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Posts Tagged ‘one state solution’

Republican National Committee Endorses Elimination of Palestine from Middle East

Friday, January 20th, 2012

Not only does Newt Gingrich believe there’s no such thing as a Palestinian people, the Republican National Committee does as well.  That mean that 20 years of bipartisan agreement between political parties and the foreign policy of presidents both Republican and Democratic, has been overturned by a resolution passed by the RNC last week.  Mitchell Plitnick reports that a nice, blond-haired white Christian Republican lady from South Carolina has dipped her toe in the deep waters of U.S. Middle East policy and suddenly become expert enough at it to topple long-term consensus.  Here’s what Cindy Costa came up with as the Party’s new approach:

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the members of this body support Israel in their natural and God-given right of self-governance and self-defense upon their own lands, recognizing that Israel is neither an attacking force nor an occupier of the lands of others; and that peace can be afforded the region only through a united Israel governed under one law for all people.

You’ll notice a number of things about this piece of pro-Israel brilliance: Palestine?  Nowhere to be found.  Two states?  Ditto.  Occupation? Ditto.  Mitchell is right in noting that it essentially posits a one-state solution.  The only thing it doesn’t do is decide what to do with the millions of Palestinians living in what used to be known, before the Republicans did away with it, the Occupied Territories.  Do you expel them outright or merely force them to live in an apartheid state?

Now that the Republicans have endorsed the one-state solution, maybe we should all stop pining for the days of two-states and start devising what sort of Israel should exist in the context of this “united Israel.”  Certainly not the one Mrs. Costa imagines, in which there either are no Palestinians or they exist somewhere at the margins of society.  No, all Palestinians must be given full equality, rights and citizenship within this grand unitary state of Israel.  We also must face the prospect that these Palestinian Arabs will likely outnumber Jews within a relatively short period of time.  They might indeed eventually assume political control in a coalition with or even without Jewish support.

The rights of the minority will be protected in that event by a constitution (hopefully), so Jews needn’t worry about their rights being trampled as Jews did to Palestinians when the former were in the majority.  Thus we have to put it to the Netanyahus and RNCs of the world: what type of Israel do you want?  One that eventually will have a Palestinian majority?  Or one that will exist alongside Palestine and possibly have the opportunity to retain a Jewish majority for a much longer period of time (I’m articulating this according to their perspective and values)?

The wording of the full resolution, which can be read at Plitnick’s blog, is a paean to Christian Zionist theology, waxing eloquent about Israel’s God-given right to all the territory granted to Abraham in the Bible.  It even quotes Scripture to seal the deal.  The only thing it doesn’t do is specify how many Jews will be killed before the Rapture in order to ensure the Second Coming of Jesus Christ back to the Holy Land.

722,000 Israelis Live Beyond Green Line

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

Yisrael HaYom published today one of the more stark and telling statistics about the ‘success’ of the Occupation: in 2011, 722,000 Israelis lived beyond the Green Line, including in settlements and East Jerusalem.  This was a 5% increase over 2010.  That means that 1 in every seven Israelis lives outside of 1967 borders and explains why the country is rapidly becoming a unitary state from the Mediterranean to the Jordan.  Bibiton and the settlers themselves are overjoyed with this development because it means they can continue pursuing their Apartheid Jews-only State.

In that case, it becomes critical to begin thinking, indeed demanding that if Israel refuses to end the Occupation and cede almost all territory outside the 1967 borders to a Palestinian state, then it must accord all individuals living in “greater” Israel full citizenship and rights.  We must stop talking about this as a possibility or eventuality, but as a reality.  Israel must be given a stark choice.  Either it’s one state from river to sea in the old Jabotinskyean anthem or the Occupation must end now.

Tony Judt, May His Memory Be for a Blessing

Sunday, August 8th, 2010
tony judt

Tony Judt z"l 1948-2010 (John Rifkin)

Today, we have lost one of the bravest public intellectuals engaged in the Israeli-Arab conflict. I just noticed in his NY Times obituary that he was born in that seminal year, 1948, an irony that undoubtedly would not have been lost on him.

During Operation Cast Lead, he was one of the first of the “celebrity intellectuals” Jerry Haber and I approached to sign a petition we organized. He signed willingly.

I remember his famous (or notorious depending on one’s point of view) op-ed in the Times in which he advocated a one-state solution. I thought his essay at the time a bit Pollyannish, and I still maintain profound skepticism of the notion. But it reminds me of the old saying about democracy: it’s the worst form of government–except for everything else. Unfortunately, the bankruptcy of the present political situation renders the two state solution ever less credible. And Tony Judt looks smarter every day.

I first learned he was ill when I invited him to speak at an event I planned about Israel-Iran relations last December. The news came as a deep shock. I can only articulate my profound respect via the Jewish form of honoring the dead: zichrono livracha (“may his memory be for a blessing”).

Henry Waxman Israel-Baits Jane Harman Opponent

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

Everyone knows about Joe McCarthy’s red-baiting during the 1950s.  Nowadays, the pro-Israel right in this country engages in Israel-baiting especially when it comes to electoral politics.  Every two years the Republican Jewish Coalition gets some rich Jewish chump like Shelly Adelson to ante up a million or two to shrey from the rooftops that the Democrats are soft on Israel.  The stunt works as well for them as Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme ended up working for him.  Many of you will remember the RJC and its affiliated henchmen taking out ads in the Jewish press arguing that Barack Obama was anti-Israel because of an insufficient deference for some Aipac-touted position or other.  We’ve come to expect it of the Republicans and the Israel lobby.  It’s their MO.


But hearing Israel-baiting (the Jewish equivalent of red-baiting) from the heart of the Democratic Party is a new one on me.  Knowing of M.J. Rosenberg’s distaste for Jane Harman and her slavish devotion to Aipac, I suggested that he look up Marcy Winograd’s progressive primary challenge against Harman.  He replied, obliquely mentioning something atrocious Henry Waxman and Lynne Woolsey had pulled.  It took me a while to find it, but I did.

Those of you who follow my blog regularly may remember that I’ve taken on Jane Harman several times over the years as one of Aipac’s most trusted Congressional flunkies.  A few years ago she even enlisted Haim Saban to pressure Nancy Pelosi to name her chair of the House Intelligence Committee.  Harman knew that Pelosi knew that if Saban wanted the former in that job he held an enormous financial sword over the House Speaker’s head since the wealthy Israeli-American was a major donor to the Party.  For a federal official to ask anyone to intervene on her behalf with another federal official in this fashion is illegal and I thought she at least should’ve been indicted.  A separate story came out that as part of an intelligence operation the FBI heard an Israeli agent of influence ask Harman to intercede for a favor.

Thanks to her personal wealth ($112-million and 3rd wealthiest Congress member), political sway and Israel lobby connections she managed to dodge the bullet–this time.

Now, Henry Waxman, the dean of the powerful California Congressional delegation has taken out after Marcy Winograd, Harman’s primary challenger with a crackerjack bit of Israel-baiting:

Recently, I came across as astounding speech by Marcy Winograd, who is running against our friend Jane Harman…Ms. Winograd’s views on Israel I find repugnant in the extreme.

What alarmed Waxman so much?  The fact that Winograd is a progressive Jew who says, along with many other progressive Israelis I might add, that the time for a two-state solution has passed due to Israeli intransigence.  The fact that Winograd opposes U.S. aid that supports Israeli “institutional racism.”  The fact that she doesn’t want to be associated with “occupation or extermination.”

To be clear, my views aren’t the same as Winograd’s.  I’m still hanging on to the possibility for a two-state solution though the prospects grow dimmer by the day.  But I completely reject the notion that such views are “repugnant” or beyond the Jewish pale or whatever.  In fact, we already have over 400 members of Congress who are clones of Waxman’s and Harman’s pro-Israel views.  To have one member of Congress who refuses to toe the Aipac line would not undermine the republic.

Waxman fulminates further:

…The notion that a member of Congress could hold such views is alarming.  Ms. Winograd is far, far outside the bipartisan mainstream of views that has long insisted that U.S. policy be based on rock-solid support for our only democratic ally in the Middle East.

In Winograd’s foreign policy, Israel would cease to exist.  In Winograd’s vision, Jews would be at the mercy of those who do not respect democracy or human rights…Jane’s victory will represent a clear repudiation of these views…

I ask you to join me in showing maximum support for Jane…

This bit of hasbara is standard Aipac boilerplate.  Waxman can probably recite it backwards and forwards and does so thrice a day just as Orthodox Jews recite their daily prayers.  A few problems though: the only democracy in the Middle East leaves out Turkey, Lebanon, Pakistan, and…the Palestine Authority which duly elected Hamas in a democratic election.  A bit of pro-Israel myopia seems to have crept into Waxman’s argument.  And it seems to me that arguing that Palestinians don’t respect “democracy or human rights” ignores the fact that Israel has a few challenges on the human rights front itself.  As for democracy, we can argue about the nature of Israeli democracy, but Hamas actually won a democratic election.  So ignoring Palestinian democracy is at best a glaring omission.

Winograd has drafted her own response to Waxman here. It reads in part:

Like you, I am intimately aware of our Jewish history. On my mother’s side, my great-grandparents escaped the Russian Pogroms to make a better life for themselves in Europe. On my father’s side, my great-grandparents were killed in the Jewish Holocaust of Nazi Germany. Because of our collective experience with persecution, it behooves us to stand in opposition to persecution anywhere and everywhere, rather than sanctify reductionist state policies that cast all Jews as victims who can only thrive in a segregated society. Furthermore, we must stand in explicit opposition to the Israeli persecution of the Palestinians; the brutal blockade of Gaza, an act of war by international standards, denying children clean water, food, and medicine.

We are better than that…

To stop the suffering of the Palestinian people and to end the rocket attacks on Israelis near the border, I am ready and willing to accept a negotiated peace agreement that adheres to principles of justice and recognizes a two-state solution based on withdrawal of illegal settlements to the 1967 borders or a mutually-agreed exchange of territory.

To be fully candid, I think Winograd is in a tough spot here as a Congressional candidate.  If you’ve endorsed a one-state solution you’ve potentially marginalized yourself among your Jewish constituency and other pro-Israel forces.  I wish this wasn’t the case.  But it is.

All that being said, I think times are changing and that Winograd should confront this slightly differently than she has.  I think she should say look, no one in Congress gets to determine whether there will a one or two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  The president and secretary of state and the parties themselves will make those determinations.  The main thing any member of Congress should stand for is dignity, respect and justice for both Israelis and Palestinians.  The main thing any member of Congress should oppose is any legislation that demeans or diminishes the rights of either Israelis or Palestinians.

Marcy Winograd hasn’t spent 30 years in the Beltway attending Aipac briefings and Israel junkets.  She hasn’t been fed the standard Likud line as have Congressmembers Harman and Waxman which parrots back Israel right or wrong talking points.  For all the time her opponent has been in Washington, Marcy’s actually been living with her middle-class Los Angeles family dealing with the travails of everyday folk as a teacher and community activist.  She hasn’t had a chance to develop the polished vacuous statements churned out by the Waxman-Harman political machine.

But you know what–Marcy Winograd spoke from the heart in her All Saint’s Church speech out of a sense of pain as a Jew at the suffering of both Israelis and Palestinians.  And if that’s a hanging offense for Harman’s buddies at Aipac, so be it. Nothing she said in her speech can be remotely construed as hostile to Israeli Jews or Israel’s security.  In addition, there are tens of thousands of Israelis who were shocked and scandalized, as she was, by the terrible suffering inflicted by the IDF on Gaza.  So Congressman Waxman, if you smear Marcy Winograd for caring too much about Gazan suffering, you’re smearing those courageous Israelis who believe that what their government and armed forces did their was wrong regardless of the reason for doing so.

Maybe on their next Aipac junket, Harman and Waxman will visit more than the Knesset and meet with other leaders than Bibi and Shimon.  Maybe they will meet with Israeli human rights NGOs like B’Tselem and Peace Now.  Maybe, God forbid they’ll visit the West Bank and Gaza, as Congressmembers Baird and Ellison and Senator Kerry did last year.  Maybe they’ll try to see how the other half lives in the Middle East.  And then maybe they’ll understand that what Marcy Winograd believes isn’t so outrageous after all.  In fact, she has nothing to apologize for.  If anything, it is Harman and Waxman and their slavish relationship with Aipac who have some explaining to do.

Returing to Winograd’s letter above, it also contains a cogent denunciation of the inadequacies of Jane Harman and her betrayal of values that most members of the Democractic Party hold dear.

If you feel like me that Marcy Winograd is not treif and that she represents a true progressive voice that should be in Congress, I hope you’ll join me in supporting her in any way you can (but especially with a financial contribution).

Abbas Refuses to Run

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Mahmoud Abbas announced today that he would not run for president in upcoming PA elections scheduled for January.  This throws U.S. policy into some disarray as it was predicated on a go-along-to-get-along Palestinian leader like Abbas who would be malleable to U.S. interests.  If there was a clear successor groomed, it might make this announcement less distressing.  But there isn’t.  The only clear names are problematic for different reasons.

The most obvious is Marwan Barghouti, the most universally acclaimed Fatah leader not only in the West Bank, but in Gaza as well.  The only problem is that he sits in an Israeli prison.  There has been some talk that a negotiated deal to release Gilad Shalit might include Barghouti.  But unless he is released, running for office would mean Palestinians would be electing someone who couldn’t serve.  This too would embarrass Israel, which might be reason enough for the Palestinians to do precisely that.

The other option is a member of the Fatah’s powerful, but discredited Old Guard like Mohammed Dahlan.  This choice would be universally condemned everywhere but in Fatah circles.  Dahlan is widely hated by Hamas for engaging in torture, corruption and other serious abuses.

There is always the possibility that Abbas is posturing or maneuvering for a more favorable stance on the part of the Obama administration regarding the settlement freeze and final status talks.  Abbas resigned when he was prime minister under Arafat (and then returned after Arafat’s death).  I don’t know which way this one’s going to go.  But it seems to me that the drubbing the U.S. indirectly engineered for him when it persuaded him to scuttle the Goldstone Report, plus the intransigence of the Netanyahu government would be more than sufficient to persuade any politician that he’d gone about as far as he could given the circumstances.

The Times article outlines the sense of despondency among Fatah leadership and their sense of betrayal by the U.S.:

It was…clear that Israeli-Palestinian talks would not resume any time soon despite intensive American diplomacy. A top aide to Mr. Abbas said a large part of the “despondency and frustration” felt by Mr. Abbas and the entire Palestinian leadership was due to President Obama’s unrealized promises to the region. He said he feared that without a stop to settlements, Islamist rivals in Hamas could triumph and violence could break out.

“There was high expectation when he arrived on the scene,” the aide, Nabil Shaath, who heads the Fatah party’s foreign affairs department, said of Mr. Obama at a briefing. “He said he would work to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, that it would play a major role in improving the American and Western relationship with the Muslim world. Now there is a total retreat, which has destroyed trust instead of building trust.”

…“I think he’s reached the conclusion that he’s reached a dead-end,” said Qaddoura Fares, another Fatah leader, on Israel Radio, speaking of Mr. Abbas.

There is also the added factor of Hamas.  Fatah has failed to negotiate a reconciliation with the Islamic movement, and without this there can be no elections in Gaza.  PA voting in the West Bank alone would be quite embarrassing to Fatah I would think, and would cause them to delay the elections.

I worry that Abbas’ resignation and the flux of Palestinian leadership that results will provide a major setback for the Obama administration.  I can see no way it can seriously attempt to advance the peace process given how little Israel is giving him to work with.

Let’s be clear about where fault lies should these things come to pass.  Look no farther than the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem.  And this impasse suits Israel just fine.  Stasis and stalemate are Israel’s preferred modes when it comes to the conflict.  The only thing that seems to move Israel off the dime is a massive terror attack.  It’s hard to tell which of Israel’s will oblige this scenario: Hezbollah or Hamas, who knows?  And if Israel truly wants to divert the world’s attention from its obstinacy there’s always a new military adventure in Iran that is possible.  That nation is the smoke that conceals Israel’s real interest, which is continuing the Occupation and stiffing the Palestinians.

Israel and its supporters seem to believe they can maintain the status quo ad infinitum.  But things change.  Instead of the consensus being a two state solution, that could change.  People who previously never spoke favorably of a one-state solution are despairingly turning to it:

Saeb Erekat, chief Palestinian negotiator, said Wednesday at a news conference that perhaps Palestinians should abandon the two-state approach and work toward one shared state with the Jews, something a vast majority of Israelis oppose.

He said Mr. Abbas should maybe “tell his people the truth, that with the continuation of settlement activities the two-state solution is no longer an option.”

Israel should understand that this is not a trick, not a maneuver.  Most of all, at some point in the future there will be no return to the two state solution.  The international consensus will move from two to one-state.  At that time, telling the world you’ve had a change of heart and a two state solution would be just fine thank you–that’s not going to work.

Why Does Saree Makdisi and a One-State Solution Threaten Carla Cohen?

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

Today’s Washington Post brings dueling statements by DC bookstore owner Carla Cohen and Saree Makdisi about the controversy she initiated when she invited him to speak and then disinvited him. In doing so, she claimed that hosting him would mean she could never be taken seriously again the DC community. In his statement, Makdisi further discloses that Cohen wrote to him:

“I do not believe that your book will further constructive debate in the United States. A single state is not a solution.”


Cohen is dead wrong on both counts. First, Makdisi is not only a respected English professor at UCLA. He is a respected Palestinian-American analyst of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. His book has been favorably reviewed by distinguished individuals like Desmond Tutu and Tony Judt. Cohen may disagree with Makdisi’s views (as I do), but how can she possibly claim it “will not further constructive debate?” This is patently untrue. Second, a one-state solution IS a solution. It may not be the one she or I or most Israelis or American Jews would advocate. But it’s certainly a legitimate approach to resolving the conflict and deserves being debated as such.

In her own Washington Post statement, she made some questionable and dubious claims:

When I finally got a chance to read his book, especially its conclusion, I was very disturbed. As an American Jew, I support Israel, but I disapprove of its policies in the West Bank. I have been active in organizations and in programs expressing my opposition to the occupation by Israel and its policies toward the Palestinians.

I’m sorry, but anyone can make such claims. The fact that says nothing about what she specifically has done on this score does not confirm her bona fides as a critic of the Occupation.

Makdisi’s critique of Israel was not what bothered me; it was his solution. He advocates one state in the place of the partition that was established by the United Nations in 1947. His solution would result in the elimination of the state of Israel.

Not quite. It would result in the elimination of a JEWISH state called Israel and replace it with a state closer to the U.S. model in which no religion dominates; but all are guaranteed the right of worship. Again, I want to make clear that I am not in favor of a one-state solution. But calling a one-state solution eliminationist as Cohen does, is overheated rhetoric.

What is more, there is no guarantee that such a state would be democratic since, except for Israel, there is no history of democracy in the Middle East.

I’m starting to believe that Cohen got her talking points from the ADL or American Jewish Committee. It is informed by their erroneous characterizations of Arab societies in the Middle East. There IS a guarantee that such a state would be democratic since the Palestinians actually held a democratic election in 2006 which chose Hamas to run the PA. Neither Carla Cohen, the ADL or AJC like the choice the Palestinians made so it’s as if no election was held at all. But one WAS held and presumably more will be held in future.

Further, Lebanon is a democratic society. It is not a terribly successful democracy presently. But it IS a democracy. And has she forgotten Turkey, another Middle Eastern democracy? Isn’t it interesting how selective Jews can be when they wish to present Israel as perfectly virtuous and the Arabs as the opposite?

I feel that we in America, both Jews and Palestinians, have an obligation to lean on the United States to be a mediator to promote a peaceful conclusion to hostilities. My opposition to Makdisi’s book is that I found no such commitment. He is highly critical of Israel but not of the Palestinians or the Arab nations.

This statement is simply a jumbled mess. She feels that Jews and Palestinians have an obligation to pressure the U.S. to mediate the conflict. But Makdisi doesn’t feel the same way? While I don’t know his precise views on this I would highly doubt that he opposes the idea that the U.S. should play an honest broker role in the conflict.

Finally, I didn’t know that an author writing a book about the I-P conflict had to write a book which blames each side equally. Since when is that, or should that be a criteria for judging a book’s worth? Since when should that even be a criteria for judging whether an author is worthy of appearing at a bookstore to promote a book?

Cohen spends almost her entire statement defending and explaining why she cancelled Makdisi’s appearance and tosses off this startling one sentence:

Nevertheless, I now believe that I was mistaken to cancel Saree Makdisi’s presentation at Politics and Prose.

She never explains why she changed her mind. By not doing so, she leaves herself open to the suspicion that she is doing so not for the right reasons (i.e. principle) but rather for the wrong reasons (fear of falling out of favor with DC’s liberal cultural community). In fact, I suspect that she wishes she’d never agreed to have Makdisi at the bookstore to begin with.

How firm can someone be in their conviction that they made a mistake if, when someone criticizes them as I did her in a private e mail, she writes to me that she wishes she could now take back her re-invitation (because she found my criticism “beyond insulting”)?

My impression, not knowing Cohen or her bookstore, is that she is a confused and frightened individual when it comes to the I-P conflict (a characteristic of many American Jews). She seemingly hasn’t done enough serious thinking on the subject to have strong convictions and the strength of those convictions.

I have lived in many American cities with wonderful independent bookstores like Politics and Prose. I’ve shopped in many of them too. But I’ve never heard an instance in which such a store invited an author and then disinvited him or her because his or her political views were seen as unacceptable to the owner. This is an astonishing phenomenon and one that Cohen’s customers should consider in making their future purchasing choices.

But do go hear Saree Makdisi at Politics and Prose and buy his book there or elsewhere (or here). Show Carla Cohen that if her heart isn’t in supporting a diverse range of debate about the I-P conflict, her community doesn’t feel the same way.

I have just written this letter to the Post editor about the controversy:

Dear Editor: I am a progressive American Jewish Zionist who has written the Tikun Olam blog since 2003, advocating Israeli-Palestinian peace. I have been following closely the controversy over Carla Cohen’s cancellation of Saree Makdisi’s appearance at her bookstore. What happened here is unfortunately a fairly common occurrence in the American Jewish community. People like Carla Cohen are frightened of ideas, like a one-state solution, that stray beyond the Jewish consensus. That’s why Saree Makdisi’s book threatened her Jewish world view. That’s why she cancelled him. That’s why talks about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by Stanford professor Joel Beinin, NYU professor Tony Judt, and Steven Walt and John Mearsheimer, have also been cancelled in other communities. People, especially Jews, are afraid of what Israel skeptics have to say.

I have lived in many communities with wonderful independent bookstores like Politics and Prose and I’ve never heard of any which invited an author and then disinvited him or her because his or her politics was deemed too contentious. That is why I believe Carla Cohen wildly overreacted in this case.

I am pleased that she has reconsidered her ill-considered original decision. But I am concerned based on what she’s written in the Post and to me privately that she has done so for the wrong reasons. When I criticized her original decision in an e mail, she replied that after reading my criticism she wished she would not have re-invited Makdisi. If someone genuinely believes they made a mistake, why should criticism make them want to revert to their original supposedly mistaken view?

My sense is that Carla Cohen values her good reputation in the Washington DC liberal community. She changed her mind because she feared that she would lose its approbation. In other words, she changed her mind out of fear, rather than because she saw the light and decided to do the right thing.

Carla Cohen claims Makdisi supports a one-state solution. I support a two-state solution. But unlike Cohen, Makdisi’s views do not threaten me and they should not threaten her nor anyone else. The more open discussion there is of this conflict the more likely we will be able to solve it.

D.C. Independent Bookstore Bans Palestinian-American Author

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

I don’t usually write about events that happen locally in Washington, D.C. But Helena Cobban informed me of a controversy brewing there that involved such a betrayal of Jewish liberal values that I thought it would be worthwhile covering it.

Saree Makdisi, is a professor of English at UCLA (where I completed my M.A.). He has just written a powerful and heart-rending story in Palestine Inside Out: An Everyday Occupation, of the impossibility of anything resembling “normal” Palestinian life under Israeli Occupation. He just happens to be the nephew of Edward Said.

Politics and Prose is a D.C. independent bookstore which agreed to an author appearance by Makdisi to promote his book. About the store, Helena writes, “in DC’s policy-intellectual circles and amongst all my liberal friends here, P&P is a HUGE deal.” So we’re not just talking about a mom and pop bookstore in a small town somewhere. We’re talking restricting the very policymakers who you’d want to hear Makdisi’s message from hearing it at the town’s pre-eminent literary showcase.

Apparently, Carla Cohen, the owner got cold feet about the event and cancelled it. But it’s her explanation provided to a local Palestinian-American who protested that boggles the mind. There is a class of intelligent American Jewish liberal who understands most of the issues involved in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Yet for some strange almost atavistic reason, they can’t bring themselves to have the courage of their convictions. When forthrightness is called for they waffle. When intestinal fortitude is needed, they cave. Here is Cohen’s response to the initial letter of protest:

Thank you so much for your thoughtful letter. I understand how you feel. I was very sad to cancel Saree Makdisi.

I have been very active — and my husband even more so — in trying to have the U.S. intervene with Israel to end the occupation of the West Bank. I was recently in Israel and saw and heard about the heartbreaking effects of Israel’s policies vis-à-vis travel, employment, and so on. I came back very discouraged about Israel’s political ability to break through the impasse. The way to end the occupation lies with the U.S. I want to make the case with American Jews and with American politicians to press Israel to end the occupation.

I guarantee that nobody will listen to me if I am seen as promoting a book whose only way out of the present situation is a one-state solution. One state means the end of Israel as a democratic and Jewish state. I do not believe that should happen. I am placing all of my energies on promoting within the American Jewish community a practical solution that involves respecting the legitimate needs of Israelis and Palestinians and treating with empathy those on both sides.

I read recently — and I cannot remember whether it was in the Post or Times — about the idea of having Israel recognize publicly the forced dispersion of Palestinians and offer a financial settlement for the families that lost their property. This is something that we can get behind. Somehow, we must work together to end the standoff.

You are very good to take the time to write to me about how you feel. I respect your thoughts. I hope that you understand and respect my position.

To call this mealy-mouthed is giving it too much credit. She expects the protester to “respect her position” when there isn’t a single element in it that deserves respect. It is shot-full of moral equivocation and fear of some unspecified outcome that might occur should she have the courage of her convictions and do what independent bookstore owners are supposed to do: champion authors for the important ideas they espouse. A good bookstore doesn’t care whether someone supports a one-state, two-state or 20-state solution. It looks for good books that will provoke thought and debate and gain an audience.

The most troubling statement is that no one would “listen” to Cohen should she promote a book advocating a one-state solution. I have to say that I have not read this book. But I have read reviews of it and know the reputation of the author. In none of the reviews have I seen mention of the author’s advocacy of a particular solution to the conflict. And even if he had done so, why is Cohen’s audience incapable of hearing such an argument without running for the hills in disgust?

Are we so frightened of discussion that we must close our ears and eyes to ideas outside some vaguely defined consensus? This is self-censorship of the worst sort. I don’t just mean censorship of the author, but rather censorship imposed by Cohen on herself and her customers. And for what purpose? To protect them from dangerous ideas? To prevent her from going out of business due to the furor such an appearance might generate?

I have to tell you that while I despise much of the political argument advanced by the Israeli right, thinking like Cohen’s is at least as pernicious. Perhaps even more so. Because she fully believes she is an enlightened liberal, anti-Occupation and supporter of Palestinians. This in turn gives her the right to act as an Israeli rightist would in stifling the free exchange of ideas about the conflict. You remember the old witticism: “I love the human race. It’s people I can’t stand?” Well, Cohen opposes the Occupation. It’s just Palestinian ideas she can’t stand.

Oh and should you live in D.C. and want to buy a copy of Saree Makdisi’s book, don’t buy it (or anything else for that matter) at P&P. It’s probably banned anyway. Buy it here instead.

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