Defined characteristics steer history to an eventual climax.
Unless a dramatic intervention occurs, similar historical characteristics
forecast similar results.
If an earlier historical event has a narrative that is
comparable with the narrative of the Middle East conflict, then the trajectory
of that conflict can be predicted from the outcome of the earlier narrative; not
exactly, but within a certain boundary. A corollary exists -- if a conclusion
can be forecasted from an earlier event that exhibited closely similar
conditions, changing the conditions by intervention can modify the directed
result.
Several conflicts have been compared to the
Israeli/Palestinian conflict. Each narrative contained claims for land, clashes
with indigenous peoples and a desire for separation due to fear and insecurity.
Each conflict left a legacy that deserves consideration. Most prominently
mentioned are:
- Apartheid South Africa
- Colonial Algeria
- Northern Ireland conflict
- The American destiny
- The Puritan experience
Which of these conflicts is most comparable with the
Israeli/Palestinian conflict? Realizing that the contestants of the 21st
century conflict are culturally advanced in comparison to the contestants
engaged in the earlier century conflicts and accounting for different eras and
different stages in civilization, the most relevant comparison is the Puritan
experience. To substantiate this assertion, let�s start with the principle
characteristics that defined the Zionist agenda and its development into the
Israeli state
The Zionists at the end of the 19th century concluded Jewish
populations, due to unique characteristics, would never find acceptance from
Christian Europe. They would remain a persecuted minority if they did not
assimilate and would lose their identity if they assimilated. In this no-win
situation, Judaism and Jewish identity would eventually disappear. Relatively few
Jews of that time agreed with or followed the Zionist agenda.
The Zionists sought a Promised Land, the same land that the
Bible claimed God had awarded to the Hebrews. However, the pioneers did not
arrive by invoking a phrase uttered by many later immigrants; �The land has
been reserved for us by a promise from God.� Gaining national identity and
social redemption by social labor and communal life guided their purpose.
Hardship and failure describe many of the early missions.
After near failure, a limited success enthused compatriots in the aftermath of World
War I, and immigration to Palestine greatly increased. As immigration
increased, the original purpose of �achievement of national identity and social
redemption by social labor and communal life,� receded from the agenda.
The early Jewish immigrants to Palestine did not display an
intention to replace the Palestinians. The land seemed sufficiently empty to
accommodate a vast number of new immigrants without replacing the local
populations. New agricultural and irrigation techniques would make the land
more productive. However, some Palestinians, disturbed by the early intruders,
others just bandits, attacked a number of settlements. After a few incidents,
awareness that the Zionists could bring benefits -- work and new technology -- encouraged
Palestinians to gradual acceptance of the newcomers. In the 1920s, the
pioneering attitude changed and the welcoming attitude drastically changed.
In 1920, after the Zionist population had grown to 60,000 in
a Palestine composed of 585,000 Arabs, a reporter noted that earlier settlers
felt uncomfortable with the later immigrants.
�It may not be generally known, but a goodly number of the
Jewish dwellers in the land are not anxious to see a large immigration into the
country. This is partly due to the fear that the result of such immigration
would be an overcrowding of the industrial and agricultural market; but a
number of the more respectable older settlers have been disgusted by the recent
arrivals in Palestine of their coreligionists, unhappy individuals from Russia
and Romania brought in under the auspices of the Zionist Commission from the
cities of Southeastern Europe, and neither able nor willing to work at
agriculture or fruit-farming. � (Zionist
Aspirations in Palestine, Anstruther Mackay, The Atlantic Monthly, July
1920)
Israel�s development did not proceed from a colonial
mission. A search for a new land to practice a unique way of life for an
alienated group propelled the adventure. After 1920, the new immigrants created
an insatiable demand for land, for coast, for plain and for hill. Land sales
dispossessed Palestinians who sensed continuous usurpation of their ancient
lands and destruction of their livelihood. An initial mildly cooperative relationship
between Zionists and Palestinians deteriorated to each wanting to be rid of the
other. Soon, Palestine quaked with total war. The Zionists won the battle and
the Palestinians were directly and indirectly forced to leave their ancient
lands. The Israeli state continued to use fear and insecurity to rationalize
separation and extend its territory to more secure boundaries. Even those
Palestinians willing to cooperate have been marginalized. History records the
Palestinian people reacting to dispossession and fighting to prevent a slow and
unyielding destruction.
How does this narrative compare to other narratives?
South Africa
In 1651, the Dutch East India Company established a
settlement as a base for its ships passing the Cape of Good Hope. An influx in
1687 of a community of Huguenots changed the purpose of the base camp. During
the following 300-plus years the Protestant colony, together with British and
Dutch farmers evolved the white population.
The acquisitive British, seeking control of vital shipping
lanes, determined the future of Africa�s southern region. The British seized
the area in 1795 and the Congress of Vienna in 1815 recognized Britain�s
sovereign control of the Cape. Discoveries of mineral resources provoked Great
Britain to incorporate the Cape Colony, Natal, Transvaal, and Orange Free State
into one nation. On May 31, 1910, the English crown created another dominion --
the Union of South Africa -- precursor to the 1961 creation of the Republic of
South Africa.
A nation that contained an estimated 67 percent black
African, 9 percent colored and 2.5 percent Asian became a state designed for
its white population. The new nation certified apartheid by a series of laws
that started with the Natives� Land Act of 1913. The Act initially restricted
the Black population ownership of land to only 7 percent of the country. The
original Crape Coloreds (not White, Black or Indian), who were able to vote,
became totally disenfranchised in 1948, after the Nationalist Party took
control of the Union�s legislature.
South Africa started as a colonial enterprise. Colonialism
led to a conflict between the descendants of white settlers and the native
population. The conflict was almost entirely due to apartheid laws that denied
economic and political power to the non-white populations. Native populations
were misplaced and races were segregated. The conflict could only be resolved
by repeal of the Apartheid laws. In 1994, the repeal occurred.
The South African experience is often compared to the Middle
East conflict because of its positive outcome -- why can�t the former be a
guide to the other? All oppression of populations have similarities.
Nevertheless, the characteristics of the settling of the two areas and the
nature of the conflict are entirely different. There was no colonialism
involved in the establishment of Israel. There are no civil laws to cancel in
order to resolve the Middle East conflict. Rather than misplacements, there
have been population replacements and displacements. Apartheid defined the
South Africa struggle and sanctions convinced the authorities that changing the
apartheid laws were preferable to world enmity. Apartheid is a side factor in
the more complicated Middle East conflict. It will take much, much more than sanctions
to resolve the conflict.
The South Africa legacy: The world community can
successfully pressure nations to discard racial prejudice and grant equal
rights to all its citizens.
Algeria
Algeria, under French rule, was an example of pure
colonialism.
Expanding from a blockade in 1827, caused by an assumed
insult to a French consul in Algiers, to invasion in 1830, France colonized
Algeria. By 1848, the French controlled most of northern Algeria, and the
Second Republic recognized the occupied lands as an integral part of France.
Initially separated from the new economic infrastructure, native Algerians
became French subjects in 1856. Nine years later, Napoleon III allowed the native Algerians to apply for full
French citizenship. Although seemingly beneficial, this maneuver had problems:
it legalized France�s occupation and replaced a right to be governed by sharia in
personal matters, which meant internal conflict.
After a century of verbal and sporadic warfare, the French
National Assembly in 1947 approved legislation that created an Algerian
Assembly with Muslim representation. It was an insufficient gesture. A
protracted Algerian War of Independence, fought from 1954-1962, resulted in an
independent Algeria and the retreat of the French colonists to their home
country.
Similar to Israel policies, which strengthened Palestinian
identity, the French awakened an Algerian national identity. Nevertheless, by
being a colonial adventure, which brought economic separation, and later tried
to legally integrate the native population into the French nation, the Algerian
narrative does not track the Israel narrative. The Palestinians would be
pleased with an outcome similar to the resolution of the Algerian conflict. Israelis
prefer that conditions don�t change to resemble the narrative which forced an
Algerian nation.
The Algerian conflict legacy: Even after a century of
struggle, native populations can win their right to self-determination against
a major power.
Northern Ireland
Ireland had been conquered and reconquered several times by English royalty. During the turn of the
16th century, England established a central government that ruled the entire Emerald
Island.
Colonization followed conquest. England sent Protestants
colonists to Irish provinces, mostly to those which would later be a part of
Northern Ireland. Constant strife culminated in a complicated arrangement by
which Ireland was temporarily partitioned in 1921 into Northern and Southern
Ireland. Following a brief war and a treaty between the English Parliament and
Irish representatives, the Irish Free State came into existence as a dominion
of the British Commonwealth. In 1949, Ireland became a republic and left the commonwealth.
By being awarded autonomy, Northern Ireland received special
consideration in the 1921 partition plan. Almost immediately, the Northern
Ireland Parliament voted to leave the Irish Free State and remain as a part of
the United Kingdom, but with its own parliament. A boundary commission failed
in its duty and a large minority of Catholics found inclusion in a Protestant
directed Northern Ireland. The Protestants dominated the political and economic
life and reduced the Catholics to a struggling minority. Discrimination and the
desire to unite Northern Ireland with Ireland guided the Catholic Nationalists
to an armed contest against the Protestant Unionists.
Paramilitary groups fought in the streets of Belfast until
1994, when the IRA and the Unionist paramilitary groups agreed to a truce.
According to Cain Web Service, between the years 1969 and 2001, 3,526
people were killed in the conflict. Approximately 60 percent of the dead were
killed by IRA supporters, 30 percent by Unionists and 10 percent by security
forces.
A 1997 peace agreement between the antagonists approved the
formation of an assembly elected by proportional representation. Considering
the violence preceding the Good Friday power sharing arrangement, Northern
Ireland has had relative calm. The assembly has been suspended on several
occasions, at one time for four and one-half years. Some violence has occurred.
At the July 2009 Protestant Orange parade, �approximately 23 police officers
were injured, numerous vehicles were hijacked, burned and pushed towards
officers, and shots were fired at police. Rioters, approximately 200 of them
youths, threw gas bombs, bricks, bottles and other missiles at the police. In
turn, the police fired plastic bullets and used water cannon to disperse the
crowd.�
�Peace walls,� which are kilometers of concrete and wire
barricades that began to be erected during the 1970s in the city of Belfast,
still separate Catholic and Protestant neighborhoods. Sound familiar?
The Northern Ireland experience has key words that relate to
the Middle East conflict -- partition, militias, immigrant pioneers, separation
wall, violence, terrorism, religious strife, nationalism, and two cultures
finding themselves together and wanting to separate. An end to the strife
resulted in two viable and adjacent states at peace with one another. Ireland
is composed of one ethnicity. Northern Ireland combines two ethnicities which
have tacitly resolved their differences and are willing to share power, an
arrangement that parallels not what is, but what could be in the Middle East.
Many perceive the path of the Irish conflict as the route to resolving the
Middle East conflict. However, characteristics of this route weren�t formed and
didn�t combine in the same manner as in the Middle East.
The Irish conflict proceeded from a colonial adventure that
happened 400 years ago.
The principal conflict was between the Irish and the English
government.
The United Kingdom guided the resolution of the conflict.
Refugees and land seizures were not principal factors in the
conflict.
Economic injustice mostly characterized the conflict.
Partition didn�t create two new nations. It created an Irish
Free State as a self-governing dominion of the United Kingdom and allowed
Northern Ireland to separate and join the United Kingdom.
Rather than refugees being created by exclusion, Catholic
refugees were created by inclusion in Northern Ireland.
Northern Ireland has its own assembly but is an integral
part of another nation -- the United Kingdom.
The Northern Ireland legacy: Disparate cultures and
religions can compromise their differences and function as one nation.
America
Settlement of the Americas seems to more closely parallel
the Israel narrative. Adventurers of many types sought a new life in a new world.
A nation�s military superiority conquered a continent and pioneer fear
destroyed the native populations. The American story of coast-to-coast
expansion is well known, but the narrative is too magnificent, too complicated,
and too controversial to make comparisons with the Israel narrative .The United
States of America transitioned from settlements to a British colonial
adventure, to the American Revolution, and to a new nation. The new nation
started with a constitution, contained slaves, fought many wars, both external
and internal, had excessive, rather than scarce, land and resources, welcomed
immigrants of all races and religions, and considered itself to have a manifest
destiny that superseded the pretensions of all nations.
The American legacy: Seemingly harmless incursions can lead
to great tragedies, especially when nations perceive themselves as exceptional.
Puritans
A small congregation of Puritans differentiated themselves
from their coreligionists by being unwilling to reconcile their independent
organization with the established Church of England. Desiring to preserve their
identity and feeling constantly persecuted, they sought new places to live
their unique social and communal life. In the year 1620, they concluded they
would never be accepted in Europe and sought an opportunity in America. They
were called the Separatists and because they made a voyage on the Mayflower to
what they termed �their Promised land,� (not a land promised to them) they
became known as the Pilgrims.
The Separatists had no intention to uproot native
communities they anticipated they would encounter. Because they did not know
that a series of contagious diseases resulting from contacts with European
fishermen on the Maine coast had reduced Native populations, the Pilgrims
concluded the area was sparsely populated and land was available. Due to the
plagues, the land was sparsely populated, but the entire area was controlled by
the Pokanoket Tribe and Federation, led by Chief Massasoit. After being wary of
the newcomers to his territory, Massasoit came to highly regard the English.
The huge Mayflower boat, perceived as a �walking island,� iron plows, muskets
and other material goods entranced the Indians and they saw themselves
benefiting from a cordial relationship with the Pilgrims.
After word reached England that the Pilgrim adventure, which
had several times been near failure, had finally succeeded, due principally to
Pokanoket assistance, other English -- Puritans, entrepreneurs, adventurers,
merchants, farmers -- booked passage to the New England. They and Pilgrim
descendants acquired an insatiable thirst for land and detoured from the
Separatists� original mission.
�The Pilgrims bought their land from the Natives, but the
Natives expected to continue to use the land�s resources. The colonists built
fences where no fences had ever been before, closing off their property to make
the land their own. Tensions had long existed due to the two cultures�
different ways of life. Colonists� livestock trampling Native cornfields was a
continuing problem. Competition for resources created friction. Regional
economic changes forced many Natives to sell their land.� (Nathan Philbrick, Mayflower)
The Pokanoket Indians became fearful of losing all their
land, agriculture, and fishing rights. Their fear and insecurity generated fear
and insecurity in the Puritans. After 40 years of a peaceful and helpful
relationship, both sides contemplated a future without the other.
Massasoit�s son, who gave himself the name of King Philip,
felt betrayed by the Puritans and started a 14-month war to drive out the
English -- a war for survival, which he almost won.
Fourteen months of attacks and counter attacks devastated
New England. The Puritans survived, but many of the area�s tribes lost their
homes, their culture, and their way of life. Within a century, �Indians of Cape
Cod had been reduced to several hundred people, most of them living on
reservations in the towns of Mashpee on the Cape and in Aquinnah on Martha�s
Vineyard. The Sakonnets dwindled from about four hundred (survivors) to six men
and nineteen women by 1774.�
The Puritans arrival in America, which eventually became the
Massachusetts Bay Colony, and their fatal encounter with the native population,
set the stage for the settlement of the entire coast-to-coast territory.
Insecurity and mistrust guided the relations between what became a nation of
Americans and the indigenous populations. Superiority of U.S. military forces
enabled American pioneers to move inexorably from the Atlantic to the Pacific
oceans. Wherever the Americans arrived, they found native peoples. Wherever
they settled, the native peoples, even those who cooperated, like Chief Joseph
and his Nez Perce tribe, were decimated.
The Zionist Jewish narrative closely follows the Separatist
Puritan narrative. The early years of
the development of the nation of Israel parallels the Puritan experience in
America. Let�s hope the trajectory will be detoured and the Israelis don�t
prove to be the New Puritans.
Dan Lieberman is editor of Alternative
Insight, a monthly web based
newsletter. Dan�s many articles on the Middle East conflicts have been
published on websites and media throughout the world. He can be reached at: alternativeinsight@earthlink.net.