Is
It Islamophobic to Deny that ‘Palestine’ Exists?
By Jonathan S. Tobin
JNS
April 1, 2019
Despite repeated comments in which she repeated hateful
anti-Semitic tropes, Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) escaped even the mildest slap on
the wrist from her congressional colleagues. But it turns out that Kalman Yeger
won’t get off so easy.
Yeger, a member of the New York City Council who represents
a heavily Jewish district, is in trouble for offending New York’s Arab and
Palestinian community with remarks that some have interpreted as Islamophobic.
But unlike Omar—around whom many Democrats circled the wagons in order to
prevent offended Jews and pro-Israel members of Congress from forcing her off
the House Foreign Relations Committee—it looks as if members of his own party
are abandoning the Brooklyn Democrat.
Bottom of Form
What did Yeger do? He denied the existence of a country
named “Palestine,” as well as earlier casting doubt on the authenticity of
the Palestinians themselves.
That was enough to draw the opprobrium of fellow Democrats
City Council Speaker Corey Johnson and Mayor Bill De Blasio. The two asserted
that if Yeger didn’t retract his comments, he should be booted off the New
York legislative body’s Committee on Immigration. Yeger has refused to back
down, with the kerfuffle leading to a noisy standoff outside his Brooklyn
office, where demonstrators and counterdemonstrators exchanged insults. Late on
Monday, the Council’s leaders made good on their threat and removed Yeger from
the committee.
Will this have an impact on the Middle East? No. But as
Linda Sarsour—a notorious anti-Semitic Palestinian-American activist and
leader of the “resistance” to U.S. President Donald Trump, who has been
drawn into this fight—observed, it may mark the first time an American
politician will be made to suffer for having offended Palestinians and those
opposed to Israel’s existence.
Yeger’s defense rests in both context and a geographic
fact.
His initial
comment came in a response on Twitter to the idea that Ahmed Tibi, one
of the leaders of an Israeli-Arab political party, would become prime minister
of an Israeli-Palestinian state that would theoretically replace Israel. He said
it proved “the ultimate goal of the so-called Palestinians is the destruction
of the Jewish state and its people.”
He then responded
to criticisms of that tweet with another that escalated the argument:
“Palestine does not exist. There, I said it again. Also, Congresswoman Omar is
an antisemite. Said that too.”
Is this analogous to Omar’s talk of Jews hypnotizing the
world, being disloyal Americans and buying Congress to support Israel?
Palestinian Americans and some of their supporters assert
that any denial of their existence as a people, or that the place they consider
their homeland is called Palestine, is hateful and delegitimizing.
Prior to 1948 and the birth of Israel, the only group that
answered to the name “Palestinians” were Jewish residents of the British
Mandate for Palestine. Non-Jews who lived there considered themselves Arabs, not
Palestinians, because there had never in history been a separate Palestinian
Arab political entity or, prior to the birth of modern Zionism, a national
movement that represented the ambitions of such a group. It was only after the
birth of Israel that the Arabs embraced the name Palestinian and claimed that
the country was “Palestine,” rather than a section of Syria or the Ottoman
Empire.
While their national movement is of relatively recent
vintage, there is no denying that it does exist now, and it represents the
ambitions of millions of people who call themselves “Palestinian.” To deny
that there is a Palestinian people is to deny reality. Calling them
“so-called” is a pointless insult, not a refutation of their political
demands or tactics.
However, Yeger is not wrong to point out that while
“Palestine” is recognized as a “non-member observer state” by the United
Nations, it is not an actual, functioning country. The Palestinian Authority
autonomously rules most Palestinians in the West Bank, but does not exercise
sovereignty. Hamas does exercise sovereignty in the Gaza Strip, but is not
recognized by anyone since it is a terrorist-run tyrannical state.
But the reason why “Palestine” isn’t a country
isn’t a function of prejudice. De Blasio is a supporter of Israel and AIPAC,
but he still chided Yeger, saying that denying the right of the Palestinians to
a home is a form of prejudice. The trouble with that argument is that
Palestinian identity has been inextricably tied to denying the right of the Jews
to a state in the same country. Those who advocate, as the New York City mayor
does, for a two-state solution to the conflict assert that there is a way for
both peoples to have a home alongside each other. However, when people like
Omar, Sarsour, Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and the BDS movement they
support—let alone the leaders of Fatah or Hamas movements—say
“Palestine,” they are not referring to a separate state next door to a
secure Jewish state. They are, instead, referring to their hope of replacing the
State of Israel with a Palestinian state that will deny the right of the Jews to
self-determination.
Opposing that ambition—as Yeger clearly intended in his
original tweet—is not Islamophobic or even necessarily rooted in hate against
Palestinians. While Yeger’s willingness to oppose Israel’s foes in this
manner was not the sort of thing that will bring Jews and Arabs together in an
ethnically diverse borough, it’s also not the same thing as Omar’s
anti-Semitic statements or her support of a BDS movement that aims at Israel’s
annihilation.
Foreign policy has long been a theme of New York politics,
and in years past, mayoral hopefuls often felt they had to demonstrate their
support for the three “I’s”: Israel, Ireland and Italy. But if support for
“Palestine,” whether alongside or replacing Israel, is now a requirement,
Sarsour is right about a sea change in the city’s politics and that of the
Democratic Party that dominates it. Now that the same party that shielded Omar
has punished Yeger, it certainly won’t strengthen the Democrats’ efforts to
be considered a pro-Israel party.