MIFTAH
Sunday, 19 May. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Sometimes, the less evident is the more sinister. While the world continues to focus its attention on the more obvious and classic features of this conflict – the armed confrontations, the wall, the siege and the economic embargo – there is an even slower death simmering beneath the surface, that of Palestinian demography.

We Palestinians have always said that unlike other conflicts around the world, the conflict between Palestinians and Israel is an existential one. It is not about economic domination or controlling natural resources. It is not like the missionary colonization of Africa meant to shine the light of Christianity on the lives of pagans. This conflict is about existence - who has or does not have the right to live on this land and which side is the “fittest” and able to vanquish its opponent.

And this is why the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is so plagued with so many complex layers. An outsider may look in and see the obvious - a military conflict that will inevitably solved by military means. At least that is how Israel would like to portray it. Although it has successfully convinced the world that the conflict can only be solved through sheer military might, behind the scenes, Israel is waging a much more effective battle, which it must be said, is winning.

The question Israel has always asked itself and has continued to find ways of answering is how to seize control of the maximum amount of land with the minimum number of Palestinians on it. In 1948, mass expulsion and massacres were the solution. Over 800,000 Palestinians were displaced from their homes, never to return while thousands of others were killed at the hands of Jewish gangs and the Israeli army.

In the 1967 War, another displacement took place and tens of thousands more fled their homes, some for the second time around.

Today, that is no longer a viable option for Israel given its international status and the fact that the Palestinian cause has been permanently put on the political map. So, besides the assassinations, the gun battles that take out handfuls of Palestinians at a time and the occasional murder of families on beaches, Israel is working at killing a nation through deportation.

Over the past year in particular, hundreds, maybe even thousands of people – mostly Palestinians with foreign passports – have been turned back at Israel’s borders and told they are “persona non grata” in Israel. Most are not given any specific reason, just that Israel’s security services deem their presence in the country as a potential security threat and will therefore not be allowed entry.

The number of just how many people have been denied entry into Israel is still unclear, however information by word of mouth has indicated that an increasing number of “foreigners” have been turned away.

Although this policy hits a wide spectrum of people who come to Palestine including volunteers, those working with Palestinian organizations, tourists and Palestinians in the Diaspora visiting relatives in the “old country”, it is most detrimental to those Palestinians who have made their permanent homes in the Palestinian territories. These individuals do not hold Palestinian citizenship and are forced to leave the country every three months to obtain a “visitors” visa upon entry into Israel.

Just how many of these Palestinians have made their homes in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Jerusalem is hard to determine, but estimates from various Palestinian and international sources have put the number in the tens of thousands.

For years, scores of Palestinians have lived, worked and even built homes in Palestine and travel in and out of the country every three months to maintain “legal” status. And although there has always been the random deportation of singled-out Palestinians or foreigners by Israel, this has only become a systematic policy in the past few years.

The horror stories at Ben Gurion Airport and Allenby Bridge are endless. People being locked up in holding rooms for hours on end before being promptly told they were to “return from whence they came” or others who had their foreign passports stamped with a five-year ban on reentering the country.

People, who have made their lives here for years have been unable to return to their homes, their families and their workplaces. Some have been separated from their children and spouses and have been forced to rebuild their lives elsewhere.

At this point, it goes without saying that this has nothing to do with Israel’s security. Banning Palestinians with foreign passports from reentering the country and denying them the right to apply for Palestinian residency is all part and parcel of their grand plan to empty this land of as many Palestinians as possible. Couple this with Israel’s other measures such as the economic siege aimed at starving people out, Israel is well on its way of realizing its century-long myth of Palestine being “A land without a people.”

Most definitely, Palestinians should continue to shed light on Israel’s oppressive military measures against them, if for nothing else than to expose the flagrant injustice done to them. However, the less conspicuous schemes should also be exposed because, unlike but no less atrocious than a bombing, which wipes out families and neighborhoods at a time, this racist policy of turning back Palestinians at the border will have serious future ramifications on the demographic balance between the two sides.

Everyone knows about “people power” and no one knows better than Israel that this is the Palestinians’ strongest card. Eventually, if enough people are squeezed out, barred entry or physically eliminated, those remaining will never be able to constitute a force strong enough to put up a real fight.

 
 
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