A
racism outside of language: Israel's
apartheid
Veterans
from the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa who visit Israel
and the occupied territories consistently say the same thing. 'It
is worse, worse, worse than everything we endured,' noted Mondli
Makhanya, editor-in-chief of the Sunday Times of South Africa,
after a recent visit to Palestine. 'The level of the apartheid, the
racism and the brutality are worse than the worst period of
apartheid. The apartheid regime viewed the blacks as inferior; I do
not think the Israelis see the Palestinians as human beings at
all.'
Saree Makdisi
2010-03-11
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/features/62928
Among the highlights of my recent trip to South Africa were a tour
of the Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg and a visit to the downtown
neighbourhood of Fordsie with my close friends Hanif and Salim
Vally (who grew up there during the apartheid years – an experience
that committed them both to the cause of justice), as well as a
walk through the nearby half-demolished neighbourhood of
Fietas.
Like
Sophiatown in Johannesburg and District Six in Cape Town, Fietas
was largely cleared of its non-white population in the 1970s (some
of its former residents were forcibly relocated to Lenasia, others
to Eldorado Park) and then methodically demolished. Its eerie,
grass-grown, open spaces today stand as stark reminders of the
city’s violent past, as reminders that under certain circumstances
town planning, charting and zoning are immediately violent
activities. For all its apparent innocuousness, bureaucracy can be
as destructive as any bomb. What happened in Fietas certainly
testifies to that: whole families forced to move, a neighbourhood
smashed to pieces, homes pulverised by bulldozers materially
manifesting a racist bureaucracy’s notion of the appropriate
distribution of people and ethnic identities in social space. The
logic of racial separation is itself violent; horrendous as its
implementation may be, the real crime is in the logic itself.
The violence
of bureaucracy and of racist logic is of course one of the central
themes in the Apartheid Museum. Of all the exhibits, the one that I
found most striking was probably one of the most visually
innocuous: a list, adorning one wall, of the various laws and
regulations that constituted South Africa’s system of apartheid.
That wall, and some of the other exhibits, really brought home to
me the extent to which South African apartheid continually
registered itself in the verbal and visual field through endless
plaques, signs, words, laws, names, classifications – an endless
series of binaries constructed around the ultimate 'blankes/nie
blankes.' One of the most compelling facts about South African
apartheid is that it was not just an invisible or inscrutable or
anonymous logic, it dared to have a proper name. After all, it
insisted on calling attention to itself in its system of explicit
signs, labels, markers – on every bus, at the entrance to every
bathroom.
There was, of
course, no way for me to contemplate South African apartheid
without contemplating its relevance for understanding the situation
in Israel–Palestine today. For anyone who has been to Palestine,
the grass-grown wasteland of Fietas looks familiar for good reason:
it has its counterpart in every grass-covered ruin of every one of
the hundreds of towns and villages in Palestine whose people were
driven from their homes in 1948 because a racial logic dictated
that they should not live in a space supposedly decreed (by God and
the United Nations) to another people; in every wind-swept
wasteland of Gaza where many of those same refugees’ homes were
once again bulldozed by the Israeli army to clear lines of sight
and make room for free-fire zones; and in every corner of occupied
East Jerusalem where Israeli bulldozers have deliberately and
methodically demolished Palestinian family homes in a vain attempt
to maintain the ratio of Jews to non-Jews in the city’s population
(72 to 28, if you are interested in the sordid details) that was
determined by city planners in the 1970s – and has been sustained
ever since by denying Palestinian residents of the city permits to
build, bulldozing their homes when they build anyway, and stripping
them of their residency status and expelling them from the city
whenever possible. 2,162 Palestinian Jerusalemites have suffered
this fate since 2003 alone, expelled to the West Bank suburbs and
denied the right to return to the city of their birth, while Jewish
arrivals from Moldova, London, Melbourne and Brooklyn who have
never set eyes on Jerusalem take their place.
It has become
commonplace to casually use the language of apartheid to refer to
the forms of discrimination that Israel maintains in the occupied
territories: two different transportation networks, two different
housing systems, two different educational complexes, even two
different legal and administrative systems for the two populations,
Jewish and non-Jewish.
Exactly the
same discriminatory logic is at work across the 1949–67 armistice
line inside Israel itself, however. And for all the resistance that
applying the term to the occupied territories generates, it is
virtually impossible to stage a rational conversation about the
system of apartheid at work inside pre-1967 Israel. Most of
Israel’s supporters in Europe and America, and even some of its
liberal critics – the ones who accept that the system of separation
that Israel has imposed on the occupied territories may have
crossed a certain line – adamantly refuse to countenance the
possibility that there is any systematic form of racism in the
would-be Jewish state. For them, the 1975 UN General Assembly
resolution denouncing Zionism as a form of racism – the only UN
resolution to have been subsequently annulled – was itself a
vicious form of racism.
When it is
levelled at Israel then, the charge of apartheid generates not
counter-argument backed by counter-evidence, but rather walls of
sheer stony denial, if not inarticulate eruptions of blind rage, as
though either denial or sheer fury could permanently forestall
argument. It is a stunning fact that, to this day, mainstream
politicians, journalists and ordinary citizens in the US and
elsewhere, even South Africa itself – I witnessed this myself while
delivering my February 2010 lecture at Wits – refuse to engage in
argument, evidence and facts on this issue; they cling stubbornly
to the mantra-like recitation of long worn-out myths. 'The Jewish
people know what it means to be oppressed, discriminated against,
and even condemned to death because of their religion,' said Nancy
Pelosi, the speaker of the US House of Representatives, in a feeble
attempt to contest the primary assertion of President Carter’s 2006
book 'Palestine: Peace not Apartheid' (which even explicitly
exempted Israel within its pre-1967 borders from its analysis,
restricting itself to the occupied territories). 'They have been
leaders in the fight for human rights in the United States and
throughout the world. It is wrong to suggest that the Jewish people
would support a government in Israel or anywhere else that
institutionalizes ethnically based oppression, and Democrats reject
that allegation vigorously.' Such a refusal to enter into a
rational argument, and to fall back on the equivalent of
superstition – Jews are superhuman, incapable of evil – is not
restricted to the US. 'If you’re going to label Israel as
Apartheid, then you are also … attacking Canadian values,' said
Canadian MP Peter Shurman in a recent angry denunciation of
Canadian universities’ annual Israeli Apartheid Week, which was
condemned by the parliament in Ottawa. 'The use of the phrase
"Israeli Apartheid Week" is about as close to hate speech as one
can get without being arrested, and I’m not certain it doesn’t
actually cross over that line,' Shurman said.
Nor are such
forms of denial restricted to politicians. Here, for example, is
Roger Cohen, foreign editor of The New York Times, who has
previously criticised Israeli policy in the occupied territories,
writing in the Washington Post just the other day: 'The Israel of
today and the South Africa of yesterday have almost nothing in
common. In South Africa, the minority white population harshly
ruled the majority black population. Nonwhites were denied civil
rights, and in 1958, they were even deprived of citizenship. In
contrast, Israeli Arabs, about one-fifth of the country, have the
same civil and political rights as do Israeli Jews. Arabs sit in
the Knesset and serve in the military, although most are exempt
from the draft. Whatever this is – and it looks suspiciously like a
liberal democracy – it cannot be apartheid.'
I have known
for some time, of course, that, no matter how many times
journalists like Cohen repeat the statement that 'Israeli Arabs' –
i.e., Palestinian citizens of Israel – have the same civil and
political rights as do Israeli Jews, that simply is not the case.
Blind recitation may be comforting, but it doesn’t actually
transform reality. What I learned from my trip to South Africa,
however, is that the parallel between the two situations (South
Africa on the one hand and the occupied territories and Israel on
the other) is much more extensive than is normally admitted in
public discourse, though there are also some notable
differences.
One thing I
learned on my trip is that every single major South African
apartheid law that I saw on the wall of the Johannesburg museum has
a direct equivalent in Israel today.
The notorious
Population Registration Act of 1950, which assigned to every South
African a racial identity according to which he or she had access
to (or was denied) a varying range of rights, has a direct
equivalent in the Israeli laws that assign to every citizen of the
state a distinct national identity. According to Israeli law, there
is no such thing as Israeli nationality. As the High Court put it
in the 1970s, 'There is no Israeli nation separate from the Jewish
people.' So Jewish citizens of the state are classified as having
'Jewish nationality', but non-Jews, although they can be citizens
of the state, are explicitly not members of the 'nation' – i.e.,
Jews all over the world, whether they want to be affiliated with
Israel or not, whose state Israel claims to be. As a result, the
national identity of the Palestinian citizens of Israel – who
constitute 20 per cent of the actual rather than merely the
ideological population of the state – is denied and erased at every
institutional level. Unlike Jewish citizens, who are recognised as
having a national identity, Israeli law methodically strips
Palestinian citizens of their national identity and reduces them to
mere ethnicity, which is why the state invented the term 'Israeli
Arabs' to refer to them. (That term is never used to refer to the
Arab Jews who make up a considerable proportion of Israel’s Jewish
population – the real Israeli Arabs – because of course in their
case Israel wants to erase their Arab identity and absorb them as
Jews, whereas in the case of Palestinian citizens the reverse holds
true: they can’t be absorbed as Jews, so their indigestible
Arabness is emphasised).
This verbal
sleight of hand is very hard to dislodge. I have had several
fruitless arguments with the editorial board of the Los Angeles
Times about the paper’s use of the term 'Israeli Arabs' to refer to
Israel’s Palestinian citizens. Well, not arguments, exactly – I
argue, I present evidence to show the artificial and misleading
constructedness of the term and the extent to which Palestinians
inside Israel totally refuse it and call themselves Palestinians,
but the paper’s editors shrug their shoulders and say that I may
have a point, but …
Of course,
this linguistic evasion serves a purpose: it is what enables
otherwise perfectly rational people like Roger Cohen or the editors
of the LA Times to come along and blithely use the state’s
discourse to buy into Israel’s erasure of Palestinian identity in
total and blissful unawareness that that is exactly what they are
doing, and to come out at the other end miraculously saying that
the state treats all its citizens equally: the act of
discrimination is invisible because it is inscrutable. How, after
all, can you acknowledge that Israel discriminates against its
Palestinian population when there is no such thing? What
Palestinians? There are no Palestinians inside Israel, only
'Israeli Arabs'. But that’s the point: the denial, the erasure, the
act of discrimination, is already there before the utterance is
made. There is no language for it; it cannot be
uttered.
Indeed, this above
all is what so markedly distinguishes Israeli apartheid from South
African apartheid. Whereas the latter insisted on giving itself a
name and drawing attention to itself through endless verbal and
visual cues, the former completely elides and covers over the forms
of racism that it embodies just as fully. Those who support racism
in Israel can do so in total freedom from having to reckon with the
fact that that is what they are doing. It is the ultimate example
of what David Theo Goldberg has recently theorised as 'racism
without racism'. This is, in short, the most brilliant use of
interpellated denial and erasure that has ever been put into
practice in the world, though, like so many things in Israel (e.g.,
building Independence Park on a Palestinian cemetery in Jerusalem,
or inventing the legal category of the 'present absentees' to refer
to Palestinians who were driven from their homes in 1948 but
remained within the borders of the state, or landscaping the West
Bank wall from the Israeli side so its true scale is obscured and
diminished), it is a purely unintended brilliance, and hence not
really brilliance at all, but rather yet one more instance of the
mind-boggling forms of denial at which Israel and its admirers are
so proficient, indeed, on which the liberal Western admiration of
Israel depends for its very existence.
At the end of the
day, the South African white, irrespective of her ideological
position, had to look at the sign saying 'blankes/nie blankes' and
affiliate herself accordingly – an awkwardness the Apartheid Museum
in Johannesburg re-enacts very effectively at its entrance. The
Jewish Israeli, and the supporter of Israel overseas, is never
forced into that confrontation, never has to make that choice –
it’s done for him before language: the racism is pre-digested and
rendered inscrutable. Jewish Israelis and admirers of the state can
say that Israel treats all its citizens equally, not so much
because they do not realise that discrimination operates at the
level of nationality rather than at the secondary level of
citizenship, but rather because, unlike white South Africans, they
are spared from having to reckon with that realisation. They are
allowed, and they allow themselves, to see right through it, to
indulge in the misrecognition of an ugly reality that is actually
staring them in the face, to continuously misrecognise the facts
when someone else insists on tabulating, documenting and presenting
them – and to erupt in blind resentful fury if the facts are pushed
at them too insistently.
Stripping
Palestinian citizens of their national identity is not only merely
degrading, however. In Israel, various fundamental rights – access
to land and housing, for example – are attendant upon national
identity, not the lesser category of mere citizenship. Thus, Jews
who are not citizens actually have more rights than citizens who
are not Jewish; in no other country on earth do racially privileged
non-citizens enjoy greater rights than citizens and
residents.
Hence, the Group
Areas Act of 1950, which assigned different areas of South Africa
for the residential use of different racial groups, has a direct
equivalent in the system of regulations that determine access to
land inside Israel (and inside the occupied territories too, of
course, but here I am talking about pre-1967 Israel). Palestinian
citizens of the state are legally excluded from residing in
officially designated 'Jewish community settlements' or 'Jewish
rural settlements' organised into rural councils that control the
vast majority of the land in Israel. Indeed, they are barred from
living on state land or land held by 'national institutions' such
as the Jewish National Fund (JNF), which compose 93 per cent of the
land inside Israel, almost every square inch of it Palestinian
property violently expropriated by the new state after the ethnic
cleansing of Palestine in 1948. Nowhere, in fact, is the extent and
institutionalisation of this kind of discrimination more glaringly
obvious than in the pronouncements of the JNF, which advertises
itself as 'the caretaker of the land of Israel on behalf of its
owners – Jewish people everywhere'. This institution not only
acknowledges but proudly justifies its long-established record of
discriminating against Palestinian citizens by pointing out that it
'is not a public body which acts on behalf of all the citizens of
the state. Its loyalty is to the Jewish people and its
responsibility is to it [i.e., the Jewish people] alone. As the
owner of JNF land, the JNF does not have to act with equality
towards all citizens of the state.' Moreover, it points out,
'Israel’s Knesset [i.e., parliament] and Israeli society have
expressed their view that the distinction between Jews and non-Jews
that is the basis for the Zionist vision is a distinction that is
permitted,' and, indeed, that its allocation of land to Jews alone
'is in complete accord with the founding principles of the state of
Israel as a Jewish state and that the value of equality, even if it
applies to JNF lands, would retreat before this principle'.
As a result
of all the forms of discrimination with which they must contend as
non-Jews living in the would-be Jewish state (would-be in spite of
the continuing non-Jewish, Palestinian presence), some 10 per cent
of the Palestinian citizens of Israel live today in 'unrecognised
villages' which predate the existence of the state by decades or
centuries yet do not appear on any official maps. They are
therefore not connected to the national power grid, the national
water distribution system, the phone network or the mail system.
They do not officially exist, other than the fact that all the
homes in these villages are slated for demolition because they
exist on land that the state retroactively zoned as agricultural,
there being 'no residences' there, after all. Here again the same
logic of profound denial of denial is at work: how can you deny the
circumstances of life in villages that according to the state do
not officially exist in the first place? There is literally nothing
to deny!
The Black Education
Act of 1953, which created a separate and unequal educational
system for black South Africans, has a direct equivalent in the
administrative procedures that have created separate and unequal
educational systems for Jewish and non-Jewish citizens of the state
of Israel (and again the same thing goes for the occupied
territories too). The naked statistics say it all: the state
provides 1,600 subsidised day-care centres, for example, but only
25 of those are in Palestinian towns. Only 4,200 of the 80,000
Israeli children under four years old who attend day-care are
Palestinian, though had that number been in proportion to the
actual population, it would have been over 20,000. After day-care,
Israel invests more than three times as much on a per capita basis
in a Jewish student than it does in a non-Jewish (i.e.,
Palestinian) one. The state’s current list of the 553 towns and
villages granted top priority for education excluded all
Palestinian towns inside Israel other than four villages. There are
25 special art schools for Jewish children, and none for
Palestinian children – citizens of the state all. And at the higher
levels of its school system, Israel opens far more curricular
tracks to Jewish students than to Palestinian ones. As a result of
all these forms of discrimination, and nakedly discriminatory
entrance and matriculation procedures – and despite the fact that
Palestinians traditionally place great emphasis on their children’s
education, a fact attested to by the disproportionately large
numbers of Palestinians among the Arab intelligentsia – a far
greater proportion of Jewish students make it through high school,
get accepted to university and graduate. Only 10 per cent of
Israel’s university students are Palestinian, for example, though
proportionately speaking it ought to be double that number. Only 3
per cent of its PhD students are Palestinian. Only 1 per cent of
its university lecturers are Palestinian.
And the list goes
on. South Africa’s Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act of 1949 has
its equivalent in the Israeli laws prohibiting Jews from marrying
non-Jews (again, there is no proscription in language that
announces this prohibition as such, but there is no institution of
civil marriage in Israel, so Jews are only allowed to marry other
Jews, and then only according to Orthodox religious law); the
Natives (Urban Areas) Consolidation Act of 1945 and the Black
(Native) Amendment Act of 1952 that required black South Africans
to carry passes and regulated their access to urban areas have
equivalents in the various Israeli laws regulating and controlling
the movement of Palestinians – but not Jews – within the occupied
territories and between and among the occupied territories,
Jerusalem and Israel; the Public Safety Act of 1953 has an
equivalent in the Israeli military regulations permitting the
long-term detention without trial of Palestinians (but not Jews,
who are protected by Israeli civil law) in the occupied territories
– a cumulative total of 650,000 Palestinians have been held
prisoner by Israel since 1967, about 20 per cent of the entire
population; the Promotion of Bantu Self-Government Act of 1952,
which mandated greater official recognition of the Bantustans like
Transkei, and the Bantu Homelands Constitution Act of 1971, have an
equivalent in the Oslo Accords’ creation of a so-called Palestinian
Authority to manage the affairs of Palestinian (but not Jewish)
residents of the occupied territories.
Indeed, just as
South Africa created Transkei, Ciskei and Bophuthatswana in order
to artificially delete as many blacks as possible from South
Africa’s own population registry, Israel maintains pockets of the
West Bank and all of Gaza as holding pens for the land’s non-Jewish
population while settling the rest of the territory with its own
population in order to be able to have its cake and eat it too: to
absorb the land (settling it) but not the people, and hence to
maintain the claim that it is a Jewish state while keeping to a
bare minimum the number of non-Jews who officially live within the
state – and hence to perpetuate the fiction that it does not
disenfranchise the majority of the land’s population that is
Palestinian. Of course Israel disenfranchises the land’s
Palestinian majority: there are today 11 million Palestinians and 5
million Israeli Jews. Israel’s manipulation of populations and
territories, however, obscures as much as possible these material
circumstances: 1 million Palestinians are citizens of Israel and
linguistically disappeared into the category of 'Israeli Arabs', so
they don’t count; 6 million Palestinians continue to live in the
exile that was violently forced on them in 1948 by Israel, which
continues to deny their legal and moral right of return, so they
don’t count either. That leaves only the 4 million or so
Palestinians in the occupied territories, and they have the
blessings of an illusory autonomy (or at least the talk about one
day having autonomy) and the collaborationist Palestinian Authority
and its hopelessly compromised and politically bankrupt leadership.
The fact that Israel has held – while stubbornly refusing to
resolve the status of – the occupied territories for over four
decades, or two thirds of its own existence as a state, belies the
discursive provisionality of the territories’ status. Israel has
colonised, planted and partially developed the West Bank and East
Jerusalem; it has settled half a million of its own citizens there;
it has extended its own laws there; it uses the aquifers and
airspace there every single day. In practice, Israel has annexed
the West Bank; only in name has it not done so. And the only reason
it has not done so is because only the pretence that the West Bank
(and Gaza) is exterior to the state allows Israel to maintain a
fiction at the level of language that is belied by the material
reality – which allows, for example, Roger Cohen to come along and
say, well, yes, there may be discrimination in the West Bank, 'but
it is not part of Israel proper', so it doesn’t really count, and
anyway that territory will eventually be the 'heartland' of a
Palestinian state (something that has been talked about for almost
two decades, half as long as the West Bank has actually been
occupied, without it making the slightest bit of difference on the
ground – e.g., the colonist population has essentially tripled
since the first so-called peace talks in 1991).
There are, of
course, major differences between apartheid inside Israel and
apartheid in South Africa.
I have already
pointed out one of the major differences: the legibility of South
African apartheid and the relative illegibility – inscrutability –
of Israeli apartheid. Nowhere in Israel or the occupied territories
is there a sign that baldly says 'Jews only'. The racism is
practised in practice rather than in language. That’s what enables
supporters of Israel to engage in the endless equivocation and
hair-splitting to which they are so often reduced in defending a
form of racism that denies that that is what it is. For example, to
the charge that there are two different road networks in the West
Bank, one for Jews (connecting colonies to each other and to
Israel) and one for non-Jews, the retort – one that is routinely
deployed by Israeli hasbara and propaganda outfits in the US and
Europe, such as CAMERA, whose capacity for linguistic contortionism
is so extreme that it is almost comical – is invariably to insist
that one network is reserved for all Israeli citizens, not just
Jewish ones. In the most narrowly literal sense – at the level of
language that has ceased to function as language because it no
longer conveys meaning, because it is not meant to – that’s true.
On the other hand, only Jews live in the West Bank colonies
(Palestinians, whether they are citizens of Israel or not, aren’t
allowed to live there because they are not Jewish), so in practice
if not in name one road network is set apart for Jews. Again, as
with so many other things, what’s in play here is a form of denial
that can’t bring itself to acknowledge itself for what it is. It is
by staring so obsessively at language, not seeing the absent
meanings because they are not conveyed in language – 'where does it
say "Jews only"?' – that the supporters of Israel allow themselves
to avoid recognising the material reality: there does not have to
be a sign saying 'Jews only' in language in order for Jews only to
use the road in practice. Unlike apartheid in South Africa, what we
see in Israel is racism that avoids language; racism without a
proper name, or, in Goldberg’s formulation, racism without racism.
That doesn’t make it any less racist,
however.
Another difference
is that the system of apartheid inside South Africa, for all its
violence and viciousness, was never as violent or as vicious as the
system that obtains inside Israel and the occupied territories. The
movement of blacks in South Africa was controlled, not banned
altogether, as is the case, for example, with Gaza. The South
African government dispatched Caspar armoured cars and soldiers
with rifles into Soweto – not heavy tanks, Apache helicopters
firing Hellfire missiles and F-16s dropping one-ton bombs on
people. The Sharpeville Massacre was an exceptional event in South
Africa; for Palestinians, it would – though this is of course not
to diminish it – hardly stand out in a list of massacres extending
from Deir Yassin and Tantra in the 1940s to Kufr Qassem, Rafah and
Khan Younis in the 1950s to Sabra and Shatilia in the 1980s to
Nablus and Jenin in the 2000s to Gaza in 2008–09. There is nothing
like a precedent for Israel’s 2008–09 assault on Gaza in the entire
history of apartheid in South Africa: the murder of one out of
every thousand people; the destruction of tens of thousands of
homes at one go; the cutting off of vital supplies of food,
medicine, fuel and construction materials to a population composed
– as Gaza’s is – largely of children, condemning them to
malnourishment; the gloating in print, for all the world to see
(though not for it to make a shred of difference), as the Israeli
Harvard fellow Martin Kramer did recently, that the reduction of
population by siege and malnourishment will also reduce the number
of 'redundant young men', and hence reduce the threat that Gaza
poses to Israel.
Veterans from the
anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa who visit Israel and the
occupied territories consistently say the same thing. 'It is worse,
worse, worse than everything we endured,' noted Mondli Makhanya,
editor-in-chief of the Sunday Times of South Africa, after a recent
visit to Palestine. 'The level of the apartheid, the racism and the
brutality are worse than the worst period of apartheid. The
apartheid regime viewed the blacks as inferior; I do not think the
Israelis see the Palestinians as human beings at
all.'
And that of course
is the major substantive difference between South African apartheid
and Israeli apartheid. There is a world of difference between
inferiority and dehumanisation: it is the difference between
exploitation and annihilation. As the Apartheid Museum in
Johannesburg makes very clear, in South Africa the system was
designed to enable the exploitation of black labour, to use black
people’s labour power to work in houses, offices and gold mines,
but deny them equal rights – for the white elite to have its cake
and eat it too. The Israeli system is not about exploitation of
Palestinian labour; labour from the occupied territories is now
totally irrelevant to the Israeli economy, having been made up for
by recent immigrants from the former Soviet Union and the supply of
cheap workers from southeast Asia enabled by global circuits of
exchange. It is, as it has always been, about the removal of one
population and its replacement by another, a process that began but
did not end in 1948, and that continues to this day every time a
Palestinian home is demolished in Jerusalem, every time a
Palestinian family is expelled from the ghost town that is central
Hebron, every time a Palestinian Jerusalemite is stripped of her
residency papers and expelled from the city of her birth, every
time a Palestinian family is shattered and broken because of an
Israeli law that was instituted in 2003 that prevents a Palestinian
in Israel or Jerusalem from marrying and living with a spouse from
the occupied territories, even though of course a Jewish Israeli
can marry a Jewish colonist from the West Bank and they can live
together wherever they please (when a similar law was proposed at
the peak of apartheid in South Africa in 1980, it was summarily
dismissed by that country’s high court as an unacceptable violation
of black people’s right to family; Israel’s high court upheld that
country’s new law in 2006).
In a word, as I have
put this in other contexts, South African apartheid was
bio-political in nature, concerned with the management and
administration of living black labour. Israel’s is, to borrow the
phrase that Achille Mbembe has elaborated so effectively,
necropolitical, concerned with the destruction and erasure of
Palestinians, something that every Palestinian resists every single
day, if only by the act of stubbornly continuing to
exist.
This necropolitics
depends crucially and absolutely, however, on the system of
inscrutability and invisibility that allows Israelis and the
supporters of Israel to go on practicing and endorsing a vulgar and
violent form of racism without having to reckon with and
acknowledge the fact that that is precisely what they are doing. I
have argued in other contexts – most recently in my Critical
Inquiry article about the construction of a so-called Museum of
Tolerance (really a kind of shrine to Zionism) right on top of the
ruins of the most important Muslim cemetery in Jerusalem – that
there are two main forms of Zionism in practice today: a hardcore
Zionism which we see at work in, for example, the pronouncements of
Avigdor Lieberman, Israel’s current foreign minister, who has made
an open call for the expulsion of Israel’s Palestinian citizens the
platform for his recent meteoric rise in Israeli politics, which
involves a kind of brutal honesty; and a softcore Zionism – the
dominant one still – whose adherents are, by virtue of the
linguistic and historical and emotional short-circuits I have
described here, spared from having to reckon with and honestly
acknowledge that what they support is a racist enterprise; it is
only on the basis of that very inscrutability, in fact, that they
can go on supporting it. This is the kind of Zionist position that
says, for example, in all innocence, that it is anti-Semitic to
criticise Zionism because it only represents the Jewish people’s
right to have a national homeland like every other people. In
asking so insistently why Jews should be denied the same right that
every other people have, the softcore Zionist depends on the
emotional short-circuit I have discussed here to mis-recognise the
very question she is asking, for the flip-side of the same question
is not whether Jews have a right to a homeland, it’s whether that
right cancels out the Palestinian people’s own right to a homeland
(and the answer to that question is an absolute no). Only by
concentrating so obsessively and self-absorbedly on the recto of
the question does the softcore Zionist avoid having to deal with
its hideous verso and with the indelible fact that there is not,
there never was and there never will be a way to create a Jewish
state in Palestine without denying or negating the Palestinian
claim to the same land and the historical rights attendant on that
claim. Rather than making the denial of Palestinian rights an
explicit component of her ideological position – as the hardcore
Zionist does – the softcore Zionist removes that denial from her
field of vision, in effect denying that there is anything to deny
to begin with. And as I said earlier, the great strength of
Israel’s system of apartheid is that it is structured in such a way
that it never ever makes the great mistake of South African
apartheid by forcing people to confront the nakedness and vulgarity
of its racism. So they can support it and go on thinking of
themselves as virtuous, ethical and progressive, technologically
chic, friendly to animals and kind to the environment.
Where
does this leave Palestinians and those who advocate for their
rights?
There are, I think,
two immediate conclusions from this discussion. One point is this:
the reason negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis so often
seem so futile is that the whole point of the linguistic
short-circuits and forms of denial of denial that I have been
discussing here is to forestall negotiation, or at least to bypass
and render unapproachable the core of the conflict between Zionism
and the Palestinians. The great strength of a racism that exists
outside of language – that exempts itself from language – is that
it is also quite impervious to language: every attempt to point to
it and say 'that’s the problem' will be met with the perfectly
sincere reply 'what problem?' What racism? What villages? What road
network? What Palestinians? This is a structural complex for which
there is no resolution at the level of language and hence
diplomatic negotiation (let alone negotiation between two totally
unequal parties). Hence the manifest futility of the attempts to
end this conflict by raising consciousness among Israelis or
supporters of Israel around the world, or appealing to their better
instincts, the sheer stubborn refusal to acknowledge reality is
demonstrated every single time lectures on Palestinian rights
around the world are met with that wearily familiar wall of solid
denials and that total refusal to entertain facts, evidence,
reason, laws, principles – if not actually eruptions of
inarticulate fury – to which we have all grown so
accustomed.
The second point is
that it should be even more obvious than ever that, in view of the
system of apartheid in place in Israel and the occupied territories
– a system of apartheid that is inseparable from the project to
create and maintain the pretence of a Jewish state in what is fact
a profoundly heterogeneous land – there can be no peaceful and just
resolution of the Zionist conflict with the Palestinians until the
attempt to replace one people with another, to impose a
monocultural identity on a multicultural country, is abandoned and
its institutions completely dismantled. Creating a Palestinian
statelet in the West Bank alongside an Israel whose claim to
Jewishness would be reinforced in a two-state solution would do
little for West Bankers, less for Gazans, nothing for the refugees
and their descendants, and less than nothing for the Palestinian
citizens of Israel, whose status as reviled non-Jews would become
even worse. Only the creation of a democratic and secular state in
all of historic Palestine, in which Israeli Jews and Palestinians –
all of them, the ones now under occupation, the ones living as
second-class citizens of Israel, and the refugees of 1948 and their
descendants, whose right of return is absolutely beyond question –
can live as equal citizens can resolve this conflict once and for
all.
From these two
conclusions a third follows as well. A just peace will not come
about by merely pleading with or trying to persuade Israeli Jews to
do the right thing and abandon and dismantle the racist system that
endows them with privileges while denying fundamental Palestinian
rights. All the closest historical precedents to this conflict –
above all South Africa – remind us that privileged groups don’t
abandon their privileges just because that’s the right thing to do
or because they are made to feel bad about enjoying those
privileges; they abandon them only when they have no other choice.
This case is no different. A just peace fundamentally requires
non-violent, outside pressure to be brought to bear on Israel,
which is why for so many people of goodwill around the world, and
for so many Palestinians themselves, the growing BDS (boycott,
divestment, sanctions) movement is a source of such
hope.
