Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Ayalon: Palestinian refugees not Israel’s problem to solve


Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon





Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon says Israel is obligated to put attention on 850,000 Jews who fled Arab lands in 1948.

The issue of Jewish refugees from Arab countries must be addressed in any final peace settlement, said Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon.

Speaking to journalists on Monday at the headquarters of MediaCentral in Jerusalem, Ayalon said Israel has a moral and legal obligation to demand that the 850,000 Jews who fled Arab lands after the War of Independence be given attention equal to that afforded Palestinian refugees.

“I do understand that at the end of the day we have to find a political solution,” but that will come only when the Palestinians realize that Israel was not responsible for the refugee problem, Ayalon said.

Israeli Prime MinisterBinyamin Netanyahu spotlighted the Jewish refugees during his joint press conference at the White House with US President Barack Obama on Friday.

“The Arab attack in 1948 on Israel resulted in two refugee problems: [the] Palestinian refugee problem and Jewish refugees, roughly the same number, who were expelled from Arab lands,” Netanyahu said. “Tiny Israel absorbed the Jewish refugees but the vast Arab world refused to absorb the Palestinian refugees.”

In April 2008, the US House of Representatives passed a resolution recognizing the plight of the Jewish refugees. Last year, the Knesset passed a law mandating that the issue of restitution for Jewish refugees be addressed in any permanent status agreement with the Palestinians.

UN Security Council Resolution 242, which has been the basis for all Israeli agreements with Egypt, Jordan and the Palestinians, calls for resolving “the refugee problem, full stop,” Ayalon said. “It talks about refugees. It doesn’t specify and doesn’t discriminate among refugees.”

Ayalon also quoted former US Supreme Court Associate Justice Arthur Goldberg, whohelped draft the resolution while serving as US ambassador to the UN, as saying that the resolution’s reference to refugees includes both Arab and Jewish refugees.

“A young nation reborn absorbed 850,000 refugees – it was a daunting task but they did it,” Ayalon said. “Unfortunately, that wasn’t the case in the Arab world, where until today we have refugee camps for the third and fourth generation. This is unprecedented in the annals of humanity.”

Ayalon also spoke of the massive refugee problem in Europe following World War II, when millions of Russians, Germans, Poles, Czechs and others were displaced. Those refugees were eventually resettled and today the world does not focus on their plight.

On the other hand, the Arab refugee population has grown from an estimated 500,000 to 700,000 who left Israel in 1948 to four million today.

These refugees are being kept in poor conditions so they can be used “as political pawns against Israel,” Ayalon said.

While none of the Jewish refugees from Arab countries threatened the existence or security of their native lands, some of the Arab refugees became refugees because they joined the campaign to destroy Israel in 1948, Ayalon said.

The issue of the Jewish refugees must be addressed if Jews and Arabs are to achieve true peace and reconciliation, said the deputy foreign minister, who was born in Israel but whose family originates from Algeria.

He noted that “some kind of redress may be appropriate,” and said former prime minister Menachem Begin spoke about the Jewish refugees with former Egyptian president Anwar Sadat at Camp David in 1978.

Ayalon referred to Obama’s speech last Thursday as “very important” and “very positive,” and he said it “attests to the great friendship between us and the United States and all like-minded countries in the Western world.”

The press briefing also included comments from Gina Bublil Waldman, who was forced to flee from Libya with her family after the Six Day War in 1967.

Today, Waldman is chair of Jews Indigenous to the Middle East and North Africa, a San Francisco-based organization which seeks recognition for Jewish refugees from Arab lands.

Waldman recalled that her family’s home in Tripoli was surrounded after the Six Day War by a mob that poured gasoline around the perimeter and tried to burn it down with her family inside. If not for assistance from a Muslim neighbor, she would have died.

Shortly thereafter, the Libyan government allowed the country’s Jews to leave, but only with one suitcase and a small amount of money per person.

On the way to the airport, the driver of the bus carrying her family tried to burn the bus with her family inside using the vehicle’s gasoline supply. Two British men rescued them.

Eventually, Waldman’s family left for Italy. Two years later, when she was 21, Waldman made her way to the US.

She said that, while almost one million Jews lived in the Middle East and North Africa outside of the British Mandate of Palestine in 1945, today there are less than 7,000 Jews living in Arab countries.

“For peace to be enduring it must address the rights of all refugees,” she said. “It would be unfair to address the issue of one refugee population, the Palestinians, and not the Jewish refugees who were displaced as a result of the same conflict and were similar in numbers.”

Speaking with The Jerusalem Post after the press conference, Ayalon said he hopes Jews from all over the world, including Arab states, continue to make aliya.
“Of course we are very much concerned about the security and well-being of these [Jewish] communities in Arab countries, and it is something we are watching very carefully.”