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Jerusalem — One City, Undivided
by Jeff Jacoby
The Boston Globe, July 22, 2009
LATE LAST WEEK, the Obama administration
demanded that the Israeli government pull the plug on a planned housing
development near the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of Jerusalem. The project,
a 20-unit apartment complex, is indisputably legal. The property to be
developed — a defunct hotel — was purchased in 1985, and the
developer has obtained all the necessary municipal permits.
Why, then, does the administration want the development
killed? Because Sheikh Jarrah is in a largely Arab section of Jerusalem,
and the developers of the planned apartments are Jews. Think about that
for a moment. Six months after Barack Obama became the first black man
to move into the previously all-white residential facility at 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue in Washington, he is fighting to prevent integration in Jerusalem.
It is impossible to imagine the opposite scenario: The administration
would never demand that Israel prevent Arabs from moving into a Jewish
neighborhood. And the Obama Justice Department would unleash seven kinds
of hell on anyone who tried to impose racial, ethnic, or religious redlining
in an American city. In the 21st century, segregation is unthinkable —
except, it seems, when it comes to housing Jews in Jerusalem.
It is not easy for Israel's government to refuse any demand
from the United States, which is the Jewish state's foremost ally. To
their credit, Israeli leaders spoke truth to power, and said no. "Jerusalem
residents can purchase apartments anywhere in the city,'' Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday. "There is no ban on Arabs buying
apartments in the west of the city, and there is no ban on Jews building
or buying in the city's east. This is the policy of an open city.''
There was a time not so long ago when Jerusalem
was anything but an open city. During Israel's War of Independence in
1948, the Jordanian Arab Legion invaded eastern Jerusalem, occupied the
Old City, and expelled all its Jews - many from families that had lived
in the city for centuries. "As they left,'' the historian Sir Martin
Gilbert later wrote, "they could see columns of smoke rising from
the quarter behind them. The Hadassah welfare station had been set on
fire and . . . the looting and burning of Jewish property was in full
swing.''
For the next 19 years, eastern Jerusalem was barred to Jews,
brutally divided from the western part of the city with barbed-wire and
military fortifications. Dozens of Jewish holy places, including synagogues
hundreds of years old, were desecrated or destroyed. Jerusalem's most
sacred Jewish shrine, the Western Wall, became a slum. It wasn't until
1967, after Jordan was routed in the Six-Day War, that Jerusalem was reunited
under Israeli sovereignty and religious freedom restored to all. Israelis
have vowed ever since that Jerusalem would never again be divided.
And not only Israelis. US policy, laid out in the Jerusalem
Embassy Act of 1995, recognizes Jerusalem as "a united city administered
by Israel'' and formally declares that "Jerusalem must remain an
undivided city.''
As a presidential candidate, Obama said
the same thing. To a 2008 candidate questionnaire that asked about "the
likely final status of Jerusalem,'' Obama replied: "The United States
cannot dictate the terms of a final status agreement . . . Jerusalem will
remain Israel's capital, and no one should want or expect it to be re-divided.''
In a speech to the American Israel Public Affairs Council, he repeated
the point: "Let me be clear . . . Jerusalem will remain the capital
of Israel, and it must remain undivided.''
Palestinian irredentists claim that eastern Jerusalem is
historically Arab territory and should be the capital of a future Palestinian
state. In reality, Jews always lived in eastern Jerusalem - it is the
location of the Old City and its famous Jewish Quarter, after all, not
to mention Hebrew University, which was founded in 1918. The apartment
complex that Obama opposes is going up in what was once Shimon Hatzadik,
a Jewish neighborhood established in 1891. Only from 1948 to 1967 - during
the Jordanian occupation - was the eastern part of Israel's capital "Arab
territory.'' Palestinians have no more claim to sovereignty there than
Russia does in formerly occupied eastern Berlin.
The great obstacle to Middle East peace is not that Jews
insist on living among Arabs. It is that Arabs insist that Jews not live
among them. If Obama doesn't grasp that, he has a lot to learn.
Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President
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