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From the Chicago Sunday Times.
Palestinians: Israel simply is not yours
September 9, 2001
BY NEIL STEINBERG SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST
Why does the United States control immigration from Mexico? The answer
is
simple. As much as the United States is a melting pot of races and
cultures,
it does have a certain makeup, a comfortable balance. The Latino
population
is 12 percent and growing. Should the floodgates open and the nation
suddenly find itself 40 or 50 percent Latino, well, it would be a
different
sort of place. Maybe better, maybe worse-I won't enter into that.
But I think it is fairly uncontroversial to say that the United States
tries
to keep change at a certain crawling pace. All countries do this. The
Australians turn away a ship filled with Afghan refugees; Germans foam
about
the Turks in their midst. The Japanese consider descendants of Koreans
who
have lived in their country 100 years to be Koreans still.
So universal is this idea of keeping Our Side from being too richly
seeded
with Their Side that it must echo some deep chord of human nature. No
doubt
a throwback to the 100,000 years or so when we travelled in small
tribes and
slept in big, smelly piles for warmth at night. Given the basic,
in-your-boneness of this desire to maintain the group, it would be
almost
funny-if it weren't so tragic-to see the Palestinians argue that
Israel's
attempts to preserve its own identity as a country and keep its people
from
being blown apart in public places as not only racism, but a
particularly
loathsome form of racism.
To return to the comparison with Mexicans, a number of Americans harbor
antipathy toward Mexicans-they want those borders sealed tight. It's a
mystery to me. As far as I can tell, the central crimes held against
Mexicans once they get here seem to consist largely of working hard at
low-paying jobs and tending to speak a language not our own.
Now, imagine the reaction if, in addition to these transgressions,
Mexicans
also lobbied for open borders by every so often showing up unannounced
at
local malls wrapped in dynamite and nails and blowing
themselves up in crowds of shoppers. We'd go berserk. We'd have a big
wall
along the Rio Grande so high it would put the Great Wall of China to
shame.
Our racists and haters-who are snarling and straining at their leashes
on
the best of days-would be liberated to run the countryside.
Palestinians reading this will no doubt point out that, unlike Mexicans
in
the United States, the West Bank and Gaza (and no doubt, Jerusalem and
the
rest of Israel) are their land. Being a sympathetic sort, I can
appreciate
the power of that argument-it must be very vexing to spend your life
crouching in a blazing sandy nowhere, convinced that some usurper is
relaxing in your olive garden.
The problem with the Palestinian logic is that it isn't true. It isn't
their
land-not anymore. Israel has it, and you can complain all you want
about the
injustices of history, but that doesn't change a thing. The
United States got hold of Texas in a manner not nearly so fair and open
as
the creation of Israel, yet if Mexicans started to blow themselves up
at
Northbrook Court, trying to get Texas back, they wouldn't make nearly
the
progress that the Palestinians made before their hunger to have
absolutely
every inch of Israel undid them.
Before the West Bank was Israel's, remember, it was Jordan's. Jordan
had it
for years. They didn't rush to make it into a Palestinian homeland. The
only
reason Israel got hold of it was because, in 1967, the Arabs tried, for
the
third time in 20 years, to destroy Israel. The Israeli Army, as per
tradition, kicked their collective butts. It took Gaza and the West
Bank and
Sinai and would have rolled into Cairo and done the hora around the
pyramids, but with an eye toward future relations, pulled up short.
The Egyptians played nice, so they got Sinai back. The Palestinians
would
have gotten a country already, with stamps and coins and a code of
maritime
law, had they been able to forget the fact that what they really want
is all
the Jews in Israel dead and their heads placed on spikes all along the
border. You have to stand in awe of a hatred so hard and bitter you'd
send
your kids out to blow themselves up, just to give the hatred its daily
exercise.
I find it puzzling, though I try to ask myself how I'd feel if my
grandfather fled the country where his family had dwelled for hundreds
of
years, leaving his land and possessions to be claimed by others.
Then I remember, oh yeah, my grandfather did flee the country where his
family had dwelled for hundreds of years: Poland. He fled, and those
who
stayed were slaughtered, every man, woman and child.
And you know what? I don't want the family farm in Bialystok back. I
don't
hate the Poles at all-heck, I consider myself half Polish. The
Palestinians,
who are scoring points borrowing a page from the Anti-Defamation League
playbook for manipulating publicity, could also learn something from
Jews
when it comes to hatred. Jews have been done wrong all over the place.
(I
know Palestinians believe the Holocaust never happened, but we're
fairly
convinced. Nobody from the Polish side of the family shows up at
reunions)
Despite this, we are not overwhelmed by hatred, because we know that it
doesn't get you anywhere. We've learned a secret-life is precious and
short,
and hatred only consumes the haters, sometimes literally, in a
deafening
flash.
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