Mycroft
High Priest of Ed
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2003
- Messages
- 20,501
Let me start off by pointing out that what you're not saying here is how the Fool's analogy fits.
Agreed. I would also add that it's high time the Palestinian-Arabs got busy working towards sovereignty, and made it a goal more important than killing people.
There are four million people who have had this identity forced upon them. When the Arab world refused to take Palestinian-Arab refugees, in many cases they were refusing people who had been born within their borders, who had family and friends who were citizens.
Imagine if you had been born in Lebanon, but in 1945 had traveled to the Palestine Mandate for work, but had fled back to Lebanon in 1948 during the Israeli war of independence. Imagine being told you were no longer Lebanese but Palestinian, and for that reason you couldn't go back to your family, couldn't go back to Palestine, but could only stay in this refugee camp. Imagine 56 years later, your great grandchild becoming a man in that same refugee camp, still denied Lebanese citizenship even though you and three successive generations had been born in Lebanon, and had hundreds of Lebanese cousins.
By denying this person his Lebanese identity, "facts on the ground" were created. An open bleeding wound was not only left untreated, but inflamed and encouraged to grow. This callous willingness to create human suffering and perpetuate it generation after generation is breath-taking.
This is the foundation of the "Palestinian" identity. It’s real enough, a lot of work has gone into its creation. It’s a "fact on the ground".
The reality is there is a "Palestinian" identity, and I support the creation of an independent Palestinian-Arab state. In pointing out that there is not and has not been a Palestinian state, I’m not denying Palestinian identity, but only illustrating that such an entity has not yet been created, that it is up to the Palestinian-Arabs to create this entity (a nation can not be imposed on them by the Israelis), and that presumptions on specifics of this state are invalid until it is created.
Originally posted by a_unique_person
One of the principles that was developed as a means to trying to get a better world was that of sovereignty. Not a panacea, not a total solution, but a step towards a legal framework for a world.
Agreed. I would also add that it's high time the Palestinian-Arabs got busy working towards sovereignty, and made it a goal more important than killing people.
Originally posted by a_unique_person
By ignoring such a concept of Palestinians, you get the situation that exists now. The road to peace, IMHO, starts by recognising that up front.
There are four million people who have had this identity forced upon them. When the Arab world refused to take Palestinian-Arab refugees, in many cases they were refusing people who had been born within their borders, who had family and friends who were citizens.
Imagine if you had been born in Lebanon, but in 1945 had traveled to the Palestine Mandate for work, but had fled back to Lebanon in 1948 during the Israeli war of independence. Imagine being told you were no longer Lebanese but Palestinian, and for that reason you couldn't go back to your family, couldn't go back to Palestine, but could only stay in this refugee camp. Imagine 56 years later, your great grandchild becoming a man in that same refugee camp, still denied Lebanese citizenship even though you and three successive generations had been born in Lebanon, and had hundreds of Lebanese cousins.
By denying this person his Lebanese identity, "facts on the ground" were created. An open bleeding wound was not only left untreated, but inflamed and encouraged to grow. This callous willingness to create human suffering and perpetuate it generation after generation is breath-taking.
This is the foundation of the "Palestinian" identity. It’s real enough, a lot of work has gone into its creation. It’s a "fact on the ground".
The reality is there is a "Palestinian" identity, and I support the creation of an independent Palestinian-Arab state. In pointing out that there is not and has not been a Palestinian state, I’m not denying Palestinian identity, but only illustrating that such an entity has not yet been created, that it is up to the Palestinian-Arabs to create this entity (a nation can not be imposed on them by the Israelis), and that presumptions on specifics of this state are invalid until it is created.