-Caveat Lector-

MEMRI: Palestinian Thoughts on the Right of Return
Special Report - PA  March 30, 2001
By Yotam Feldner and Aluma Solnik*
Introduction

The Palestinian demand for the Right of Return for the refugees was one of
the reasons for the failure of the Camp David summit and for the
Palestinians' objection to the Clinton proposals. While the Camp David
negotiations and the Clinton proposals focused on the possibility that the
refugees would have the right to return to the future Palestinian state,
the
Palestinians demanded recognition of their Right of Return "to their
homes,"
as stated in UN General Assembly (UNGA) Resolution 194.

"We made it clear to the Israelis," said Abu Mazen following the Camp David
talks, "that the Right of Return means a return to Israel and not to the
Palestinian state... because it is from there that [the Palestinians] were
driven out and it is there that their property is found..."[1]

A similar position was also expressed in the letter of reservations
delivered by the PA to President Clinton in response to his proposals:
"Resolution 194, which is the basis for a just settlement of the Refugee
Problem, determines that the return of the Palestinian refugees 'to their
homes' and not 'to their homeland' or 'to historical Palestine.' The
essence
of the Right of Return is freedom of choice: The Palestinians must be given
the right to choose where they live, and that includes returning to the
homes out of which they were driven."[2]

Deviating Statements

The position that the Palestinian refugees must have the right to choose to
return to Israeli territory, is the official position of the PLO and the PA
and is voiced by Palestinian officials on a daily basis. Statements by
Palestinian officials that deviate from this consensus are rare. One such
example was PA Chairman Yasser Arafat's statement to the Lebanese daily
Al-Nahar in September 1999: "We refuse to talk about the resettlement of
the
refugees [where they are currently located] because this is a crime. When
the Palestinian State is established, it will have the right to absorb its
citizens. It is the Palestinians' right to return to their homeland. Only
in
Lebanon do we hear talk of resettlement. Is Lebanon the only country with
Palestinian refugees?"[3] PA Minister of Planning and International
Cooperation, Nabil Sha'ath declared three months later: "We will not agree
to a solution that does not return of refugees to their homes or, at least,
to the West Bank and to Gaza."[4]

These statements have been interpreted as an indication that the
Palestinians may be flexible on the issue of return. However, although the
proposals raised at Camp David and in Clinton's ideas were very similar to
these statements - they were totally rejected by the Palestinian
leadership.
The explanation for this contradiction may be found in the context in which
both Sha'ath's and Arafat's statements were made. The statements were made
after a wave of Lebanese protests following rumors that the refugees might
be resettled in Lebanon. It seems that both Sha'ath and Arafat directed
their statements at Lebanese, rather than Israeli fears. They were
attempting to assure the Lebanese leadership that they need not fear that
the refugees will be resettled in Lebanon, because absorbing them in the
future Palestinian State will always remain an option.

The Palestinian View of Israeli Fears

Palestinian officials are aware of the Israeli claim that the return of the
refugees into Israeli territory implies the destruction of the State of
Israel in its current Zionist character. "The demand for the return of the
Palestinian refugees to their homes and property, in accordance with
Resolution 194," explained As'ad Abd-Al Rahman, the PA Minister of Refugee
Affairs, "is tantamount to the destruction of Israel in the Israeli
political culture."[5] "The return of more than 5 million refugees to their
homes jeopardizes the Israelis and therefore they utterly object to it."[6]

There are those among the Palestinian leadership who believe that the
demographic change in Israel following the return is Israel's problem, and
not the Palestinians.' Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) member, Hanan
Ashrawi, for example, stated that: "The fact that the Zionist project
requires a Jewish majority does not justify a concession of the legitimate
right [of the refugees] to return and to receive compensations."[7]

On the other hand, there are those Palestinian officials who believe that
the Palestinian side must address Israeli fears, if only because the
international community, and first and foremost the US, take these fears
seriously. "We must take into consideration the Israeli fears and
interests," lead Palestinian negotiator Saeb Areqat, recently, told CNN.[8]

There are two main Palestinian approaches regarding the implementation of
the Right of Return. The first one is to present various models for the
return of the refugees that, they claim, make it feasible. The second is to
establish a distinction between the demand for Israeli recognition of the
Palestinian Right of Return, which they present in absolute terms, and the
implementation, which they discuss in vague terms.

Palestinian Models for the Return of the Refugees

Palestinian officials do not commit to any idea that deviates in any way
from the official Palestinian line. Abu Mazen fought for years to clear his
name, after it was reported that he had agreed to the return of the
refugees
to the Palestinian State in the "Beilin-Abu Mazen understandings." Abu
Mazen
now presents the hard line position according to which the refugees must
return to their homes, literally. Following the Camp David summit he said,
"We were not prepared to limit the number of refugees who would be allowed
to return, even if they had proposed a number of three million
refugees".[9]

Member of the Palestinian Cabinet, Ziyad Abu Ziyad, also fumbled once when
he said to the Voice of Israel Radio that, "The Palestinians do not insist
on the Right of Return and are looking for a compromise solution, nor do
they ask Israel to commit suicide."[10] The following day, Abu Ziyad
published a clarification in the Palestinian press saying that his
"statement was not aired in its entirety" and that his intention was to say
that "we do not ask of Israel to commit suicide and to transform into a
state with an Arab majority, however... a comprehensive final status peace
agreement cannot be reached without solving the refugee problem in
accordance with Resolution 194," and "The Right of Return is an established
Palestinian right that cannot be denied."[11]

Most of the 'creative' Palestinian ideas relate only to the implementation
of the return and are raised by intellectuals, publicists and independent
researchers, and are occasionally adopted by official Palestinian circles.

Model A: "Refugees' Return to Israel is Practical"

Palestinian researchers claim that the return of the refugees to Israel can
be implemented without causing a negative demographic effect to the Jewish
population. A study conducted by the PLO's Refugee Department states,
"contrary to the false Israeli claims, the return of the refugees will not
lead to the uprooting of many Jewish immigrants from their current homes."
The study plans the refugees' return to regions which are populated
primarily by Arabs and which were in Arab ownership before 1948. Most of
this land has remained empty. On the other hand, the Jewish population in
Israel is concentrated in territories that were under Jewish control even
before 1948.

The study claims that 78% of the Jewish population lives on 14%, at most,
of
Israel's territory. The remaining land, 86% of Israel's territory, belongs
for the most part to the Palestinian refugees. Apart from a few population
centers "inhabited by religious Jews" and 154,000 Kibbutzim and Moshavim,
there are no Jews at all on this land. One of the factors that would
facilitate the refugees return, the study states, is the "voluntary
departure" of part of those 154,000 "rural Jews."[12]

The force behind this theory is Dr. Salman Abu Sitta, a researcher and
author of the book The Palestinian Right of Return -- Sacred, Legal and
Practical. Abu Sitta, who was invited by the PLO's Refugee Department to
present his ideas on the eve pf the Camp David Summit, states in his study:
"All of the refugees in Lebanon should return to the Galilee and all of the
refugees in Gaza should return to Beer Sheva. It is simple. The number of
refugees in Lebanon is estimated at 399,000, and those in Gaza, at 700,000.
If we return them, the Jewish areas will not be affected at all.
Theoretically, the Jews will not even feel their presence. If all of the
Lebanese and Gaza refugees return, their number will be equal to that of
the
Russian Jews who immigrated to Israel since 1989... The claim that this is
impossible or even difficult is unacceptable."[13]

Following the failure of Camp David, Dr. Abu Sitta once again presented his
theory in an article published in the London based Al-Hayat and in the
Palestinian daily Al-Ayyam. "The Israelis say," he wrote, "that the
villages
were destroyed, the borders were lost, and that it will be difficult to
return the property. But this is not at all true. There are enough maps and
documents to return each and every dunam to its owner..."

"They say that the land is full of Jewish immigrants and that there is no
room for the refugees. This is a blatant lie. 78% of the Jews live on 14%
of
Israel's territory... Three percent live on Kibbutzim and they are using
the
refugees' land, which comes to 18 million dunam. The failure of the
kibbutzim has been proven. They have gone into debt and many of their
members have migrated to the cities. The theory of the 'agricultural Jew
returning to his land' has fallen apart. This proves the traditional
characteristic of the Jew -- who lives in cities, in Jewish populated
neighborhoods, and whose occupation is with money and trade..."

Abu Sitta rejects the Israeli claims that the return of the refugees will
change the character of Israel. Legally, he claims, international law and
UN
resolutions do not accept Israel's composition. In the social sense, Israel
is not a homogeneous society anyway. In terms of religion, the Jews will
have no problem continuing to observe their religious rituals after the
return of the refugees. Demographically, the thought that the Jews will
always be the majority in Israel is an illusion anyway. According to Abu
Sitta's calculations, this demographic situation will change in the
2040s.[14]

Although to the Israelis Abu Sitta may sound odd, he enjoys great support,
and his articles are published in the leading newspapers in the Arab world.
Furthermore, leading intellectuals have praised him. He has been called an
"extraordinary engineer and scholar" by Professor Edward Said, who praised
Abu Sitta's "loyal expertise and authentic commitment."[15] Professor Ghada
Karmi from London University, who writes extensively about the Palestinian
refugees, suggested that "all those who doubt that the Right of Return is
practically feasible", should read Abu Sitta's studies.[16]

PLO and PA officials who are in charge of the refugee problem, have adopted
Abu Sitta's theory. They often cite it to refute Israel's claim that the
return of the refugees is impossible. This claim is "null and void. It is
based on false arguments and on lies whose sole purpose is to evade the
implementation of Resolution 194," said Director General of the PLO Refugee
Department, Walid Al-'Awadh.[17] Dr. As'ad Abd Al-Rahman, PA Minister of
Refugee Affairs, uses every opportunity to cite Abu Sitta's theory. "Eighty
percent of the residents of Israel live in the Tel Aviv- Jerusalem-Haifa
triangle," he explained on one occasion, "aside from this triangle, the
territory is empty."[18]

Abu Sitta's theory does not ease the Israeli fears of the return of the
refugees. Rather, it strengthens them. His interpretation of "demographics"
is limited and applies to specific, arbitrarily defined areas, rather than
to the overall framework of the state.

Model B: Bi-National or Secular Democratic state

Another model presented by the Palestinians as a solution that makes the
implementation of the Right of Return possible is the unification of
Israel,
the West Bank and the Gaza Strip to form either one democratic and secular
state or a bi-national state "according to the Benelux model."[19]

The idea of a secular democratic state was raised by the PLO in 1970 and
survived a few years until the emergence of the 12th session of the
Palestinian National Council. in June 1974. In recent years, prominent
intellectuals, such as Edward Said, who have grown tired of Arafat's
policies, have resurrected this idea. This approach also has significant
support among the Arab Israeli leadership, the most prominent of whom is MK
'Azmi Bishara, who calls for the return of the refugees and the
establishment of a "state of all of its citizens."

Columnist 'Ata Al-Qimari, has been promoting the idea of a bi-national or
secular democratic state in his articles in Al-Quds for the past several
years: "The refugee problem does not have a solution in the absolute sense
of the word, as long as the idea of two [neighboring] states exists. The
justice of one side collides with the justice of the other side, and the
two
contradict one another. All the solutions besides that of a bi-national
state that will absorb all of the Palestinian refugees, as well as the
Jewish refugees will soon blow up in our face."[20]

"Any Israeli-Palestinian agreement will be shattered on the rock of the
Right of Return" he recently wrote in another article: "Israel is not ready
to agree to a return of the refugees that will change its Jewish character,
while the Palestinians... cannot trade this political [right] for a
humanitarian [solution]... Israel, along with the US, now unequivocally
state that we the Palestinians must understand that in order to win
self-determination in an independent state... 'we must concede' our right
to
our land, Palestine..."

"In fact, this approach is acceptable both to the Western world and to the
Arab world, and therefore we can anticipate great pressures from now on, to
trade the Return for the Haram [The Temple Mount]. They will tell us: you
have fought for a state and now, in the name of the Right of Return, you
want a second state and, who knows, maybe you will yet demand a third, one
[Jordan] in the name of its [Palestinian] majority?..."

"Any unilateral declaration of [an independent Palestinian] state, or even
a
declaration of a state in the framework of an agreement, means giving-up
the
Right of Return. The world will not support any future demand that [spills
over into] the neighboring state. They will say to us: it is inconceivable
that after the two peoples had their self determination in two [separate]
independent states, that you demand to demographically conquer the
neighboring state..."

"At this historic moment, both peoples must examine other solutions...
because Palestine in any case cannot [truly] be partitioned. If there is a
partition, everybody will feel humiliated. On the other hand, if there is
one state, confederated or federated, no one will feel that a rib has been
amputated from his national body. The refugee will not feel that he is
being
forced to settle for Ramallah instead of Lod, but rather that he can
voluntarily choose between the two, based on practical residential and
employment considerations..."

"There is no other solution: not separation, not detachment, not a dwarfed
and crumbled independent state, and no Right of Return to Israel after the
establishment of a Palestinian state in order to continue the conflict in
other means. The only solution is one federal state on a bi-national and
democratic basis with equal rights..."

"We Palestinians cannot trade the Right of Return for an independent
Palestinian state, while they [the Israelis] cannot agree to the Right of
Return after they have given up their [territorial] reserves in the region
in order to allow us to establish our state in the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip. We all want peace. We want it for the sake of Return, stability and
for our national self-determination; and they want it for security and a
promising future. Is there a solution that combines all of these desires
under one roof and gives everyone what he wants, without cutting it off
from
the other side, other than the solution of two cooperating states that are
affiliated with each other in one open federation?!"

"If there is something that is worth negotiating for, it is [this solution]
a true peace plan that is more realistic than all the current solutions of
partition, amputation, and expulsion."[21]

Columnist Majed Kayali, on the other hand, does not object to the
establishment of an independent Palestinian state as long as it is an
interim stage on the way to a bi-national state: "Compensations will not
solve the problem of the refugees if they do not come with a moral
apology... as well as a mechanism that will assure the return of the
refugees to their land and property, in addition to the establishment of an
independent Palestinian state. Only these solutions rise to the level of a
just moral and political level and open a window to a historic compromise
between the two sides that will allow them to share a joint future in the
framework of a bi-national state or in the framework of a secular
democratic
state."[22]

Dr. Abdallah Al-Sa'afin, a Palestinian writer living in London, offered a
variation on the theme of the bi-national state. According to him, the
joint
state should be shared by the Jews already living in Israel, and the entire
Palestinian people: "The optimal solution, in our opinion, is Arab-Jewish
co-existence between the Jews currently in Israel and the Palestinians, in
the framework of one democratic state. In other words, a state that is not
only for the Jews; a secular rather than a religious state, in which all of
its citizens, regardless of their religion, live in equality. It will have
a
written constitution that will be drafted by a representative authority
elected by all of the Palestinians and all of the Jews currently living in
Israel."

"One of the important conditions for the establishment of this state is
that
Israel commits itself to absorbing all of the Palestinian refugees as equal
citizens, and that it annuls the Israeli Law of Return of 1948. It will
have
to regard citizenship not as a religious affiliation but as a legal
affiliation, that is, an affiliation of residence and life in the
Palestinian-Israeli state that stretches from the river to the sea."[23]

The PLO consistently claims that in its agreement to a solution of two
states for two peoples, it made a "historic compromise." The PLO's
continued
demand for the return the refugees into Israel after the establishment of
the Palestinian state is evidence that it is not ready for such an
"historic
compromise." The idea of a secular democratic or bi-national state
completely contradicts the compromise presumably manifested in the
Palestinian consent to a Jewish state within the 1967 borders, and totally
undermines the legitimacy of Zionist self- determination within any
borders.
Furthermore, the demographic status of the Jews within the borders of such
a
state would be even worse than within the official solution proposed by the
PLO for the "return of the refugees to their homes" because in addition to
the current population of Israel and the returning refugees, the proposed
state would also include, according to this model, all of the Palestinians
currently living in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Thus, this idea
presents no solution to the existential fears of Zionist Israel.

Model C: Practical But Not Political Return

A third model, which is not very popular in the Palestinian media, is
raised
primarily by the PA Undersecretary for Planning and International
Cooperation, 'Adli Sadeq. According to him, the refugees can return without
being given Israeli citizenship: "...The Hebrew state need not fear
Palestinian demographic superiority, because the returning Palestinians are
not in any case interested in being its citizens, or being represented in
its parliament. Alternative formulas can be found for their political and
legal existence."[24]

The idea that demographic balance is only a matter of equal parliamentary
representation is flawed. Case in point is the situation of the Palestinian
refugees in Lebanon, who, although they have no political rights
whatsoever,
are considered by the Lebanese state to be a threat. A Zionist state whose
sovereign territory includes a Palestinian majority, cannot be expected to
survive, even if the Palestinian residents are given citizenship in the
neighboring Palestinian state.

Return in Stages

Another model proposed by Palestinian intellectuals includes temporal
flexibility on the issue of return. Columnist Hassan Al-Batal suggested,
"if
we want to be practical and realistic... a generation or more will pass
between the agreement on the principle of the Right of Return, and the
realization of the principle."[25] Nevertheless, Al-Batal states that the
return remains the solution to the Refugee Problem: "In the first stage,
the
Right of Return must be recognized, and in the second stage, it must be
slowly implemented."[26]

Phase One: Return of the refugees in camps to Israel

One of the proposals for a slow implementation was that the first stage in
the process of returning the refugees to their homes would be moving the
refugee camps into Israeli territory. Dr. Mazen Abu-Bakr, a researcher of
the Refugee Problem, writes: "The solution to the deeply rooted Refugee
Problem lies in the implementation of Resolution 194, but there is no
alternative other than to act in stages: even a voyage of a thousand miles
begins with one step. The first stage must be to move the refugee camps
into
the Green Line. We must start with the refugee camps in Lebanon, without
conceding the return of all refugees. In my opinion, as a refugee, realism
does not lie in conceding the Right of Return, but in setting priorities.
First priority must be given to solving the problem of the refugee camps,
by
shifting the refugees into the Green Line. Camps will be built there, until
they can return to their cities and villages [in Israel]."[27]

Columnist Muhammad Shaker Abdallah took this idea a step further and
proposed building permanent settlements for the refugees within the Green
Line that will offset the settlement-blocs that Israel wants to leave in
Palestinian territory: "The idea is to build a handful of Palestinian
settlements inside Israel proper -- adjacent to the would-be Palestinian
state. Each settlement would be capable of housing tens of thousands of
Palestinian refugees. These settlements will be located on mountains,
beaches and valleys. There will have to be a minimal amount of these
settlement blocs equal to the amount of Jewish settlement blocs in the
Palestinian territories. Immediately after the construction of these
settlements, they would be placed under Palestinian jurisdiction and serve
as a gigantic housing project for the returning refugees who insist on
exercising their right of return to their homeland... One can easily
contemplate such Palestinian settlement bloc in the Galilee mountains on
the
west side of the Green Line (sic.), another near the hills of the West
Bank,
and a third north of the Gaza Strip..."[28]

Phase One: Return of the Lebanese Refugees

The Palestinian leadership accepts the idea that the implementation of the
Right of Return "will be in stages over a period of years," according to PA
Minister of Refugee Affairs, As'ad Abd Al-Rahman, who added: "We understand
that it is difficult to return five million Palestinian refugees to their
homes in a single day..."[29]

In effect, the PA agreed that the refugees from Lebanon will get priority
under any solution. In a speech made in Ramallah after his return from Camp
David, Arafat said, "The return of refugees is sacred, and its sanctity is
no less, in our hearts, than that of the holy places. We desire, first of
all, the return of our brethren in Lebanon, because of their suffering and
out of loyalty to the Lebanese people for standing by us through thick and
thin and for fighting together with us in wars and during the siege on
Beirut..."[30]

However, the Palestinian prerequisite for the implementation of the return
in stages is that the priority given to the refugees from Lebanon will not
diminish the rights of the rest of the refugees. "The Palestinian
delegation
to the [Camp David] negotiations required a specific mechanism regarding
the
priority that will be given to the return of the refugees from Lebanon,"
said PA Minister of Development and International Cooperation, Nabil
Sha'ath. However, he added, "priority in the Return is an entirely
different
issue from the [principle of] Right of Return for all of the refugees."[31]
To this, Head of the Refugee Committee in the Palestinian Legislative
Council, Jamal Shati added, "the return of the Lebanese refugees in the
framework of an agreement through a mechanism, and as a result of
priorities, is acceptable to us. On the other hand, if the return of the
Lebanese refugees is detached from a comprehensive solution to the issue,
the PA will absolutely reject it."[32]

Phase One: Return to the Palestinian State

This model, which is similar to the American proposals, is not very popular
among Palestinians. It is promoted by veteran writer, Tawfik Abu-Bakr, who
writes: "...So far, we have no plan which will muster great international
support or win the understanding of the important side: The Americans.
There
is no escape from emphasizing the 'international legitimacy' including the
Right of Return, but this is not sufficient for negotiations in the
international arena. Although justice is on our side, historically
speaking,
we are also the weak side and are, therefore, in need of broader
international sympathy than they [the Israelis] are. Such sympathy is
unattainable unless we present convincing ideas, at least for the long
run..."

"There is no magic solution to this problem... Unless there is a decisive
Arab military victory that forces the Israelis to declare the bankruptcy of
the Zionist project, to turn out the lights at Ben Gurion Airport, and to
cross the Mediterranean Sea back to where they or their parents came
from...
This magic solution no longer exists... and therefore, a long-term solution
is the only one possible..."

"The Israeli side cannot object to the return of hundreds of thousands of
refugees to the Palestinian state after Israel recognizes this independent
state itself. Our future state must pass a Law of Return that will give
every Palestinian in the world this right. There is enough territory in the
West Bank for the construction of large cities... I heard objections from
members of the [PLO] Central Committee, to such a law, because it closes
the
window to a return to the 1948 territories. In my opinion, however, this
law
should be passed after the nature of settlement of the Refugee Problem
becomes clear, including the scope of the return [allowed by Israel] 'to
the
original residences.' The return to Nablus does not close the door on the
return to Nazareth. On the contrary, the path will be shorter for those who
have returned to Palestine, or for their sons..."[33]

Abu Bakr presents a model very similar to the American proposals and closer
than any other Palestinian idea to the Israeli redline. Although he treats
his proposal as a "stage" toward a possible future return to Israeli
territory, he does not require any mention of this in the agreement.

Separating the "Right of Return" From its Implementation

Another tactic Palestinian officials use is emphasizing their demand for
Israeli recognition of the Right of Return while remaining vague about the
parameters of the implementation. Thus, for example, PA Minister of Refugee
Affairs, As'ad Abd Al-Rahman, stated, "The most important thing is the
recognition of the refugees' Right of Return; afterwards we will discuss
the
mechanism of implementation."[34] On another occasion he said, "[Israel
should] recognize the Right of Return and then we will reach an agreement
about the mechanism and the formulas that allow for the return while
preventing the 'destruction' of Israel."[35]

The Palestinians emphasize that the Right of Return is a personal right of
each and every refugee, and not a collective right. They do not explain how
it will be possible to put collective limitations on a right that is
subject
to the personal choice of the refugees.

It seems that the purpose of separating the Right of Return and its
implementation, is to weaken Israeli arguments about the expected dangers
to
the State of Israel from the implementation of the return. However, many
Palestinians admit that recognition of the right inevitably entails its
implementation. PLC member Hanan Ashrawi, for example, stated that Israel's
recognition of its legal, moral and historical responsibility, "will be a
step towards the implementation of Resolution 194."[36] Fatah Central
Committee member and Arafat's advisor, Hani Al-Hassan stated, "The PA's
position is clear: an apology must be obtained from Israel, and then the
recognition of the Right of Return, [and then] it can be implemented in
stages."[37]

Ingrid Jaradat Asner, Director of the "Al-Badil" Center which documents the
refugees' property in Israel, agrees that "Israel's recognition of the
Right
of Return, in principle, is a prerequisite for the opening of negotiations
about the practical solution to the Refugee Problem based on Resolution
194." She states that the Palestinians must purposely keep Israel in the
dark about the implementation of the Right of Return, until Israel in
principle gives in: "Members of the negotiating team, academics, and
Palestinian institutions must refrain from presenting scenarios or
mechanisms for a solution before Israel accepts the principle of the
Return."[38]

Recognition of the Right of Return and the Compensation Issue

The Palestinian demand for an Israeli apology and recognition of the
principle of the Right of Return and its responsibility for a solution to
the refugee problem have significance beyond the issue of the actual
return.
The Palestinians demand two kinds of financial compensation: compensation
for the loss of property to refugees who choose not to return, in
accordance
with Resolution 194 and compensation for the emotional, material and
spiritual suffering caused to the Palestinians since 1948. The Palestinians
demand that the second type of compensation be rewarded also to those who
choose to return.

The Palestinians relate to the 1948 War in terms that parallel the
Holocaust
of European Jewry. Palestinian intellectual, Edward Said, established the
phrase, "the victims of the victims", which has become rooted in the
Palestinian rhetoric. The Palestinian refugees "suffer at the hands of the
Jews -- yesterday's victims are [or have become] today's executioners,"[39]
stated PA Minister of Refugee Affairs, As'ad Abd Al-Rahman: "If a European
Jew demands compensation from the European governments, then the
Palestinian
is more than deserving of compensation for his suffering at the hands of
the
Jew."[40] On another occasion he said, "[We demand] return and compensation
just as was the case with the Jews of the world...We deserve compensation
for our suffering over the years, just as the Jews received compensation
from European and other countries. They were persecuted and now they are
persecuting us. Those who were persecuted yesterday have become today's
persecutors."[41] Furthermore, in a symposium held in Gaza, Dr. Ali 'Odeh
called on the PA to learn "from the Jews who milked Germany with their Nazi
propaganda, causing the Germans guilt feelings until today."[42]

Will the Refugees Return?

Many Palestinians on both sides of the Green Line are trying to quiet
Israeli fears by claiming that after Israel recognizes the refugees' Right
of Return, they will choose not to return. MK 'Issam Mahoul, Ha'aretz
reported, said, "The refugees do not really intend to return to Israel.
They
just need the right." However, when it was suggested in response that
simultaneous to an Israeli recognition of the Right of Return, the
Palestinians would declare that they give up its implementation -- he
rejected the proposal. First Israel must recognize the Right of Return, "
he
said, "and then the implementation will be discussed."[43]

There is no reliable data about the number of refugees who are interested
in
returning to Israeli territory, and there are those among the Palestinians
who estimate that their number is small. Dr. 'Adel Yahya, author of the
book, The Palestinian Refugees 1948-1998 -- An Oral History, who admits
that
he personally has no intention to return to Israel because "with all of my
talents, I will not be able to succeed in Haifa." He further states, "To
imagine hundreds of thousands knocking on Israeli doors -- this is an
unrealistic vision. But we must begin with the principle of the right of
return, and only then to move on to compensation and other feasible
solutions, which are much easier than they seem. [On the other hand,] if
they say from the start: we will begin with resettlement and compensation,
the refugees will reject this approach."[44]

Dr. Salman Abu Sitta, who came up with the theory of "The Palestinian Right
of Return -- Sacred, Legal and Practical" is upset with those who doubt the
refugees' desire to return: "There are those who say that 'many' of the
refugees do not want to return even if they are given the opportunity. I
don't know who conducted the statistics regarding those 'many' and with
what
sort of integrity. Every poll taken so far has proven that the vast
majority
wants to return to the very homes out of which their families were driven.
Among these are included the refugees who live in Israel and in the
territories of the PA itself -- despite the fact that they already live in
Palestine -- and this is because returning means to their very homes
..."[45]

Dr. Abu Sitta is interested only in the practical implications of the
return. "We do not need Israel to apologize in words about its crimes
throughout half a century," he said, "The memory of these crimes is branded
on the chest of every Palestinian. True Israeli repentance will come only
with the return of the right to its owners and the repairing of the sin,
and
not with cheap propaganda."[46]

However, some Palestinians claim that once Israel recognizes the principle
of the Right of Return, it has no reason to worry. A PLO official, who
identified himself as A.F., told Ha'aretz: "Abu Sitta is dreaming, because
what we are talking about is a mental return, and not a practical one. The
Israelis know us, the Palestinians, but they do not understand us. Had they
understood us, it would be easy to draft a text that recognizes the Right
of
Return and clears the way to relations of true peace that are not based on
the current Israeli advantage in the balance of power. Israel would open
its
gates for a period of a few months so that the refugees could come and
visit. The refugees would come and see the Israeli cities built on their
villages, and they would see that other people live there. They would
embrace their relatives in the Galilee villages, cry over the cactuses that
remained as memorials to their villages; but they would begin to understand
that you cannot go back in time; that even if they could live in Jaffa,
what
would they do without knowing Hebrew? And they don't even want to learn
Hebrew, nor do they want to live with the Jews. And maybe it's better to
live in the State of Palestine, with an open border, so they could go to
the
beach sometimes. No more than half a million refugees would want to stay in
Israel, most of whom are elderly who want to die here and who have
immediate
family in Israel.."[47]

PA Minister of Refugee Affairs, As'ad Abd Al-Rahman¸ believes that many of
the refugees may not want to return. The return of the refugees itself is a
compromise solution, he writes in his article, because before the Arabs
chose to accept Resolution 194, they called for the destruction of Israel.
Now they recognize Israel's existence and settle for the return of
refugees.
In his view, if Israel recognizes the Right of Return, there will be an
opportunity for an additional compromise, because many of the refugees may
choose not to live within the Green Line.[48]

Conclusion

Contrary to the idea that has spread in Israel over the past years, the
Palestinian demand for the implementation of the Right of Return is a real
demand and not one expressed merely for domestic consumption or a
negotiation tactic. Statements by Palestinian officials that convey a
willingness to make a significant compromise on the issue of the refugees
are very rare. It is a mistake to rely on such statements in consolidating
a
future assessment and to ignore the years of Palestinian emphasis on the
national and individual ethos of refugees' return.

The American proposal, which is also the basis for the model proposed by
writer, Tawfiq Abu Bakr, defining the return as return to the future
Palestinian state -- is not supported by the Palestinian public or by its
leadership. All of the other models surveyed in this analysis imply the end
of Israel's existence as a Zionist state with a Jewish majority.

The distinction made by Palestinian officials between the Right of Return
and its implementation is artificial. The principle of the right and its
implementation are tied together, primarily because the "Right of Return"
is
perceived as an individual right.

The Oslo Agreement's mutual recognition as a basis for a solution to the
conflict was inscribed in the Israeli consciousness in a way that allows
for
the continuation of the existence of Israel as a Zionist state with a
Jewish
majority. In the Palestinian consciousness, however, Israel's Jewish
majority and its Zionist character are not sacred, and certainly not more
important than the Right of Return.

Yotam Feldner is MEMRI's Director of Media Analysis. Aluma Solnik is a
Research Associate with MEMRI.
----------------------------------------------------------
[1] Al-Hayat (London-Beirut), November 23-24, 2000.
[2] Al-Ayyam (PA), January 2, 2001.
[3] Al-Quds (PA), September 11, 1999.
[4] Al-Hayat Al-Jadida (PA), December 6, 1999.
[5] Al-Dustur (Jordan) , August 16, 1999.
[6] Filistin Al-Youm (PA). July 1, 1998. Abd Al-Rahman resigned from his
position after not being included in the Palestinian delegation to the Camp
David Summit. His resignation was finally accepted by Arafat in January
2001.
[7] Shaml, Appendix to Al-Ayyam (PA), December 4, 2000.
[8] Al-Hayat (London-Beirut), January 15, 2001.
[9] Al-Ayyam (PA), July 30, 2000.
[10] Al-Quds (PA), July 3, 1999.
[11] Al-Quds (PA), July 4, 1999.
[12] Al-Risala (PA) August 26, 1999.
[13] Akhbar Al-Naqab (Israel), December 6, 1998.
[14] Al-Hayat (London-Beirut), August 4, 2000; Al-Ayyam (PA), August 7,
2000.
[15] Al-Ahram Weekly (Egypt), February 10, 2000.
[16] Al-Quds (PA), May 13, 2000.
[17] Al-Hayat Al Jadida (PA), January 16, 2001.
[18] Al-Ayyam (PA) June 1, 1998. Also, Deputy Head of the PLO's Refugee
Department, Daoud Barakat: "I believe that the Palestinians must act
intensively among the Israeli public in order to raise the issue of the
refugees, and to discourage the approach that says that implementing
Resolution 194 is unrealistic. [We must claim] that the State of Israel
managed, in a short period of time, to absorb a million and a half Russian
immigrants from former USSR." Kul Al-Arab (Israel), December 10, 1999.
[19] As stated by PA Minister of Refugee Affairs, Asa'd Abd Al-Rahman.
Al-Ayyam (PA), June 1, 1998. Also, The Jerusalem Times (PA), June 12, 1998;
also Filistin Al-Youm (PA), July 1, 1998.
[20] Al-Quds (PA), November 27, 1999.
[21] Al-Quds (PA), January 12, 2001.
[22] Al-Hayat Al-Jadida (London-Beirut), July 8, 2000.
[23] Al-Quds Al-Arabi (London), July 1, 2000.
[24] Al-Hayat Al-Jadida (PA), January 12, 2001.
[25] Al-Ayyam, July 24, 1999.
[26] Al-Ayyam (PA), September 16, 1999.
[27] Al-Hayat Al-Jadida (PA), June 13, 2000.
[28] The Jerusalem Times (PA), July 21, 2000.
[29] Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, August 1, 1999.
[30] Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, July 28, 2000.
[31] Appendix to Al-Ayyam (PA), December 4, 2000.
[32] Al-Hayat Al-Jadida (PA), January 16, 2000.
[33] Al-Ayyam (PA), September 26, 2000.
[34] Al-Hayat Al-Jadida (PA), August 1, 1999.
[35] Al-Quds (PA), May 18, 2000.
[36] Shamel, an Appendix of Al-Ayyam (PA), December 4, 2000.
[37] Al-Quds (PA), January 17, 2000.
[38] Al-Hayat Al-Jadida (PA), June 17, 2000.
[39] Al-Bayader Al-Siyassi (PA) January 2, 1999.
[40] Filistin Al-Youm, (PA) July 1, 1998.
[41] Al-'Awda (PA), March 26, 1999.
[42] Al-Hayat Al Jadida, (PA) December 30, 1999.
[43] Dan Margalit, Ha'aretz (Israel), March 20, 2000.
[44] Ha'aretz (Israel), November 16, 1999.
[45] Al-Hayat (London-Beirut), August 4, 2000; Al-Ayyam (PA), August 7,
2000.
[46] Al-Hayat (London-Beirut), August 4, 2000; Al-Ayyam (PA), August 7,
2000.
[47] Amira Hass, Ha'aretz (Israel), July 25, 2000.
[48] Al-Ahram (Egypt), January 16, 2000.

The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI)
P.O. Box 27837, Washington, DC 20038-7837
Phone: (202) 955-9070
Fax: (202) 955-9077
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.memri.org

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