Skudeneshavn 4. mai 2022
Jan Marton Jensen
Kilde:
3. mai 2022
https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/repaying-the-historic-debt-1.10778944
HELE artikkelen i Haaretz 3. mai 2022:
Haaretz Editorial
Israel Has a Historic Debt to Pay
Independence Day is not a holiday for all of Israel’s citizens. The most
important event in the history of the Jewish people, by dint of which
it gained an independent, sovereign and internationally recognized
state, concurrently turned hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who
were living within its borders into refugees. Most of them went into
exile in neighboring Arab states, while the 160,000 or so who remained
in Israel were forced to live under military rule.
From the Palestinian perspective, the establishment of the State of Israel was a “nakba,” a great national catastrophe that destroyed their world and shattered their aspirations. This deep wound shaped the troubled relationship between the Jewish state and its Arab minority, which today comprises more than 21 percent of the population.
That promise was never kept. In July 1951, the High Court of Justice
ordered the Israeli government to allow the residents of Iqrit to
return, but the ruling was ignored. In December 1995, a ministerial committee headed by Justice Minister David Libai recommended
restoring to the Iqrit and Bir’im villagers some 300 acres of land that
once belonged to them. That recommendation was also ignored. Successive
governments have reiterated the claim that, despite the promises made
during the war, allowing the former residents to return to their
villages would constitute a precedent that could be interpreted as
Israeli recognition of the right of return for all Palestinian refugees.
This claim is unfounded. Israel has a historic debt to the residents of the two villages. It must correct the injustice and make good on its promise. After 74 years as an independent state, one of the strongest in the world, which calls its army the most moral in the world, Israel must reach out to the internally displaced people of Iqrit and Bir’im – not just as a goodwill gesture but as a repayment of a moral debt. A step like this will not compromise the security of the state and won’t erase the memory of the Nakba, but it will have important symbolic value by proving that Israel is capable of examining its past and of building a new partnership with its Arab citizens.
The above article is Haaretz's lead editorial, as published in the Hebrew and English newspapers in Israel.
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