REALITY CHECK: President Jimmy Carter's Accusation of Israel's APARTHEID Policies
by Read here related article : Excerpts from Jimmy Carter's book "Palestine: PeaceNot Apartheid." Israeli Racism Israeli law affords differences in privileges for Jewish and non-Jewish citizens of the state -- in matters of access to land, family unification and acquisition of citizenship. Israel's amended nationality law, for example, prevents Palestinian citizens of Israel who are married to Palestinians from the occupied territories from living together in Israel. A similar law, passed at the peak of apartheid in South Africa, was overturned by that country's supreme court as a violation of the right to a family. Israel's high court upheld its law just this year. The only thing wrong with using the word "apartheid" to describe such a repugnant system is that the South African version of institutionalized discrimination was NEVER as elaborate as its Israeli counterpart -- nor did it have such a vocal chorus of defenders among otherwise liberal Americans. Perhaps it is: There is a limit to how long such a cover up can go on.
Saree Makdisi
(Saree Makdisi, a professor of English at UCLA, is the author of Romantic Imperialism: Universal Empire and the Culture of Modernity (Cambridge University Press, 1998) and William Blake and the Impossible History of the 1790s (University of Chicago Press, 2003). He can be reached at: makdisi@humnet.ucla.edu)
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Former President Jimmy Carter has come under sustained attack for having dared to use the term "apartheid" to describe Israel's policies in the West Bank.
Read here related article :Words Even an Ex-President Can't Say in America
Read here related article: Former President Jimmy Carter: Speaking Frankly about Israel and Palestine
Read here related article: FOX News Launches Jihad Against Jimmy Carter and His New Book
However, NOT one of Carter's critics has refute his central claim that Israel bestows rights on Jewish residents settling illegally on Palestinian land, while denying the same rights to the indigenous Palestinians. In fact, in registering citizens, the Israeli Ministry of the Interior assigns them a whole range of nationalities other than "Israeli."
In the official registry, the nationality line for a Jewish citizen of Israel reads "Jew." For a Palestinian citizen, the same line reads "Arab."
When this glaring inequity was protested all the way to Israel's high court, the justices upheld it: "There is no Israeli nation separate from the Jewish people."
Obviously this leaves non-Jewish citizens of Israel in, at best, a somewhat ambiguous situation.
Little wonder, then, that a solid majority of Israeli Jews regard their Arab fellow-citizens as what they call "a demographic threat," which many -- including the deputy prime minister -- would like to see eliminated altogether.
What is all this, if not racism?
The glaring error in Carter's book, however, is his insistence that the term "apartheid" does not apply to Israel itself, where, he says, Jewish and non-Jewish citizens are given the same treatment under the law.
That is simply NOT true.
Many of the very individuals and institutions that are so vociferously denouncing President Jimmy Carter would NOT for one moment tolerate such glaring injustice IN the United States.
And the main lesson of Carter's book is that we have finally reached that limit.
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