Worse
Than Apartheid?
By Robert
D. Novak
Monday,
April 9, 2007; 12:00 AM
BETHLEHEM,
West Bank -- Hani Hayek, an accountant who is the Christian mayor of the tiny
majority-Christian Palestinian village of Beit Sahour, was angry last week as he
drove me along the Israeli security wall. "They are taking our communal lands,"
he said, pointing to the massive Israeli settlement of Har Homa. "They don't
want us to live here. They want us to leave."
Har Homa,
dwarfing nearby dwellings of Beit Sahour, seemed larger than when I saw it at
Holy Week a year ago. It is. The Israeli government has steadily enlarged
settlements on the occupied West Bank, and I could see both the construction at
Har Homa and road building for a dual transportation system for Israelis and
Palestinians.
Jimmy
Carter raised hackles by titling his book about the Palestinian question "Peace
Not Apartheid." But Palestinians allege this is worse than the former South
African racial separation. Nearing the 40th anniversary of the Israeli military
occupation of the West Bank, the territory has been so fragmented that a genuine
Palestinian state and a "two-state solution" seem increasingly difficult.
The
security wall has led to virtual elimination of suicide bombings and short-term
peace. But life is hard for Palestinians, whose deaths because of conflict
increased 272 percent in 2006 while Israeli casualties declined. In a minor
incident last week of the type that goes unnoticed internationally, Israel
Defense Forces (IDF) troopers killed a Palestinian man accused of illegally
entering a firing zone while collecting metal scraps to sell. The Britain- based
organization Save the Children estimates that half the children in the occupied
territories are psychologically traumatized.
Palestinians argue that things have gotten worse because
of pervasive feelings of hopelessness. Students at Bethlehem University (run by
the Catholic Brothers of De La Salle, with an enrollment that is 70 percent
Muslim) sounded more pessimistic and radicalized than a year ago. Ahmad al Issa,
a fourth-year journalism student, was held for a year in an Israeli prison on
charges of throwing stones at Israeli troops. Now he has bought into the libel
that Jewish employees at the World Trade Center were warned in advance of the
Sept. 11 attacks.
The
U.S.-backed boycott following the election victory of the extremist group Hamas
in early 2006 has made the Palestinian Authority destitute, crippling government
services. Deprived of help from the authority, with the economy in a shambles,
city governments are bankrupt. Bethlehem's mayor, Victor Batarseh, has a special
problem because tourists and pilgrims no longer stay overnight in the city of
Christ's birth. Out of money and credit, he is ready to lay off the city's 165
staffers.
Batarseh,
a U.S. citizen who practiced thoracic surgery in Sacramento, is pinned down in
Bethlehem. A Christian and political independent who calls himself a
private-enterprise democrat, Batarseh is on the Israeli blacklist because he
contributed to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), which
the State Department has designated a terrorist organization. Denied permits for
Jerusalem, the mayor must drive to Amman, Jordan, to get to meetings in Europe.
Contact
with the PFLP is not a requirement for being holed up by the Israel Defense
Forces. Bethlehem University students cannot get to Jerusalem, a few minutes'
drive away, unless they sneak in illegally. The students from the separated Gaza
enclave have to take classes from Bethlehem via the Internet.
Republican
Rep. Chris Smith of New Jersey was at the university the same day I was, and
faculty members could hardly believe a real live member of Congress was there.
Smith later was given a tour of Jerusalem to see with his own eyes that the
separation barrier in most places is a big, ugly and intimidating wall, not
merely a fence.
Smith, an
active Catholic layman, was drawn here because of the rapid emigration of the
Holy Land's Christian minority. They leave more quickly than Muslims because
contacts on the outside make them more mobile. Peter Corlano, a Catholic member
of the Bethlehem University faculty, told Smith and me: "We live the same life
as Muslims. We are Palestinians."
Concerned
by the disappearance of Christians in the land of Christianity's birthplace,
Smith could also become (as I did) concerned by the plight of all Palestinians.
If so, he will find precious little company in Congress.
© 2007
Creators Syndicate Inc.