A treaty with the Palestinians is in the
long-term interest of Israel and the Palestinians from all angles. I
believe that this is achievable if one of three things happens: a catastrophic event
between Israel and the Palestinians; the presence of a leader who has the clout
to strong-arm a treaty into happening (e.g. Yitzhak Rabin, Menachem Begin,
Ariel Sharon); or at the behest of an Israeli public who insists on it. I’ll
ignore the first option; after all, it is important to maintain one’s optimism
when living here. Ironically, Bibi is the only leader who has the ability and
political capital to push a treaty through. However, he has made it perfectly
clear that he does not intend to do so. So the responsibility for making peace happen
now firmly rests with the Israeli public.
There is a plethora of polling data which
states Israelis are in support of a peace treaty to create a Palestinian state
along ‘67 borders with land swaps to deal with the “grey areas.” Yet seeing as
how politicians are answerable to the people and since I do not see the vast
majority of people in the streets calling for peace or many politicians placing
it front-and-center, something seems to be amiss. So what’s happening here? A
treaty with the Palestinians will require a lot of sacrifice and compromise on
our part. It will impact borders, the economy, and water, cost a fortune to
carry out and create huge social rifts within the society. This is in addition
to placing a huge amount of trust in the Palestinians to curtail terrorism and
extremism in order to maintain the peace. The Israeli public is not capable of
doing this at the present time. This is evident by looking at the way we treat each
other within Israeli proper. There is rampant racism, prejudice, discrimination
and oppression. And here I’m only speaking about the Jewish population. If we
can’t look at each other in an accepting, trusting and respectful manner, how
can we expect to do it with our enemy?
What I see in Avodah is a political
party that is focused on tackling how Israelis relate to each other; who are
actively working to repair the rifts within Israeli society and change its
direction. The only way that the Israeli public will actively push forward peace
is if we return to the values of equality and respect that this country was
founded on and are laid out in the Declaration of Independence. I support
Avodah because I believe they are the only ones capable of doing this and are
actively doing so by shifting the conversation towards the issues that will
effect this: the economy, education, health care, social infrastructure and the
social safety net. Unfortunately, this means that peace and security won’t
arrive tomorrow, but if we can change the situation it will once again be on the
horizon.
-Shawn, an oleh from Canada
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