THE SIX DAY WAR, 20 YEARS LATER the stand of those who believe in Jewish sovereignty over — and set- tlement in — all of biblical Israel. Indeed, he regards the settlement of 70,000 Jews in Judea, Samaria and Gaza — and 100,000 Jews in east Je- rusalem — as the great achievement of the past two decades. Medad, however, is dismayed by the failure of successive Israeli govern- ments to extend Jewish sovereign- ty — "I don't call it annexation" — over the territories, a failure which he attributes to a lack of courage and resolve. It has, he says, left a vacuum which has been filled with the ambitions of Palestinian nationalism and the am- bitions of King Hussein that he might one day restore territories to Jordan. The prospect of absorbing 1.3 million hostile West Bank and Gaza Palestinians into Israel does not bother him. The "demographic threat," he says, is vastly overrated and a stick that Israeli liberals and "concessionists" use to beat themselves. Israel Medad exudes confidence that the tide of Jewish history — and "No way!" says Medad. "There would be street demonstrations, massive rallies, petitions, lobbying to stop such a settlement. "If land was handed over to the Arabs, and if — as Shimon Peres claims — Jewish settlements were allowed to remain on that land, I believe there would be many settlers, perhaps a majority, who would take up arms [against the Arabs] to wrest back control. "We will never accept such a securi- ty risk," he says, "such a corruption of basic Zionist values. We will never divorce ourselves from Jewish history." .E.N ■••■■■I 'Our Only Hope Is To Give Back The Territories' EHOSHAFAT HARKAB I'S nightmares are woven from the stuff • of Israel Medad's dreams. Like Professor Yuval Ne'eman, the leader of the lehiya Party, Professor y EGYPT 6/3 NX 3RD ADD 1ST LD EGYPT CAIRO 057A XXX REPILSED• DLE EAST NEWS AGENCY SAID FROM DAMASCUS THAT • 1HE MID HAS ENTERED THE BATTLE TO REPEL THE ISRAELI AGGRESS UOTED THE SYRIAN SUPREME MILITARY COWART& IT Q PDS ITIONS. - SYRIAN PLANES HERE "RAIDING ENEMY ME IN CCOBAT WITH THE ENEMY OTHER ARAB NATION' . the realities of Israeli society — are running with him. The rIbhiya Party, born out of the anger over Israel's evacuation of set- tlements in the Sinai, is gaining in popularity, particularly among young voters. Polls consistently show the party winning between 8 and 10 seats in the next election, placing it in a pivotal position if the votes are once again fairly evenly divided between the major parties. If, against all the odds, an Israeli government does reach a settlement with Jordan and the Palestinians based on a territorial compromise, what would be the reaction of the nationalist camp? 28 Friday, June 5, 1987 Harbaki is a former director of Israeli military intelligence. Now a senior history professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Hakarbi's self-appointed mission is to warn ordinary Israelis — not those he terms "the bleeding heart leftists" — of the grave perils awaiting them and their children if Israel does not get out of the occupied territories — and fast. He deliberately avoids addressing the moral issues involved in ruling over a subject people and the effect of the occupation on Israeli society. Instead, he hammers away at an argument that he believes is "readi- ly understood by everyone" — the demographic predicament facing Israel. "Barring some divine interven- tion," he says, "the Arabs will become a majority in the not-so-distant future. There is no possibility what- soever that a Jewish state can exist THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS where the majority of its inhabitants are Arabs. "The Arabs will demand political rights, and when they obtain them — because there will be no choice —they will have a majority in the Knesset and demand equality with regard to the Law of Return. "This will spell the end of the Jewish state. Jews are not coming here. Arabs will. And lots of them, too. "If we refuse to grant them political rights, the situation won't be any bet- ter. Our rule in the West Bank will become less and less tolerated. "The Arab inhabitants of the ter- ritories still consider the Israeli occupation temporary, and they will somehow put up with it as long as they continue to view it as such. "Once they realize that this is an irrevocable situation, serious distur- bances will break out. Terrorism will intensify at an alarming rate and the situation will become intolerable. "We must bear in mind that the Palestinians are making progress all the time. Their intelligentsia is grow- ing, and history has already shown that the more developed a nation is, the less it is willing to tolerate foreign rule. "The Arabs are not orphans. They enjoy the concern of public opinion both inside and outside Israel — including, of course, the Arab coun- tries. If no settlement is reached, horrendous wars will break out. The peace with Egypt will collapse. Everything will collapse. "Even if Israel emerges victorious it will be at a catastrophic cost in human life and the Arabs are far more able than we to sustain losses. "However you look at it, Israel as good as commits suicide if it does not reach a settlement over the ter- ritories." The only logical, if unrealistic, path for Israel if it intends holding on to the territories and retaining the Jewish character of the state, says Hakarbi, is that proposed by Rabbi Meir Kahane and his openly racist Kach movement, which advocates the expulsion of all Arabs from Israel and the territories. "I don't believe we could do it," says Hakarbi. "It is not only a moral ques- tion, it's a question of the reactions such a move will trigger throughout the world. "It is also, of course, a question of Israel's staying power, which would be vital in the violence that will reach new heights if such a move is taken." Hakarbi terms his own generation "the generation that is betraying their children." "We are leaving such dreadful prob- lems to our children that it is difficult to believe they will ever manage to cope with them," he says. "We are throwing them to the wolves with our own hands." 'We Are Locked Together' R AJA SHEHADEH was 16 years old in 1967. He remembers seeing women from the Latrun area, carrying bundles of possessions, passing his family home in the West Bank town of Ramallah. The women said that the Jews had chased them from their villages and had killed their menfolk. "I was scared that I would be killed, too," says Raja, scion of a prominent Christian Arab family that has produced generations of lawyers and judges. "I recall discus- sions at home about where it was safest to sit to avoid the bullets." There were of course, no bullets, on- ly the arrival of Israeli officers who sought the help and advice of Raja's father in the task of restoring calm and normal services to the newly- conquered areas. "The Israelis I met at home were very impressive, very high-caliber," says Raja, himself now a lawyer and active in the predominantly Palestin- ian human rights organization called Law in the Service of Man. "The option of anger and hate," he says, "was frustrated by my personal encounters." Raja has, in fact, become a leading exponent of the concept of "sam- mud" —steadfastness — which he describes as "the third way between the alternatives of mute submission and blind hate." Like many Palestinians of his generation, he longs for an end to the Israeli occupation; for a realization of Palestinian self-determination. But living cheek-by-jowl with Israel for 20 years has had a profound im- pact on his thinking. "Israelis and Palestinians are locked together, for better or for worse," he says. "Both sides have yearnings, both sides are fatigued. Both seem to define themselves in terms of the other, in terms of arrogance and fear." He speaks sadly of a feeling "that all three religions are being driven to fanaticism, to tribalism," and he speaks with anger of the militant Jewish settlers "who plant their flags at the tops of hills as if they were discovering the moon where no one