UNITED
NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY
COMMITTEE
ON THE EXERCISE OF THE INALIENABLE RIGHTS OF THE PALESTINIAN PEOPLE
INTERNATIONAL
DAY OF SOLIDARITY WITH THE PALESTINIAN PEOPLE
Trusteeship
Council Chamber
United
Nations
New
York, New York
November
30, 2009
Remarks
by Bill Fletcher, Jr.
BlackCommentator.com
& U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation
Mr.
Chairman, Mr. Secretary-General, Mr. President, Excellencies:
Let
me begin by expressing my appreciation to the Committee on the Exercise
of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People for inviting
me to participate in today�s meeting and offering a presentation
in connection with the International Day of Solidarity with the
Palestinian People.
My
name is Bill Fletcher, Jr.� I am the Executive Editor of the on-line
magazine BlackCommentator.com and a member of the leadership committee
of the coalition known as the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation.�
I am the immediate past president of the advocacy group TransAfrica
Forum which was the leading voice within the United States of America
against South African apartheid and white minority rule in Africa.�
I am also a long-time trade union activist.
I
sit before you today to discuss a contemporary apartheid:� that
practiced by the state of Israel against the Palestinian people.
As
an African American in and from the United States, I am keenly aware
of the similarities between the systems of Israeli apartheid, South
African apartheid, and the home-grown apartheid in the United States
of America once known as �Jim Crow segregation.�� Despite every
effort of the Israeli state to wrap its actions in religious garments,
to claim a God-given Judaic exclusive right for its actions, the
description of the racial differential or national-ethnic differential
that exists between the officially sanctioned Jewish citizens of
Israel and the Palestinians within Israel, those in exile and those
in the Occupied Territories sounds all too familiar.� It is also
far from Holy.�� Notwithstanding the efforts of heroic individuals
such as William Patterson, Paul Robeson and Malcolm X to bring the
case of African Americans before the United Nations, the international
ramifications of the oppression suffered here were often and conveniently
ignored by the great powers of the global North.� The South African
apartheid system was, to a great extent, modeled on the Jim Crow
system in the United States, a fact noted by many people in South
Africa and in the global South.� The United Nations failed to take
up the challenge to racism in my own country a generation ago; it
must not fail to take up the struggle against Israeli apartheid
today.
The
realities of the Israeli apartheid system, in contrast to South
Africa, were often hidden from view, at least outside of Israel
and, later, the Occupied Territories.� It was, however, the close
collaboration�including military and nuclear collaboration�between
the Israeli regime and the South African apartheid regime at a point
when the South African apartheid regime had become an international
pariah state that raised more than a few eyebrows and encouraged
many people to more closely examine the theory and workings of the
two states.
The
parallel between the Israeli apartheid system and the Jim Crow system
under which African Americans suffered and died here in the United
States of America also helps to explain a phenomenon that seems
to puzzle many mainstream commentators.� How is it that there exists
such a relatively large reservoir of sympathy among African Americans
in the United States of America for the cause of the Palestinians?�
It is a vicious slander to assert that such sympathy
is based on anti-Jewish sentiment, though I would be na�ve to ignore
that such sentiment does exist in some isolated quarters.� Rather,
for African Americans, we can at one and the same time stand with
the Jewish victims of the Nazi�s Holocaust, while at the same time
reject the Israeli apartheid system and its victimization of the
Palestinian people.� The horrors of the Holocaust, as the great
Martiniquan writer Aime Cesaire pointed out, were not unprecedented,
but found their basis in the brutal holocausts committed against
the peoples of the global South by the colonial powers and the settler
states. �It was based on that shared history that African Americans
viscerally understood and, therefore, placed ourselves in opposition
to the racist motivations that lay behind the actions of the German
Nazis and later the Italian Fascists in their persecution and then
attempts at annihilation of the Jewish people.
Yet
none of this, that is, none of the reality of the Holocaust suffered
by European Jews,� excuses what has happened to the Palestinian
people in the period since World War II, and especially since May
1948.� And it is this that many people, in what is colloquially
known as �Black America,� understand so well.� The Israeli apartheid
system that expropriates land from the Palestinians; restricts mixed
marriages; condemns Palestinians to separate AND inferior education;
and repudiates their internationally recognized right to return
to their land and their homes, simply carries with it the same stench
of the decadent and oppressive system that we came to know here
in the USA as Jim Crow segregation.
The
work of your committee and the attention that you devote the situation
facing the Palestinian people receives insufficient notice in the
mainstream media.� As a result, the actual conditions of the Palestinian
people are not fully understood in many quarters, most especially
here within the United States of America.
This
year�s gathering comes at a critical moment.� The release of the
Goldstone Report, the international attention it has received and
its adoption by the United Nations Human Rights Council and the
General Assembly are representative of a shifting discourse on the
conditions of the Palestinian people and their struggle for self-determination
and full human rights.� While the Goldstone Report is critical of
both Hamas and the Israeli Defense Forces, the report is very clear
that the preponderance of both force and atrocities were those committed
by the Israeli side.�� The situating of the Israeli atrocities within
the larger context of collective punishment of the Palestinian people
generally, and the Gazans in particular, as done in this report,
reminds the world that there is no equivalent power relation when
it comes to the Israeli/Palestinian conflict.�� Try as they may,
the Israeli government cannot succeed in getting most of the world
to forget that there is an illegal occupation of Palestinian territory
that they have perpetrated since 1967.
The
challenge of the Goldstone Report, however, is to move beyond discourse
to a shift in actual policy � to make real the Report�s commitment
to accountability.� That is a challenge for all of us, but most
especially for you, the United Nations.� Because so far, despite
clear evidence of the flaunting of international law by the Israeli
government, whether through the violation of the Hague conventions
or Geneva conventions when it comes to the Occupation, few actual
sanctions have been taken in defense of the Palestinian people or
to punish the Occupiers for their transgressions.� As a citizen
of the United States of America I am reminded of this on a daily
basis.� As you are aware, the Congress of the United States of America
voted to condemn the Goldstone Report.� Distorting the findings
of the report and declaring it to be biased with no concrete evidence
to support such allegations not only disrespected Justice Goldstone,
the Report, the United Nations Human Rights Council and indeed the
United Nations as a whole, and the Palestinian people, but also
disrespected the intelligence of the people of the United States
of America.� The actions by the Congress of the United States attempted
to short-circuit any possibility for a timely and fair examination
not only of the facts and implications of the Goldstone Report,
but also attempted to eliminate the possibility of undertaking the
sort of healthy debate on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, and
the role of the United States in it, that is so desperately needed.�
We in the U.S. and global civil society, however, have no intention
of allowing the effort to bury the Goldstone Report to succeed.�
It is, therefore, my hope that the planned �Gaza Freedom March,�
scheduled for 1 January 2010 will be another opportunity to both
call attention to the Goldstone Report, but also and more critically,
re-raise the world�s attention to the continuing violation of the
human rights of the Palestinian people of Gaza at the hands of the
forces of the Israeli State.
As
important as is the Goldstone Report, the analysis of atrocities
committed at the time of the Israeli aggression against Gaza represents
only part of the overall picture.� The Goldstone Report opens the
door to a broader discussion of the Israeli Occupation and the question
of the suppression of the Palestinian people�s right to self-determination,
including the rights of the Palestinian refugees, and equally important
the denial of full equality to the Palestinian minority who are
citizens of the state of Israel.
The Israeli Occupation has come to be broadly understood as an apartheid
arrangement.� Civil society around the world, including the UN-accredited
International Coordinating Network on Palestine, has been working
for years to build and broaden public understanding of that concept.�
Within the United
States of America, the U.S. Campaign to End Israeli Occupation has
made the issue of apartheid a major part of our work.� The courageous
stand taken by former President Carter in his book�Palestine:�
Peace, not Apartheid�has dramatically helped to increase
awareness of the dramatic similarities in the situation faced by
Palestinians in the Occupied Territories and those faced by non-whites
in apartheid-era South Africa.� Whether one is discussing the illegal
seizure of Palestinian land and its being granted to Israeli settlers
(Note:� UN reports indicate that 40% of the West Bank land is now
inaccessible to Palestinians for residence, agriculture, transportation,
commerce or any other human activity); roads that are restricted
to Israelis alone; the creation of an internationally condemned
separation wall; or the ethnic cleansing of Occupied East Jerusalem,
again and again the situation and circumstances conform to the norms
that the United Nations established more than thirty-five years
ago in defining apartheid as a crime.� What was particularly noteworthy,
I might add, regarding the steps taken by the United Nations in
the 1973 Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime
of Apartheid was that it defined apartheid not as a crime limited
to the South African context but, as was stated at the time:� ��
�the crime of apartheid�, which shall include similar policies and
practices of racial segregation and discrimination as practiced
in southern Africa��
The
plight of the Palestinian people is not limited to the actions taken
in the Occupied Territories by the Israeli Defense Forces and other
Israeli government agencies.� While there are important distinctions
to be made, the Palestinian citizens of Israel cannot be understood
to be free and equal citizens of a country that denies them so many
basic rights of citizenship.� Rather, Palestinian citizens of Israel
find themselves in a second-class status by comparison with those
citizens officially recognized as being of Jewish background.� The
examples are shocking and, in another context, might be mind baffling.�
A report from the Institute for Palestine Studies noted that in
2007, for instance, the Knesset voted to extend and broaden a law
that denies the Palestinian citizens of Israel a basic human right,
namely to marry and raise a family which naturally shares the same
citizenship rights as the citizen who marries.� If Palestinian citizens
of Israel take a spouse who lives in the Palestinian lands under
military occupation, Israel denies citizenship to its own citizen�s
chosen spouse!�
In
the realm of education, Israel has operated what is, in effect,
a racially segregated state school system since the establishment
of the state of Israel in 1948.� A recent and outrageous example
demonstrates the logical conclusion of such a system.� Writer Jonathan
Cook reported that an Arab couple suffered the humiliation of the
expulsion of their one year old daughter from an Israeli daycare
center because six other Israeli parents, six parents of state-recognized
Jewish background, complained that an Arab child was in the center.��
The course of action available to this couple is very limited due
to the nature of Israeli law when it comes to racial or national/ethnic
discrimination.� Cook went on to point out that Israel spends approximately
$1100 on the education of each Israeli student who can demonstrate
the requisite religious/ethnic credentials to the Israeli state
compared with $190 for each Israeli student marked as �Palestinian�.�
The gap, Cook noted, was even wider when comparison is made to state-run
religious schools.� There Israeli students who belong to the requisite
state religion receive nine times more funding than Palestinian
Israeli students of Christian, Muslim or secular background.� When
it comes to teachers, 8000 Palestinian teachers are reportedly unemployed
even though, as of the middle of 2009, the Israeli educational system
was suffering from staff shortages.
With
regard to land ownership, it was reported in the New York Times
on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of Israel�s independence�or
for the Palestinians, the anniversary of the Nakba�that
Arabs occupy a tiny percentage of Israeli land despite the fact
that they make up twenty percent of the population.� In fact, in
a separate article �Defining Apartheid:� Israel�s record,�
the author, Uri Strauss, noted that 93% of the land within Israel
has been designated State land and, in effect, denied to Palestinians
solely on the basis of their ethnicity, regardless of whether they
hold Israeli citizenship.� So, in order to be clear, we are talking
about less than seven percent of the land even being available to
one fifth of Israeli citizens WITHIN Israel.� While even U.S. citizens
who move to Israel and can be recognized by the Israeli state as
being �Jewish� routinely receive permits to construct homes, nothing
approaching such ease is true for Christian, Muslim or secular Palestinian
citizens.� Obviously, for Palestinians under the Occupation the
situation goes beyond a matter of being denied permits to build;
their homes are regularly being seized and demolished, often because
of the military occupier�s claim that the home itself was illegally
constructed.
In
every major category, whether land and education�as noted earlier�or
health and employment, a racial or national/ethnic differential
exists between the officially recognized Jewish citizens vs. the
Arab citizens of Israel.� In fact, according to that same New York
Times article, Arab families, whether Christian, Muslim or secular,
are three times more likely to be below the poverty line than are
officially recognized Jewish families.� This racial or national/ethnic
differential even extends to marriage, where the Israeli government
only recognizes so-called �mixed marriages� when they have taken
place in other countries.
The
Israeli system of apartheid also includes the disparity regarding
the rights of people to enter Israel.� The Israeli law of return
allows any officially recognized Jewish person, from anywhere in
the world, regardless of whether that person has any actual tie
to the state of Israel, to arrive in the country and receive immediate
citizenship, with all the rights and privileges that follow.� Palestinians
who themselves were forcibly expelled from what is now Israel during
the 1947-48 war or later, are prohibited from returning to their
home, even if they still hold the key to their house, despite specific
requirements of international law, including UN Resolution 194.
It
is important to acknowledge both the situation in Israel as well
as the Occupied Territories in order to emphasize that the Israeli
apartheid system is not one limited to the occupied zones.� The
system of racial oppression or national/ethnic oppression that is
so evident in the Occupied Territories is directly related to the
manner in which Palestinian citizens of Israel are both viewed and
treated. �On this International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian
People this fact cannot be forgotten or glossed over.� While the
experience in Israel, for the refugees, and within the Occupied
Territories for Palestinians is not identical, it does reflect
the fundamental thinking of the racial-settler state
of Israel that Palestinians, much like African Americans in the
United States of America as described in an infamous court decision
from the 19th century, do not have rights that Jewish
Israelis are bound to respect.
I
was recently sent a copy of a letter that was written in April 1948
in direct response to the news of the massacre of the Arab residents
of Deir Yassin by Jewish terrorists.� The letter, written by a naturalized
American citizen of Jewish background, and sent to the executive
director of an organization known as �American Friends of the Fighters
for the Freedom of Israel� read in part:
When
a real and final catastrophe should befall us in Palestine the
first responsible for it would be the British and the second responsible
for it the Terrorist organizations build up from our own ranks.
I
am not willing to see anybody associated with those misled and
criminal people.
You
will have to forgive the typos and the grammar.� The author was
not known to be a fluid writer.� His greatness lay elsewhere.� His
name was Albert Einstein.
It
is worth quoting Einstein and calling attention to his letter on
this, the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People,
for several reasons.�� One, to remind us that the terrorists condemned
by Einstein later gained international legitimacy when the Israeli
state was recognized and many of these same terrorists achieved
positions in the military and in government.� Thus, today�s terrorist
becomes tomorrow statesperson, or at least so it often seems when
accountability is absent.
Two,
that Einstein, someone who had fled the persecution of the Nazis
and who understood the full horror and implications of the Holocaust,
was not prepared to use that historical reality to countenance the
ethnic cleansing that was taking place in Palestine at the hands
of individuals who claimed that they did not want the world to forget
what had happened to Jews.� Einstein did not cower in the face of
news of an atrocity committed by Zionist terrorists, nor did he
attempt to explain it away by claiming that atrocities were committed
by both sides.
Three,
Einstein recognized that there could be, what he called a ��real
and final catastrophe�� in Palestine.� Though that catastrophe happened
to the Palestinians in 1948 and not to the Zionist colonizers, the
failure of the Israeli state to repudiate its apartheid system and
to recognize the human rights of Palestinian people has set in motion
events that could lead to a massive catastrophe for the people of
the Middle East.� With an Israel armed with 100 to 200 nuclear weapons
and an escalating arms race throughout the region, a catastrophe
could be beyond what even Einstein could have contemplated in 1948.
Einstein
set an example, an example that many members of the Congress of
the United States of America and alleged supporters of Israel, would
benefit from both remembering and understanding.� Common sense says
that oppression, discrimination and, indeed, genocide, committed
against one group never explains away or justifies crimes committed
by that same group against another people.� The flaunting of international
law through an occupation lasting more than 40 years accompanied
by clearly illegal colonial settlements, along with the institutionalization
of a system of racial/national-ethnic apartheid in order to guarantee
that the subordinate group never exercises their human rights and
instead disintegrates as a people into the dust of the Middle East,
simply cannot be tolerated.� Not only are the governments represented
in these halls called upon to take action against such criminality,
but people of conscience around the world, including WITHIN Israel,
must and are taking a stand.� Whether through public statements
in the mainstream media; petitions; resolutions; or through the
boycotts, divestments and sanctions to bring non-violent pressure
on the Occupying Power, the international desire for peace, equality
and justice for the Jewish Israelis and for the Palestinians�including,
Israeli citizens, the refugees and those under Occupation�must move
beyond conferences and fine words and materialize ultimately as
actions that those who have perpetrated this oppression and who
profit from the suppression of the Palestinian people will not only
hear, but will clearly understand.
I,
again, am honored to have been offered these moments to address
the General Assembly, and thank you for recognizing that there is
a civil society voice on the matter of justice for the Palestinian
people that must be heard.
Thank
you very much.
BlackCommentator.com
Executive Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the
Institute for Policy Studies,
the immediate past president of
TransAfrica Forum
and co-author of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University
of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor
in the USA. Click here
to contact Mr. Fletcher. |