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Discussion of Israeli policy toward Palestinians is often regarded as a taboo subject, with the result that few people - especially in the US - understand the origins and consequences of the conflict. This book provides an indispensable context for understanding why the situation remains so intractable.



The book focuses on the Gaza Strip, an area that remains consistently neglected and misunderstood despite its political centrality. Drawing on more than two thousand interviews and extensive firsthand experience, Sara Roy chronicles the impact of Israeli occupation in Palestine over nearly a generation.



Exploring the devastating consequences of socio-economic and political decline, this is a unique and powerful account of the reality of life in the West Bank and Gaza. Written by one of the world's foremost scholars of the region, it offers an unrivalled breadth of scholarship and insight.
Acknowledgements

Preface

1. Introduction

2. Learning from the Holocaust

3. Israel’s Military Occupation and the First Palestinian

4. Israeli Occupation and the Oslo Peace Process

5. The Failure of 'Peace' and its Consequences

6. Conclusion

Notes

Index
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20 octobre 2006

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0

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9781849642408

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English

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1 Mo

Failing Peace
Gaza and the Palestinian–Israeli Conflict
SARA ROY
P Pluto Press LONDON • ANN ARBOR, MI
First published 2007 by Pluto Press 345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA and 839 Greene Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48106
www.plutobooks.com
Copyright © Sara Roy 2007
The right of Sara Roy to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Hardback ISBN13 978 0 7453 2235 3 ISBN10 0 7453 2235 2
Paperback ISBN13 978 0 7453 2234 6 ISBN10 0 7453 2234 4
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data applied for
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Designed and produced for Pluto Press by Chase Publishing Services Ltd, Fortescue, Sidmouth, EX10 9QG, England Typeset from disk by Stanford DTP Services, Northampton, England Printed and bound in Canada by Transcontinental Printing
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 8 Introduction to Part III  9 “The Seed of Chaos, and of Night”: The Gaza Strip After the Oslo Agreement
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PART II ISRAEL’S MILITARY OCCUPATION AND THE FIRST PALESTINIAN INTIFADA: THE NATURE OF ISRAELI CONTROL
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Contents
40
 1 Introduction to Part I  2 Living with the Holocaust: The Journey of a Child of Holocaust Survivors  3 Searching for the Covenant: A Response to the Works of Marc H. Ellis
PART I LEARNING FROM THE HOLOCAUST AND THE PALESTINIAN–ISRAELI CONFLICT
PART III ISRAELI OCCUPATION AND THE OSLO PEACE PROCESS: DEDEVELOPMENT ACCELERATED
 4 Introduction to Part II  5 The Political Economy of Despair: Changing Political and Economic Realities in the Gaza Strip  6 Black Milk: The Desperate Lives of Women in the Gaza Strip  7 Gaza: New Dynamics of Civic Disintegration
Introduction
AcknowledgementsPreface
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10 Separation or Integration?: Closure and the Economic Future of the Gaza Strip Revisited 11 Civil Society in the Gaza Strip: Obstacles to Social Reconstruction 12 Beyond Hamas: Islamic Activism in the Gaza Strip 13 The Crisis Within: The Struggle for Palestinian Society
PART IV THE FAILURE OF “PEACE” AND ITS CONSEQUENCES: THE SECOND PALESTINIAN INTIFADA
14 15 16 17
Introduction to Part IV Why Peace Failed: An Oslo Autopsy Ending the Palestinian Economy Hamas and the Transformation(s) of Political Islam in Palestine
PART V CONCLUSION—THE DISENGAGEMENT FROM GAZA
18 A Dubai on the Mediterranean 19 Conclusion—Where Next?
NotesIndex
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123 160 191
215 233 250
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311 322
333 369
In Memory of Edward W. Said
Acknowledgements
It is, of course, impossible to list all the people who deserve to be acknowledged for their contribution to this collection. None of what appears in this book would have been possible without them—from the government official and university intellectual to the barber and taxi driver—I learned from them equally albeit differently. Most still live in Gaza, the West Bank and Israel; some have died while others have been killed. Some have left their homes forever; others never will. I am greatly indebted to all of them. They will always have my profound gratitude, respect, admiration and affection. There are some individuals who I would like to thank by name, knowing I may offend those I do not and for that I apologize. I hope they all understand the roles they have played: Alya Shawwa, Haidar and Huda Abd’el Shafi, Hatem and Aida Abu Ghazaleh, Talal Abu Rahme, Walid Khalidi, Martha Myers, Landrum Bolling, Eyad el Sarraj, Radwan and Itimad Abu Shmais, the late Ismail Abu Shanab, Charles Shammas, Salim Tamari, Munir Fasheh, the late Edward Said, Irene Gendzier, Linda Butler, the late Henry Selz, the late Russell Davis, the late Donald Warwick, Afif and Christ’l Safieh, Marc Ellis, Ruchama Marton, Amira Hass, Dan BarOn, Herbert and Rose Kelman, Augustus Richard Norton, Fr. Steve Doyle, Fr. Vincent Martin, Jeffrey Feltman, Jacob Walles, Constance Mayer, Bob Simon, Roger Owen, William Graham, William Granara, Susan Miller, Cemal Kafadar, Roy Mottahedeh, Tom and Pat Neu, Peter Gubser, Robert Mosrie, Brian Klug, Nubar Hovsepian, Philip Mattar, Leticia Pena and Dayr Reis, Ellen Siegel, Hilda Silverman, Souad Dajani, Brigitte Schulz and Douglass Hansen, Jillian Jevtic, Deena Hurwitz, Lisa Majaj, Roger Banks, Denis Sullivan, Lenore Martin, Steve and Angela Bader, Ellen Greenberg, and Alexandra Senftt. A special and profound note of thanks to Elaine Hagopian for her invaluable input and friendship throughout. I also extend my sincere gratitude to Roger van Zwanenberg whose patience and encouragement ix
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meant more than I can possibly convey. I remain indebted and grateful to the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard, which has been my academic home for many years, providing me with constant support and a wealth of resources essential to my work. A loving note of gratitude to my mother, Taube Roy, who passed away in 2005 at the age of 86 and who always remained my guide and support; and my husband, Jay, and daughters, Annie and Jess, who give me hope and faith in the future.
I wish to express my sincere gratitude to the following journals and publishers for allowing me to reprint the articles contained in this book (each article also cites the journal in which it originally appeared). They are: theJournal of Palestine Studies/University of California Press,The London Review of Books,Current History,Journal of the American Academy of Religion/Oxford University Press,The Women’s Review of Books,Middle East Journal, E.J. Brill Publishers, theHarvard Middle Eastern and Islamic Review/Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Harvard University,Middle East Policy/Blackwell Publishers andCritique: Journal for Critical Studies of the Middle East.
Preface Humanism, scholarship and politics: writing on the Palestinian–Israeli conflict
. . . the writer’s role is not free from difficult duties. By definition he cannot put himself today in the service of those who make history; he is at the service of those who suffer it . . . Not all the armies of tyranny with their millions of men will free him from his isolation, even and particularly if he falls into step with them. But the silence of the unknown prisoner, abandoned to humiliations at the other end of the world, is enough to draw the writer out of his exile, at least whenever, in the midst of the privileges of freedom, he manages not to forget that silence, and to transmit it in order to make it resound by means of his art. Albert Camus, Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, December 10, 1957
When I started out to write this preface, I had planned an academic examination of the role of scholarship and politics in the presentation of politically charged issues. However, after months absorbed in the lit erature, I realized that such an examination had already been done and 1 done exhaustively. The core issue underlying the discussion—the intel lectual’s role in society—is a very old one with an extensive history of study and debate. A great deal of inconsistency, confusion and ambiguity surrounds the nature and activities of intellectuals and no one accepted definition of what an intellectual is or has to be. Not wanting to turn this preface into a literature review or summarizing report, I decided to go beyond such a review as it were, to take what I had learned from the literature and from my own two decades of experience working on the Palestinian–Israeli conflict and combine it into a more personal reflec tion of certain themes, which have recurred in my work. These themes are: objectivity and partisanship, process, and dissent.
On Objectivity
There is perhaps no issue that has been more contentious and unrelenting in my work than that of objectivity and its stated antithesis,
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partisanship. Given the politically sensitive nature of my research, I have consistently been accused by those who disagree with my findings and analysis of being unobjective and unbalanced, that is, pro Palestinian, antiIsraeli, a polemicist for the Palestinian “side,” even a selfhating Jew. The attacks often have been personal, directed at my alleged motives, rather than methodological or academic. According to some, the relationship between humanistic scholarship and politics in writing about the Middle East must be based upon an immutable (and to my knowledge, yet to be agreed upon) standard of objectivity, which mandates deference to balance, neutrality, impersonality, even indifference. In the absence of these criteria, the critique maintains, lies advocacy not scholarship, an argument that lies at the heart of the long debate on intellectual responsibility and how it is exercised. Yet a review of the literature (both past and present), or at least a good part of it, reveals something quite different. It reveals an argument that calls for individual judgment and imagination in the conduct of research, exposes the insufficiency of detachment, objectivity and essentialism as exclusive moral goals, and embraces the subjective as an essential component in scholarship, rejecting what Northrop Frye 2 refers to as the “naïve ferocity of abstraction.” The issue of objectivity as a utopia for scholarship is not a given, despite current protestations to the contrary. The great philosopher Theodor Adorno argued that truth cannot be found in the aggregate but in the subjective, on the individual’s consciousness, “on what could 3 not be regimented in the totally administered society.” The philosopher Stuart Hampshire echoed a similar sentiment when, writing during the Vietnam War, he decried the subordination of scholarship and critical analysis to society with a big “S,” which he said is often defined as “some giant boarding school in which we’re all required 4 to prove ourselves as of sound character.” The inevitable result of such intellectual subordination, said Northrop Frye, is a dystopia—“a society maimed through the systematic corruption of its intelligence, 5 to the accompaniment of piped music.” George Orwell perhaps put it best if not most eloquently when he said that uncritical and unthinking accommodation to the status quo in some false quest toward objectivity 6 has the effect of giving “an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” These writers and many others do not dispute the importance of “detachment”—or a certain degree of it—as a “precondition for
PREFACE
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knowledge,” to quote Frye but not to the point where one becomes indifferent to consequences and unable to engage in “a range of 7 imaginative sympathy.” For Frye, “indifference is the vice of 8 detachment” and its only corrective is concern, unrelieved concern, which “has nothing directly to do with the content of knowledge, but that it establishes the human context into which the knowledge fits, 9 and to that extent informs it.” Commenting on the politics of censorship in American academia, the historian Joan Scott similarly stated:
[C]onflicts of values and ethics, as well as of interpretation, are part of the process of knowledge production; they inform it, drive it, trouble it. The commitments of scholars to ideas of justice, for example, are at the heart of many an important investigation in political theory, philosophy, and history; they cannot be suppressed as irrelevant “opinion.” And because such commitments cannot be separated from scholarship and teaching, there are mechanisms internal to academic life that monitor abuses, distinguishing between serious, responsible work and polemic, between teaching that aims 10 to unsettle received opinion and teaching that is indoctrination.”
For Edward Said, the intellectual’s contribution must be a “critical and relatively independent spirit and analysis and judgment . . . But whereas, we are right to bewail the disappearance of a consensus on what constitutes objectivity, we are not by the same token completely 11 adrift in selfindulgent subjectivity.” Complete detachment and the struggle to achieve it, a struggle informed by “a moral concern that is unstained by any emotion 12 traceable to an origin in personal history,” is, ultimately, impossible as well as assailable for the “reconciliation of emotion and scientific 13 objectivity need imply no ultimate sacrifice of objectivity.” Again, quoting Hampshire, “My suggestion is rather that committed writing, and committed scholarship in the humanities, is always an imaginative working out of problems that are felt to be urgent, in some external, resisting material. The concern ultimately has its roots in an individual history, but the problem has been displaced and given an 14 objective form.” If pure objectivity is unattainable and, as argued, undesirable, then to what should the scholar be committed? What should scholarship embrace as its final goal? Again, there is some consensus on the answer: the scholar must seek accuracy (or as some have defined it, a detached
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