http://972mag.com/e1-doesnt-matter-one-state-reality-is-here/62774/

By Mya Guarnieri <http://972mag.com/author/myag/> |Published December 27,
2012E1 doesn't matter: One-state reality is here

*Those who think that E1 is the nail in the coffin of the two-state
‘solution’ are willfully blind to the fact that a one-state outcome is
already on the ground and that the Zionist militias started building it
before there ever was an Israel.*

I know this is a little late. The big brouhaha about
E1<http://972mag.com/resource-what-is-the-e1-area-and-why-is-it-so-important/61298/>
was,
what, a few weeks ago? I wasn’t paying that much attention because, as
someone who spends a lot of time traveling between Jerusalem and the West
Bank–and noticing the one unequal state already on the ground–I didn’t
quite get the fuss about E1. It’s just more of the same; it’s part of the
process that began in 1947.

Every day, I take a Palestinian bus from East
Jerusalem<http://972mag.com/west-bank-and-east-jerusalem-buses-are-already-segregated/61041/>
to
Abu Dis, in the West Bank. We go through Sheikh Jarrah and then through the
tunnels, popping out in the Palestinian land next to the Israeli settlement
Maale Adumim. We pass through Azzariya and then take a winding road to Abu
Dis.

People were up in arms about construction in E1 making a contiguous
Palestinian state impossible. As though there were any possibilities left.
The West Bank has been carved up already. Israeli settlements dot East
Jerusalem and the West Bank and the Palestinians are confined to separate
bus line that connects their Bantustans. I see it on my commute every day
as the Palestinian bus passes Israeli bus stops full of settlers. As we
pass Maale Adumim. As we share the road with all the yellow-plated Israeli
vehicles traveling to and from settlements that are even deeper in the West
Bank than Maale Adumim neighboring E1.

Of course, it’s awful that Israel will expropriate privately owned
Palestinian land for settlement in E1. It’s shameful that the Palestinians
who live in the areas surrounding E1 will find their (already non-existent)
ability to expand to accommodate for natural growth further limited. But
those who think that the tiny piece of land known as E1 is what will make
or break a Palestinian state don’t realize that the Palestinian state was
broken from day one; those who think that E-1 is the nail in the coffin of
the two-state “solution” are willfully blind to the fact that a one-state
outcome is already on the ground and that the Zionist militias started
building it before there was an Israel.

Zionist militias started breaking the Palestinian state in 1947 right after
the UN Partition Plan was approved. As Salim Tamari writes in Jerusalem
1948: The Arab Neighborhoods and Their Fate in the War:

The Zionist forces conducted thirteen operations for the capture of
Jerusalem. The objectives of these operations was twofold: (1) to clear the
Tel Aviv-Jaffa-Jerusalem highway for the free movement of Jewish forces;
and (2) to clear Arab villages on the western flanks of Jerusalem from
their Palestinian population to provide *demographic depth and
linkages* between
the proposed Jewish state and the city of Jerusalem, in the framework of *Plan
Dalet*. (emphasis mine)

Israel’s plans for E1 are just more of the same. It’s part of the same
demographic war that Israel was waging from the get go, it’s part of an
attempt to link Jewish settlements from the river to the sea, creating one
state in the entirety of the territory shared by two people.

Tamari points out that the Zionist forces “conducted seven military
operations in Jerusalem” from December of 1947 up until Israel’s
independence on May 15 and that “[a]ll of those operations were conducted
inside the boundaries of the UN proposed Arab State…”

Today, these same conquered areas are considered part of “West Jerusalem.”
But, as Tamari points out, West Jerusalem is “a post-1948 term.” On a
personal note, I feel the continuity between the West Bank and “West
Jerusalem” in my bones when I go hiking inIr Ganim’s
hills<http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/12/20121216788267229.html>–which
were Palestinian agricultural terraces before 1948–and I stand listening to
Battir’s call to prayer. Even though I can see and hear
Battir<http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/israel-s-high-court-orders-state-to-find-alternative-to-separation-fence-at-west-bank-village.premium-1.484764>,
I can’t reach it. The continuity between Jerusalem and the West Bank was
broken six decades ago.

This is what my students, many of whom are refugees from areas that are now
part of “West Jerusalem,” talk about when they talk about Palestine. They
talk about their grandparents’ villages—Ein Karem, Deir Yassin, and Malha,
to name a few—which they consider *their* villages. They talk about the
right of return. They talk about 1947 and 1948—the *nakba*—and everything
that has come since. Those who have foreign passports and East Jerusalem
IDs talk about getting arrested at Ben Gurion International Airport—which
stands on Lydda, they remind me—because they dared to try to enter their
country. They talk about checkpoints and green and blue IDs; they talk
about being attacked by a Jewish mob during the holiday that celebrates the
“reunification” of Jerusalem; they talk about being assaulted by soldiers.

They are talking about their human rights and all the ways Israel violates
them every day. They are not talking about the 1967 lands. And they are
definitely not talking about E-1. They’re talking about Palestine.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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