The Michigan Daily - New Student Edition - Fall 2003 - 9B 'U' should divest from Israeli apartheid Idea of 'Iraeli Apartheid' a reduction BY SALAH HUSSEINI magine that in 2002, a small group of Muslims decides for one reason or another that they want to take back southern Spain, the lands which were once conquered by the Islamic Empire some 1250 years ago and establish a Muslim-only state. The groups believes that they are the rightful owners of tha. since at one point in history Mus. had established a flourishing empire in that area. And so, this group, with the support of a superpower, say, the United States, violently takes back Andalusia, killing thousandrf Spaniards and making refugees.;ut of millions. But this group is not content. They want more. Against the will of the world, with the exception of the US, its main backer, these Muslims continue their push through the rest of Spain, through Madrid, all the way up to the French border, eventually taking over the entire nation. All native Spaniards are either expelled or become subjects of this new Mus- lim state, where they are forced to live in sub-human conditions, in refugee camps or in isolated and impoverished towns once of beauty and splendor, but since suffocated by the Muslim rule. Of course, the Spaniards fight back - and who wouldn't, but the Muslims call this fighting back terrorism, justifiably so if one neglects the context, and retali- ate by demolishing entire blocks in Spanish towns, striking civilian areas with the latest war machines, arrest- ing thousands, and barring all the original Spanish inhabitants the right to travel from town to town, and even imposing 24-hour curfews which last weeks on end. the United States' misplaced support. Had the analogy described above occurred in reality, the international community would be up in arms, and rightfully so, against those hypotheti- cal Muslim invaders. Unfortunately the reality which is before us is that Israel is still guaran- teed a green light to continue its bru- tal policies against the Palestinian people. What can be done then? A message must be sent to the Israeli government, as well as our govern- ment, that all countries must be held equally accountable for their actions. Because of its blatant disregard for human rights and international law, and the ineffectiveness of the United Nations, Israel's brutal policies against the Palestinians must be com- bated at the grass-roots level, via such actions as divestment. By withdrawing all monetary sup- port from Israeli investments, this University can send this message. This community has proven in the past its dedication to the upholding of basic human rights, as demonstrated by the divestment movement against South African apartheid in the 1980s. It is time once again for the community to take a stance Against the apartheid-like practices of the Israeli government against the Palestinian people. Husseini is the vice president of theArab- American Anti-Discrimination Committee BY ELAN DOBBS It is difficult to know where to begin refuting the insidious, not-ter- ribly-well-conceived parallels invoked by Salah Husseini's editorial piece from September 16. To anyone familiar with the history and content of the Apartheid regime in South Africa, a direct comparison between it and Israeli occupation of the W t Bank immediately sticks out ainane and inapposite. Unfortunately, in a world of catch phrases and over sim- plification, it seems that the talis- manic repetition of such a provocative word, even when com- pletely divorced from its meaning and context carries with it a great. deal of power. Many proin ent members of the University cNmwu' nity have made the irresponsible and selfish decision to choose incitement over oration, propaganda over infor- mation and unproductive, factually inaccurate renditions of history over thoughtful, level dialogue. This thinking and these postures keep pushing progress and peace to the edges of our collective imagination. I need look no further for evidence of this depressing trend than to Hus- seini's piece. Husseini asks us to com- pare the Jews in the State of Israel to a hypothetical raiding party, leaving some (pray tell, where?) homeland with the purpose of overruning a native population (viz., the Palestini- ans). While this hypothetical invasion bears striking resemblance to the his- torical injustices perpetrated by Euro- pean imperialists upon native populations the world round, it has no bearing on Israel unless you believe that Jews have neither a historical nor legal right to existence within any bor- Palestinian populace. No one should have to suffer as the Palestinians have. The settlement policy, especially since the early '80s and especially in Gaza and Hebron is, in my opinion foolish and wrong. These feelings do not, however, beg Husseini's conclusion that Israel's existence is an affront to the order of things, nor does it change the fact that the vast majority of aelis would, if given the chance, brace a peaceful Palestinian State t door (I say that with full under- st~nding of what current Israeli opin- ion polls say ... these are the products of a country at war. I also don't really believe the Palestinian polls at the moment reflect the genuine opinion of that population. Take a look at domes- polls right now and you could 1sely conclude that Americans don't care for their own civil liberties). I am greatly saddened by the at best obtuse and at worst hateful rami- fications of cheap and easy political reductions of a situation that is both unique in history and profoundly morally gray. I sincerely hope, mem- bers of the University community, that you are not won over by invective from either side and that you take a hard look at the last 54 years before you decide where you stand. Let's foster a little bit of understanding. Dobbs is a Law student. the fact that this analogy is quite clear as to whom it refers to, it sounds impossible if one keeps the names in place as they are above. But unfortunately, this has been the reality in the Middle East. Because of its blind support by our government, Israel has been able to get away with great injustices for the last 54 years. While we dub Iraq's refusal of United Nations inspectors into that country an action worthy of war, we fail to dis- cuss the fact that Israel is currently in violation of more than 70 United Nations resolutions. And it has been able to get away with this because of ence to its actual meaning) to damn Israel but seems to take no stock in the fact that Israel was created by a clear, unequivocal act of international law that was not respected by its neigh- bors. In violation of international law, those neighbors perpetrated four wars of aggression against the new nation. Now, I am, as far as Israeli politics are concerned, to the left of center. I do believe that a great number of Israeli policies are ill-conceived and along with hostile neighbors and inept Palestinian leadership have resulted in intolerably bad conditions for the Divestment conference not about divestment JOHANNA HANINK PARLANCE OF OUR TIMES f you haven't heard about it, you haven't been paying attention, and believe me, I am truly jealous of you. But if you do know about it, you know it's controversial. The Second National Student Conference on the Palestine Solidarity Movement came to the University from Oct. 12-14 - happily over fall break. From here on out I'll call it by what it is (the long and sloppy official name is just for show anyway), the Divestment Con- ference. If you disagree with my inference, tell the organizers - you can find their contact info at wwwdivestmentconference.com. What you can't find in the mission statement at divestmentconference.com, howev- er, is a single mention of the word "peace." This conference has already received a slight nod from the national media; it was mentioned in, among other outlets, last week's issue of Time. When it hap- pens, people will pay attention. Argument about whether a conference like this should be allowed to take place at this University is silly and irrelevant; it's going to happen. It should. We should be happy to have it here; we should be especially happy to have a thriving Hillel and a vibrant Jewish community that can organize a wonderful and intellectual schedule of events in reaction to it. If there's going to be dialogue, let it happen at Michigan. Let it happen at a school where everyone has an opinion and there is a means to express it. The concept of divestment itself is not inherently anti-Semitic (we all know that anti-Semitic means anti-Jewish, so let's not start any useless semantic debate). We divested from South Africa, yes, and the idea of divesting from Israel is on the table so, again, yes - let's talk about it. The problem with divestment is when the concept ceases to exist individually. Divestment is a means of economic pressure - in South Africa, economic pressure was a tool for political change. When it comes to Israel, however, divestment advocates' motives become suspicious when they don't see divestment as being about economics, but instead about the permanent destruction and vilification of a country. Their motives become suspicious when not one speaker at a conference about divestment is addressing economics. The framework of this conference comes with exactly the kind of nasty baggage that people (take Larry Summers, the president of Harvard or the Anti-Defamation League, for example) have been worried about. Some of those who are organizing the conference are truly engaging, intellectual and compassionate activists. However, whether these people are aware of it, there is lan- guage in the conference's mission statement that is ugly and wrong. The conference "condemns the racism and discrimination inherent in Zionism." Herein lays the prob- lem. If racism and discrimination are inherent in - inextricable from - Zionism, an elementary transitive approach could reconfigure this statement to say that the confer- ence condemns Zionism. Merriam Webster defines Zionism as "An international move- ment originally for the establishment of a Jewish national or religious community in Palestine and later for the support of modern Israel." Condemnation of Zionism is gen- eral condemnation of the State of Israel. And once again, whether the organizers know it, the connection here to anti-Semitism is not so abstract, not so far-fetched. If this conference is about anti-Zionism, then, it's also not about ending the occupa- tion. The occupation should end. A lot of Israelis, a lot of Jews (the two groups are not the same) agree. If this conference is about anti-Zionism, it's about reversing the "Naqba' it's about not wanting there to be a State of Israel at all. To some, then, of the organizers, - I assure you not all - this conference is not even about divestment. They know that the University is not going to divest. The conference is, instead, intended to shift the set of assumptions that the common person not so up on the politics of the Middle East has. When someone presents me with the statement "Israel is apartheid; we should divest," it's easy for me to miss that there are two components of this statement that I need to challenge. I'll consider whether we should divest, but now I'll simply assume that the situation in Israel is com- parable to apartheid. My internal suppositions will have therefore adjusted through text- book rhetorical strategy. You have to hand it to these people; it's a pretty smart strategy. "Divestment may be only a fall fad on college campuses, but it's political nitroglyc- erin," wrote John Alter in his Oct. 7 Newsweek column. He believes that it undermines work toward a two-state solution. I agree with him. Maybe I'll be less cynical when I see a divestment conference talking about - just to stay in the neighborhood - the Syrian occupation of Lebanon. Or maybe I'll be less cynical when the word "peace" finally appears on that website. Hanink can be reached at jhanink@umich.edu. ~ Cha-Cha - Rumba - Samba - Jive/Swing - Salsa - Waltz - Foxtrot 1 Ballroom Dance Club Trial Membership only $3 Social Dancing and Lessons Sundays @ the Michigan Union Beginner lessons 7-8 pm Open to Students AND members of the community! Beginners welcome! No experience or partner required! http://www.umich.edu/~umbdc Schlanderer Jewelers Fourth Generation Serving Ann Arbor Fine Diamonds, Colored Jewelry and Swiss Watches ht