An Israeli Apology to Palestinians Starts
Real Peace
By Uri Avnery
Gush Shalom, June 16, 2008
An Apology
THIS WEEK, the Prime Minister of Canada made a dramatic statement
in Parliament: he apologized to the indigenous peoples of his
country for the injustices done to them for generations by
successive Canadian governments.
This way, White Canada tries to make peace with the native
nations, whose country their forefathers conquered and whose culture
their rulers have tried to wipe out.
APOLOGIZING FOR past wrongs has become a part of modern political
culture.
That is never an easy thing to do. Cynics might say: nothing to
it. Just words. And words, after all, are a cheap commodity. But in
fact, such acts have a profound significance. A human being - and
even more so, a whole nation - always finds it hard to admit to
iniquities performed and to atrocities committed. It means a
rewriting of the historical narrative that forms the basis of their
national cohesion. It necessitates a drastic change in the
schoolbooks and in the national outlook. In general, governments are
averse to this, because of the nationalistic demagogues and
hate-mongers who infest every country.
The President of France has apologized on behalf of his people
for the misdeeds of the Vichy regime, which turned Jews over to the
Nazi exterminators. The Czech government has apologized to the
Germans for the mass expulsion of the German population at the end
of World War II. Germany, of course, has apologized to the Jews for
the unspeakable crimes of the Holocaust. Quite recently, the
government of Australia has apologized to the Aborigines. And even
in Israel, a feeble effort was made to heal a grievous domestic
wound, when Ehud Barak apologized to the Oriental Jews for the
discrimination they have suffered for many years.
But we face a much more difficult and complex problem. It
concerns the roots of our national existence in this country.
I BELIEVE that
peace between us and the Palestinian
people - a real peace, based on real conciliation - starts with an
apology.
In my mind's eye I see the President of the State or the Prime
Minister addressing a special extraordinary session of the Knesset
and making a historic speech on the following lines:
MADAM SPEAKER, Honorable Knesset,
On behalf of the State of Israel and all its citizens, I address
today the sons and daughters of the Palestinian people, wherever
they are.
We recognize the fact that we have committed against you a
historic injustice, and we humbly ask your forgiveness.
When the Zionist movement decided to establish a national home in
this country, which we call Eretz Yisrael and you call Filastin, it
had no intention of building our state on the ruins of another
people. Indeed, almost no one in the Zionist movement had ever been
in the country before the first Zionist Congress in 1897, or even
had any idea about the actual situation here.
The burning desire of the founding fathers of this movement was
to save the Jews of Europe, where the dark clouds of hatred for the
Jews were gathering. In Eastern Europe, pogroms were raging, and all
over Europe there were signs of the process that would eventually
lead to the terrible Holocaust, in which six million Jews perished.
This basic aim attached itself to the profound devotion of the
Jews, throughout the generations, to the country in which the Bible,
the defining text of our people, was written, and to the city of
Jerusalem, towards which the Jews have turned for thousands of years
in their prayers.
The Zionist founders who came to this country were pioneers who
carried in their hearts the most lofty ideals. They believed in
national liberation, freedom, justice and equality. We are proud of
them. They certainly did not dream of committing an injustice of
historic dimensions.
ALL THIS does not justify what happened afterwards. The creation
of the Jewish national home in this country has involved a profound
injustice to you, the people who lived here for generations.
We cannot ignore anymore the fact that in the war of 1948 - which
is the War of Independence for us, and the Naqba for you - some 750
thousand Palestinians were compelled to leave their homes and lands.
As for the precise circumstances of this tragedy I propose the
establishment of a "Committee for Truth and Reconciliation"'
composed of experts from your and from our side, whose conclusions
will from then on be incorporated in the schoolbooks, yours and
ours.
We cannot ignore anymore the fact that for 60 years of conflict
and war, you have been prevented from realizing your natural right
to independence in your own free national state, a right confirmed
by the United Nations General Assembly resolution of November 29,
1947, which also formed the legal basis for the establishment of the
State of Israel.
For all this, we owe you an apology, and I express it hereby with
all my heart.
The Bible tells us: "Whoso confesseth (his crimes) and forsakes
them shall have mercy" (Proverbs 28:13). Clearly, confession does
not suffice. We have also to forsake the wrongs we have done in the
past.
It is impossible to turn the wheel of history back and restore
the situation that existed in the country in 1947, much as Canada -
or the United States, for that matter - cannot go back 200 years. We
must build our common future on the joint desire to move forwards,
to heal what can be healed and repair what can be repaired without
inflicting new wounds, committing new injustices and causing more
human tragedies.
I urge you to accept our apology in the spirit in which it is
offered. Let us work together for a just, viable and practical
solution of our century-old conflict - a solution that may not
fulfill all justified aspirations nor right all wrongs, but which
will allow both our peoples to live their lives in freedom, peace
and prosperity.
This solution is clear for all to see. We all know what it is. It
has emerged from our painful experiences, hammered out by the
lessons of our sufferings, crystallized by the exertions of the best
of our minds - yours as well as ours.
This solution means, simply: You have the same rights as we. We
have the same rights as you: to live in a state of our own, under
our own flag, governed by laws of our own making, ruled by a
government freely elected by ourselves - hopefully a good one.
One of the fundamental commandments of our religion - as of yours
and every other - was pronounced 2000 years ago by Rabbi Hillel: Do
not unto others, what you do not want others to do to you.
This means in practice: your right to establish at once the free
and sovereign State of Palestine in all the territories occupied by
Israel in 1967, which will be accepted as a full member of the
United Nations.
The borders of June 4, 1967, will be restored. I hope that we can
agree, in free negotiations, to minimal exchanges of territory
beneficial to both sides.
Jerusalem, which is so dear to all of us, must be the capital of
both our states - West Jerusalem, including the Western Wall, the
capital of Israel, East Jerusalem, including al-Haram al-Sharif,
which we call the Temple Mount, the capital of Palestine. What is
Arab shall be yours, what is Jewish shall be ours. Let us work
together to keep the city, as a living reality, open and united.
We shall evacuate the Israeli settlements, which have caused so
much suffering and iniquities to you, and bring the settlers home,
except from those small areas which will be joined to Israel in the
framework of freely agreed swaps of territory. We shall also
dismantle all the paraphernalia of the occupation, both physical and
institutional.
We must approach with open hearts, compassion and common sense,
the task of finding a just and viable solution for the terrible
tragedy of the refugees and their decendants. Each refugee family
must be granted a free choice between the various solutions:
repatriation and resettlement in the State of Palestine, with
generous assistance; staying where they are or emigration to any
country of their choice, also with generous assistance; and yes -
coming back to the territory of Israel in acceptable numbers, agreed
by us. The refugees themselves must be a full partner in all our
efforts.
I trust that our two states - Israel and Palestine, living side
by side in this beloved but small country, will quickly come
together on the human, social, economic, technological and cultural
levels, creating a relationship that will not only guarantee our
security, but also rapid development and prosperity for all.
Together we will work for peace and prosperity throughout our
region, based on close relations with all the countries of the area.
Committed to peace and vowing to create a better future for our
children and grandchildren, let us rise to our feet and bow our
heads in memory of the countless victims of our conflict, Jews and
Arabs, Israelis and Palestinians - a conflict that has lasted far
too long.
SUCH A SPEECH is, to my mind, absolutely essential for opening a
new chapter in the history of this country.
In decades of meeting with Palestinians of all walks of life, I
have come to the conclusion that the emotional aspects of the
conflict are no less - and perhaps even more - important than the
political ones. A profound sense of injustice permeates the minds
and actions of all Palestinians. Unconscious or half-conscious guilt
feelings are troubling the souls of the Israelis, creating a deep
conviction that Arabs will never make peace with us.
I do not know when such a speech will be possible. Many
imponderable factors will have an impact on that. But I do know that
without it, mere peace agreements, reached between haggling
diplomats, will not suffice. As the Oslo agreements have shown,
building an artificial island in a sea of stormy emotions just will
not do.
THE PUBLIC apology by the Canadian Prime Minister is not the only
thing we can learn from that North American country.
43 years ago, the Canadian government took an extraordinary step
in order to make peace between the English-speaking majority and the
French-speaking minority among their citizens. That relationship had
remained an open wound from the time the British conquered French
Canada some 250 years ago. It was decided to replace the Canadian
national flag, which was based on the British "Union Jack", with a
completely new national flag, featuring the maple leaf.
On this occasion, the Speaker of the Senate said: "The flag is
the symbol of the nation's unity, for it, beyond any doubt,
represents all the citizens of Canada without distinction of race,
language, belief or opinion."
We can learn something from that, too.
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