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Israel has
every right to expand settlements
by Michael Freund
Don't tell this to Secretary of State Colin Powell, but a friend of mine
in a West Bank Jewish settlement is thinking of adding an extra bathroom
to his home.
Normally, the lavatory layout in a private Jewish household outside of
Jerusalem would hardly be a matter of international diplomatic concern.
With the war on terror in its early stages and America gearing up for
battle against Saddam Hussein, one would assume that the U.S. foreign
policy establishment has more important things to worry about than how
many flush options will be available to my friend and his family.
That assumption, however, has proven to be wrong. In a series of recent
statements, Powell has repeatedly insisted that Israel should halt all
construction in Jewish settlements throughout the West Bank and Gaza.
Speaking on NBC's ''Meet the Press'' on May 5, Powell said, ''Something
has to be done about the problem of the settlements, the settlements
continue to grow and continue to expand.''
To which I cannot help but respond: What is wrong with that?
Down the road from my friend's community lies an Arab village, where
building proceeds apace, unrestricted and unhindered. No one has gone on
the Sunday talk shows to denounce such activity, for the simple reason
that it isn't anyone's business what a person decides to do in his own
home. Why, then, does construction become an international issue simply
because the person involved is a Jew?
Indeed, there is something very troubling about the fact that a U.S.
secretary of state would object to the erection of a house based on the
religious or ethnic identity of its owner. In the olden days, we had a
word for such views: racism. And segregation.
To deny people the right to live in a certain area because they are Jews
is no different from denying African Americans or Hispanics or any other
ethnic group the right to live where they please. And to suggest that the
exercise of that right is somehow an ''obstacle to peace'' and must be
halted is to capitulate to the haters and allow them to dictate who may
live where. We cannot allow that to happen.
The fact is that Jews choosing to live in the West Bank and Gaza are
pioneers. They are returning to live in the heartland of Israel, the place
that served as the cradle of Western civilization and religion.
These areas--which we in Israel refer to by their original names of Judea,
Samaria and Gaza--were the scene of much of the drama described in the
Bible. It is the place where King David walked and where the prophets of
Israel gave the world a vision of peace and brotherhood.
Ancient synagogues and archeological sites attest to the long-standing
Jewish presence in the region, a presence that is once again flourishing
despite Arab opposition. Moreover, Israel did not ''occupy'' these
territories, as the Palestinians and others would have you believe. In the
1967 Six Day War, Arab armies massed on Israel's narrow borders, vowing to
destroy the Jewish state.
In a war of self-defense, Israel succeeded in overcoming its enemies, in
the process taking control over Judea, Samaria and Gaza. Under
international law, territories are considered ''occupied'' only when they
are taken in an act of aggression--which clearly does not apply to
Israel's case.
It was 35 years ago this month that Israel prevailed in the 1967 war,
returning to places such as Hebron and Shilo. For 2,000 uninterrupted
years, Jews had lived in the ancient Jewish quarter of Hebron, near the
Tomb of the Patriarchs where Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are buried. Only in
1929, when local Arabs massacred them, was the Jewish community forced to
flee the city. What could be more historically just than to rebuild the
Jewish presence there?
Jews have a moral, legal, historical and Biblical right to settle the
territories. And despite the threat posed by Palestinian terrorism, that
is precisely what they continue to do. The number of Jews living in Judea,
Samaria and Gaza has more than doubled in the past decade, with more than
200,000 people now living in some 150 communities. They work and play and
hope and dream just like the rest of us.
Israel's settlements matter, then, because they are at the forefront of
righting a historical wrong, one in which Jews were previously barred from
living in their ancestral homeland due to Arab rejectionism and hatred.
But as the American people so bravely demonstrated in the aftermath of
Sept. 11, the best response to one's mortal foes is to go right on living.
And building. And that is what the Jews of Israel will undoubtedly
continue to do as well.
(Michael Freund is an editorial writer and syndicated columnist for the
Jerusalem Post.)
Source:
www.suntimes.com/output/otherviews/cst-edt-ref15.html
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