[antiwar-van] Preconditions for Dialogue

hanna hkawas at email.msn.com
Wed Oct 6 15:00:21 PDT 2004


The following letter was sent to Sarah Efron, a freelance journalist,
regarding reporting about the "Peace It Together" camp held this summer in
Vancouver.  The camp brought Israeli and Palestinian teenagers to Vancouver
from the Middle East and received alot of attention in the local media as a
step towards reconciliation in the region.  It was also well received by
local Zionists.  Our letter explains why most of the local Palestinian
community had reservations about this camp and similar initiatives.

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30/09/2004

Dear Sarah

Thank you for the report you did for CBC Radio about the Israeli/Palestinian
Peace Camp http://www.urbanlegend.ca/stories/peacecamp.shtml .   In your
print edition, you quote me as saying that "As long as there is no equality
(my emphasis), dialogue is nice but doesn't lead anywhere...".
In a large part of your interview with me, I talked about the preconditions
for any dialogue which included the importance of equality among peoples in
Israel/Palestine if there is any hope for a peaceful solution.  By putting
the sentence "As long as there is no equality" you captured the essence of
my reasoning as to why I have doubts about “Peace it Together”.
Unfortunately my opinion was not reflected in the CBC Radio on air report
http://www.urbanlegend.ca/radio.shtml.

I was disappointed that you did not inform me that you are going to use the
same interview for an article in the Zionist paper The Jewish Western
Bulletin (JWB)
http://www.jewishbulletin.ca/archives/Sept04/archives04Sept17-02.html .
This article also does not include any reference to equality as precondition
to dialogue. The JWB supports Israeli war crimes against the Palestinian
people and is complicit in these war crimes (please see our positions which
were reported by JWB):
http://www.jewishwesternbulletin.com/Archives/Aug03/archives03Aug01-01.html
and http://www.jewishbulletin.ca/Archives/Nov02/archives02Nov29-22.html)

I would like to re-state, for the record, the preconditions for any
successful dialogue amongst Palestinians and Israelis, which might lead to
fruitful results and help the process of  forgiveness, healing and
coexistence. In addition to agreeing to the obvious, that the 37 year old
Israeli occupation of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Jerusalem should be
terminated completely and unconditionally, the following are essential for
any future dialogue.

1- Recognizing the injustice that befell the Palestinian people in 1947/48
where over 400 Palestinian villages and towns were wiped off the map of the
world and where over 75 percent of the Palestinian people became refugees.
Without recognizing "the original sin against the native Arabs", as the
Israeli author Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi put it in his book Original Sins:
Reflections on the History of Zionism and Israel, THERE CAN BE NO DIALOGUE.

2- As long as there is no agreement on a coordinated and vocal opposition to
the racist laws, where discrimination between Jew and non Jew is
institutionalized in Israeli society, there is no basis for any fruitful
dialogue. An example of this is the Israeli law of return which applies to
any Jew (Israeli or not) while the same law does NOT apply to Palestinians
with Israeli citizenship because they are Muslims or Christians ( they are
not from the "chosen people"). Without recognizing the racist dimension of
such laws and having the commitment of all to reverse them, THERE CAN BE NO
DIALOGUE.

3- As long as 93 per cent of the land in Israel is controlled by the Jewish
National Fund (JNF) and as the Israeli scholar Uri Davis said, "is reserved
under law for Jewish citizens only. If the apartheid distinction in South
Africa was between white and non-white, the apartheid distinction in Israel
is between Jew and non-Jew". Without recognizing the injustice of these
Israeli apartheid land policies THERE CAN BE NO DIALOGUE.

4- Israeli-born Adam Keller from Gush Shalom in his recent trip to Canada
stated "The demand of Palestinian refugees to come back to where they lived
in Israel before 1948 is a morally justified demand. (One would think) the
first to sympathize with this would be a Zionist." The Palestinian Right of
Return should be recognized, and most objection to it is based solely on
supremacist ideology that does not recognize the humanity of Palestinian
Christians and Moslems. Without this recognition of this sacred collective
and individual "Right of Return", THERE CAN BE NO DIALOGUE.

Finally, any dialogue held without recognizing these basic conditions, no
matter how well-intentioned, is just a sham and serves the PR interests of
the more powerful side in the conflict (i.e. Israel).  This inescapable
outcome explains the reservations most Palestinians have towards projects
like the "peace camp".  True dialogue can be easily conducted if there is
recognition on both sides that we are all human beings with equal rights and
obligations.  If one side believes that they are a superior race and they
are doing it as a charity act or as an insurance policy or as a tactic till
objective conditions change, then THERE CAN BE NO DIALOGUE, NO JUSTICE AND
CERTAINLY NO HEALING, NO RECONCILIATION  AND NO PEACE.

Yours truly

Hanna Kawas

Chair, Canada Palestine Association www.cpavancouver.org

Host, Voice of Palestine www.voiceofpalestine.ca
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