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Zionism Myth and reality..
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Apartheid

Dispossession still continues in various ways. Planning laws restrict Arab communities both in number - to the 123 listed in 1965 - and in area, even though the population has increased. Israel is an apartheid state which enforces policies of ethnic segregation. Dr Uri Davies a Jew who, like Susan Nathan, lives in an Arab town is quoted as applying the term apartheid in a specific sense to mean "the regulation and enforcement of racism and xenophobia in law." He defines the core element of an apartheid state as "the structure of laws that allows the colonising population to exploit the resources of the state - mainly land - to the disadvantage of the native population."


Though it is not publicly admitted "racist employment practices and the exclusion of Arabs from wealth generating sectors of the economy are the bedrock of state planning policies." Most computer systems do not list Arab communities. Arabic is the second official language, yet people are not allowed to use it at work - a woman was sacked from McDonalds for doing so.


There are two separate school systems, with much less money spent on Arab children. There is intensive surveillance of the Arab education system, teachers are effectively "banned from teaching about the Nakba…or about their people's connection to Palestinians in the West Bank or Gaza" and the refugee camps in other countries. In Haifa the Arab Parents' Forum failed in an attempt to register their children at Jewish schools for 2004: Arab pupils are in a separate registration area.


Susan Nathan believes that what happened in the 1948 war is at the root of conflict in the Middle East. The price of creating a homeland was to inflict the "Jewish story of dispossession and wandering on another people - the Palestinians." She makes a distinction between making a comparison, quantitative judgements about the degree of suffering, and drawing a parallel which suggests "one set of events can echo another." Zionist organisations, she says, like the Jewish National Fund and the Jewish Agency should be disbanded and the apartheid system ended; there should be equality between all citizens.


An old man told her of the time when it was possible to travel by train from the Galilee to all of the region's biggest cities "when the borders existed as no more than the lines on maps produced by the area's British and French rulers." Socialists never supported Zionism but opposed it as yet another nationalist delusion as what we aspire to is a world without national frontiers in which free movement is possible and where all people live together as equals.

PAT DEUTZ



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Socialist Party