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  On ethnic cleansing and racism  The ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian 
population over almost 60 years could not have occurred without the concomitant 
racist discourse coming from the Israeli nation, writes Ramzy Baroud* 
  
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    "The term ethnic cleansing refers to various policies of forcibly removing 
people of another ethnic group. At one end of the spectrum, it is virtually 
indistinguishable from forced emigration and population transfer, while at the 
other it merges with deportation and genocide." 
  According to this definition, and others, including those emerging in the 
1990s following the ethnic cleansing in the Balkans, Palestinians have been and 
remain victims of a determined ethnic cleansing policy that began in 1947-48 
and continues today. 
   
  However, it is important to note that when we examine the subject of ethnic 
cleansing in Palestine, we take into account its various dimensions, one being 
the accompanying racist discourse, which has become part and parcel of Israel's 
ethnic cleansing policies. 
   
  Any act of collective punishment -- whether ethnic cleansing or genocide -- 
is often preceded and adjoined by a racist discourse that dehumanises the 
victim and justifies the crime on baseless grounds, a concoction of lies and 
fabrications that may appeal to national or religious psyches, but fails any 
test of law, morality or basic human norms.
   
  Without such discourse - in which the Zionists movement depicted the original 
inhabitants of Palestine as cancerous, subhuman and a nuisance in the face of 
civilisation and progress -- it would not have been possible to carry out a 
systematic campaign of murder and ethnic cleansing in 1947- 48. This inhumanity 
saw the killing of an estimated 13,000 Palestinians, the forcible eviction of 
850,000 and the depopulation and subsequent destruction of nearly 500 villages 
and localities.
   
  Without such a racist discourse it would have been difficult to carry out 
scores of pre-emptive massacres, including Deir Yassin, Tantoura, Abbasiya, 
Beit Daras, Bir Al-Sabaa and Haifa, to name but a few.
   
  Were it not for a concerted campaign of institutionalised racism that was 
propagated on a large scale and which is maintained until today, it would have 
been impossible to gun down scores of innocent people after lining them up 
against the crumbling wall of the old Tantura Mosque in May of 1948, or to 
bulldoze the home of a crippled man in Jenin in April 2002 without giving his 
mother the chance to evacuate him. It would have been impossible to describe as 
a "great success" the killing of 14 civilians, including children, when a 
one-tonne Israeli bomb slammed into their apartment building in the Zeitun 
neighbourhood in Gaza in July 2002, or condone the wanton murder of 19 people, 
most of them women and children of the same extended family in Beit Hanoun 
earlier this November. But according to Israeli officials, every other method 
has been tried, and failed. "With murderous, bloodthirsty terrorism that wants 
to wipe you off the map, you have to respond accordingly: wipe it
 out," as Ben Caspit commented following the brutal massacre of Beit Hanoun. 
   
  But if what purely motivates Israel is the fear of its own annihilation, 
then, how can the Zionist state's morally flexible supporters explain Israel's 
continuous colonisation of the West Bank and Jerusalem? According to a 2004 
Foundation for Middle East Peace report, the total settler population in the 
West Bank and East Jerusalem has neared 420,000: 220,000 settlers in the West 
Bank and 200,000 in East Jerusalem. In reality, many believe the number stands 
at a much higher figure.
   
  New settlements are being erected while existing settlements continue to 
expand. According to a recent report drafted by the PLO's Negotiations Affairs 
Department, Israel approved tenders for 690 new settlement units in two major 
East Jerusalem settlements: Maaleh Adumim and Beit Illit. The housing units 
could accommodate up to 2,800 new Jewish settlers. 
   
  If the idea of the Separation Wall was indeed to shield Israel from 
Palestinian attacks, then why is 80 per cent of the wall being built on 
ethnically cleansed Palestinian land? Why encircle the Palestinian population 
of the West Bank from east and west, and those of Qalqilia from all directions? 
Why do thousands of Palestinian school children have to stand for hours in 
front of their gated villages to acquire permission from an Israeli soldier to 
allow them access to their schools? 
   
  Ethnic cleansing is indeed back on the Israeli political agenda, as Avigdor 
Lieberman, an Israeli politician who has for long advocated the ethnic 
cleansing of the Arab inhabitants of Palestine, was recently appointed as 
Israel's new deputy prime minister. One of his early ideas since the new post, 
aside from sending Palestinians packing, was the killing of the entire 
leadership of the elected Palestinian government. "They... have to disappear, 
to go to paradise, all of them, and there can't be any compromise," he told 
Israeli radio last week. 
  The unfortunate reality is that Israel's campaign of ethnic cleansing, though 
it might have changed tactics and pace throughout the years, has never stopped 
and is now more active than it has been for decades. It's also clear that the 
concurrent racist dialogue that made such a policy sustainable for six decades 
is also at work, making advocates of war crimes heroes in the eyes of most 
Israelis. 
   
  Moreover, amid unstinting American support for such policies and an eerie 
silence from the rest of the international community, Israel knows that the 
success of its colonial project in the West Bank is time-dependent. 
   
  What's even more disheartening is the fact that Palestinian infighting is 
distracting and wasting energies that should be put to work to provoke and 
sustain an international campaign against Israeli atrocities. Infighting over 
governments that have no sovereignty, lack national consensus and contain no 
clear political programme to unify Palestinians at home and in Diaspora around 
one political and national agenda, will certainly ensure the success of the 
Israeli programme and further contribute to the racist discourse that sees 
Palestinians as incapable of taking on the task of leadership and 
self-determination. 
  * The writer is an Arab-American journalist
  Source: http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2006/822/op132.htm#1 

                
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