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R.R. Reno

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Bad Dreams

In a recent short essay in America, the once influential magazine put out by the Society of Jesus. Fr. Raymond A. Schroth, S.J., offers what he thinks is a lasting answer to the conflict between Jews and Palestinians over the future of the Holy Land. Unfortunately, as he faces this thorny issue, which calls for the delicate exercise of theological reflection and prudential judgment, he offers easy Leftist slogans rather than serious analysis.

Fr. Schroth, who is an associate editor of the magazine, begins with a writ of attainder that implies that Israel is to blame for the current impasse in negotiations for a two-state solution. For instance, he creates the impression that current Israeli building projects in East Jerusalem are the main impediment to negotiations and to peace. He begins the essay this way:


What began in September as hope for a two-state solution between Israel and Palestine has fizzled. Palestinians will not negotiate while Israel builds settlements on the West Bank and in East Jerusalem, which in international law are occupied territory; Israel will not extend the “moratorium” on construction, during which Israel continued to build settlements and segregated highways and to demolish Palestinian homes.

The logic is clear: It’s Israel’s fault. But in fact, a recent poll reports that only 24 percent of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank think that a settlement freeze is necessary for renewed negotiations. The new buildings do not seem to be the issue, even for the Palestinians for whom Fr. Schroth thinks he is speaking.

This isn’t surprising. As Palestinians know, in 2005 Israel used its own military to forcibly remove settlers from the Gaza Strip before turning over control to the Palestinian Authority. If a final agreement requires removing settlers, Israel has shown itself trustworthy. The new buildings are just pawns in a now very familiar Kabuki drama: the negotiations over whether to negotiate.

In any event, both sides recognize that the future outlines of a Palestinian state will roughly follow the 1967 boundaries, with a few square miles (perhaps fewer) in East Jerusalem as the (admittedly very) wild card.

It seems to me that the current impasse is unsurprising but not insuperable. Negotiations have long been hobbled by the disorder and dysfunction of Palestinian political life, which is perhaps understandable, given their many decades of stateless existence. Their situation has been made miserable by unnecessary provocations, indignities, and ill-considered policies that have characterized Israel’s exercise of power in the occupied territories. Moreover, Israeli political parties have not been shy about spinning the details of negotiations in order to please coalition partners and gain electoral advantage.

There are, as is always the case in a conflict-laden world, faults on both sides. Arab countries that proclaim their support of the Palestinian cause have often manipulated them and exploited their isolation in the long cold, and sometimes hot, war against Israel. The atmosphere is further poisoned by many decades of hyperbolic denunciations of the very existence of the State of Israel, and by wavering support by the nation’s fellow democracies in the West.

Perhaps I’m completely wrong about the sources of the conflict, but whatever the source, the tremendous pain, suffering, violence, and injustice that characterize Israel and Palestinian relations should rightly engage our moral concern. We may be unusually invested in this particular episode in human history because of the religious passions it arouses, the legacy of the Holocaust, and the geopolitical significance of Arab-dominated countries, but we need to reject grandiose analysis and idealistic solutions.

Peace will require what peace always requires: careful, prudent decisions and actions tailored to the realities at hand, with a sympathy for the interests and perspectives of everyone involved, and no reckless reliance upon human goodwill to overcome human passions.

Unfortunately, Fr. Schroth seems to think otherwise, for he proposes a truly fantastical one-state solution. In his dream world, Israel will give up on the idea of a Jewish state, paving the way toward a utopian Greater Israel in which Jews and Arabs will link arms and sings Kumbaya. A single post-ethnic state will, he imagines, become Switzerland on the Mediterranean. “Look at the map,” he writes,


Erase the lines setting off the West Bank and Gaza; imagine highways connecting the whole territory with Jerusalem, the shared capital. Every citizen has the same right to vote, the same access to water, land, education, marriage, health care, employment, property, and freedom of speech and religion. Walls disappear. Settlements may remain, but Palestinians will build beside them. An emerging leadership class will shepherd Israel-Palestine into a peaceful future.

This dream is not just unrealistic, it’s tendentious. Arabs do not have an even remotely reliable track record as civic partners with Jews. Since 1948, many Muslim countries have engaged in a sustained and successful project of ethnic cleansing. The once large communities of Jews spread throughout the Near East no longer exist, because synagogues were burned and lives threatened.

Moreover, the Palestinians themselves haven’t exactly been avatars of peace and cooperation. A society that celebrates suicide bombers can hardly be trusted to share a common civic space.

Only historical amnesia and willful blindness would allow anyone to imagine that the one-state solution won’t end disastrously for Jews. Perhaps Fr. Schroth knows that this outcome is likely, but I suspect that he is simply unwilling to confront reality. Like so many earnest, pious Europeans and Americans, I think he harbors the usual liberal, self-complimenting illusion that a radical new beginning will release us from the agonies of history, allowing our natural goodness to shine forth.

This mentality is not in accord with Catholic teaching. Of course, the Church does not want us to simply accept the world as we find it. We are to try to correct injustices and do our best to create the conditions for peace. This includes taking risks, risks that involve using our political imaginations in new and creative ways.

But the Church requires us to accept responsibility for our political dreams, and recognize how quickly dreams can become nightmares. Revolution and rebellion, for example, can only be justified with great difficulty. As the Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches:


Armed resistance to oppression by political authority is not legitimate, unless all the following conditions are met: 1) there is certain, grave, and prolonged violation of fundamental rights; 2) all other means of redress have been exhausted; 3) such resistance will not provoke worse disorders; 4) there is well-founded hope of success; and 5) it is impossible reasonably to foresee any better solution. (2243)

The same applies to schemes for recasting a nation’s entire social system. Fr. Schroth’s dream fails to meet the Catechism’s basic test of responsibility. No reasonable person would imagine that it can succeed. The result of his proposal would be the end of Israel as a home for Jews and indeed the destruction of Jewish life in the Holy Land.

He must know that, surely? But maybe my original assessment was right: the proposal is the product of predictable (and irresponsible) Jesuit soft-mindedness.

R.R. Reno is a Senior Editor of First Things and Professor of Theology at Creighton University. He is the general editor of the Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible and author of the volume on Genesis. His previous “On the Square” articles can be found here. Fr. Schroth’s “Two Peoples, One State” can be found here. The poll on Palestinian attitudes to the negotiations can be found here.


 

Comments:

11.18.2010 | 9:21am
Come on! The Israeli plan has for many years been to drive all the Palestinians out of Palestine, and at this point they have nearly finished the job. Since I live in America and am not Palestinian, I have the luxury of viewing this with a certain detached equinamity, but I still have trouble swallowing nonsensical propaganda of any variety.

I am fascinated by the perspicacity of the interviewers who were able to find some Palestinians to interview. I am much less surprised that the poor devils have about given up any thought of having a homeland or rights or anything like that.
11.18.2010 | 10:17am
Jane says:
One hesitates to say anything about this complex topic, but an interesting idea seemed to be emerging from the 2010 Synod of Bishops from the Middle East on the idea of "positive secularism" - i.e., against establishment of state religions and in favor of secular states that allow religious freedom. I am not sure how the state of Israel is organized in this regard - it seems that Palestinians (citizens and non-citizens) can practice their own religion, and Muslim/Christian citizens of Israel seem to have a vote, but Israel is often referred to as a "Jewish State" and there is strong support from many quarters to maintain that character. Since the majority of Palestinians are not citizens of Israel, the fact that they are not Jewish is not currently a factor on the electoral side in Israeli politics. Presumably, this is one reason why many Israelis now want a "two-state" solution so that democracy will result in maintaining a Jewish majority in Israel. Further, in some background materials for the Synod, it seems that autocratic secular regimes (Iraq under Saddam, Syria) are seen as better at protecting Christian minorities than are Muslim-majority democracies and quasi-democracies. From a Catholic viewpoint, Prof. Reno's Catechism references are helpful, but then one has to ask whether these conditions are being met by the Palestinian movement(s). Certainly, this is a mixed picture and a changing one, as "hope of success" has fluctuated a lot. While I agree with Prof. Reno that Fr. Schroth's "dream" sounds unrealistic, there are not many positive alternatives out there. What would be a preferable alternative that would also result in justice for Palestinians?
11.18.2010 | 10:57am
All seemingly rational, measured comments and proposals for solutions must take into account the horrifying resurgence of anti-Semitism and the absolute necessity that a safe haven be provided for the Jews.
11.18.2010 | 11:02am
Michael PS says:
And I will set thy bounds from the Red sea even unto the sea of the Philistines, and from the desert unto the river: for I will deliver the inhabitants of the land into your hand; and thou shalt drive them out before thee (Exodus 23:31)
11.18.2010 | 11:45am
Israel is a legitimate state in an Arab and Persian region that wishes to destroy it. The Israeli people have every right to vigorously defend heir vital security interests. This Jesuit fellow is whistling Dixie.

Ehud Barak once negotiated a treaty with the Palestinians that returned about 90% of the occupied land. Arafat turned this down and began a vicious Intifada.

If America were threatened by serious enemies including one ruled by a madman about to obtain nuclear weapons, we would act with far less restraint than the Israelis.

Since the Israelis occupied the West Bank, the Palestinian economy, education system, and social welfare has vastly improved. Israel itself, having given up its socialist illusion, has become a vital high tech industrial nation.

One grows weary of these liberal idealists with hopelessly utopian visions.
11.18.2010 | 11:49am
Michael PS makes an interesting point. According to the plan, there are going to be a lot more Jordanian, Syrian, Iraqi, and Lebanese refugees to keep the Palestinians company in Detroit.

I seem to recall another passage from Genesis which tells the story of Esau anbd his bowl of porridge. Now we see what has become of the Promise. Modern Israel despairs of her Messiah, and has chosen instead to settle for David's Empire. Which is to say, her mess of porridge.

Many Orthodox rabbis have made this point before now. Perhaps someone should listen to them.
11.18.2010 | 12:44pm
Peter says:
The Occupation most certainly does not bear close moral scrutiny. Yet, those who recall will note that many voices in the Palestinian community have been raised against Israel long before the Occupation. Yasser Arafat's Fatah organization launched raids into Israel from Jordan in the late 50s and early 60s (before Occupation). Israel could withdraw from all contested areas and still be subject to attack by hostile neighbors, because for many of those neighbors, all of Israel, in any version from 1948 on, is "contested". Imagine if those of Arafat's political ilk had their way we would probably need to use words like pogrom to describe life for Jews in a Palestinian state. So what are the real alternatives we (who most often don't as they say "have a dog in the fight") weigh?
11.18.2010 | 2:37pm
"...given their many decades of stateless existence."

When exactly did the Palestinians have a state of their own? Before the Israelis were the British and their Hashemite clients. Before that were the Turks - when Arabs had to be behind the barbed wire around their villages after curfew. Before the Turks, there were various Arab dynasties based in Egypt or Syria. Before that, the Calphs based in Baghdad. Before that the Greeks and Romans. Before that, hmm. Judea.

What about the Arab occupation of Byzantine Christendom, and their settlements?
11.19.2010 | 4:49pm
Joel Clarke Gibbons: "The Israeli plan has for many years been to drive all the Palestinians out of Palestine, and at this point they have nearly finished the job."

I wish some people knew their history better. From 1967 to about 1984, the job was already "done", by this definition. Under Oslo, the attempt began again to allow the formation of an Arab Palestine. Gaza more recently was completely turned over to the Palestinian Arabs. Still no solution. Read up, Joel.
12.3.2010 | 6:49pm
Fouad Ali says:
I love how people have this crazy idea that the Palestinians are just gonna up and disappear. Regardless of Palestinian short-comings, a two state solution will NEVER work and NEVER be viable in anyway constructive - a situation where you have a powerful state on top of a weak state has never ever worked out for the weak state, not for Tibet against China, not for Georgia against Russia and especially not for all of Latin America against the United States. Before the end of Apartheid, the white South African government wanted to place its black citizens in 12 separate 'bhuntostans' and call the separate nation states. The real motive behind this needless to say was so that the white government could retain its power at the expense of the black majority. But the Black SA's saw through this, rejected the crippled state solution as will the Palestinians. You can trap them, you can kill them you can make them wish they were never born - but as long as they continue to make up a sizable majority of the people living on that particular land area, they will continue pushing for rights, ultimately it would be about a state anymore it will be about citizenship - Israeli citizenship. True there will be violence right away and for a while to come, but this is a model that has worked for nearly all oppressed minorities everywhere. If the Israeli's don't like it, deal with it as anything short of a holocaust couldn't rid Israeli's of Palestinians anymore than Palestinians could hope to rid themselves of Israel.
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