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Jerusalem: 'Sharing' Not 'Dividing'
~October 22, 2007~
MJ
Rosenberg of the Israel Policy
Forum wrote about Jerusalem in his weekly column on Friday October 19.
CMEP appreciates MJ’s clarification of the important difference between
“shared” and “divided” relative to Jerusalem’s status and reality. This
column is evidence of the closeness of the policy positions of Jewish,
Arab, and Christian peace groups on Jerusalem. In CMEP’s work on Capitol
Hill, we are glad to have the good company of the Israel Policy Forum
along with the Arab American Institute, Americans for Peace Now, Brit
Tzedek v’Shalom (Jewish Alliance for Justice and Peace) and the American
Task Force on Palestine.
Jerusalem: 'Sharing' Not 'Dividing'
IPF Friday
M.J. Rosenberg’s Weekly Opinion Column
Washington, DC
October 19, 2007
Issue #340
Here is the only thing you need to know about Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s
plan to divide Jerusalem: there is no such plan. There never was one and
it is safe to say that there will never be one.
Nor is there a plan by any other Israeli leader to divide Jerusalem.
Additionally, neither Mahmoud Abbas nor the Palestinian Authority he heads
favors the division of Jerusalem.
From Olmert to Ramon to Beilin to Abbas and Fayyad, there is not a single
proposal to divide the city.
So what is all the yelling about?
Right-wing American Jews are already taking out ads and organizing to stop
the division of Jerusalem. Right-wing Israelis are saying that once
Jerusalem is divided, Jews will have no access to the Western Wall and
that snipers will be firing at Jews on Jaffa Road from the Old City walls.
All this despite the fact that no one is proposing dividing Jerusalem.
What is being discussed is the formulation President Bill Clinton devised
in 2001.
“First, Jerusalem should be an open and undivided city, with assured
freedom of access and worship for all. It should encompass the
internationally recognized capitals of two states, Israel and Palestine.
“Second, what is Arab should be Palestinian, for why would Israel want to
govern in perpetuity the lives of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians?
“Third, what is Jewish should be Israeli. That would give rise to a Jewish
Jerusalem, larger and more vibrant than any in history.
“Fourth, what is holy to both requires a special care to meet the needs of
all. No peace agreement will last if not premised on mutual respect for
the religious beliefs and holy shrines of Jews, Muslims and Christians.”
The Clinton language is the full-blown version of the ideas Israelis and
Palestinians have been discussing. Not only does it not call for
Jerusalem’s division, it specifically rules it out.
Why the hysteria? Simple, it’s tactical.
The howling about Jerusalem is not really about Jerusalem at all. It is
about the West Bank. It is about the settlements.
The far right understands that the Israeli public is not going to get
worked up over the possible “abandonment” of the West Bank and its Jewish
settlements. On the contrary, polling shows that in exchange for full
peace, Israelis would relinquish the territory and the settlements in a
Tel-Aviv minute.
That is why the far right has decided to focus on Jerusalem, to which
mainstream Israelis are as legitimately attached as they are relatively
indifferent to “Judea and Samaria.”
Those favoring negotiations and compromise should stop using the term
“dividing” Jerusalem because that is not on the table at all. The issue is
“sharing” Jerusalem. Are Israelis and Palestinians willing to share the
city? Polls show that a majority in each camp is.
Those majorities do not favor erecting physical walls to divide Jerusalem
but rather setting up a legal framework which preserves physical unity of
the city while sharing sovereignty.
That wouldn’t divide Jerusalem; it would re-establish its unity.
The last time Jerusalem was truly undivided was before the Jordanians took
over East Jerusalem and erected a wall separating it from West Jerusalem
in 1948. The Israelis took a giant step toward unifying the city when,
following its Six-Day War victory in 1967, it tore down the walls and
allowed Arabs and Jews to move freely in one city.
Unfortunately, every year since 1967, Jerusalem has grown more and more
divided. The Israelis have even extended the security wall into Jerusalem,
cutting some neighborhoods off from each other.
Israeli Jews rarely set foot in the parts of Jerusalem which, under the
Clinton formulation, would come under the Palestinian flag. The thing that
keeps Israelis out of East Jerusalem and Arabs out of West Jerusalem is
fear. Arabs are uncomfortable when in West Jerusalem and Israelis are
uncomfortable when in East Jerusalem. Jerusalem today is divided in two
and anyone who knows the city (not the propagandists of the far right)
understands that.
There is only one way to unify the city. That is by reaching an agreement
that will end the conflict.
And no resolution can be reached without dealing with the issue of
Jerusalem.
That is what the screaming is about. The Israeli far right and its backers
in this country do not want an end to the conflict on any terms -- other
than perhaps “transfer” or “ethnic cleansing.” They seize on the emotional
issue of Jerusalem to build a consensus against peace. Right now their
goal is to thwart Secretary Rice’s peace conference. Should the conference
go ahead, their goal will be to ensure its failure. Should it succeed,
they will fight to ensure that Israel does not implement any commitments
it may have made (“concessions,” as the right likes to call them).
For these people, Jerusalem is just a pretext. They know that no Israeli
government will ever allow the city to be divided or the Western Wall to
become off-limits to Jews.
But they will keep yelling, taking out ads, and misleading Members of
Congress.
To his credit, Prime Minister Olmert appears undaunted. He even told an
audience of right-wingers this week that he saw no reason why totally Arab
neighborhoods – including a Palestinian refugee camp – need to be under
Israeli rule.
He also says that Israel is finally facing a Palestinian leadership it can
do business with, a Palestinian leadership that desperately wants peace
with Israel. (Secretary Rice reportedly told him that without a deal with
Abbas now, Israel will soon be facing a Hamas controlled West Bank, one
that will have itself been transformed into a kind of Al Qaeda, which will
delight the right because then they can scream “no partner” again).
Forgive Olmert if he does not believe that allowing Palestinian flags to
fly over Palestinian neighborhoods is too steep a price to avoid that. But
understand one thing. This former Likud Mayor of Jerusalem has no
intention of dividing his city.
The word is “sharing” not “dividing.”
MJ Rosenberg is the Director of Israel Policy Forum's Washington Policy
Center.
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