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The Native American analogy doesn’t work

By Ali Abunimah  | Mondoweiss | December 5, 2010

Earlier today Phil Weiss did a post mentioning Native Americans and the argument that American historical sins immunize the Israelis from the Palestinian right of return.

Citing the ethnic cleansing of Native Americans as a way to justify not recognizing the Palestinian right of return, as I’ve often heard people do, is usually disingenuous. The situation is comparable up to a point and then breaks down. Native Americans were ethnically cleansed as Palestinians were and are being ethnically cleansed. As a percentage of the US population today, Native Americans constitute less than one percent. We should support doing everything possible to recognize and support their rights, including returning traditional land as has happened to greater or lesser degrees in other settler-colonial countries including Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

The main reason people can flippantly say “well if you support the Palestinian right of return then you should support Native Americans returning to their land” in order to justify Israel not recognizing the Palestinian right is that there are simply so few Native Americans that the question does not really arise. Native Americans in the United States are struggling for survival, justice and recognition, but generally not by seeking the return of land that is now, say, a neighborhood of Chicago. Their struggle came poignantly to light recently in the affair of the US refusal to recognize tribal passports of the Iroquois Lacrosse team that was supposed to travel to the UK (link here).

But imagine if the situation were more analogous to Palestine today in terms of numbers. Imagine if Native Americans constituted 30, 40, or 50 or even 20 percent of the population of the United States and that they lived in sealed reservations in conditions similar to those in the Gaza Strip or refugee camps in the West Bank or Lebanon?

If there were 30, 70 or 100 million people who identified as Native Americans and existed in such conditions, no one would be able to so flippantly dismiss either their right to return to their original lands or any challenge they would make to the legitimacy of the United States. The United States would have a legitimacy crisis and bloodbath on its hands.

The only reason the United States can so easily ignore the rights of Native Americans is that they suffered near-genocide. Palestinians today are 50 percent of the population in their historic homeland and cannot simply be ignored as they could be if they were one percent. This is why Benny Morris said in 2004 that yes, ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians was necessary and justified to create Israel, but if Ben-Gurion had made a mistake it was that he did not “finish the job.” The United States, Canada, Australia did “finish the job” and those are the settler-colonial states that survive. French Algeria, Portuguese Mozambique, Rhodesia, Apartheid South Africa, Protestant-ruled Northern Ireland and Israel are the settler-colonial states where the native population remained either a majority or a substantial minority that could challenge the legitimacy of the state. How many of them are left?

Finally, it is disingenuous to make this an issue solely about property rights. Property rights are a difficult issue that would affect a fraction of Palestinians and Israelis. Most Palestinians, however, could return to land in Israel that is currently empty. Israelis reject the right of return primarily on ethnoreligious grounds: they just don’t want too many Palestinians polluting the “Jewish democracy.”

December 5, 2010 - Posted by | Ethnic Cleansing, Racism, Zionism

6 Comments »

  1. I would never use the Native American argument as a justification for Israel–but it does show that the US is no better historically with it’s ‘American Exceptionalist’ expansionist policies built on hubris.
    Amerikan history turns out to be nothing but psychomythology–why do you think DC has no problem funding the genocidal practices of the Zionist beast?
    “Judao-Christianity” an oxymoron of deep sickness.
    ww

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    hybridrogue1's avatar Comment by hybridrogue1 | December 5, 2010 | Reply

  2. Israel when it sought approval for a Jewish homeland amongst the Muslims gave its undertaken to the Leagues of Nations in its 1948unilateral declaration, recognizing that Israel borders are along the Partition Plan and enshrined in UN181.
    Annexation of land outside of Israel’s legitimate borders and earmarked for the Palestinian state was NEVER approved by the UN. Israel unlike Mexico/Australia/US remains in blatant continued belligerent occupation in violation of numerous UN res. as well as the Charters of the Organization that approved a Jewish homeland on Palestinian soil.

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    lydia's avatar Comment by lydia | December 5, 2010 | Reply

    • Good points Lydia.

      The nations of the world cannot tolerate Israel’s ongoing lawlessness especially because it is based on racism.

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      aletho's avatar Comment by aletho | December 6, 2010 | Reply

  3. I would add that the time frame must also be considered. At the time, conquest and colonialism (and indentures and slavery) were more accepted. Israel’s actions have taken place in a post WWII world with its development of human rights and the hopes to create a framework for nations to resolve differences while respecting those rights.

    And it would make as much sense to use the reverse analogy of the American Indian as the Israeli, who would attempt to move out the US’s current population (as the Palestinians) in order to claim historical ownership. If American Indians wanted to do this, they could not expect everyone would to go quietly, not even if they held up the Great Spirit as evidence of title.

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    G Street's avatar Comment by G Street | December 6, 2010 | Reply

    • One problem with your last analogy; whereas Native Americans are indigenous to the Americas, Israelis are not, and never were indigenous to the Levant, as Schlomo Sand has argued so decisively. The right of return to Israel that is claimed by Jews is strictly mythical since they descend from proselytes from many peoples, primarily Khazars. It is the Palestinians who are descended from the biblical Jews.

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      aletho's avatar Comment by aletho | December 6, 2010 | Reply

      • True.

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        G Street's avatar Comment by G Street | December 6, 2010 | Reply


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