by Dror Eydar
This is what you found?
 A murmured response to the question by PLO leader Yasser Arafat in 
1988, and an additional hum directed toward Haaretz journalists? And 
after this, they'll be angry that people talk about U.S. Secretary of 
State John Kerry in terms of messianic obsession.
Why should it be 
necessary to search high and low for Palestinian recognition of a Jewish
 state? Because there is none. One can read the declarations of the 
Palestinian Authority and its leaders over the past 20 years. Indeed, 
opposing recognition of Israel as the national home of the Jewish people
 is more important to the Palestinians than land, since this is the true
 heart of the conflict, rather than the other territorial nonsense that 
the Left has been selling for years. It's not about territory and not 
about settlements and not about refugee rights, not at all. 
The hundred-year-old 
argument is about the Jewish people's right to an independent home in 
the Land of Israel. Not only the Palestinians -- no Arab state 
recognizes our right as Jews to any part of the region. They obscure the
 issue and talk about "recognizing Israel," since the desire is to 
perpetuate the conflict even after a diplomatic treaty is signed, when 
the false claim will be that the Arab minority in Israel is suffering 
under "apartheid" and should have autonomy, since they belong to the 
Palestinian people who have been here since the dawn of creation. The 
international battle against Israel will continue to dismantle its 
Jewish identity on the way to making it a state for all its 
nationalities. There will be no end to the conflict without recognition 
of a Jewish state. This should be at the top of the Left's priorities. 
Kerry should read the 
Palestinian National Charter, the founding document of the "moderate" 
Fatah. It was ratified by the Sixth General Assembly of the Fatah 
Movement in Bethlehem in August 2009, when Palestinian Authority 
President Mahmoud Abbas was again elected head of the organization. This
 conference approved a plan that included the principle of "absolute 
irrevocable opposition to recognition of Israel as a 'Jewish state' to 
protect the rights of refugees and the rights of our people [Israeli 
Arabs] beyond the Green Line." 
Here, Mr. Kerry, is the
 rationale for the Palestinian refusal to recognize a Jewish state: They
 will continue to demand that refugees return even after a deal is 
signed and turn the parts of Israel around the Green Line into a 
binational state. Abbas and Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat both 
voted in favor of the plan. 
And here is a quote 
from the Palestinian platform that thus far, despite repeated promises, 
has not been changed: "Claims of historical or religious ties of Jews 
with Palestine are incompatible with the facts of history and the true 
conception of what constitutes statehood. Judaism, being a religion, is 
not an independent nationality. Nor do Jews constitute a single nation 
with an identity of its own; they are citizens of the states to which 
they belong." The Jews are not a people but a religion, and therefore 
have no national rights. Clear and simple. Just read it. 
The insistence upon 
recognition of a Jewish state isn't meant for us. We don't need 
recognition from Ramallah. The call to recognize Israel as a Jewish 
state is intended to block the PLO's progressive tactic in which each 
territory it receives serves as the base for the next demand. And not 
recognition in empty words, but a requirement that this recognition make
 its way into the Palestinian school studies and media. As of now, the 
state of Israel doesn't exist in the PA. So the Israeli insistence on 
recognition is non-negotiable. Without this, it is better to maintain 
the status quo. The so-called threat that without a diplomatic deal 
Israel's situation will worsen has been made for a hundred years 
already. Don't try to scare us. We've managed all right so far. 
Ahead of Prime Minister
 Benjamin Netanyahu's arrival, the American administration sought to 
pressure Israel by releasing an aggressive interview President Barack 
Obama gave to Jeffrey Goldberg. And now, as Abbas is on his way, John 
Kerry is putting out statements to press Israel -- imagine that -- into 
relieving the Palestinians of their responsibility. It's not only a 
matter of justice and fair mediation, it's much more serious. John 
Kerry's recent remarks have helped the PLO's step-by-step approach. 
                    Dror Eydar
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=7715
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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