32nd Anniversary of the Palestinian
		"Land Day" and Israeli 
		 Riffraff Shout of 
		"Death to the Arabs!" 
		By Uri Avnery
		Gush Shalom, April 1, 2008
		
		 
		(March 30 was) the 32nd anniversary of the first "Day of the Land" - one 
		of the defining events in the history of Israel.
		 
		I remember the day well. I was at Ben Gurion airport, on the way to a 
		secret meeting in London with Said Hamami, Yasser Arafat's emissary, 
		when someone told me: "They have killed a lot of Arab protestors!"
		 
		That was not entirely unexpected. A few days before, we - members of the 
		newly formed Israeli Council for Israeli-Palestinian Peace - had handed 
		the Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, an urgent memorandum warning him that 
		the government's intention of expropriating huge chunks of land from 
		Arab villages would cause an explosion. We included a proposal for an 
		alternative solution, worked out by Lova Eliav, a veteran expert on 
		settlements.
		 
		When I returned from abroad, the poet Yevi suggested that we make a 
		symbolic gesture of sorrow and regret for the killings. Three of us - 
		Yevi himself, the painter Dan Kedar and I - laid wreaths on the graves 
		of the victims. This aroused a wave of hatred against us. I felt that 
		something profoundly significant had happened, that the relationship 
		between Jews and Arabs within the state had changed fundamentally.
		 
		And indeed, the impact of the Day of the Land - as the event was called 
		- was stronger than even the Kafr Kassem massacre of 1956 or the October 
		Events killings of 2000.
		  
		THE REASONS for this go back to the early days of the state.
		 
		After the 1948 war, only a small, weak and frightened Arab community was 
		left in the state. Not only had about 750 thousand Arabs been uprooted 
		from the territory that had become the State of Israel, but those who 
		remained were leaderless. The political, intellectual and economic 
		elites had vanished, most of them right at the beginning of the war. The 
		vacuum was somehow filled by the Communist Party, whose leaders had been 
		allowed to return from abroad - mainly in order to please Stalin, who at 
		the time supported Israel.
		 
		After an internal debate, the leaders of the new state decided to accord 
		the Arabs in the "Jewish State" citizenship and the right to vote. That 
		was not self-evident. But the government wanted to appear before the 
		world as a democratic state. In my opinion, the main reason was party 
		political: David Ben-Gurion believed that he could coerce the Arabs to 
		vote for his own party.
		 
		And indeed: the great majority of the Arab citizens voted for the Labor 
		Party (then called Mapai) and its two Arab satellite parties which had 
		been set up for that very purpose. They had no choice: they were living 
		in a state of fear, under the watchful eyes of the Security Service 
		(then called Shin Bet). Every Arab Hamulah (extended family) was told 
		exactly how to vote, either for Mapai or one of the two subsidiaries. 
		Since every election list has two different ballot papers, one in Hebrew 
		and one in Arabic, there were six possibilities for faithful Arabs in 
		every polling station, and it was easy for the Shin Bet to make sure 
		that each Hamula voted exactly as instructed. More than once did Ben 
		Gurion achieve a majority in the Knesset only with the help of these 
		captive votes. 
		 
		For the sake of "security" (in both senses) the Arabs were subjected to 
		a "military government". Every detail of their lives depended on it. 
		They needed a permit to leave their village and go to town or the next 
		village. Without the permission of the military government they could 
		not buy a tractor, send a daughter to the teachers' college, get a job 
		for a son, obtain an import license. Under the authority of the military 
		government and a whole series of laws, huge chunks of land were 
		expropriated for Jewish towns and kibbutzim.
		 
		A story engraved in my memory: my late friend, the poet Rashed Hussein 
		from Musmus village, was summoned to the military governor in Netanya, 
		who told him: Independence Day is approaching and I want you to write a 
		nice poem for the occasion. Rashed, a proud youngster, refused. When he 
		came home, he found his whole family sitting on the floor and weeping. 
		At first he thought that somebody had died, but then his mother cried 
		out: "You have destroyed us! We are finished!" So the poem was written.
		 
		Every independent Arab political initiative was choked at birth. The 
		first such group - the nationalist al-Ard ("the land") group - was 
		rigorously suppressed. It was outlawed, its leaders exiled, its paper 
		proscribed - all with the blessing of the Supreme Court. Only the 
		Communist Party was left intact, but its leaders were also persecuted 
		from time to time.
		 
		The military government was dismantled only in 1966, after Ben Gurion's 
		exit from power and a short time after my election to the Knesset. After 
		demonstrating against it so many times, I had the pleasure of voting for 
		its abolition. But in practice very little changed - instead of the 
		official military government an unofficial one remained, as did most of 
		the discrimination.
		 
		"THE DAY OF THE LAND" changed the situation. A second generation of 
		Arabs had grown up in Israel, no longer timidly submissive, a generation 
		that had not experienced the mass expulsions and whose economic position 
		had improved. The order given to the soldiers and policemen to open fire 
		on them caused a shock. Thus a new chapter started.
		 
		The percentage of Arab citizens in the state has not changed: from the 
		first days of the state to now, it had hovered around 20%. The much 
		higher natural rate of increase of the Muslim community was balanced by 
		Jewish immigration. But the numbers have grown significantly: from 200 
		thousand at the beginning of the state to almost 1.3 million - twice the 
		size of the Jewish community that founded the state.
		 
		The Day of the Land also dramatically changed the attitude of the Arab 
		world and the Palestinian people towards the Arabs in Israel. Until 
		then, they were considered traitors, collaborators of the "Zionist 
		entity". I remember a scene from the 1965 meeting convened in Firenze by 
		the legendary mayor, Giorgio la Pira, who tried to bring together 
		personalities from Israel and the Arab world. At the time, that was 
		considered a very bold undertaking.
		 
		During one of the intermissions, I was chatting with a senior Egyptian 
		diplomat in a sunny piazza outside the conference site, when two young 
		Arabs from Israel, who had heard about the conference, approached us. 
		After embracing, I introduced them to the Egyptian, but he turned his 
		back and exclaimed: "I am ready to talk with you, but not with these 
		traitors!" 
		 
		The bloody events of the Day of the Land brought the "Israeli Arabs" 
		back into the fold of the Arab nation and the Palestinian people, who 
		now call them "the 1948 Arabs".
		 
		In October 2000, policemen again shot and killed Arab citizens, when 
		they tried to express their solidarity with Arabs killed at the Haram 
		al-Sharif (Temple Mount) in Jerusalem. But in the meantime, a third 
		generation of Arabs had grown up in Israel, many of whom, in spite of 
		all the obstacles, had attended universities and become business people, 
		politicians, professors, lawyers and physicians. It is impossible to 
		ignore this community - even if the state tries very hard to do just 
		that.
		 
		From time to time, complaints about discrimination are voiced, but 
		everybody shrinks back from the fundamental question: What is the status 
		of the Arab minority growing up in a state that defines itself 
		officially as "Jewish and democratic"?
		 
		ONE LEADER of the Arab community, the late Knesset member Abd-al-Aziz 
		Zuabi, defined his dilemma this way: "My state is at war with my 
		people". The Arab citizens belong both to the State of Israel and to the 
		Palestinian people.
		 
		Their belonging to the Palestinian people is self-evident. The Arab 
		citizens of Israel, who lately tend to call themselves "Palestinians in 
		Israel", are only one part of the stricken Palestinian people, which 
		consists of many branches: the inhabitants of the occupied territories 
		(now themselves split between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip), the 
		Arabs in East Jerusalem (officially "residents" but not "citizens" of 
		Israel), and the refugees living in many different countries, each with 
		its own particular regime. All these branches have a strong feeling of 
		belonging together, but the consciousness of each is shaped by its own 
		particular situation.
		 
		How strong is the Palestinian component in the consciousness of the Arab 
		citizens of Israel? How can it be measured? Palestinians in the occupied 
		territories often complain that it expresses itself mainly in words, not 
		deeds. The support given by the Arab citizens in Israel to the 
		Palestinian struggle for liberation is mainly symbolic. Here and there a 
		citizen is arrested for helping a suicide bomber, but these are rare 
		exceptions. 
		 
		When the extreme Arab-hater Avigdor Liberman proposed that a string of 
		Arab villages in Israel adjoining the Green Line (called "the Triangle") 
		be turned over to the future Palestinian state in return for the Jewish  
		settlement blocs in the West Bank, not a single Arab voice was raised in 
		support. That is a very significant fact.
		 
		The Arab community is much more rooted in Israel than appears at first 
		sight. The Arabs play an important part in the Israeli economy, they 
		work in the state, pay taxes to the state. They enjoy the benefits of 
		social security - by right, since they pay for it. Their standard of 
		living is much higher than that of their Palestinian brethren in the 
		occupied territories and beyond. They participate in Israeli democracy 
		and have no desire at all to live under regimes like those of Egypt and 
		Jordan. They have serious and justified complaints - but they live in 
		Israel und will continue to do so.
		 
		IN RECENT YEARS, intellectuals of the third Arab generation in Israel 
		have published several proposals for the normalization of the relations 
		between the majority and the minority.
		 
		There exist, in principle, two main alternatives: 
		 
		The first way says: Israel is a Jewish state, but a second people also 
		live here. If Jewish Israelis have defined national rights, Arab 
		Israelis must also have defined national rights. For example, 
		educational, cultural and religious autonomy (as the young Vladimir Zeev 
		Jabotinsky demanded a hundred years ago for the Jews in Czarist Russia). 
		They must be allowed to have free and open connections with the Arab 
		world and the Palestinian people, like the connections Jewish citizens 
		have with the Jewish Diaspora. All this must be spelled out in the 
		future constitution of the state.
		 
		The second way says: Israel belongs to all its citizens, and only to 
		them. Every citizen is an Israeli, much as every US citizen is an 
		American. As far as the state is concerned, there is no difference 
		between one citizen and another, whether Jewish, Muslim or Christian, 
		Arab or Russian, much as, from the point of view of the American state, 
		there is no difference between white, brown or black citizens, whether 
		of European, African or Asian descent, Protestant, Catholic, Jewish or 
		Muslim. In Israeli parlance, this is called "a state of all its 
		citizens".
		 
		It goes without saying that I favor the second alternative, but I am 
		ready to accept the first. Either of them is preferable to the existing 
		situation, where the state pretends that there is no problem except some 
		traces of discrimination that have to be overcome (without doing 
		anything about it).
		 
		If the courage is lacking to treat a wound, it will fester. At football 
		matches, the riffraff shout: "Death-to-the-Arabs!" and in the Knesset 
		far right deputies threaten to expel Arab members from the House, and 
		from the state altogether.                                       
		 
		On the 32nd anniversary of the Day of the Land, with the 60th 
		Independence Day approaching, it is time to take this bull by the horns.