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Page 1 of 4 The Olga Appeal: For Truth and Reconciliation, For Equality and Partnership
In the last 3 weeks an interesting political exchange is taking place between left Israeli activists and scholars (primarily in Hebrew) around a new initiative called "The Olga Appeal," of which AIC board member Michael Warschawski is part. Below please find the Olga Text translated from Hebrew; A list of first endorsers; A letter from the 7 ?Olga-Appeal? initiators to Palestinian friends in Israel, the Occupied Territories and the diaspora, and the Link to sign up to our OLGA Supportes Mailing List
Text of the Olga Appeal:
The State of Israel was supposed to grant security to
Jews; it has created a death-trap whose inhabitants live in constant
danger, the likes of which is not experienced by any other Jewish
community;
The State of Israel was supposed to tear down the walls
of the ghetto; it is now constructing the biggest ghetto in the entire
history of the Jews;
The State of Israel was supposed to be a democracy; it
has set up a colonial structure, combining unmistakable elements of
apartheid with the arbitrariness of brutal military occupation.
Israel, 2004, is a state on the road to nowhere.
Fifty-six years after its establishment - notwithstanding its many
achievements in agriculture, science and technology, and albeit a great
regional military power, armed with doomsday weapons - many of its
citizens are heartsick with existential worry and fear for their future.
Since its foundation Israel has lived by its sword. An
incessant succession of "retaliations", military operations and wars
has become the life-support drug of Israel's Jews. And now, almost four
years after the beginning of the second Palestinian Intifada, Israel is
up to its neck in the mire of occupation and oppression, while it goes
on extending the settlements and multiplying the outposts, repeating to
itself ad nauseam that "we have no partner for peace".
Ten years after the Oslo Accords, we are living in a
benighted colonial reality - in the heart of darkness. Thirty-seven
years after Israel conquered the last of the Palestinian territories in
the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, over three and a half million
Palestinians under its rule are penned up in their towns and villages.
The term "Palestinian State" - which for years embodied the peace
option - is being used by many Israeli politicians as a mirage phrase,
a spin on the reality of occupation: "In the future," they whisper with
a knowing wink, "the Palestinian entity in the Territories may be
called a 'state'." And meanwhile Israel is amplifying the devastation
of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, as if determined to pulverize the
Palestinian people to dust.
In the face of the large Israeli camp of supporters of
the separation walls - those, both right and left, who are terrified by
the demons of demography, constantly counting the populace to find out
how many Jews and Arabs are born and die every week, how many Jews and
Arabs live in the entire country and in each of its districts every
month - it is vital to pose an alternative outlook, based on the
following principles:
Coexistence of the peoples of this country, based on
mutual recognition, equal partnership and implementation of historical
justice.
We are united in a critique of Zionism, based as it is
on refusal to acknowledge the indigenous people of this country and on
denial of their rights, on dispossession of their lands, and on
adoption of separation as a fundamental principle and way of life.
Adding insult to injury, Israel persists in its refusal to bear any
responsibility for its deeds, from the expulsion of the majority of
Palestinians from their homeland more than half a century ago, to the
present erection of ghetto walls around the remaining Palestinians in
the towns and villages of the West Bank. Thus, wherever Jew and Arab
stand together or face each other, a boundary is drawn between them, to
separate and distinguish between the blessed and the cursed.
We are united in the recognition that this country
belongs to all its sons and daughters - citizens and residents, both
present and absentees (the uprooted Palestinian citizens of Israel in
48' ) - with no discrimination on personal or communal grounds,
irrespective of citizenship or nationality, religion, culture,
ethnicity or gender. Thus we demand the immediate annulment of all
laws, regulations and practices that discriminate between Jewish and
Arab citizens of Israel, and the dissolution of all institutions,
organizations and authorities based on such laws, regulations and
practices.
We are united in the belief that peace and
reconciliation are contingent on Israel's recognition of its
responsibility for the injustices done to the indigenous people, the
Palestinians, and on willingness to redress them. Recognition of the
right of return follows from our principles. Redressing the continued
injustice inflicted on the Palestinian refugees, generation after
generation, is a necessary condition both for reconciliation with the
Palestinian people, as for the spiritual healing of ourselves, Israeli
Jews. Only thus shall we stop being plagued by the past's demons and
damnations and make ourselves at home in our common homeland.
For many years now, Israeli leaders have been exerting
themselves to depict the Palestinians as sub-human; and their exertions
have been seconded and assisted by members of the cultural elite, media
barons, vain functionaries and light-scribblers, right and left. We
reject this racist arrogance with disgust, knowing that the
Palestinians, as all other people, are neither devils nor angels, but
just like us, are humans, created equal.
We are convinced that if we approach peace and
reconciliation with the Palestinians with an open mind and a willing
spirit, we shall find in them what we bring with us: an open mind and a
willing spirit. For we are brothers and sisters, not eternal enemies as
the well-poisoners profess.
It is pointless, now, to guess the material future form
of the vision of life together: two states or one?! perhaps a
confederation?! or maybe a federation?! and what about cantons?! In any
case, the primary condition for advancing the vision of living together
is self-evident, both as a supreme moral imperative and as a practical
matter of the here and now: an immediate end to the state of occupation.
Only in this way will the Palestinians in eastern
Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza Strip be rid of the yoke of
settlements, the nightmare of apartheid, the burden of humiliation and
the demons of destruction employed by Israel unremittingly, day and
night, for 37 years. Only when they are totally free will the
Palestinians be able to discuss and decide their future.
We believe that adoption of the principles stated above
will lay the foundations on which the people of this country can set up
the proper common frameworks for life together. We are not talking of
fantasies or of a miracle move that would lead us from our living hell
to a heavenly paradise.
We are talking of a road that has not been tried
hitherto: being honest with ourselves, with our neighbours and
particularly with the Palestinian people - our enemies who are our
brothers and sisters. If we muster within ourselves the appropriate
honesty and requisite courage, we will be able to take the first step
in the long journey that can extricate us from the tangle of denial,
repression, distortion of reality, loss of direction and forsaking of
conscience, in which the people of Israel have been trapped for
generations.
Whoever has eyes to see and ears to hear knows that the
choice is between another ?hundred years of conflict? ending in
annihilation, and a partnership among all the inhabitants of this land.
Only such a partnership is capable of turning us, the Jews of Israel,
from foreigners in their country to its real inhabitants.
We do not intend to start another movement against the
occupation, or another party (platform, institutions, leaders). We seek
to start off a genuine public discussion about the Israeli blind alley
in which we live and the profound changes needed in order to break out
of it. Every Israeli knows that this is not a matter of political
trifles, but concerns the fate of the peoples of this country.
Giv`at Olga, June 2004
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