http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2011\09\26\story_26-9-2011_pg3_6
Monday, September 26, 2011
VIEW: Towards Israel-Palestine unity —Yasser Latif Hamdani


 A prosperous Palestine allied with Israel is the only guarantee of Israel’s 
status as a Jewish state. It will also solve the irksome issue of settlements 
that have plagued all negotiations

How does the world solve an intractable problem such as the Israeli-Palestinian 
conflict? Sixty-three years later the world is still where Harry S Truman left 
it. President Obama, who showed so much potential in the beginning, now cuts a 
pathetic figure — helpless and overcome by events. Too much history and 
emphasis on competing national narratives have ensured that the solution as 
envisaged now remains elusive for some time to come.

It is important then to begin at the irreducible minimums claimed by the 
parties to the conflict. First of all, Israel is here to stay and this is a 
bitter pill that partisans of Palestine have to swallow. Sixty-three years of 
determined existence has proved that throwing out Israel is an impossible 
undertaking. Second, the Israelis are unlikely to give up the Jewish nature of 
their state, even if practically they are a secular country. Third, 
Palestinians deserve to have a state of their own. Fourth, this future 
Palestinian state existing in close proximity to Israel will remain embroiled 
in a never-ending conflict with Israel. The essential question is how to 
preserve the first three without allowing the fourth to hijack the Mideast 
peace process for all times to come.

People have spoken in the past of a one state solution instead of two but the 
one state solution hits at the heart of Jewish anxiety vis-à-vis the identity 
of their state. Yet it seems that not enough consideration has been given by 
the statesmen in either nation to a middle way, i.e. an Israeli-Palestinian 
confederation where a sovereign Israel and a sovereign Palestine come together 
for the sake of the defence of their common interests. Jerusalem can be the 
symbolic capital of this confederation with Tel Aviv and Ramallah taking their 
places as individual capitals of the two confederating sovereign states. Such 
an arrangement could even be called an Abrahamic Confederation, seeing as it 
would create political unity between the three Abrahamic religions.

Defence would have to be, in such a confederation, a mutual responsibility of 
Israel and Palestine, backed by both a joint defence pact and a no war pact. 
The Israeli Defence Forces could help train the Palestinians as defenders of 
their frontiers. In return, peaceful coexistence between Palestine and Israel 
will ensure economic opportunities for the Palestinian youth and to this end 
Israel would do well to open the doors of its universities and institutions of 
higher learning to Palestinians. An educated Palestinian middle class will 
welcome jobs and opportunities in Israel’s corporate sector. A prosperous 
Palestine allied with Israel is the only guarantee of Israel’s status as a 
Jewish state. It will also solve the irksome issue of settlements that have 
plagued all negotiations. Palestinians, especially Muslims, have a great 
example for such a political arrangement. The great Medina Pact negotiated and 
signed by the Holy Prophet (PBUH) provided for precisely this kind of unity. 
Article 25 of the said pact made Jews, Muslims and other residents of Medina 
one ummah (community) for the purposes of defence of Medina.

A mighty Abrahamic Confederation consisting of a sovereign Israel and a 
sovereign Palestine will not only bring peace to them but will be a pillar of 
stability and a welcome note of unity in an increasingly divided world. As the 
Arabs shake off centuries of slumber and take their place as prosperous 
democratic states of the world, Israel can play a unique role as a democracy 
that is both modern in form and ancient in spirit in guiding not just its 
Palestinian neighbours but also the greater Semitic world, i.e. the Arabs. Too 
many ties of religion, culture and history link Jews and Arabs together. It is 
time that this historical reality expressed itself not antagonistically but as 
a protagonist of the great story of the rise of the Middle East in the 21st 
century. If they succeed, they will set an extraordinary precedent for dispute 
resolution around the world.

Will an Israel and a Palestine dominated by hawks of Likud and Hamas ever allow 
such a solution? There is no doubt that the political will to bury the hatchet 
is entirely absent on both sides. Yet statesmanship demands that politicians on 
either side put their people before their real and perceived grievances and 
common good before egos for the betterment of their future generations.

History beckons them to ignore the bitterness that poisoned their narratives 
and write one together. Will they heed its call?

The writer is a lawyer based in Lahore. He is also a regular contributor to the 
Indian law website http://mylaw.net and blogs on 
http//globallegalforum.blogspot.com and http://pakteahouse.net. He can be 
reached at yasser.hamd...@gmail.com


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