*1 OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, October 4, 1989 The Mhihgan Daily Wbe £kihwua ?&d1y Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. C, No. 20 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Pawns in their game A Jewish idea of Israel FH E U.S. Government has worked hard for the right of Soviet Jews to emigrate. In the past it accepted the emigres freely. But now, as Gorbachev and glasnost prepare to release more than ever ---- 50,000 this year, double that next year, compared to 19,000 in 1988 - the State Department has an- nounced that it will apply tougher im- migration standards and will turn away more than three-fourths of those who wish to enter. Why? The Government was not motivated by strictly humanitarian concerns when it began to press Brezhnev to set Jews free in the early 1970s. A coalition of Jewish and humanitarian groups, with the valuable support of The New York Dmes, courageously took up the chore of advocacy; they were met by a Nixon Administration eager to show the world how the Soviets persecuted their peo- ples. Refugees from Cuba and other Communist countries were given simi- lar attention; those from Pinochet's Chile and white-ruled South Africa, none at all. Each year, Congress decides how many of those seeking to escape politi- cal persecution it wants to let in. The number ranges from 100,000 to 150,000, although Congress recog- nizes, conservatively, more than ten million. The Immigration and Naturalization Service chooses the pool which may immigrate, applying a recipe which ranks the afflicted by the degree of peril they face - and always reckoning that people in Communist countries are in special danger. The unlucky ones who fall into the bottom of the six categories are stripped of the title "refugee," and are generally refused entrance. Until last year, Soviet Jews were ex- empted from this whole process; but at the close of his term as Attorney Gen- eral, Edwin Meese changed that, and for the first time the U.S. turned 20% of the Soviet Jews away. Lamentable, but not enough to raise a stir. The Bush Administration has gone a step further, and insisted that more Soviet Jews be placed in the sixth cate- gory. Now 75% will be rejected. The Government has never claimed that Soviet Jewry today are less persecuted: it merely cites fiscal reasons. Last year, it says, it cost $7000 to process the pa- pers for each refugee, to fly them over, and to settle them. Such mercenary ar- guments are despicable: what cost a human life, and with a budget in the billions? In this case, they are also a lie. Processing the applications from Soviet Jewry had been expensive. Emigres were passed through Vienna to Rome, where they waited news from the United States. There are now 14,000 in limbo in the suburb of Ladispoli, outside Rome. But there will be no more. Gorbachev has allowed the U.S. to streamline its operations by deciding cases at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, while applicants remain in the Soviet Union. The savings will be about 75% per person (Th e Economist, 9/9/89). No doubt the U.S. can afford to take more Soviet Jews; it has decided it doesn't want to. The decision came at the request of the Israeli government. Prime Minister Shamir started asking the U.S. to re- voke refugee status when he took office (NYT 9/24/89). He has never hidden his desire to have Jews immigrate to Israel alone. Jews now leave Israel at the rate of 20,000 a year, while the Arab population inside its borders is growing. Arabs promise to become a majority in the Jewish state within a generation unless Shamir is able to swell the Jewish population. So the American Israeli Public Affairs Com- mittee spent $800,000 lobbying Washington for the recent change in status. The problem is that the vast majority of Jews leaving the Soviet Union don't pick Israel as their first choice for a new home. The Economist says that some 90% want to come here; that es- timate may be high, but the 14,000 Jews in Ladispoli speak for the broad truth of the statement. All of them could go to Israel immediately - the Dutch embassy processes visas for Is- rael in less than a day. All of them are waiting to see if they can go to the U.S. instead. Under the new policy, they will be forced into Israel. Jews have suffered enough in the Soviet Union. For them to become pawns of the Israeli and American governments is inhumane. By Israel Shahak Dr. Israel Shahak is Professor of Chemistry at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. He is Chair of the Israel League for Human Rights, a civil liberties organization he has lead since 1970. Shahak is a leading advocate of Palestinian human rights and considered Israel's most renowned dissident. He will be speaking tonight on the present political climate in Israel and also the nature and current status of the Palestinian popular uprising. His talk begins at 7:00 pm at 100 Hutchins Hall in the Law Quad. I will begin from the Israeli Jewish an- gle by telling you what, in my opinion, are the reasons why the Palestinian rebel- lion broke out in December 1987. There are very deep and immediate reasons, which proceed from the changes in the Israeli Jewish society in the spring or summer of 1987, when Jewish chauvin- ism began to increase enormously and in a visible way. Out of many open manifesta- tions, I will mention two. Pogroms From June to August 1987, a period during which the occupied territories are quiet - completely quiet - there were a series of pogroms against Palestinians in Israel itself. By "pogroms" I mean exactly the common use of the word. In a given neighborhood, usually quite a big neigh- borhood, all of a sudden, all the flats or houses or rooms rented by Arabs were vandalized and burned. The Arabs were beaten and expelled from the neighbor- hoods. I mean all the Arabs - both from the Palestinian territories and Israeli Arabs. The police did not give any protec- tion, and the neighborhoods became free of Arabs. The Hebrew press at the time in- vented, or re-invented, using Hebrew char- acters, a German word, Arabien, which means in German, "clean of Arabs," from the German word employed by the Nazis, Judenrein, "clean of Jews." They invented the expression in order to refer to what was happening - a process of Nazification. The "Transfer Proposal" The second deep manifestation was what e call the "transfer proposal." "Transfer," in the Israeli use of the word, refers to a proposal which has been current in Israel from July or August 1987, to expel all the Palestinians - I emphasize, all the Palestinians - from all occupied territo- ries. By the way, I am not speaking about 'But there is also great hope. If the Palestinian people con- tinue the uprising, a majority of the Israelis can be persuaded to withdraw from the territories.' similar argument would have gone in Mississippi or Alabama 40 or 50 years ago. The second important argument made by those people, who are much more serious in their political approach than either Kahane or the settlers, comes from the 0 Kahane, as you will see; I am speaking about the "respectable" members of Israeli society. Here the difference from Kahane comes out. This is not proposed for so- called reasons of security, but from so- called reasons of principle. The one who proposed this plan is General Rahaban Zahevi, a very good friend of Defense Minister Rabin. Only last week he held a big symposium in Tel Aviv about this proposal which was at- tended by a former chief of military intel- ligence, General Shlomo Gazit. Also at- tending were the formal Central Command of the West Bank, Uri Orr, and many other distinguished figures from Israeli military intelligence, retired of course, and even from the literary establishment. Another person who publicly supported this idea last summer was Mr. Michael Dekel, Deputy Minister of Mr. Rabin. And Mr. Rabin, who could, under Israeli constitu- tional laws, dismiss Mr. Dekel and simply ask that Likud nominate another Deputy, did not do it. I want to emphasize, first of all, that from last summer, the idea of expulsion of all the Palestinians from all the occupied territories was supported by important people who are completely different from Kahane, and completely different also from the settlers. Second, this transfer idea is always supported for reasons of principle, not for reasons of security. One reason, given both by Mr. Dekel and by General Gazit, is opposition to assimilation. If Palestinians remain in the occupied territo- ries, then sooner or later there will be mar- riages between Palestinians and Jews. And since they believe that mixed marriages are the greatest calamity for the Jewish people that can be imagined - a proposition which, I am afraid, is accepted by a good half of Israeli society - this can be a very strong argument. Try to imagine how a history of Zionism. They make many ref- erences to Ben Gurion, and to other leaders of a socialist type of Zionism who sup- ported expulsion. They point out that ex- pulsion was not carried out only during times of war, but also during the time of absolute peace, such as the expulsion which was carried out by Ben Gurion, from 1949 to 1957. For example, near Gaza there is a town now called Ashkelon which once was called Majdal, and from this town all the Palestinians - 15,000 of them - were expelled by an agreement with Egypt in 1951, at a time of complete peace. The Future Now, about the future. The question to be asked is not so much about the Israeli government, but about the Israeli Jewish people. Even if there is enough pressure from the Palestinian people or from other, outside forces, we still are in great danger. Half the Israeli Jewish people are prepared to make a war, not only on Palestinians but on other states, in order to effect this transfer. But there is also great hope. If the Palestinian people continue the uprising, a majority of the Israelis can be persuaded to withdraw from the territories. But, I must be clear, we are now no more than 15 per- cent of the people with this moral consid- eration. We might increase to 30 percent, but that is not enough. However, by mak- ing things unpleasant for our society, we could capture the majority. Then it would not be a question of an international con- ference; we would speak directly with rep- resentatives of the Palestinian people, just as we did with Sadat. The above was excerpted from an article that appeared in the Covert Action Bulletin, Summer 1988. Mubarak plan necessary I Where they go Annual emigration of Soviet Jews to: 0o00s ' Israel '~ United States 35 By Ori Lev, The editorial "Camp David Revisited" (9/27/89) claims that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's ten-point plan for elec- tions in the Israeli-occupied territories is "a whitewash" and "a giant step back- ward." I beg to differ. Mubarak's plan is the outside impetus needed to start the long stalled Middle East peace process. Third party mediation, of which the Egyptian plan is an example, is essential to getting the two sides involved, namely the Israelis and the Palestinians, to talk to each other. The Mubarak plan is obvi- ously an attempt to get both sides to compromise and begin direct negotiations. The Palestinians are asked to partic- ipate in elections without the stipulation that these elections will lead to the estab- lishment of a Palestinian state. The Palestinians are also asked to abandon their demand that Israel negotiate directly with the PLO. The Israelis, however, are asked to accept the results of these elec- tions regardless of who is elected, meaning that if PLO support is as strong as the Daily and others claim, the Israelis would be obliged to speak with PLO supporters. The Israelis are also asked to stop building settlements in the occupied territories; the Daily does not view this as a concession but it is certainly a concession for the rul- ing Likud party. Israeli troops would be required to leave election sites on the day of the voting and Israel would also be re- quired to accept the notion of trading land for peace. The Daily claims that "the Palestinians... have not been consulted" about this issue. However, Mubarak dis- cussed his peace plan last week with Yassir Arafat, the head of the PLO, whom the Daily recognizes as the sole representa- tive of the Palestinian people. The Daily also complains that no specific borders are called for in the plan, and chastises Israel for "refus[ing] to define its own (borders)." The reason Israel does not have le- gally recognized "borders" is that no Arab country, with the exception of Egypt, has been willing to sign a peace treaty with Israel. Only ceasefires have been reached, setting up ceasefire lines. This has been the case since the establishment of the State of Israel, and continues to be the case today. It is the Arab countries who have in the past refused to recognize Israel and her borders, and it was the Arab coun- tries, who, following the 1967 Mid-East War in which Israel gained control of the West Bank and Gaza, issued their "Three No" declaration specifically stating: "No recognition of Israel's right to exist, No 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 negotiations, and No peace." It would be ridiculous, however, if the Mubarak plan were to specify bor- ders - that is what the negotiations are to be about. But in order to have negotia- tions, there must first be agreement as to who is negotiating. The Mubarak plan is an excellent way of forcing both sides to compromise while not forcing either side to give in completely. That is the only way for negotiations to begin, and negoti- ation is the only way out of the problem. The Daily must abandon its unreal- istic and simplistic notion that the Arab- Israeli conflict is a black and white issue. It must abandon its dream that the way to solve the problem is for Israel to unilater- ally accept all Palestinian demands and leave the territories immediately and un- conditionally. The only way to reach a tenable solution is through mutually re- spected negotiations and the Mubarak plan is a positive step in establishing these ne- gotiations. One can only hope that both the Israelis and the Palestinians are willing to compromise and take advantage of this opportunity. 0 Ori Lev is a sophomore in the LSA college of Crossing the By Michael Weiss For several years now the Daily has come under consistent and repeated criticism from Jewish individuals and groups on campus regarding its anti-Israel editorial positions. During the two years of the Daily's coverage of the intifadah, it's been accused of anti-Semitism, insensitivity, and "Jew-baiting"on nu- merous occasions. During all this time, the Daily's con- sistent response was that anti-Zionism and decision to "drop the expressio religion." It's a sad story and a memoir of how one man's relig to reach out to him. But I fail to it's doing in the Daily. What Cohen's piece does isc Judaism. "I started looking more the orthodox members of myf the religious rites and practices w served," writes Cohen. "I began same differences between those and my. life that I felt between Tc. ..m oa dithe, 'tnrv n thin line n of [his] They, too, would be interesting stories. poignant But these stories, rightly, would not get ion failed printed. They have no place on the see what Opinion page of a newspaper. Why, then, was Cohen's bitter assault on his former cut down religious beliefs given such prominence? closely at I will say, to Philip Cohen, that he is family, at mistaken when he says it is "nearly im- ie had ob- possible [in the United States] to be a part to feel the of the religion without supporting the practices state [of Israel]." Zionism and Judaism are n the Old closely linked, but they are not identical. of Tcrni1 T.,,km ist n . , 1nttic- na nhi nhu i it L. 19707274 76 78 80 82 84 86 8889* e.s rn Jewish Committee *January-August 'I U