This past week I have seen two different perspectives in
regard to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
One perspective was from a documentary I watched about the
current situation in the West Bank and the work of the former Palestinian Prime
Minister, Fayyad Salam. With the security barrier and the occupation zones in
the West Bank, most Palestinians are discontent and yearn for independence and
international recognition, as do many left-wing Israeli factions. These groups want to bring peace and independence via peaceful means, such as building up
infrastructure and utilizing media. Many in this camp are optimistic for the
future with the recent recognition of Palestine as a non-member observer by the
UN. A different perspective can be seen in areas near Gaza, which are far
wearier of a fully independent Palestine. Groups such as Hamas have bombarded
this region of Israel with rockets from Gaza. The town of Sderot over the past
10+ years has been bombarded by 26,000+ rockets alone, according to the IDF
liaisons officer that spoke to our group. This has made people from this area of
Israel weary of peace negotiations, which is why many people in towns such as
Sderot vote for more “hawkish” political parties that emphasize on a more
hardline policy towards Palestine.
These two perspectives create a dichotomy. On one hand, there are people who a highly interested in peace and are using peaceful
means to achieve their goal. One the other hand, there are people who show no
interest in attempting negotiations, either too weary or believe that the other
side has no legitimacy to exist to begin with. How does peace, or even
negotiations come about in such a situation?
I see several factors that would play into potential peace.
On the Israeli side, a settlement freeze would need to happen. Israel does not
need Palestine, for if they annexed it, the country would be just barely a
Jewish majority state and perhaps eventually due to birthrates could potentially cease
to be one in the future, not to mention the moral qualms I and many others have
with annexation. On the Palestinian side, Hamas and other fundamentalist
organizations need to go. Israel cannot negotiate with organizations that do
not see Israel as valid, to the point were they are potentially encouraging
genocide and the use of violence against civilians.
While these changes would not likely result in a solution to
the conflict, it would be a major first step in building up trust between
Israel and Palestine, which, in my opinion, is much needed.
Hi Daniel-You are starting to impersonate me-Janice and I miss you. Louis
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