two times brought to court and this is the third investigation.
The first
two times had to do with my political opinions. Once because I was not
recognising the Jewish character of the state and calling for a state of its
citizens.
The second
time was for visiting an enemy country. They consider Syria and Lebanon as enemy countries. I was
charged with that.
Actually we
do not accept that the enemies of Israel are our enemies as Arabs and
Palestinians. We think we are part of the Arab world too and not only citizens
of the state of Israel.
This is the
third time. We can see the first two charges were once probably constitutional
charges or normal felonies and I was stripped of my immunity, but I was not
guilty because the court did not accept the Israeli charges.
It seems
for me it has to succeed in Israel
because the charge is about security. Something has to do with our connections
to journalists and friends in the Arab world, as if passing the information to
the enemy at a time of war, which is a very serious charge but had to do with
what we think as normal for our relations with the Arab world.
Israel wants to use this as a tool in order to get rid of
this position in Israel
which calls for Israel
to be the state of its citizens and accepting the national character of the
Arabs in the country.
Al
Jazeera: How
do you balance your interests? You say that Syria
and Lebanon,
particularly Hezbollah, are not your enemy, but they are enemies of the Israeli
state?
The Israeli
state was established in 1948 on the ruins of the Palestinian people. Now if
you want, in the language which will be known probably in Australia or America
or even in South Africa,
we are indigenous people, the natives of the place.
And Israel was
built on our ruins. We did not immigrate to Israel
in order to become Israelis like many French people would like the Algerians to
integrate into France
or to accept as equal citizens.
But these
people immigrated to France
and they chose to be French. We did not choose to be Israelis. Israel came to Palestine,
destroyed Palestine and emerged from the ruins
of Palestine.
We are Arab
Palestinians. Israeli identity does not exist even according to Israel, they
insist their identity is Jewish. There is no such thing as Israeli identity.
Our Israeli
citizenship was forced upon us. Now we use it as a framework for work to demand
for equality. But this does not amount to identification with the goals of the
country in the region, which we do not accept. We are not Zionists and we do
not consider Syria and Lebanon our
enemies, on the contrary.
Al
Jazeera: So
you are advocating the destruction of Israel?
Of course
not. We do not identify with everything that other organisations demand.
We live in
the state of Israel and in
the framework of such a regime and we think that Israel should be accepted if it
accepts a just peace, which means a just settlement with the Palestinians to
co-exist in justice and equality.
But we do
not accept a kind of apartheid reality with the West Bank and Gaza
and third- or fourth-class citizenship for the Arabs in Israel. We also
do not accept Israel
to be the policeman of the region. In that sense, yes we do identify, for
example, with the victims of Israel,
the West Bank and Gaza as victims of the
occupation, Lebanon
as a victim of Israeli aggression and we do not conceal this.
We think
that Israel
turned the border incident into a full-scale war. It was an aggression against Lebanon which
destroyed about a third of the country. And we also say that war crimes were
committed. We said that as Palestinians, and actually we can say that as
parliamentarians.
It is our
duty to speak out against Israeli aggression. In addition to this, I think what
is cultural and what is historical and what people do not understand is the
fact that historically we cannot identify with the Zionist project. It is a
Zionist project which is built on our ruins.
Al
Jazeera: How
do you find your working with other Israelis on the Knesset?
The Knesset
is not the worst political culture in Israel. The street could be even
more racist than the parliament. But in the parliament, I think Israel is
democratic within the limits of being a Jewish state.
I would
call it trivial democracy. It is a democracy for Jews, and Arabs are granted
rights because they are a minority and because they can be endured.
What is
amazing or what would be amazing for Westerners who think that Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East, is the media. It is totalitarian actually.
There is one orchestrated incitement calling for ousting us etc, while in the
Arab media there are different opinions.
Al
Jazeera:
What options are open to the Arabs there? What do Arab Israelis want?
Normal
people, of course, are not professional politicians and they don't think of
ideologies etc. Most Arabs, even people who do not support us politically,
think that Arabs should be acknowledged to run their own affairs as a national
minority like other national minorities. And that the state should be the state
of all its citizens, Because as long as it is a Zionist state, it cannot grant
equality for its citizens.
The
majority of the Arabs, I think, do believe that. But of course there are
different interests, like any other minority. Some of the Arabs are connected
to the state apparatus, some work in the state and are afraid to say their
opinions. Some have even connections with Zionist parties.
So we have
different opinions, but I think that the majority of the people agree to this
platform and I think this is driving a lot of people in Israel crazy.
What we started is now actually becoming commonplace.
Al
Jazeera: You
said that the Arabs are persecuted in Israel. Give us a sense if you will
of the conditions in which they live?
First of
all, not all Arabs are persecuted. If you are a loyal Arab or a good Arab as
many Zionists would say, you are not persecuted of course. It depends on what
the definition of a good Arab.
Al
Jazeera:
What makes a good Arab?
Accepting
to be marginalised, accepting to be a second-class citizen and being pleased
and thankful because you live better than in Gaza. You have to be grateful.
Anyway,
many times when we talk like this, they would say you should be pleased that we
allow you to talk, in Syria
you cannot talk. We would say, well, you took the whole country and you give us
the freedom of speech.
Give us
back the country and you take your freedom of speech if you want. And at the
end Syria will be
democratic, Egypt
will be democratic. I know that democracy will win in the Arab world in the
end. But these are their countries which you took.
Al
Jazeera: How
do the bad Arabs live then?
Well, the
bad Arabs have to do with not accepting to be just tolerated. They have the
pride of the indigenous people that this is their country and actually you are
not doing them a favour that you are in the Knesset. Probably if you look at it
from my side, I am doing them a favour that I am in the Knesset because this
gives them legitimacy. And many Arabs blame us for being in the Knesset.
So, people
like us, who come with this approach that our rights are derived from being
natives, not from Zionism, or not a favour done for us that we have to be
grateful for, then, you know, you start being a bad Arab.
You want us
to recognize your national character, we also have a national character and we
want to run our cultural affairs autonomously etc. Then you are provoking the
limits of the tolerance of the state.
So then you
become a bad Arab and then they try to persecute you. One charge after another,
and if they fail, they seem they are ready to carry on and charge you with
treason because you do not identify with the state or because you have
connections with the Arab world, which is the principal issue for us because we
are Arabs.
Al
Jazeera: Do
you think that Israeli state is in a state of flux at the moment? Do you think
what is happening in the Middle East at the moment will determine Israel's
future?
It could
be. If Israel
does not grab now and does not jump on the opportunity of the current Arab
peace initiative, I think, they are going into catastrophe. Because at the end
what will impose itself is the fact that this is an apartheid country. And the
two state solution will fail because people will live in inequality and in the
end people will not accept to be second-class citizens.
Most Arabs
in Israel
live in discrimination in all walks of life.
They cannot
go back to their villages, I am not speaking about refugees who are outside Israel. I am
not also speaking about the right of return.
Many
internal refugees, Arabs in Israel
who live five kilometres from their villages, were driven away and cannot go
back to their properties.
There is no
demographic question here, if they go back to their villages the number of
Arabs won't be bigger. They are already citizens.
Sometimes
things are happening to Arabs in Israel because the state ignores
them. There is a phenomenon called unrecognised villages. Villages that should
not be there, although they were there before the state of Israel emerged.
So it is a severe case of discrimination. That's why, I think, Israel is
making a huge mistake if it is not taking the peace initiative which is
suggested by the Arab world.
Al
Jazeera: What
do you think of the significance of the timing in this investigation?
I think
media interest has one timing and the interest of the security apparatus has a
totally different timing. The media interest in blowing it all at once probably
has to do with the failure of the war against Lebanon. They are looking for a
scapegoat. I think this is a mechanism that we know in cases of, let me call
it, problematic minorities at times of war.
Jews were
like this once in Europe and were treated like
that sometimes. In our case, we are speaking about minority Arabs in a country
at war with Arabs.
So it is
very easy to speak about a scapegoat to blame at times of war, especially when
they fail in war and they failed in the war.
It also has
to do with the distribution of our ideas in Israeli society, especially at the
time of the discussions of the Israeli constitution.
A lot of
papers were recently published by Arab institutions which adopted our ideas.
They say that the source of the problem is the fact that a group, or Azmi
Bishara, or someone else, published their ideas freely and speak about the
state of the citizens etc althought they are in the parliament.
Source: Al
Jazeera. For the original article, go here.
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