Some have contacted me expressing disappointment and even
anger that Obama was not stronger in condemning Israel for its brutal treatment of
the Palestinians. I have read that some
Palestinians were feeling betrayed by the American president. I understand their anger. However, but for
what it’s worth:
I read (not heard) Obama’s speech to the students in Jerusalem and I am not
that upset by it. Like those who are angry, it galls me that he referred to
“the courage of the Israeli Defense Force,” without any reference to its brutal
bombardment of its unarmed neighbors such as Lebanon
in ’82, and Gaza in ‘08-09 and again in 2012, killing
hundreds of civilians. Knowing that
history, how can he say, “In Israel
we see values that we share.” He brought
up rockets in Sderot, without a hint of the multiple murders of women and children
in Gaza that triggered those rockets, as “Israel ’s right
to defend itself.” He called Menachem Begin, one of the world’s worst
terrorist, “a brave leader” of Israel .
He must have forgotten Begin’s Irgun days when he blew up the King David Hotel , executed British soldiers and massacred
at least a hundred unarmed citizens in Deir Yassin. Nor in any way did Obama hold Begin
accountable for the thousands, mostly women and children, killed during the
1982 invasion of Lebanon .
Our president referred to a two state solution without any
reference to the almost 600,000 settlers who continue to steal land and water
from Palestinian families. He ignored the construction of the apartheid wall as
well as praised Israel ’s
military disengagement from Gaza
as if it had been a disengagement. It’s not “disengagement” when you continue
to control the imports of food, medicine and fuel, and shoot fishermen seeking
to survive in their own waters.
I agree that Obama ignored Israel ’s abysmal behavior and
record of human rights violations.
At the same time,
the word “Palestine ” has seldom passed
the lips of any U.S.
president, politician, preacher or broadcaster
for the past 64 years. Obama obviously knew, since his Cairo speech, that anything he said on this issue
would be repeated over and over. Yet, he
still put the Palestinians on the table.
Then, maybe in the best part of his speech, he paints Arabs,
especially Palestinians, as “no different” than the kids to whom he was speaking:
Four years ago, I stood in Cairo in front of an
audience of young people. Politically, religiously, they must seem a world
away. But the things they want – they’re not so different from you. The ability
to make their own decisions; to get an education and a good job; to worship God
in their own way; to get married and have a family. The same is true of the
young Palestinians that I met in Ramallah this morning, and of young
Palestinians who yearn for a better life in Gaza .
He used the term, “occupation,” and spoke of “justice for
Palestinians.” Will his saying these things make any difference? Probably not
to the governments of the U.S.
or Israel . But maybe, just maybe, his recognition of a
Palestinian people who have hopes and
dreams just like those to whom he was speaking may touch the conscience of
those young people. I don’t think he
was talking to Netanyahu or the U.S. Congress. He was talking to the future Israel
which will be one state made up of Israelis and Palestinians. Those kids will have to decide whether it will
be an apartheid state of violent oppressors or a democratic nation for all its
citizens.
He challenged those 2000 students in Israel , and he did so, in spite of
the attacks he will receive from the big four: Netanyahu, the Republicans, the
Christian fundamentalists and the lobby, none of which express any caring for the Palestinians. The
reality of the Israeli/Palestinian situation has been deliberately hidden from
the American people. At least, Obama put it on the table.
Now, it’s up to the rest of us, ordinary people like you and
me, to keep it there.
Thomas Are
March 30, 2013