The myth of Israeli democracy

February 20, 2024
Issue 
The 19th weekly rally on Gadigal land/Sydney
The 19th weekly rally on Gadigal land/Sydney. Photo: Zebedee Parkes

Nachshon Amir, an anti-Zionist Jewish activist and former Israeli Defense Forces soldier, told a 麻豆传媒-hosted forum on January 30 that while he grew up as a Zionist, after many years he had changed his view.听

Amir said he joined the IDF to 鈥減roudly to defend my country鈥, but,听鈥淎fter many years, I turned 180 degrees 鈥 and I鈥檓 now in Free Palestine听Melbourne, supporting the Palestinian struggle for justice and rights.鈥

Amir said the apartheid system violates Palestinians鈥 basic human rights, their political and civil rights, their right to privacy, right to education and work.

Democracy makes us think that the 鈥渃ountry 鈥 has elections, a parliament and [an] independent justice system鈥, he said. But South Africa 鈥渉ad all these things, but it wasn鈥檛 a democracy, because it was only for white people鈥.

It is 鈥渢he same in Israel鈥, he said, where democracy is 鈥渇or Jewish people鈥.

He explained how millions of Palestinians live without political rights because of Israel鈥檚 military control in the Occupied Territories. It controls the use of land, and access to land and resources, such as water in the West Bank.

鈥淣o one can build a house in the West Bank anywhere without Israeli permission, and they don鈥檛 give you any permits for that.

鈥淭he Israeli regime is on top in every aspect of life,鈥 Amir said. 鈥淚 was a combat officer 鈥 in a lot of villages [and] towns in the West Bank 鈥 That was in the First Intifada 鈥 before the Oslo Accords.

鈥淏ut I, as a young officer, could do whatever I wanted there. I was like a sheriff of the village or the area I was in 鈥 And no one controlled me 鈥 I could put [up] a checkpoint in the middle of the village or the town, whenever I wanted, to stop all the cars. And they all waited for two hours because I decided [to do] this 鈥 that was my power鈥︹

Unchecked power

Amir said this unchecked power meant he could knock on doors in the middle of the night 鈥渂ecause I saw something written on the wall outside the house, which I didn鈥檛 even understand because it was Arabic鈥 and 鈥渃ould tell the person inside to 鈥 clean it or paint [over] it鈥.

The point, he said, is to continually harass Palestinians in the hope that they give up any resistance.

Amir said the apartheid system violates Palestinians鈥 basic human rights, their political and civil rights, their right to privacy, right to education and work. Palestinians are tried in military courts, whereas Israeli citizens who break the law are tried in civilian courts. Even commemorating the Nakba (catastrophe) is outlawed.

Israel鈥檚 apartheid system has been criticised by its largest human rights organisation, B鈥橳selem. Its听report, published in 2021, details听how only Jews live in a democracy;听the Indigenous Palestinian population live as either second-class citizens or non-citizens in their own country.

Identity of resistance

Mai Saif, who was born in Palestine and traces her ancestry back more than 4000 years, told the forum that, for Palestinians, 鈥渢alking about your identity is a form of resistance鈥.

This is because 鈥渢here was a denial that we were even ethnically cleansed out of our lands and homes. There鈥檚 even a denial that we actually even exist鈥.

In practice听鈥渢his is shown with the criminalisation of us being able to carry our flags, practise our national culture, the destruction of our lands and connection to land, which is something we hold very closely, like our Indigenous brothers and sisters do.

鈥淎 lot of us have been denied the ability to go back and visit our ancestral homes and lands, or visit family.鈥

Despite having grown up in Australia, Saif said she 鈥済rew up in a household that talked about [its] Palestinian heritage; that was so connected with its Palestinian identity鈥.

During the First Intifada, Saif lost countless family members, including a cousin 鈥渨ho died through the 鈥榖roken bones鈥 policy during the First Intifada 鈥 if [the Israelis] got you, they'd break your bones and leave you naked and stripped in the middle of the street and if anyone helped you, they鈥檇 get sniper shot.

鈥淸This] actually happened to my uncle. He was trying to help a friend 鈥 and he got shot by a sniper. It just missed his heart. He went into hiding for about two years in the mountains 鈥

鈥淢y grandma 鈥 was helping the resistance movement at the time, by hiding those young men in their lands, which would have been very, very dangerous, she could have been easily killed, and the family would have been arrested.

鈥淒uring that period, my grandfather was a political prisoner. He was kept in prison for 14 years 鈥 he was a school principal, and a writer and a poet. And he was accused of inciting resistance against the Israeli state.

鈥淲hen he got too sick to remain in prison, they just swapped him [for] my uncle. And so my uncle served out his sentence in his place.鈥

Saif said intergenerational trauma is part of being Palestinian. We鈥檝e been living it for decades, but the world seems to have finally caught up 鈥 slowly it鈥檚 creeping into mainstream media.鈥

Despite this, Saif said, the media tries to deny that Israel is an apartheid regime. 鈥淵ou cannot have a democracy if it鈥檚 a democracy for some and none for others,鈥澨齭he said.

Saif lived and worked in the West Bank when the Second Intifada broke out and witnessed IDF soldiers鈥 brutality. 鈥淸A]s I was walking, going through a checkpoint, I met a very excited Jewish soldier. He was 18 years old and had] just started serving in the West Bank.

鈥淚 saw eight men lying on the side of the road, their hands behind their backs 鈥 [it] looked like they鈥檇 been there for hours 鈥 That was a game to him 鈥 [and it] really brought home to me the level of dehumanisation that Palestinians experience.

鈥淚 think it becomes part and parcel with the Israeli state and the Zionist agenda. It鈥檚 an ethnic supremacist agenda. And it is built on the idea that Palestinians are subhuman.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e been doing it for 75 years. And what we have seen, though, is that every generation has become even more brutal, and more violent.鈥

'Big lie'

Loud Jew Collective member Meredith Lawrence, who grew up in a family of Holocaust survivors, described as听鈥渉eroes鈥, took up the Palestinian cause in 1973, after learning about what had really happened.

鈥淚n many ways I feel like I have got a family connection to the genocide and dispossession,鈥 Lawrence told the forum.

鈥淲hile the propaganda at the time [of Israel鈥檚 establishment] was that Palestine was another terra nullius, there was a clear recognition right from the beginning that Palestine was a settled state. The Zionists were open about the 鈥榥eed鈥 to displace the Palestinians to create a secular Jewish state and the ethnic cleansing of the Indigenous Palestinian population was always intended.鈥

With the help of the Global North, Israel promotes itself 鈥渁s the only truly liberal democratic state in the Middle east, a bastion of civilization among the 鈥榖arbarians鈥欌.

鈥淭he founding documents describe the state of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state鈥澨齭he said. The emphasis historically has been on the rights of the Jewish majority rather than the population as a whole.

鈥淯ntil 1966, Palestinian Israelis lived under martial law, but after it was lifted they did not enjoy equal rights with Israeli citizens.鈥

Israel is copying the former South African Apartheid regime. 鈥淛ews and Muslims are not allowed to marry in Israel 鈥 [Palestinian Israelis] can be forcibly transferred from one place to another. They are subject to administrative detention 鈥 torture [and] unlawful killings 鈥 and chronic underinvestment in Palestinian Israeli communities.

鈥淒iscrimination against Palestinian Israelis was written into the Israeli constitution in 2018, when it enshrined Israel as the 'exclusive nation state of the Jewish people'.

"This law also promoted the building of illegal settlements on occupied territory and downgrades the status of Arabic as an official language.鈥

The myth of Israeli democracy amounts to 鈥渁 big lie used to try and build support for Israel across the world鈥, Lawrence concluded.

[Listen to a podcast of the 麻豆传媒 forum here.]

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