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Gerald M. Steinberg- Pesah,la liberta al primo posto 10/04/2009
JerusalemPost, April 7, 2009
MAKING FREEDOM THE TOP PRIORITY
Gerald M. Steinberg
JerusalemPost, April 7, 2009

For 4,000 years, the Passover celebration of freedom has been a central theme, both
for the Jewish people, who retell the story of slavery in Egypt and the Exodus every
year, and for other oppressed people who have found hope in these events. In America
, the oppressed blacks identified themselves with the enslaved Hebrews, and leaders
like Martin Luther King referred to their struggle in biblical terms. Similarly,
 the victims of South African apartheid often adopted the symbols of the Exodus,
 and Nelson Mandela became their Moses. But in the hate-filled ideological climate
in which the Jewish state is portrayed as the world's worst human rights offender,
Israel is often cast in the role of the Egyptian taskmasters, and the Palestinians
have become the enslaved people.
This version of history is both patronizing and wrongheaded. Unlike the Jewish emphasis
on freedom, which is reflected in the Zionist movement, most Palestinian officials
and leaders give priority to preventing Jewish sovereignty and rolling back the
recognition of Israel as the Jewish homeland.
Israelis not the reason for the lack of a Palestinian state--this is the responsibility
of the Palestinians, and an accurate reflection of their agenda. For more than six
decades, Arab leaders rejected every opportunity to create an independent state
that would have also left Israel intact. In November 1947--20 years before "the
occupation" following the 1967 war--Arab officials spurned the UN partition plan,
which embodied the "two-state solution." In sharp contrast, the Zionist leadership
grasped this opportunity, despite the minimal territory allocated to the nascent
 Jewish state.
After the terror campaign and Arab invasion in 1948 failed to dislodge the Jews
or to destroy Israel , the Arab leaders continued to refuse compromise that would
have meant accepting its existence and legitimacy. For them, freedom was and remains
a secondary goal, at best.
More recently, PLO leader Yasser Arafat's behavior during the Oslo process in the
1990s showed that nothing had changed in the intervening decades. Optimistic Israel
officials expected the Palestinians to follow the Zionist approach of the 1940s,
 and to use this process, beginning with the establishment of the Palestinian Authority,
to develop the institutions that would lead to statehood. Arafat could easily have
negotiated the terms of a two-state solution during this period, had he been interested
in this outcome.
However, the Palestinian leadership continues to demonstrate that it was not interested
in political independence, if this meant accepting a Jewish state. Arafat walked
 away from every attempt to negotiate a compromise, including the Camp David summit
in 2000 and in the talks that followed. Instead, he and the PLO prepared for another
round of warfare aimed, again, at destroying Israel , this time using suicide bombers
as the main weapon.
After Arafat's death, the withdrawal from Gaza in 2005 provided yet another opportunity
for the Palestinians to declare independence, but the results were the same as before.
Rather than seeking to develop the institutions of a sovereign state, they used
the freedom of action in Gaza to smuggle massive amounts of weapons from Iran ,
and to extend the rocket attacks against the Negev . Shortly afterward, Hamas took
control from Fatah in a violent coup, and increased the range of the attacks. As
 a branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas openly declares that its primary objective
is destroying Israel . An independent Palestinian state is secondary, at best, in
this religious war.
In referring to Gaza, the critics and apologists, who blame all the failures on
Israel, argue that this "partial withdrawal" left it in control of the West Bank,
making Palestinian independence impossible. But this is simply an excuse--if the
 Palestinians had chosen sovereignty as the primary goal, they would have grasped
the opportunity, just as David Ben-Gurion and the Jewish leadership did in May 1948,
with the departure of the British colonial regime. If independence was at the top
of the list, a success in Gaza would have been followed by gradual extension, but
the main objective continued to be war against Israel. Similarly, Palestinian literature,
movies and songs highlight negative messages and the actions of martyrs in the struggle
against the Jews and the Jewish state. For Palestinians, the concept of freedom is subsumed in the desire to destroy Israel.
In contrast, for the Jewish people in exile for 2,000 years, the goal of freedom
 was rekindled every year during the Passover Seder, which ended with a positive
 message--the hope for "next year in Jerusalem." For those who are serious about
 promoting peace based on the "two-state solution," placing the blame on Israel
is counterproductive. Until the Palestinians adopt the positive rhetoric of freedom
based on construction, to replace the negative language of destruction, there will
be no change.

(Gerald M. Steinberg chairs the Political Science Department at Bar-Ilan University
and is executive director of NGO Monitor.)

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