I get that you are in favour of a two-state-solution. And making it seem like the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) is at cross purposes to the will of the Palestinian Arab public would support attempts to move in that direction. But where is your evidence regarding the suggestion that the PIJ and Palestinian Arab public opinion are at odds with one another? My problem is with the evidence you suggests exists for this claim. In the following sentence, you provide a text-link to an article you claim supports this idea:Amnesty International is lying about Israel. As a Palestinian peace activist and the founder of the Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group, I’m here to set the record straight: Israel is not an apartheid state. Watch my video to learn the facts! #SHAMnesty #AmnestyLies pic.twitter.com/ldv36B9fiU
— Bassem Eid (@realbassemeid) February 1, 2022
PIJ is not representative of the will of the Palestinian people, who with Israel SHARES THE DREAM [link below in my discussion] of a two-state solution within the borders of the pre-1948 British Mandate.In other words you are implying that both Israel and the Palestinian Arab public share this dream. When I read those three words, I was surprised. From what I know of Israeli contemporary society, the great majority of Israeli Jews no longer believe that there can be a Palestinian Arab state alongside Israel, that such a state would comprise a mortal danger to Israel. And from what I have seen and read, I was led to believe that the majority of Palestinian Arabs are likewise against a two-state-solution. Could I be wrong? When opening the linked article (called "What do Palestinians Want?), one reads, in bold letters, at the head of the article, the following:
Those who support permanent peace with Israel are in the minority even among the younger generation, but Washington should still prepare for the future by working around the economic edges.This immediately made me think that the only one with the dream of a two-state-solution is the USA. But since it is not fair to believe that one understands an article solely based upon the title and the first paragraph or two, I read the entire thing. And this article concludes thus:
...the sobering reality is that there is still no Palestinian popular majority that supports permanent peace with Israel, including a majority even among the younger generation.Between the opening lines of this article and its conclusion, we are told something we Israelis often are told.
Shifts in Palestinian public opinion also suggest that Israeli overtures, or at least Israeli restraint, may prompt more moderate Palestinian attitudes. Conversely, hardline Israeli policies—whether on settlements, security, or economic relations—may negatively shift Palestinian public opinion.In other words, the article attributes Palestinian Arab public opinion to Israeli behaviour, thus belittling the Palestinian Arabs, making it seem as if they have no ability to reach their own independent opinions based on a comprehensive examination of what is going on around them within their neighbourhoods, within the PA as a whole, within the geographic region encompassing not just Israel and the PA, but also Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Egypt, and within the wider context of a world threatened by Iranian jihadic and nuclear ambitions. That article also clearly states that a small number of Palestinian Arabs would be happy with the peace a quiet that would result from successful implementation of the two-state-solution while others, the majority, perhaps, would view that as a stepping stone to taking back all the 1948 lands as they consider Israel a colonial occupational regime between the river and the sea. What do we make of the Palestinian Arabs who believe their lives will be improved, not by the establishment of a Palestinian Arab state, but by Judea and Samaria being annexed by Israel, as you said in the interview on which I reported and about which has been written in various places? In view of all of this, I am surprised, Bassem, that you turned a well-known American dream into one that supposedly is OUR dream, yours and mine. It is not what WE dream for. You may, but many of your fellow Palestinian Arabs do not. And I do not.
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