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"If it's an eternal struggle, how could there ever be a solution or a peace?" Joel Send a noteboard - 06/06/2010 06:20:39 PM
Though I suppose it is, it just seems odd given how long ago it was. It actually touches on the issue that I think is too often ignored in European discussions of Israel and Palestine: I still think the whole reason modern Israel exists has less to do with Zionist conspiracies and more to do with an attempt to export "the Jewish Question" and be rid of it once and for all. Of course, when European nations and nationals decide to weigh in on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict they aren't really rid of it at all, are they? ;) There seems to be some trouble recognizing the root problem: An attempt to expiate guilt over anti-semitism by simply exporting all the Jews to a recreated Israel created new guilt for having displaced hundreds of thousands of Palestinians already living there. But having "done right" by the Jews it seems like many people are willing to completely ignore their own nations role in recreating Israel as they criticize what Israel subsequently did. Meanwhile the same parochial patronizing attitudes that caused intervention (and hence a lot of current problems) continues apace.

Many Europeans do indeed gloss over the role their own countries played in the past, either in the creation of Israel and the modern Middle east directly, or in shaping the circumstances in which the Zionist mindset originated. The Brits and the French divided the Middle East between the two of them and stayed there for a good thirty years, in a number of cases (mostly in North-Africa) much more still. It's a bit too easy to then sit back and criticize Israel when some of the difficulties facing Israel are of their own ancestors' making.

Of course, as I have argued before, part of what makes Europeans so uneasy about Israel is precisely that - that some aspects of the situation remind them of pages in their own history that they'd like to turn. And then I'm not talking about the Holocaust, but about colonialism.
All of which leads me back to my own old view: Neither Europe nor the US is responsible for the millennia of conflict between Jews and Arabs, or Israelis and Palestinians, it's not our responsibility to resolve it and we keep getting a mountain of grief for trying, so why not just get the hell out and let them go back to happily killing each other like they've been doing since before any of our native countries existed?

This is the part where I strongly disagree - your ahistorical view and projecting current problems back across a whopping three thousand years, or close. Jews and Arabs have not been "happily killing each other" for centuries, let alone millennia. Certainly there have been moments in time in which that happened, before the creation of the modern Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but it's completely wrong and misleading to depict it as some kind of eternal struggle. Wrong, misleading, and also dangerous - if it's an eternal struggle, how could there ever be a solution or a peace?

That is indeed the question. I don't mean to suggest Jews and Arabs, or Jews and Palestinians, have been at constant war for 4000 years. However, each time circumstances encourage a new conflict, all the old grievances and accusations resurface, unforgotten in the passage of decades or generations. As in the past, I refer again to Purim, which is nothing more or less than an annual Jewish holiday commemorating their deliverance from a plot by an Arab to exterminate them as a people--2500 years ago. Meanwhile, geography and scant resources insure circumstances encourage new conflicts regularly, and, once again, the Palestinian is no more interested in simply moving away than the Israeli. I continue to believe this is not simply a matter of "this is my fathers land" as it goes deeper than that aspect does with most refugees; for most, it's to a great extent a matter of "this is Father Abrahams land" just as both Muslim and Jew looks to the Temple Mount as the scene of Abrahams abortive sacrifice of his son (though WHICH son depends whom you ask. ;))

As to the issue of colonialism, there's definitely some merit to that view of it, but there seems little question whether the colonial issues are also deeper and more intractable in places that were also witness to the Crusades. It's a complicated and fascinating topic, because Europe does have a very real historical role dating from a time when Christianity provided a supra-national European identity much as pan-Islamic movements do in the modern Mid-East, yet the priority of religion appears something from which much of Europe would distance itself as readily as it would colonialism or anti-semitism. Yet we don't see many things like Algeria or Palestine in Europes relations with Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa or South and Central America. There are examples, but mostly episodic and limited ones, not the inescapable quagmire the Mid-East has become.
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Jacqueline Rose on the Dreyfus affair and related problems, in the LRB - 06/06/2010 11:28:14 AM 996 Views
What she has to say about Dreyfus is very interesting. - 06/06/2010 04:48:16 PM 794 Views
Re: What she has to say about Dreyfus is very interesting. - 06/06/2010 04:56:32 PM 730 Views
*remains amused at the suggestion of the Dreyfus Affairs "pertinence" to "current" events* - 06/06/2010 05:14:23 PM 715 Views
I agree in part and (strongly) disagree in part. - 06/06/2010 05:40:26 PM 693 Views
"If it's an eternal struggle, how could there ever be a solution or a peace?" - 06/06/2010 06:20:39 PM 763 Views
Purim may or may not refer to a historic event. Even if it does, Haman was not likely an Arab. - 07/06/2010 12:00:05 AM 612 Views
I second your main point. - 07/06/2010 12:09:42 AM 622 Views
I don't discount that there is Arab blood in many or even most "Arabs". - 07/06/2010 12:18:32 AM 620 Views
Okay, fair enough then. *NM* - 07/06/2010 08:45:19 AM 277 Views
The holiday is centuries old and real, regardless. - 07/06/2010 12:28:59 AM 693 Views
You're still missing the major point here. - 07/06/2010 12:44:08 AM 611 Views
That seems a rather limited view of history. - 07/06/2010 01:10:11 AM 723 Views
What the Hell are you going on about? - 07/06/2010 04:08:19 AM 671 Views
Oooh - 07/06/2010 11:07:43 AM 533 Views
Yeah, to whom was the claim on that land given? - 07/06/2010 10:35:42 PM 667 Views
jeez Joel... - 07/06/2010 04:24:47 AM 655 Views
No, the Persians are not Arabs. - 07/06/2010 10:09:47 PM 771 Views
I (coincidentally) stumbled across those infamous hadith passages about Jews the other day. - 07/06/2010 09:41:39 AM 693 Views
So? - 07/06/2010 10:50:49 PM 689 Views
So the relevance of apocalyptic passages is close to zero. - 07/06/2010 11:55:05 PM 639 Views
Not to mention - 08/06/2010 09:09:27 AM 581 Views
Then why are they canon? - 08/06/2010 06:25:09 PM 825 Views
are you claiming that people would pull some things out of holy text and ignore the rest? - 08/06/2010 12:16:41 PM 716 Views
*NM* - 08/06/2010 01:16:13 PM 260 Views
well, for me this just proves why we are not supposed to live among non-Jews - 06/06/2010 11:39:45 PM 788 Views
how so? - 06/06/2010 11:41:18 PM 571 Views
It reminds me of what I kept thinking as I read it. - 07/06/2010 12:51:36 AM 603 Views
couldn't get past the part where anyone who opposes Obama is a racist *NM* - 08/06/2010 01:40:07 AM 441 Views
You hallucinated? *NM* - 08/06/2010 08:39:37 AM 317 Views
No, that would've been one of the places where she should've shut up. *NM* - 08/06/2010 08:58:11 AM 256 Views
No - 08/06/2010 09:08:04 AM 579 Views
I think he's not talking about that bit, but about the very first paragraph. - 08/06/2010 09:30:21 AM 703 Views
If there was more I didn't get far enough to hear it - 08/06/2010 12:09:47 PM 572 Views
That's the problem with the speech - the large majority of what she had to say was worthwhile. - 08/06/2010 01:15:39 PM 623 Views
The problem is blatant bias - 08/06/2010 02:24:57 PM 608 Views

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