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Israeli apartheid/Sandbox

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Israeli apartheid (or the terming of Israel an apartheid state) is a term used by some Palestinian-rights activists, South Africans, and some anti-Zionists to criticize Israel's policies by drawing an analogy between the policies of various Israeli governments towards the Palestinians to those of the apartheid-era South African government towards its Black and mixed-race populations. The use of this term to describe Israeli policies is considered objectionable by some pro-Israel groups.

Origins

The origins of linking Israel and Zionism with apartheid go back to the UN General Assembly Resolution 3379 equating Zionism and racism. The text of the UNGA R/3379 states: "the Organization of African Unity... considered "that the racist regime in occupied Palestine and the racist regime in Zimbabwe and South Africa have a common imperialist origin, forming a whole and having the same racist structure..." The Resolution 3379 was revoked in 1991 by the Resolution 4686.

Analogy

Proponents of this term argue that while Israel grants some rights its Arab citizens, its policies towards Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are (or were, in case of Gaza) analogous to the Apartheid policies of South Africa towards blacks, for the following reasons:

Usage

The analogy was used in 1984 Syrian letter to the UN Security Council that stated in part: "...Zionist Israeli institutional terrorism in no way differs from the terrorism pursued by the apartheid regime against millions of Africans in South Africa and Namibia..., just as it in no way differs in essense and nature from the Nazi terrorism which shed European blood and visited ruin and destruction upon the peoples of Europe" UN Doc S/16520 at 2 (1984), quoting from Israel Yearbook on Human Rights 1987. Edited by Y. Dinstein, M. Tabory. (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1987) ISBN 9024736463 p.36

In 1987 Uri Davis, an Israeli-born academic and Jewish member of the Palestine Liberation Organization, wrote a book Israel: An Apartheid StateUri Davis, Israel: An Apartheid State (1987) ISBN 0862323177, which provided a detailed comparison of Israel and South Africa.

The term "Israeli apartheid" has been used by groups protesting the Israeli government, particularly student groups in Britain, the United States and Canada, where "Israeli apartheid week" is held on many campuses.["Oxford holds 'Apartheid Israel' week"] at Jerusalem Post by Jonny Paul It has been widely used by Palestinian rights advocates and also by some on the Israeli Jewish left.

Several left wing Members of the Knesset (MKs) have also drawn an analogy between Israeli policies and apartheid, such as Zehava Gal-On of the Meretz party who said of an Israeli Supreme Court ruling upholding the country's controversial citizenship law "The Supreme Court could have taken a braver decision and not relegated us to the level of an apartheid state."[Left appalled by citizenship ruling] at Jerusalem Post by Sheera Claire Frenkel

The term has also been used by three prominent South African Anti-Apartheid activists such as Archbishop Desmond Tutu in the articles he published following his visit to Israel.[Apartheid in the Holy Land] in The Guardian, by Desmond Tutu

Criticism

Critics of the phrase argue that calling the country an "apartheid state" or referring to "Israeli apartheid" is incorrect for a number of reasons:

References

External links

See also

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