Tag Archives: Palestine

40 Years Ago I Became a Settler

40 years ago to this day I became a settler in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. I certainly did not think of myself as a settler at the time. Aged 23 and after a decade growing up in a Zionist youth movement in the UK, I was “making Aliyah,” immigrating to Israel to fulfil the first priority of a practical Zionist. I was going to take my place in the collective national project of the Jewish people in the State of Israel. My first destination was an absorption centre in East Talpiot in Jerusalem. By chance, it was in walking distance of the campus of the Institute for Youth Leaders from Abroad where I had spent five months of a gap year in Israel, in 1978. I do not recall ever going to look at the new suburb of East Talpiot being built close by during my time there, but by the time I arrived on New Year’s Eve 1984, it was a well-established and built-up neighbourhood. We knew that the building we were in had been Jordanian before 1967, but I also did not ask myself about the history and fate of the Palestinian teachers’ training college that had been there.

I was well aware that East Talpiot is in East Jerusalem, over the Green Line that marked the border between Israel and Jordan from 1949 until 1967, as illegal under international law as any other settlement in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. That did not matter to me, as in my mind it was clear that whatever future diplomatic agreements there might be between Israel and Jordan or the Palestinians, Jerusalem must remain undivided under Israeli sovereignty. That was not negotiable. East Talpiot was one of the ring of new neighbourhoods built around Jerusalem after the conquest of East Jerusalem in the June 1967 war. My family’s only relative living in Israel, my second cousin, lived in another of them, French Hill, and I could no more imagine her and her family having to move out of their neighbourhood than I could my own family having to leave our home in Manchester.

East Talpiot. Photo by By Hagai Agmon-Snir

A decade later, in 1995, as I made my preparations to leave Israel and return to the UK to take up my first full-time academic position, I had misgivings about abandoning a campaign I was involved in to stop another Jerusalem suburb being built. Through a dialogue group between West Jerusalem Israelis and Palestinians in the West Bank town of Beit Sahour, I had a stake in preventing the building of Har Homa on the land of Jebel abu Ghneim, owned by Beit Sahouris as well as Palestinians in the neighbouring village of Umm Tuba and Jewish owners from before the 1948 war. A colleague assured me that Har Homa would never be built, and indeed soon after I left the Israeli government shelved the plan. However, the victory was short-lived. After the right-wing Likud government defeated the Labour-led “peace government” in the 1996 elections, the settlement plans were revived and went ahead despite further Palestinian appeals to the UN. I did not see Har Homa until years later in 2012, when it had about 25,000 residents and looked as established as the other Jewish settlement suburbs built around Jerusalem since 1967, including East Talpiot. Har Homa is another brick in the wall obstructing Palestinian nationhood.

View of Har Homa from Beit Sahour. Photo by Daniel Case.

What had changed for me between 1985 and 1995? A good deal, including immersion in Israeli activism against the Occupation and for peace. It was not simply that after several months in the absorption centre I moved to West Jerusalem and lived there until I left. In 1985 I had not asked myself on whose land East Talpiot was built. I lacked the curiosity to find out that 1,343 dunams had been taken from the neighbouring village Sur Baher and 544 dunams from another village, Jabel Mukaber. I had never asked the Palestinians in those villages how they felt about East Talpiot being built on their land and to obstruct their development. By 1995 I had spent many hours in dialogue and organising meetings with Palestinians from Beit Sahour who had become my friends. Through the practice of dialogue, even one that did not undo the relationships between occupier and occupied, I had unlearned the arrogance that allowed me to think that I could tell Palestinians that the Israeli claim to sovereignty over all of Jerusalem is not negotiable. I had learned equality, to treat Palestinians and their rights as equal to Jewish Israeli rights. I had unlearned, at least to some degree, the mentality of the settler I had arrived in the country as.

The Mark of Cain: Genocide in Gaza

Cain was the first perpetrator of a violent crime, the crime of murder, of fratricide. According to the Biblical story, God asks Cain where Abel is after Cain had killed him, to which Cain responds “Am I my brother’s keeper?” My father loved to repeat that phrase so I grew up with a sense that we siblings were supposed to take of each other, a sense which developed into a broader feeling of social responsibility, of care for others. For his crime Cain was cursed with failure of all his farming endeavours and to be “a fugitive and a vagabond.” When Cain protested that he would be slain in his wanderings, God put a mark on him, a warning sign that others should not punish him further, at the risk of sevenfold vengeance. Although the mark is not given to Cain as the punishment, as the mark of shame for taking a life made in the image of God, it is nonetheless a life-long sign of guilt.

David Scott (1806-1849); Cain Degraded (Remorse); Photo credit: Royal Scottish Academy of Art & Architecture

The accusation brought by South Africa that Israel is committing genocide of Palestinians feels like an unbearable mark of shame and guilt. How can it be the the Jewish state is accused of genocide, less than a century since genocide was committed against the Jewish people? Surely, we are the victims of genocide, not the perpetrators? How can this be any more than a scandalous libel, a blood libel as Israeli government spokesman Eylon Levy said? It’s especially galling so soon after the horrendous attack by Hamas on October 7th that reminded us so starkly of our vulnerability, that looks itself like an act of genocide. Are we to be denied the right to defend ourselves just because our enemy uses its population as human shields and fights from within the civilian infrastructure? “There can hardly be a charge more false and more malevolent than the allegation against Israel of genocide, ” said Israeli Foreign Ministry legal adviser Tal Becker in response to the South African case on January 12th. This is the line of defence against the genocide accusation taken by Israel at the International Court of Justice. We are the victims, not the perpetrators. And some us still bear those other marks, those numbers inscribed on our flesh by the other murderers, before we had a state with which to defend ourselves, when at the whim of persecuting states we could be turned into fugitive vagabonds at a moment’s notice.

I leave to the judges of the court and international law experts to determine the validity of this defence. In part, Jewish and Israeli outrage at and revulsion from the accusation of genocide is prompted by the definition of genocide in the UN’s Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. There it is stated that

genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:
(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

Genocide does not then mean another Holocaust, extermination camps and gas chambers. It does not mean the destruction of Palestinians in whole, only in part. Killing 1% of the population Gaza, most of them women and children, the displacement of 85% of the population, the destruction of a third of the buildings and the creation of circumstances meaning one in four households is at risk of starvation means Israel does have a case to answer. It also means that Hamas is also open to accusations of genocide, but as it is not a state that has ratified the Genocide Convention, it cannot be brought before the International Court of Justice. Instead, those horrendous crimes are under the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court as well as Israeli courts.

One of Israel’s key legal difficulties at the Hague is of its own making, the multitude of statements by politicians, official spokespersons, military officers, news anchors, commentators and journalists that appear to advocate or condone genocide. Legal experts say that the hardest part of a genocide case to make is usually the demonstration of intent to commit genocide, but in this instance there has been a lot of unguarded talk. I will come back to Biblical stories to focus on one statement picked out by the South African team, by Prime Minister Netanyahu on October 28th: “you must remember what Amalek has done to you, says our Holy Bible. And we do remember”. The Amalekites were one of the tribes whom the Israelites fought after their Exodus from Egypt, during their sojourn in the desert, before conquering Canaan. In the first telling, in the Book of Exodus 17:8-16, no reason is given for why their remembrance must be blotted out, but Deuteronomy 25:17-19 tells us that “they smote the hindmost of thee, all that were feeble in thy rear, when thou wast faint and weary; and … [Amalek] feared not God.” The Amalekites reappear in the First Book of Samuel 15, when Samuel tells King Saul that God reminds him of what the Amalekites did to Israel and orders him to “go and smite Amaleq, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass.” This last passage is quoted in the South African case, seemingly as proof that Netanyahu intended the Israeli troops about to enter Gaza to act similarly.

Joshua fighting Amalek, By Philip De Vere – Phillip Medhurst Collection of Bible illustrations. housed at Belgrave Hall Leicester, made possible by the Kevin Victor Freestone Bequest.

In his rebuttal of the accusation that the accumulation of similar utterances to Netanyahu’s amount to incitement to genocide, Malcolm Shaw argued that the South African team had misunderstood the place of Amalek in Judaism but that there was no time for a theological debate. He is certainly right that within Judaism the literal meaning should not be taken as a commandment, and even if it were, neither the Palestinians or Hamas are literally ancient Amalekites. Shaw goes on to claim that the quotations brought by South Africa “are clearly rhetorical, made in the immediate aftermath of a [traumatic] event.” Again he is right, but not in the way he intended the word “rhetorical,” in the everyday sense of an empty statement, but in the sense of rhetoric as persuasive statements uttered to move their audiences. In their spoken presentation, the South African team referred to the normalization of genocide discourse in Israel, indicating an accumulative pattern of speech and writing across politics and media. They showed a clip of dancing Israeli soldiers, singing that they understood their commandment to “wipe out the seed of Amalek” and their operational slogan that there are “no uninvolved” in Gaza, meaning no innocent civilians. Netanyahu’s rhetoric was clearly understood by the soldiers, as well as the synecdoche whereby today’s Palestinians stand in for the Biblical Amalekites. Whether the soldiers in the clip acted on that understanding, we do not know. But in the context of the rise of the Jewish-supremacist, messianic far-right in Israel and its inclusion in the current government, the meaning of Netanyahu’s statement, along others calling explicitly for a second Nakba, is chillingly dangerous and irresponsible, at least murderous if not genocidal in intent, as my colleague Joshua Shanes noted at the time.

The governing discourse in Israel today is, if not genocidal than at least politicidal, a discourse in which there is no truth to Palestinian collective existence, Palestinian peoplehood and connection to the land. In their eulogy for their brother Hayim who was murdered by Hamas (which of course has its own murderous discourse) on October 7th, his sibling Noy said:

My brother was always active for peace … He spoke truth in the face of – as Foucault said – the power that forces discourse up on us, the power that forces us to say certain things, and not say other things. Hayim spoke truth to power – even at the price of being the one who is different, the one who is strange

The power of Israeli discourse was evident last week when 85 members of Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, from most of the opposition as well as coalition parties, signed up to an impeachment process for one of their number, Ofer Cassif, a representative of Hadash, the Democratic Front for Peace and Equality. He had signed a petition in favour of South Africa’s submission to the ICJ, although from some of the reactions he might as well have joined the petition to the court itself. He is very strange to them, very different, abnormal, and what he says does not make sense to them. He speaks a truth that does not have a place in their consensus. He wrote on X (formerly Twitter) that

My constitutional duty is to Israeli society and all its residents, not to a government whose members and its coalition are calling for ethnic cleansing and even actual genocide. They are the ones who harm the country and the people, they are the ones who led to South Africa’s petition to The Hague.

It will pain me deeply if, after its long deliberations, the International Court of Justice finds that Israel, the Jewish state, committed genocide. It would be a mark of Cain that the state would bear forever. The atrocities of October 7th pained and shocked me deeply, as does the fate of the hostages, now in their 100th day of captivity. But it also pains me that the State of Israel is inflicting so much harm on Palestinians in what it claims is self-defence but seems like a prolonged act of vengeance without achievable and defined goals. At this time of intense polarization, the social media mobs and the gatekeepers of discourse insist that Palestinians can be only either victims or perpetrators, that Israelis can be only victims or perpetrators. But what if we are both victims and perpetrators? If we can speak in a discourse that allows for that possibility, can we then not also be our brothers’ keepers?