It is not so much Sharon's agenda which makes him a dangerous enemy of the Palestinian people. Sharon's danger is that he is smart. His agenda is simple: as much as possible, to expand the Israeli territory at the expense of the Palestinian people. But, for many reasons, he cannot acknowledge his agenda. We can easily understand how badly such an acknowledgment would hurt his image in the international public opinion. What is harder to grasp is that Sharon is much more worried about his image with the Israeli people. Sharon had no difficulty to refuse entry to a UN committee sent by the UN to investigate the situation in Jenin. This refusal hurt his international image. But Sharon's knows quite well that the Israeli people took to the streets to protest his involvement in the massacres of Sabra and Shatila. He knows that it was the Israeli demonstrators who forced the Israeli government to indict him Subsequently, he was condemned to never become an Israeli defense minister. Elsewhere, I mentioned the many ways the expansionist establishment had recourse to, to increase the distance between the Israeli and the Palestinian peoples. It is a permanent fixture of the Israeli expansionist policies to induce in the minds of the Israelis the fear of the Palestinians, a fear which they endeavor to increase constantly. It is then that, under the name of security, they succeed in having the Israeli people "swallow" measures the Israeli people would have otherwise rejected. But the success of Sharon's policies is not ensured unless he also succeeds in forcing Palestinians to dance to his tune. There have often been periods during which no suicide bombing occurred. At such times the Israeli people expected to hear about resumption of peace talks between the Israeli government and the PA. This was going against Sharon's wishes. It was time to make some Palestinians dancing to his tune. He just had to order some targeted assassination and "lo and behold" it would be followed by a suicide bombing incident which would destroy the hopes for a resumption of negotiations. We know that Sharon's provocation was deliberate and purposeful. The main responsibility of the drawback in the peace process lies on his shoulder. Still, did a Palestinian organization have to dance to Sharon's tune? Still, should have the targeted assassination be allowed to occurred without retribution, without revenge? We must remember that victory is the best retribution. The satisfaction of the Palestinian aspirations, is the best revenge. Instead of dancing to Sharon's tune, which amounts to reacting to his evil deeds, we should have a strategy, our own tune, to which Sharon may have to dance, if he could. He probably could not, and would end up being toppled by the Israeli people. The Palestinian tune is described with some details in "Stumbling Blocks" Let us take the initiative. Let us take back the fate of our people, the Palestinian people, in our own hands. **"Stumbling Blocks" describes how to build an alliance between the two peoples directed against their common enemy: the Israeli expansionist establishment. Read More...
By: Joharah Baker for MIFTAH
Date: 27/05/2013
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Believing in Jerusalem
Last week, Israel barred a UNESCO fact-finding mission from entering the country, charging that the Palestinians had ‘politicized’ the mission before it had even arrived. The mission was tasked with looking into conditions of historical sites in the Old City of Jerusalem, something Israel apparently found to be very threatening. Looking at the state of Jerusalem’s eastern sector today, it is understandable why Israel would not want UNESCO or anyone else walking around the Old City, especially the Palestinian-populated parts of it. Because anyone who does, will see the devastation that Israel and its settlers have wreaked on one of the oldest and most beautiful cities in the world. Excavation works are being conducted in and around the Aqsa Mosque to make way for more Jewish construction at the place where Waqf authorities say Ottoman and Abbasid artifacts have long been tucked away. A Muslim graveyard is being dug up just outside the Old City’s Jaffa Gate, to build – ironically – a museum of tolerance. Today, two stores were forcefully taken over by Jewish settlers in Al Hakari, one of the neighborhoods in the Muslim quarter and every day, it seems that more and more homes are either being demolished by Israeli municipality authorities or being taken over by Jewish settlers. The “Judiazation” of Jerusalem is a term many Palestinians and Arabs use for what Israel is doing in the city. In a nutshell, it is the long-term plan Israel is gradually carrying out to change the Arab Palestinian character of Jerusalem. This means demolishing old and historical structures, displacing Palestinians, handing over their homes to settlers and trying to erase the Palestinian or Arab history of the city. The sad truth is that, on the surface, Israel has succeeded in this to a large extent. Pockets of Jewish settlers now live in the heart of Muslim quarters and aim to take over more and more. Sheikh Jarrah, one of the more affluent Palestinian neighborhoods of Jerusalem, is now pierced with Jewish flags waving from homes that have been wrestled from their Palestinian owners, and Israel’s light rail train cuts right down through Palestinian neighborhoods outside of the city center. The train, of course, is not meant to service the Palestinian population but rather to connect Jewish neighborhoods and settlements in the city, but the area confiscated from Shufat and Beit Hanina for its construction simply fell into the plan. What the UNESCO mission would not have seen even if they made it into the Old City is the overall humiliation that the Palestinian population of Jerusalem must endure on a daily basis because of Israel’s military occupation. Trips to the Israeli ministry of interior must be made just to prove that one lives in the city for fear that their residency rights may be revoked; young Palestinian men are stopped randomly by Israeli soldiers to check their ID cards or just to harass them, and settlers are always given the luxury of maximum security whenever they walk the streets. If settlers want to march through the city, the Palestinians are told to close their shops, are barred for hours from reaching their homes if they run along the path of the march and are always the ones blamed if any kind of confrontation between the two sides breaks out. Jerusalem is being squeezed by these measures more and more each day. But there is always that glimmer of hope, that strength that shines through proving that all is not lost. On Shavuot, Israeli settlers and extremists poured into the Old City, singing loudly, banging on the shop doors and waving huge Israeli flags. The sight was disconcerting to say the least. However, the afternoon of that same day, at Damascus Gate, passersby were met with a completely different scene. Palestinian flags waved in determined Palestinian hands under the threatening eye of heavily armed Israeli police and soldiers. The youths were fearless, demanding freedom, with strong, unrelenting voices. The sight of the Palestinian flag waving at the entrance to Damascus Gate was a breath of fresh air. All is not lost and never will be because hope is eternal and determination and strength come from a never-ending spring. That day at Damascus Gate is what all Palestinians must keep in their minds’ eye in spite of the daily oppression of the occupation. No matter how many missions Israel bars from entering or how many houses it takes over, there will always be those brave souls who, despite the risks, will always raise Palestine’s flag. Joharah Baker is a Writer for the Media and Information Department at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mid@miftah.org.
By: Joharah Baker for MIFTAH
Date: 20/05/2013
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Let Mohammed rest in peace
There is no point falling into the pit of countering the claims being made about the death of Mohammed Al Durra, the 12-year old boy from Gaza whose videotaped killing was seen around the world. The boy, crouching in fear behind is equally afraid father as bullets whizzed around them, was killed admittedly by the Israeli army. Later, the army recanted after investigating the tape, saying Durra was killed by Palestinian fire instead. Well now, Israel is changing its story altogether, saying he was not killed at all. In fact, he was probably not even wounded and the French channel that broadcast the footage and brought some pretty bad rap to Israel, had most likely filmed a charade. The reason why I will not waste my time countering this claim is that even with the great lengths the Israeli government went to to prove that the boy was never killed, it could not provide any irrefutable proof that Mohammed Al Durra – who would be 25 now – is still alive. No pictures, no testimonies, no hospital or morgue officials giving statements to refute his death, have been provided. Only sketchy information about ‘poor quality footage’ and the fact that it seems as though the boy moved his arm after he had slumped over his father following the explosion. My point is this: indeed, Mohammed Durra’s death was at least one of the catalysts that fueled the second Intifada, and thus, was an important event in the history of the Palestinians. However, more importantly – most importantly to me –is the fact that this is about a boy who died in sheer terror, with his distraught father futilely trying to shelter him from the barrage of bullets coming their way. Mohammed Al Durra was a boy, with a life, a family and friends. He died a horrible death and now he is being made to die a second one. I did not know Mohammed or his family, but I can only imagine how awful it must be for them to read these claims now and feel the pain of losing their child all over again. If nothing else, this is disrespect for human life of the worst kind. Some may postulate that the rehashing of the Durra case is a personal jab at the French cameraman who shot the footage, Charles Enderlin. Perhaps. But as a Palestinian who has seen the pain endured by numerous families who receive the horrible news that their sons or daughters have been killed by the Israeli army, my concern is for his family and for his memory. He should be left to rest in peace. If Israel has axes to grind with French journalists or with the international community for holding it accountable for its actions, then so be it. Israel is not lacking in the public relations department. That being said, there is just one decent thing left to do. Leave Mohammed Al Durra and his memory alone. Joharah Baker is a Writer for the Media and Information Department at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mid@miftah.org.
By: Joharah Baker for MIFTAH
Date: 13/05/2013
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Recognition and justice is our demand
This week Palestinians will commemorate Al Nakba, the catastrophe that befell the Palestinian people when Israel was founded. Every year, Palestinians hang placards pointing to the right of return, they carry keys symbolizing the homes they were forced to leave and could not return to and remember the Palestine that was lost to them 65 years ago. This year will be no different. Every May 15, Palestinian recall their catastrophe and demand justice. They demand that they are granted the right of return for those who were made refugees virtually overnight and were then relegate to a life they did not choose. But more than anything, they demand recognition of the tragedy that befell them rather than a denial that it ever happened, or worse, that it was of their own making. It has been 65 years since Israel was established in 1948, which means those who were cast into exile are either very old or have long passed. Those who experienced the Nakba are now few and far between, clinging to those few precious memories of a small garden in front of their house in Jaffa or of the salty smell of the sea in their neighborhood in Haifa. The rest of us are either descendants of these refugees or ordinary Palestinians who feel their cause is our cause because we are one people. But the Palestinians have made one thing clear. The refugee issue will not die with the last refugee. It is felt nationwide, the loss, the injustice and the fact that those who were forced from their homes have mostly passed, longing for their beloved homes. We cannot turn back time. What was lost has been altered, destroyed, changed or taken over by Israel’s newcomers. What we can do is hold on to the right to be recognized, for the injustice to be rectified in word and deed and for Palestine to never be lost in our minds or hearts. Joharah Baker is a Writer for the Media and Information Department at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mid@miftah.org.
By the Same Author
Date: 02/06/2006
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A Way Out
Palestine is going through a crisis imposed by Israel, and its supporters. Cutting off funds from the Palestinian government prevents it from running the daily business of governing, prevents it from paying its employees, and greatly hurts the whole Palestinian population. The mere fact that the European Union participates in the cutting of funds demonstrates how easily the Israeli government can today pursue its policies of unilateralism. Israel now states that there is no Palestinian partner with whom to negotiate. Israeli leaders have always stated this. They were subject to some moderate criticism from European countries. But now, Israeli leaders have it very easy. No European country criticizes them. The attention is shifted from the traditional Israeli reluctance to negotiate, to the fact that there is no Palestinian partner. There are many ways the Palestinian government could follow to get out of the present difficulties. The government could adopt the document signed in jail by imprisoned Fateh and Hamas leaders, among others. Then Israel would be recognized as a state within its pre-1967 boundaries. The US and Europe would have no excuses to maintain cutting off funds. Israel would have to find new and weaker excuses to act unilaterally. A second way is to have recourse to a plebiscite imposed by Mahmoud Abbas will leave it to the Palestinians to approve or disapprove the recognition of Israel. A third way would be for Abbas to declare a state of emergency during which the constitution (the Palestinian Basic Law) would allow him to edict laws to be approved by the Palestinian Legislative Council much later. He could form an emergency cabinet which would likewise have to be approved by the parliament. A constitutional crisis is not the healthiest way to develop democracy in any state, and particularly in a nascent democracy. Both the second and third ways would be in fact a confrontation between the Palestinian presidency and government. It bodes ill for the future of democracy and establishes precedents which are divisive, and God knows if Palestinians can afford some more division!! The best way would be for Hamas to issue an invitation to Fateh to examine together the proposal of the jailed leaders to considering its possible adoption. In this way, difficulties are solved without challenging the constitution, without putting it to the test in a divisive atmosphere. It would be a demonstration of maturity for Hamas to follow that way.
Date: 05/05/2006
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Two Losing Cards, and One Missing (Winning) Card
Suicide-Bombings In certain respects, there is a symmetry between the position of Hamas and that of Israel. Both have committed, and are supporting, acts of violence against innocent civil population. Nevertheless, there are three essential differences between the two sides.
It is time for Hamas to take a clear position with respect to violence, a position which, while recognizing the sacred right of the Palestinian people to fight for its independence, does not unify the international community against it. Attacking the Israeli forces in the occupied territory conveys the clear message that Palestinians are against the occupation. The recourse to suicide-bombings on the Israeli territory conveys the message that Hamas hate Jews, is immoral and do not mind the killing of innocent civil population. For reasons which will be dealt elsewhere Israel can "get away with murder" in this respect. It is why the policy of suicide-bombings is a losing card in the hands of Hamas. Hamas should disavow the suicide-bombings while not disavowing the suicide-bombers who are victims of the Israeli occupation, victims of the Israeli persecution. Instead, Hamas should remind that an occupied people has the right to resist to the occupation even violently, provided the violence is directed against the occupying forces. And what about the victims' right to revenge? No day is passing without bringing still more evidence of the barbarity of the Israeli occupation. We learn that more Palestinians of all age are killed. More obstructions are imposed on the normal productive activities of the Palestinian population More and more do the settlers act like the Hitler-youth. More and more do the Israelis inflict humiliating measures on the Palestinian young and adult population. The claim for the blood of the killer is a primeval need that most parents of a murdered child would feel with an unbearable intensity. Few are the saints on earth who can ignore that gut's demand. Patients suffering unbearable pains are given morphine to alleviate their sufferings. Nobody dares criticize a person who has lost most of his skin in a fire when he asks for the strongest pain killers. Likewise, nobody should dare criticize parents asking for revenge. This is the only aspiration whose realization could somewhat calm the unbearable. This demand for revenge must be treated with respect. And since the personal revenge is impossible, since in most cases one cannot get the name of the individual killer, since the killer can be as anonymous as the pilot of an apachi helicopter, the revenge is requested from anonymous entities. It is the whole Israeli people who is perceived as THE murderer, and must be made to pay for the crime. The Palestinian psyche is injured and is in need to have its dignity restored. The easiest way is to take revenge and inflict heavy casualties on the Israelis. It results in a short-term benefit, antidote to the humiliating feeling of powerlessness. It is a pale antidote to the loss of a child, at a time when no other antidote is available. Those parents asking for revenge are carrying the martyrdom of their children. Is it fair to ask from martyrs to accept a second martyrdom in the form of renouncing their justified claim for revenge? Here I must ask the victims to chose between two ways of revenge. One is to inflict misery on the Israelis even if it would result in more miseries on the Palestinians, even if it serves well the policy of the Israeli expansionist establishment. The other revenge is to counteract the policy of the Israeli expansionist establishment, contribute in reducing the distance between the two peoples, lead in a real policy of reconciliation, the progress of which will be paralleled with the satisfaction of more and more of the Palestinian aspirations. Instead of blood revenge, I am suggesting a revenge which derives from a vision, the vision of victory, the victory of the Palestinian people in achieving, together with the Israeli people, peace against their common enemy, the Israeli expansionist establishment. This vision is not illusory. It can be substantiated by a proper strategy (contact the author cleibovi@shawbiz.ca). In this perspective, the policy of supporting suicide-bombings is a failing one strengthening the Israeli policy of unilateralism and expansion,. Non-Recognition of Israel Hamas should proclaim what is its agenda. What comes above anything else? Here one can wonder. Is the satisfaction, of the Palestinian people's aspirations, to the maximum possible, is it Hamas' agenda? Or is Hamas' agenda the non-recognition of Israel? For Hamas, is the non-recognition of Israel a way to realize, to the maximum possible, Palestinian aspirations, or is it an agenda in itself, an aim which in principle they would not deviate from, even if it conflicts with the best interests of the Palestinian people? Hamas owes it to the Palestinian people to be clear on this subject. It could be a matter of principles, or it could be a card to give away against some advantage, some gain, some diplomatic progress. If it is a matter of principle then it cannot be subject to conditions such as "Israel should first return behind the pre-1967 boundaries",. we will then see what we will do. This does not sound compatible with the statement many times repeated that "we will not abandon our principle, the one of non-recognition of Israel". Once more there is here a need for more clarity, for more candidness. If Hamas envisage conditions under which they would recognize Israel, they should clarify what is gained by putting conditions. Does the expansionist Israel needs Hamas' recognition? The whole political history would convince us that Israel is delighted by the absence of recognition. It justifies internationally its unilateralism it isolates Hamas. On the contrary, an official and clear statement by Hamas that it recognizes Israel within its pre--1967 borders, can only reinforce the international position of Hamas. The fact is that the non-recognition of Israel is now a losing card in Hamas' hands and represents a winning card in the expansionist Israeli hands. A recognition of Israel within its pre-1967 borders would in fact force Israel to lose one of its winning cards. The missing winning card It is time for all Palestinian leaders to recognize that no serious progress can be made towards the satisfaction of the Palestinian aspirations without the toppling of the Israeli expansionist leadership. This must go hand in hand with the recognition that the only force that can topple that Israeli leadership is the Israeli people. A good strategy could show the role of the Palestinian leadership in helping the Israeli people to realize this important task. Here are the proofs that I am not rambling. Following the massacres in Sabra and Shatila, 300,00 Israeli took to the streets of Tel-Aviv on September 1982 demonstrating against Sharon. At this demonstration, there was a virtual alliance between the two peoples. What is also remarkable about that demonstration is that the Israeli people was quite furious against the Palestinians after the Munich massacre of many of the Israeli olympic team in September 1972, just ten year before. This virtual alliance between the two people did not last. Under the Israeli street pressure, an Israeli commission concluded that Sharon had a personal responsibility in the massacres of Sabra And Shatila. It recommended that Sharon should never hold a public office. The Israeli expansionist endeavored to increase the distance between the two people. This was rendered easy following the wave of suicide bombings. Often, the suicide-bombing was provoked by the Israeli authorities. Whenever Hamas would announce a truce in hostilities, Israel would proceed to targeted assassinations designed at provoking Hamas to resume its policy of suicide-bombings. And Hamas would fall in the trap. The fact is that, as a result of a lack of interest from the part of the Palestinian authority in influencing the Israeli public opinion, by following policies helping the Israeli government in increasing the distance between the two people, following serious mistakes of arab leaders (write to me at cleibovi@shawbiz.ca ), the distance between the two people has indeed increased to the point where the Israeli expansionists feel comfortable in pursuing their policies of expansion and of unilateralism. I have shown in http://cleibovi.shawbiz.ca/justpeace/stumbl.html that a successful Palestinian Strategy has to pass through a reconciliation of the two peoples, the thought of it is the nightmare of the Israeli expansionists. Hamas who does not believe in it is ignoring the most important winning card it could have.
Date: 14/04/2006
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The Initiative Should Not Be Surrendered to Israel
Dr. Isam Sartawi was a moderate member of the PLO. He was assassinated in Portugal in 1983. Ytzhak Shamir, the then Israeli minister for foreign affairs, in an interview with Time Magazine, was asked if he was sad at the death of a moderate PLO member. He answered that he was not sad at all, quite the contrary. Israel, said Shamir, is not afraid of the extremists. No country in the world would pressure Israel into negotiating with them. He added that the dangerous people are the moderate Palestinians. There is pressure on Israel to negotiate with them, and peace is not in the interest of Israel. I do not say that Hamas is extremist, but I do say that Hamas is perceived as being so. That in itself is enough for the Israeli expansionists to be happy at the electoral victory of Hamas. Their task is then much easier. There have often been periods of calm, when armed hostilities and suicide bombings had ceased for a while. During these times, the Israeli expansionists provoked Hamas to resume the hostilities. The provocation was often caused by the targeting of Hamas leaders for assassination. Israel is now demanding that Hamas recognize the state of Israel. Indeed, the Israeli expansionists would prefer that Hamas abstain from that. It is enough to consider the past when the PLO refused for long years to recognize the existence of Israel. When the PLO finally did recognize Israel, Israel refused to 'recognize' that recognition. They tried for some time to convince the Israeli people that the recognition was not a valid one. The Israel expansionists did and still do not want the expression of a moderate policy by Palestinian popular leaders. Today, the international community supports Israel and concentrates on the extremist aspects of Hamas' charter or in the vows of the martyrs. The recognition of Israel in its pre-1967 borders would be a severe blow to the Israeli expansionists. We saw that in the last 50 years they were afraid of the moderates, not of the "extremists". The expansionists deal with the Palestinian "extremists" using military power. However, they feel powerless with popular Palestinian moderates. Mahmoud Abbas was a moderate, but not a popular one. The Palestinian people want a moderate who will not give up Palestinian rights, who will recognize Israel within its pre-1967 borders, and who will pursue a strategy to ensure the right of return of refugees, if not immediately, then within a foreseeable future. The Palestinians have suffered for too long. By fulfilling the Israeli expansionists' dreams, Hamas will prolong the suffering of the Palestinian people, isolating Palestine from the international community and facilitating the building of new Jewish settlements in the West Bank. Hamas has other options, but the Palestinian people are entitled to know what course Hamas intends to take. Recently, snippets of news indicated that Hamas might be preparing to recognize Israel, provided that the latter evacuates the territories it conquered and occupied in 1967. Israel is not ready to respond positively because it suits them at the moment to demand recognition from Hamas, all the while banking on their refusal to do. Instead, Hamas should call Israel's bluff and recognize the state within its pre-1967 boundaries, leaving the ball in Israel's court. Israel would no longer be in a position to hide behind the pretense that Hamas does not recognize its existence. Indeed, if Hamas took on this initiative, it would certainly leave Israel in a difficult position. Date: 27/01/2006
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Hamas' Electoral Victory: Meanings, Lessons and Peace Prospects
It is a victory for the Palestinian people. They have expressed their distrust in Mahmoud Abbas' corrupt government, a government that expected partial satisfaction of Palestinian aspirations through US pressure on Israel. The political atmosphere has thus changed for the better. The world, and the US in
particular, have to face a situation in which they must take into account that the people of Palestine have made a stand against subservient policies and delays. They must now know that unless curfews become a thing of the past, unless checkpoints are quickly eliminated, unless borders are established, and unless the Israeli army retires behind those borders, the atmosphere in Palestine will become chaotic in a way that no longer serves the joint interests of Israel and the US.
As for the borders established by Israel, they cannot become permanent until detailed peace negotiations between a Palestinian state and Israel are complete. Hamas will also have to consider the fact that an important minority of the Palestinian people did not vote for them. I am certain that Hamas, realizing the huge difficulty of the tasks ahead, will consider measures aimed at unifying the Palestinian people. Hamas will also have to consider the significance of their electoral victory. It must, and I hope it will, understand that many of the votes for Hamas were due to a) a protest against the Mahmoud Abbas' rule b) the social activities of Hamas c) the fighting spirit of Hamas, though not specifically any of its ideological positions, and d) Fatah's relationship with the US. In addition, Hamas must understand that their victory does not automatically mean that the Palestinian people are committed to an Islamic state. The lessons are clear. Palestinian leaders should not underestimate the Palestinian people; nor should they assume the Palestinian people will show leniency regarding corruption. Palestinian leaders must listen to the people, and not impose on them a subservient and weak foreign policy. Palestinian people will not forgive a leadership that acts as though it has abandoned one of the glorious Palestinian sons, Marwan Barghouti, currently lying in an Israeli prison cell. The Palestinian leadership should have organised demonstrations demanding his release. I am certain that Hamas would have joined those demonstrations in the spirit of Palestinian unity, a spirit that has faltered in recent times. Future peace prospects now depend very much on the policies of Hamas. Hamas has already demonstrated a degree of flexibility by eliminating from their electoral discourse their original intentions of returning all of Israel back to the Palestinians. They have also explained that they have nothing against the Jews as such. Will they go as far as recognizing the state of Israel west of the Green Line? Will they understand how much Israeli expansionists rely upon increasing hostilities between Palestinians and Israelis? Will they understand that Israelis and Palestinians could develop into two independent states? Can they understand that the Israeli and the Palestinian people both have some of the exact same wishes in mind: security, peace and prosperity. Will the leaders of Hamas have the wisdom to realize that Israelis and Palestinians have the same enemy, the expansionist Israeli establishment? If they do, and if they work on it, then the Israeli people will be able to topple the expansionists from power. It will then not take too long for the co-existence of the two states, the Palestinian state and the Israeli state, to advance into a relationship stronger than coexistence, a relation of friendship and maybe even brotherhood.. I do not expect less from Hamas, and nor should the Palestinians.
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