Dunam after dunam
Dunam after dunam
by Uri Avnery
For Hebrew http://www.geocities.com/keller_adam/Avnery_heb.htm ìòáøéú
What would we say if an American
institution, holding a seventh of all the land in the United
States, adopted statutes that allowed it to sell or rent
land only to White Anglo-Saxon Protestants?
We would not believe it. And it is, indeed, impossible.
But that's the way things are in Israel. This us now the
subject of a stormy public debate.
These are the
facts: The Jewish National Fund (in Hebrew Keren Kayemet
le-Israel - KKL) holds 13% of all the land in Israel. Its
statutes explicitly prohibit the sale or rental of land to
non-Jews. This means that every Jew in the world, living
anywhere from Timbuktu to Kamchatka, can get land from the
KKL, without even coming to Israel, while an Arab citizen of
Israel, whose forefathers have lived here for hundreds - or
even thousands - of years, cannot acquire a house or an
apartment on its land.
The debate arose after a
recent ruling of the Israeli Supreme Court which proscribed
discrimination between citizens in the distribution of land.
On the strength of this, the KKL has been sued. Now the
Attorney General has decided that the Government cannot
discriminate against Arab citizens, even while distributing
land belonging to the KKL.
This is all very nice,
but there is a "but". The best legal brains looked for a way
out: How to keep the discrimination alive in spite of the
court's decision? No Problem. The Attorney General simply
proposes that for every dunam (1000 square meters, a Turkish
measure still applied in Israel) that the KKL will have to
distribute - God forbid - to Arabs, the government will
compensate it with another dunam somewhere else. The
alternative land will be in the "peripheral" areas, the
Negev and the Galilee, where it is much more profitable. And
for good measure, the government will guarantee that the
annual revenues of the KKL will reach half a billion
Shekels. Thus the cake will be divided but remain
whole.
The KKL, by the way, appoints almost half
the directors of the "Israel Land Authority", the government
body that is in charge of all state-owned land in Israel.
In this situation, 20% of the citizens of Israel
are denied the right to buy a home in large parts of the
country, while this right is enjoyed by Jews living in
Brooklyn and Odessa.
How did this state of affairs come about?
Like many other bad things
here, it started quite innocently.
More than a
hundred years ago, when the Zionist movement was created,
the need arose to buy land for Jewish immigrants in
Palestine. The KKL was set up for this purpose. In every
Zionist home around the world a blue collection box was hung
up. In every classroom in Jewish schools, children were
urged to drop their coins into the box. In Jewish schools in
this country, KKL-trustees were appointed, whose job was to
encourage donations, for example by organizing fund-raising
competitions between classes and between schools. The blue
box became a symbol of the Zionist movement, perhaps the
most prominent. I, too, put my coins into the box that was
passed along the benches every Friday in my classroom in the
Ahad-Ha'am elementary school in Tel-Aviv.
With
the money thus collected, a lot of land was acquired, on
which Kibbutzim and Moshavim were set up. That was the
height of Zionist idealism. The "Redemption of the Land" and
"Hebrew Labor" were the cornerstones of the Zionist
dream.
And, indeed, what could be more
beautiful? Children all over the world dropped their pennies
into the blue box. The land of Israel was bought with good
money. On this land the pioneers, sons of merchants and
usurers, tilled the field in the sweat of their
brows.
All over the world, Jewish children were
singing: "I shall tell you, girl, / And you too, boy, / How
in the land of Israel / The land is redeemed. // A dunam
here, a dunam there, / Clod after clod, / The land of the
people is being bought, / From the North to the Negev. // On
the wall there hangs a box, / A blue box, / Every penny in
the box / Redeems land…"
However, this beautiful story had a dark side, which was not registered in Zionist consciousness.
The land was indeed
bought, often at exorbitant prices, but from rich absentee
owners, who did not live on it or cultivate it. When the
late Ottoman Empire was bankrupt and in dire need of money,
it sold huge tracts to rich Arab merchants in Jaffa, Beirut
and other cities, who bought them as an investment. The Arab
Felaheen (farmers), who had tilled the land for many
generations, were mere tenants. When the KKL bought the
land, the Felaheen were driven out, often with the help of
the Turkish, and later the British police.
In
spite of all this effort, when the United Nations resolved
in November 1947 to partition the country between a Jewish
and an Arab State, less than 7% of the land belonged to
Jews. Only a part of this area belonged to the KKL, the rest
to private Jewish owners in the towns and the agricultural
"colonies".
Logic would have dictated that with
the founding of the State of Israel, the KKL transfer its
lands to the State. After all, that was the idea of
collecting the money.
But this did not happen. In
fact, the very opposite took place: the new state
transferred to the KKL millions of dunams of land
expropriated from Arabs - the refugees who were not allowed
to return ("absentees" in legal language), those who had
remained in the country but were absent on a given day from
their villages ("present absentees"), as well as Arabs who
became citizens of Israel.
It is important to
keep this in mind, since it disproves the big lie that
hovers over the whole debate: that the KKL land was bought
with the money of the Jewish people. The greater part of the
present KKL land was not bought at all, but conquered in war
and transferred to the KKL.
Why transferred? Why
did the sovereign state transfer lands gratis to a non-state
body? Only one reason comes to mind: so as to continue with
the discrimination against the Arab citizens.
In
an official brief, the KKL argues that it does not owe
loyalty to the principles of the State of Israel, as put
down in the 1948 Declaration of Independence (equality
between all citizens, regardless of religion and race), but
to "The Jewish People". This means that "The Jewish People",
which is not a political body, is being presented as an
independent entity superior to the State of Israel.
The KKL does not act, of course, for "the Jewish People". It
is an instrument of the Israeli Jewish community against the
Israeli Arab community. It has become an instrument for
institutionalized discrimination. The Attorney General's
sleight of hand, designed to satisfy the demand of the
Israeli Supreme Court for equality between all citizens,
while still allowing a body based on discrimination to keep
hold of 13% of the land in the state, does not change the
situation in principle.
The KKL is not unique. Discrimination reigns in many fields. In the last few days alone, the following facts happened to come to light:
* The chiefs of the Treasury Ministry are pondering how to pay allowances to big Jewish families, without paying them to big Arab families. (There are two communities in Israel with a soaring birth-rate: the Jewish orthodox and the Muslim Arab, especially Bedouin.)
* The Ministry of the Interior is pushing a law that allows all foreigners who marry Israelis to acquire Israeli citizenship, even if they are not Jewish - but explicitly excludes Arabs. This denies thousands of young Arabs, citizens of Israel, the right to set up a family in Israel, if the bride or bridegroom is a resident of the Palestinian territories, even if he or she is a relative.
* The Ministry of Education confirmed what until now has been an open secret: that the appointment of every teacher and principal in an Arab school in Israel is subject to the approval of the General Security Service (Shin-Bet). But the ministry is progressing with the times: Until now, the Shin-Bet representative was automatically the vice-chairman of the appointments committee. From now on, he will only be a simple committee member.
It would be nice if we could say that these phenomena, and the many others of the sort, are inspired by the right-wing. But the truth is that most of them came into being when the Zionist left was in control, and continue now with the support of the left-wing whose representatives serve in the Sharon government.
This is not the state that we promised ourselves in the
Declaration of Independence. We have a tough struggle ahead
of us, until Israel becomes a democratic, liberal, secular,
pluralist and egalitarian state.
A step in this
direction would be the abolition of the KKL and the transfer
of its lands to the state.