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Israeli and Palestinian Voices: Anger and Hope
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12764 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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3 / 1987 |
3,718 Words |
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Antony T. Sullivan Antony T. Sullivan is an associate of the Center for Near
Eastern and North African Studies at the University of
Michigan. He is the author of Thomas-Robert Bugeaud, France
and Algeria, 1784-1849: Politics, Power and the Good Society
(Archon Books, 1983) and Palestinian Universities Under
Occupation (American University in Cairo Press, 1988). |
The high-rise Jewish apartments of Tel Aviv and the red-roofed Arab homes in Jerusalem give little hint of the abyss separating Israelis and Palestinians in the Middle East. To the casual visitor, the Levantine bustle of daily life for both Jews and Palestinians, combined with the absence of obvious, large-scale communal conflict, may suggest that the seriousness of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been exaggerated.
Beneath the surface, however, a cancer gnaws at the future of Jews and Arabs. The Palestinian ambush of an Israeli military unit outside Jerusalem's Old City last fall and the Israeli army's killing of two Palestinian students at Bir Zeit University on the West Bank, combined with the PLO's return in force to Lebanon, may indicate that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has now reemerged as a major threat to world peace.
In 1985 and 1986, I interviewed a variety of Israelis and Palestinians concerning their predicament and their agenda for the future. These conversations offer little basis for optimism that any settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is likely soon.
Since World War II, history has dramatically changed the status of both Jews and Palestinians, and it has been singularly unkind to the Palestinian people.
Although Jordan absorbed and provided citizenship for many of the 750,000 Arab refugees from what had become Israel, Palestinians who fled to other Arab countries were not similarly integrated into the host societies. The refugee problem worsened after Israel's victory in the Six Day War in 1967, when
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