End Israel's Boycott of PalestineOnce again there was another Op-ed calling for an end to the Arab boycott of Israel in a major America newspaper, this time the New York Times. The author is Ed Husain, a senior fellow for Middle Eastern Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, an organization that spends a lot of time defending Israel at the expense of accuracy. Husain is not Arab, he is a Bengali Muslim. That explains a lot. Husain detailed how he traveled to Jerusalem and, unhassled, he wondered why the Arabs haven't done enough to improve the city. Maybe senior fellows at the Council on Foreign Relations don't follow the news, like reports that Jerusalem is a practically closed city to most Muslims, Arabs and particularly Palestinians. Or maybe he missed the stories about the new Israeli bus service that separates Jews from non-Jews (specifically Palestinian non-Jews). Israel has taken the racism that forced blacks like Rosa Parks in Montgomery, Alabama in 1955 to share buses with whites by only riding in the back of the bus. Under the new Israeli policy, Palestinians can't ride on the same bus because Jewish settlers have concerns and view all Palestinians as terrorists. So they have to ride by themselves in separate buses or in the back of the buss. In any language or society, that's called racism. Apparently the Council on Foreign relations, and Ed Husain, doesn't have a problem with separate but equal policies. It has not been easy for Arabs or Palestinians to do anything in Jerusalem, since Israel militarily occupied the western part in 1948 and then the eastern part in 1967. Israel routinely prevents non-Jews from doing any construction in Jerusalem. Arabs can't develop their land. I know because I own 8.5 acres of land just south of Jerusalem adjacent to Gilo, the illegal Jewish-only settlement that Israel claims is a city, where Arabs and Muslims have been chased out by Jewish neighbors. Maybe Husain missed the wall. Maybe he was told to look for a fence. But the concrete wall that separates Palestinians from Jerusalem and most of the deep water wells in the West Bank and in Israel reminds people of the World War II concentration camps with their turrets and towers where armed soldiers watch with guns pointing downward at the civilians who are forced to pass through military checkpoints like those that once separated Berlin. Maybe the Council of Foreign Relations hasn't noticed that many Arab countries deal directly with Israel and that two in particular, Egypt and Jordan, have peace treaties with the Zionist nation. The reality that the non-Arab Husain doesn't see, or maybe doesn't want to see, is that Israel doesn't recognize Palestine. But it sure looks nice on a column to have an author with an "Arab" name urging the Arabs to stop boycotting Israel.
A day doesn't pass that someone doesn't come up to me and say, "Why are you complaining about not enough Arabs in the American media? You have Fareed Zakaria." No Fareed is NOT an Arab, I respond, exasperated. If Husain and Zakaria were Arab, maybe they would lead the chorus demanding that Israel end the anti-Arab hatred that overwhelms Israeli textbooks, not just in the settlement schools but in mainstream Israeli schools where history is distorted and Palestinian claims to rights in Israel are rejected as unfounded. Palestinians, many Israeli textbooks assert in Hebrew, "never existed as a nation" and migrated to the "land of Israel" from other Arab countries. Not being Arab, Husain might simply accept those claims and not recognize the inherent racism or anti-Arab hatred these Israeli school teachings embrace. I would bet that if Ed Husain were to try to enter Israel and tell the heavily armed border guards and security personnel who occupy Ben Gurion Airport that he was a Palestinian returning to his country, he might experience what many Arabs experience. Hours of detention. Deprecating, disparaging comments. Ridicule. Challenges to their dignity. And a barrage of questions like, "Where is you grandfather from originally?" Israeli security asks questions like that because they want to be sure about whom they are discriminating against when they subject visitors to their racist interrogations at the airport. Husain concludes his column by arguing that Arabs and Muslims — he never uses the word Palestinian (probably a prohibition imposed by the Council on Foreign Relations, I am sure) — should do what they can to alleviate Israeli concerns about their security. How about alleviating Palestinian concerns about their rights? How about asking Israelis to recognize the rights of Palestinians to live in Palestine? How about asking Israel to recognize Palestine? How about treating everyone in Israel the same regardless of their religion or nationality and ending the institutional discrimination that prevents Palestinians from buying and selling land, building homes, living in certain neighborhoods and settlements or qualifying for government services and benefits? As a matter of fact, Ed Husain, maybe you need to go back to Israel and have a second look. Don't go there escorted by a pro-Israel organization. Enter through Jordan and travel to Jerusalem through the Israeli military occupied West Bank. Look and act just like any other Muslim. Then, tell me how you feel. Ray Hanania is an award-winning Palestinian American columnist. To find out more about Ray Hanania and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM
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