Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Lynne Teperman's avatar

I suspect that with few exceptions, those objecting to the "occupation" of Palestinian lands have always meant all of the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, and not just Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem. With the growth of the movement over the last 25 years or so, especially on university campuses, it has emboldened people to come out of the proverbial closet, with a few pretending that the Palestine that will arise from Israel's ashes will be a secular, democratic binational state, regardless of the fascistic nature of Hamas, the most powerful Palestinian movement of the day and Hamas's closest allies.

As regards the charge of settler-colonialism, as John Strawson has pointed out, Israel, rather uniquely, was established as a refugee state. That understanding of Israel's founding has been twisted into such an unrecognizable state that the victims of 1800+ years of forced displacement, persecution, pressure to assimilate/convert under duress, discrimination, pogroms, real genocides and ethnic cleansing become the hated "settler-colonialists" while a population that doubtless, in significant proportion, descend from people who resettled there under a succession of conquerors and occupiers which followed the Romans are presumed to be "indigenous" to the land.

Expand full comment
Bob Borsley's avatar

It is striking that people can call for a “ceasefire” and “peace” and simultaneously fantasise about a bloody war to destroy Israel. I wonder how many dead they would expect this fantasy to require. I also wonder how many who talk about settler colonialism are at all bothered about Russian settler colonialism in Eastern Ukraine. I suspect many hate Israel because they hate the West and don’t have any problem with settler colonialism when it is practiced by an enemy of the West.

Expand full comment
9 more comments...

No posts