https://www.972mag.com/palestinian-statehood-israeli-apartheid-recognition/?utm_source=972+Magazine+Newsletter&utm_campaign=3461d9b6b0-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_9_12_2022_11_20_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f1fe821d25-3461d9b6b0-320789101

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Forget symbolic statehood — the world must recognize Israeli apartheid
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The push to recognize a Palestinian state creates the illusion of action, but 
delays the real remedies: sanctioning and isolating Israel's apartheid regime.
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My grandmother is 90 years old. Twice exiled, first by Israel during the Nakba, 
then by Assad’s regime in Syria, her memory is no longer whole. Of her life 
today in Sweden, she holds only the last few minutes. Of her long decades, just 
flashes.

Yet her childhood in Kfar Sabt, a Palestinian village in the Galilee 
depopulated in 1948, burns bright. She grins, almost mischievously, as she 
recalls playing in the fields, running around with the other children, and 
spying on a Jewish farmer whose sudden arrival in the village — and the noisy 
tractor that came with him — stirred curiosity and suspicion.

I was born a refugee, my grandmother’s family from Kfar Sabt, my grandfather’s 
family from the nearby village of Lubya. Today, from my home in Ramallah, I 
wake each morning to the sight of an Israeli flag in the nearby settlement Beit 
El, a clear reminder of the apartheid regime that dictates every aspect of my 
life.

The Jewish Israelis who live there cast their votes for a government that 
determines where I can live, work, and travel, how much water I receive, and 
which set of rules and laws apply to me, and which do not. Like millions of 
Palestinians, from the West Bank to Gaza, I’m ruled by a system that sees me 
only as an obstacle in the way of its expansionist ethnostate.

This is a reality that has become impossible to ignore for millions across the 
globe, especially during the past two years. Yet in recent months, rather than 
acknowledging Israeli apartheid or taking meaningful action to stop the 
atrocities in Gaza, a growing chorus of states have decided to recognize 
something else: a Palestinian state.

The first breakthrough came in May 2024, when Norway, Spain, and Ireland ( 
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cl77drw22qjo ) recognized the State of 
Palestine, the latter two among the most vocal critics of Israel’s war on Gaza. 
A second wave is now emerging, led by an initiative from France and the United 
Kingdom ( 
https://edition.cnn.com/world/middleeast/countries-recognize-palestinian-state-intl-vis
 ) in response to Israel’s plans to prolong the war, soon joined by Australia, 
Canada, Portugal, and Malta.

While indicative of Israel’s growing international isolation, the global 
political theater of “recognizing a Palestinian state” is impossible to take at 
face value. With Israel moving forward to annex vast swaths of the West Bank, ( 
https://www.972mag.com/settler-impunity-west-bank-annexation/ ) and amid a 
genocide in Gaza ( 
https://www.972mag.com/israeli-intelligence-database-83-percent-civilians-militants/
 ) that has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, it is absurd to continue to 
advocate for a two-state solution as a reasonable or practical compromise.

Stranger still is the insistence that it is the only possible answer to what, 
77 years after the Nakba, does nothing to address the core issue: an 
aggressive, militaristic regime that demands national, legal, and economic 
supremacy for one people over another.

Let us not waste another 30 years of Palestinian lives on the partition 
paradigm — a colonial “solution” to a colonial problem. Israel has long made 
clear it will never accept a Palestinian state; clinging to the  two-state 
solution is gaslighting on an extraordinary scale, and it has brought us only 
despair.

Now, more than ever, symbolic gestures are worse than useless, as they buy time 
for the regime committing the crimes and drain urgency from the only remedies 
that matter: ending the genocide, sanctioning the perpetrator, isolating the 
apartheid system, and insisting without apology on equal rights and the right 
of return. This is not extremism. It is the bare minimum of justice.

There is already one state, and it is an apartheid state
--------------------------------------------------------

A “solution” that is neither just nor possible is not a peace plan, but an 
alibi for inaction that will allow Israel to continue its massacres, accelerate 
its expansion, and deepen the apartheid regime. Is this really how we punish a 
regime that has committed a genocide? By offering it complete dominance over 
its victims while we give them false hope that they might get a state on less 
than 23 percent of their ancestral homeland?

And where are the Palestinians in all of this? When was the last time we were 
democratically represented, or even asked what solution we would accept? As in 
1947, when the United Nations Partition Plan was drawn without our consent, the 
latest push for a two-state solution is being driven by European powers with 
little regard for the people who will live or die by its terms.

France makes the arrogance explicit: threatening Israel with recognition of a 
Palestinian state but insisting it be demilitarized ( 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jul/24/france-to-recognise-palestinian-state-at-un-general-assembly-macron-says
 ) , all while continuing to supply Israel with weapons. I may dream of a world 
free of lethal weapons, but it is not for an arms dealer to tell the victims of 
genocide to lay down their arms.

Meanwhile, Israel huffs and puffs, condemning the recognitions as a “prize for 
terror” ( 
https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/recognise-palestine-state-hamas-v202zv0lt
 ) and using it as a pretense to enact even more extreme measures. In July, the 
Knesset passed ( 
https://www.timesofisrael.com/knesset-votes-71-13-for-non-binding-motion-calling-to-annex-west-bank/
 ) a resolution supporting the annexation of the West Bank, and settlement 
expansion continues apace, including the recent approval of the E1 bloc ( 
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvg30l6myj3o ) that experts warn would make a 
contiguous Palestinian state impossible.

Even if by some miracle, Israel eventually withdraws from the West Bank and 
Gaza, what guarantees the Palestinians in the new state their safety? When has 
statehood protected anyone from Israeli aggression and expansionism? Lebanon 
and Syria are both sovereign states with internationally recognized borders, 
yet they have seen their land occupied and their cities bombed. A Palestinian 
flag at the UN will not halt settlement growth, dismantle military rule, or end 
regional warfare.

If countries wish to recognize a Palestinian state, so be it, but they must not 
pretend that it changes reality. Real change begins with acknowledging the 
truth: there is already one state here, and it is an apartheid state. >From 
there, countries must act legally, diplomatically, economically until the cost 
for Israel to maintain apartheid outweighs its benefits. Until my family has a 
place to call home again, and until hundreds of displaced Palestinian 
communities can go home.

Zionism has failed, not only because creating a Jewish homeland in Palestine at 
the expense of Palestinians was always unjust, but because ethnic cleansing and 
now genocide were always its logical outcomes, atrocities that will leave the 
Jewish state isolated and reviled. And despite Israel’s best efforts, Zionism 
has also failed because Palestinians continue to insist on remaining in their 
homeland.

What endures now is a grotesque system of apartheid, one people enjoying full 
rights and sovereignty while the natives are slaughtered, divided, and subdued. 
It may eventually collapse under the weight of its own brutality, but it will 
not go quietly — clinging to life with the kind of violence we already see 
unleashed in Gaza today.

*With recognition comes responsibilities*
-----------------------------------------

Recognizing Israel as an apartheid state is the necessary first step toward a 
future beyond ethnonationalism, rooted in equality, justice, and freedom for 
all. And it is not symbolic; apartheid is a crime against humanity under 
international law.

The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court defines it as such, and 
the 1973 United Nations International Convention on the Suppression and 
Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid obligates states to enact legislative, 
judicial, and administrative measures to prevent and punish it. Just last 
summer, the International Court of Justice issued a landmark advisory opinion ( 
https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/07/19/world-court-finds-israel-responsible-apartheid
 ) on Israeli apartheid, concluding that Israel’s occupation and annexation of 
Palestinian territories are in violation of international law and calling for 
reparations ( 
https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/09/19/world-court-findings-israeli-apartheid-wake-call
 ).

Official recognition of Israel’s system as apartheid, even by a handful of 
states, would place these duties on the table and make continued military and 
economic support to Israel legally and politically indefensible. It would also 
open the door for sanctions, the withdrawal of diplomatic representation, and 
travel bans on officials who uphold the system.

It would also shift public discourse, making the very word “apartheid” 
unavoidable in mainstream conversation about Israel, and putting pressure on 
corporations, under threat of boycott, public shaming, or shareholder revolt to 
reconsider their operations in or with Israel. The precedent exists: in the 
case of apartheid South Africa, grassroots activism combined with state-level 
condemnation gradually forced companies to divest, even if many resisted for 
years.

It would also change how Palestinians are seen internationally. Today, we are 
labeled “stateless” or citizens of a nominal “State of Palestine” with no real 
power to protect us, denied the diplomatic and economic tools most nations take 
for granted. Recognizing Israel as an apartheid regime reframes us as victims 
of a crime against humanity, entitled to protection, and forces a reckoning 
with the absurdity of a world where Israelis travel freely while we face 
endless barriers to study, work, or visit family abroad.

This will not be a magical fix. Israel will fight harder than South Africa to 
maintain apartheid, as it has become more entrenched, fueled by religious 
myths, and backed by international support. But recognition would at least put 
us on the right road, replacing decades of make-believe with a confrontation 
with reality. Those years could be spent dismantling the system instead of 
reinforcing illusions.

Kfar Sabt no longer exists. According to Palestine Remembered ( 
https://www.palestineremembered.com/Tiberias/Kafr-Sabt/index.html ) , only 
“piles of stone and stone terraces” remain as evidence that a village once 
stood there. The people are scattered; the land is unused, uninhabited. But 
Kfar Sabt lives in my grandmother’s mind, in the stories she tells, and in the 
stories I will keep telling. It lives in the unhealed wound of a people denied 
return. My homeland stretches from Ramallah to Kfar Sabt, from the Naqab to 
Lubya.

This is not a call for expulsion or war; we have endured enough of both. It is 
a call for justice, because only justice can bring peace and secure a different 
future for all peoples on this land — one where my grandmother’s stories are 
not just relics of a destroyed world, but seeds of one rebuilt.


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