The Psychological Dimension Of The
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict - Historical Experiences
16 Feb 2012
By Alon Ben-Meir
This article was filed under
following categories: Arab-Israeli conflict,
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, International Terrorism,
Middle East, Israel, Hamas, West Bank
This is the first of 10 articles that will address
how the psychological dimension of Israeli-Palestinian
conflict has and continues to impact every conflicting
issue between the two sides and what can be done to
mitigate these psychological impediments to reach an
agreement based on a two state solution.
On the surface, the lack of progress in the
Israeli-Palestinian peace process seems illogical and
unsettling. After all, each side accepts the
inevitability of coexistence and presumably
understands the general parameters of a negotiated
peace agreement: a two-state solution based on the
1967 border with land swaps that keep the major
settlement blocks under Israel's sovereignty,
Jerusalem would remain a united capital of two-states,
and the vast majority of Palestinian refugees would be
compensated and remain in their countries of residence
or resettle in the newly-created Palestinian state in
the West Bank and Gaza Strip. These fundamental
Imperatives, coupled with appropriate security
guarantees for Israel, represent what has been on the
table at the conclusion of numerous rounds of
negotiations in the past decades, with each round
coming closer to finalizing an agreement, yet
ultimately failing to do so. The question is: why?
The answer lies far beyond the physical concessions on
the ground and is deeply embedded in the psychological
dimensions of the conflict, which impact every
conflicting issue between the two parties. It is the
mindset, nurtured over more than nine decades, that
allows the individuals and the groups, Israelis and
Palestinians alike, to perceive and interpret the
nature of the discord between them in a biased and
selective way. In turn, this stifles and inhibits any
new information that could shed new light on the
situation and help advance the peace process. In
principle, such a mindset prevents either side from
entertaining new ideas that might lead to compromises
for a peaceful solution. Thus, to mitigate the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, we must first carefully
look into the various elements that inform the
psychological dimensions of the conflict and discuss
how they may impact the relationship between the two
sides and what it would take to alleviate these
psychological impediments as prerequisites to finding
a solution to the conflict.
Historical Experiences
Underlying the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are the
scars that each side carries from traumatic pasts. The
Jewish experience throughout the Diaspora was one
filled with discrimination, persecution, anti-Semitism
and expulsion, culminating in the Holocaust, during
which one nation sought to extinguish a defenseless
Jewish people. The trauma of the genocide perpetrated
by the Nazis is unmatched in size and scope. Moreover,
many Jews were prevented from avoiding death camps by
immigrating to Palestine, which added yet another
layer to the horrific experiences of the Jewish
people. Without question, the Jews have carried the
scars of this past with them to Palestine and still
hold to the view that it can happen again unless they
remain relentless in protecting themselves at any
cost. With this past in mind, once the State of Israel
was established, it was seen not only as the last
refuge to provide protection for the Jewish people but
also the realization of the secular Zionist mission
and the biblical fulfillment of the return of the Jews
to their ancient homeland that had to be guarded with
absolute and unwavering zeal.
It is this sense of victimization and injustice that
has served to nurture the allegiance that each Israeli
feels towards the state and to each other with a
naturally-engendered, negative emotional sentiment
towards the enemy. From the Israeli perspective, the
establishment of Israel on the heels of the Holocaust
was seen (and continues to be viewed) as a last chance
to create a refuge and remain on guard to protect the
Jews' welfare and wellbeing, wherever they may live
and at whatever cost. Moreover, this sense of being
victimized, which results from an intentional
infliction of harm which is viewed as unjust and
utterly immoral, has led to a lack of empathy towards
the enemy and further manifested itself through a
shirking of Israeli responsibility, for example,
regarding the Palestinian refugee problem while
promoting self-righteousness. Together these phenomena
tend to endure for a very long period of time,
particularly when it is accompanied by extensive
violence and growing concerns over security.
The Palestinians, on the other hand, have never really
appreciated the psychological implications of the
Jews' historical experience. Instead of understanding
the Israeli mindset that was formed by this horrific
experience and the Jews' connection to the land, the
Palestinians have either denied the Holocaust
altogether, or bemoaned that if it did happen, they
should not be forced to pay the price.
For the Palestinians, the experience of the Nakba,
precipitated by the 1948 war, was indeed no less
catastrophic. From their view, they were living in
their own land, albeit under Ottoman rule for
centuries and then under British rule. During the 1948
war, many were either forced out of their homes by
Israelis or encouraged to leave by their Arab brethren
in the context of the war and found themselves as
refugees – an experience that has lasted for decades
and which they continue to endure to this day. This
traumatic experience has served to bind Palestinians
together in the same way that the Jews coalesced
following the Holocaust, the two tragic events,
however, unparalleled in scope by any stretch of the
imagination. The fact that the Arab states manipulated
the Palestinian refugee problem to their advantage did
not change the reality on the ground nor did it alter
the Palestinians' sentiment and feelings about their
plight.
What has further aggravated the Palestinian refugees
are the subsequent and frequent violent encounters
between the two sides, especially after the 1967 war.
This was a war which not only created another wave of
refugees but set the stage for bloody confrontation
during which many thousands lost their lives on both
sides. Moreover, the Israeli settlement project
provided a daily reminder of the Palestinian
inaptitude while demonstrating the futility of their
efforts to stem the Israeli encroachment on their
territory, especially in the West Bank. The repeated
humiliation of the Palestinians further deepened their
resolve to oppose the Israelis at whatever cost, but
all to no avail, which served to further deepen their
resentment, hatred and animosity.
Israelis have never fully understood the significance
of what the Palestinians have been experiencing, how
this has impacted their psychological dispositions,
and why they have shown no desire to reconcile their
differences with Israel. Israelis often argue that
since nearly 800,000 Jews left their homes across the
Arab Middle East and North Africa and largely settled
in Israel, the Palestinian refugees must be considered
a de-facto swap with the Jewish refugees. This view
not only dismisses the historic trauma experienced by
the Palestinians but also disregards their national
aspirations to establish a homeland of their own. It
is that psychological fixation reinforced by public
narratives and education in schools, among other
factors, that has prevented either side from coming to
grips with the inevitability of peaceful coexistence.
Political Ideology
For most Israelis, the meanings and the implications
of the occupation took a dramatic turn only a few
months following the 1967 war. Whereas initially
Israel offered to relinquish the territories with the
exception of East Jerusalem in exchange for peace, the
Arab states' refusal changed the Israelis view
dramatically from viewing the land as occupied to one
that was liberated. As a result, the Palestinians
living on the land have been seen as an impediment to
the fulfillment of those who embraced this
nationalistic, ideological orientation. From their
perspective, the Jews' cultural heritage is
intertwined with the land and Jews have a historical
right to the land that is not subject to mitigation.
As a result, these factions opposed any compromise for
ideological reasons while intensifying the sense of
vulnerability from a security perspective in order to
undermine any efforts to reach a cooperative
agreement. Such ideologues often assume an arrogant
approach while disregarding legitimate norms of
conduct and the rules of law as they have come to see
the occupation as a legitimate repossession of the
Jews' historic land.
In addition to three religious parties, there is
plethora of political parties in Israel, which cover
the whole spectrum from extreme left to the extreme
right, who hold different ideological positions in
connection with the territories. Some, such as Likud,
seek to hold onto the entirety of what they call, "the
land of Israel." Others, like Labor and Kadima, are
willing to compromise territorially because of their
concerns over the loss of Jewish dominance resulting
from annexation or the loss of the democratic nature
of the state due to shifting demographics. Other
left-of-center parties such as Meretz insist that the
occupation is a violation of universal moral values
and seek an end to it, provided Israel can ensure its
national security. And there are the religious parties
who, like their secular counterparts, differ in their
approach regarding the disposition of the territories.
However, regardless of their ideological or religious
orientations, they have all supported (in various
degrees) the settlement enterprise and insist on
retaining part of the West Bank, ranging between five
to forty percent, to accommodate their ideological,
national security or religious needs.
The Palestinians have never understood the depth and
the meaning of the historical connection between the
Jews and what they consider their ancient homeland.
This is a connection that has lived in the mind and
soul of most Jews throughout the millennium. The
Palestinians have rejected Israel as a matter of
principle regardless of the eventual disposition of
the West Bank and Gaza, something that has become
deeply ingrained in the Israeli mindset particularly
because the Palestinians have openly and repeatedly
stated that position.
From the Palestinian perspective, Palestine is the
only land they have known. It is their ancestral land,
which they have occupied for centuries. Although they
recognize that a small Jewish community has always
lived in Palestine and even though the land was ruled
by the Ottoman and then fell under British mandate,
they have never psychologically or emotionally
conceded their right to Palestine as they view it as
Arab matrimony. The War of 1948, which followed the
creation of the state of Israel and precipitated the
first wave of Palestinian refugees, further deepened
their resolve which led to the creation of more than a
dozen militant- resistance groups forsworn to bring an
end to the Jewish enterprise in Palestine through one
form or another.
Sixty-four years into the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, and following half a dozen wars and hundreds
of terrorist attacks and Israeli retaliations, very
little has changed psychologically. There are still
numerous resistance movements such as Hamas that
oppose Israel's existence and continue to adhere to
the ideological ethos of Palestinian control over all
of mandated Palestine. Following the 1993 Oslo
accords, however, a growing majority of Palestinians
began to realize that they must find a way to co-exist
with Israel, which subsequently became the official
policy of the Palestinian Authority (PA) in the West
Bank. The PA's rival, Hamas, which controls Gaza,
continues to struggle to find a way to reconcile with
the reality of Israel. Yet, despite the growing
pragmatic view, the psychological disposition of the
Palestinians remains locked in place and a significant
constituency on both sides continues to oppose any
effort to reconcile their historical perspectives.
Religious Belief and Conviction
The Arab-Israeli conflict is typically viewed as a
political and territorial conflict, yet the religious
component has created a certain mindset that further
complicates the conflict and makes it extremely
difficult to resolve. The Israeli narrative is one
that is based on the biblical connection of the Jewish
people to the land of their forefathers. As Prime
Minister Netanyahu implored of Congress in his May
24th address, "This is the land of our forefathers,
the Land of Israel, to which Abraham brought the idea
of one God, where David set out to confront Goliath,
and where Isaiah saw a vision of eternal peace. No
distortion of history can deny the four thousand
year-old bond, between the Jewish people and the
Jewish land." For many Israelis, it is extremely
painful to relinquish control of the West Bank, known
as the ancient biblical lands of Judea and Samaria,
and it is inconceivable to surrender the Wailing Wall
and have Jerusalem under the jurisdiction of anyone
else. This has, in fact, created intergroup factions
such as the settlement movement that strongly supports
militant actions, rejects compromises and often exerts
disproportionate pressure on the government to not
make any compromises. As a result, with the expansion
of the settlements, this particular and most powerful
psychological disposition became even further embedded
in the Israeli psyche and the growing, if not
decisive, power of the problematic settlement movement
has made it ever so more difficult to contemplate a
return to the 1967 borders even with some land swap.
As recent internal Israeli conflicts between Israeli
soldiers and settlers attest to, nothing will stop the
zealot settlers as long as they believe that they are
pursuing God's mission and that the Almighty is
testing their resolve, tenacity and willingness to
sacrifice themselves before He grants them once again
the Promised Land.
Similarly, no Arab leader will compromise on Jerusalem
because of the religious convictions tied to the third
holiest shrines of Islam in Jerusalem, the Al Aqsa
Mosque and the Dome of the Rock on the Haram al-Sharif.
Moreover, many Muslim scholars believe that Muhammad
made his Journey from Mecca to the Al Aqsa Mosque
(literally, ‘furthest mosque') in Jerusalem before he
ascended to heaven. Although the Al Aqsa Mosque was
built long after the death of the prophet, Surah 17:1
says that Mohammad visited the site where Masjid Al
Aqsa was to be built. This belief is certainly not
limited to the Palestinians but shared by all Muslims,
further complicating any solution to the future of
Jerusalem. Like their Israeli counterparts, the
Palestinians too have shown absolutely no flexibility
in this regard. It is this mindset, cultivated over
many centuries but further reinforced since the
creation of Israel that has and will continue to
hinder finding a solution that can satisfy both the
psychological and emotional needs of both sides.
National Security
The trauma experienced by both sides prior to, and as
a result of, the founding of Israel has been
reinforced by wars and misdeeds by each side that has
fostered a deeply-embedded culture of mistrust between
the two peoples. The Arab states' refusal to accept
the 1947 United Nations' partition plan was the first
such message to Israelis that the Arabs were not
interested in peace. The wars, identified by the years
they took place—1948, 1956, 1967, 1973—have only
strengthened the Israeli conviction that Arabs seek
only the destruction of, rather than peace with, the
State of Israel which has led many Israelis to believe
that the entire world is against them and adopt a
powerful and intractable siege mentality.
The Arab League meeting in Khartoum in 1967 codified
this view and further reinforced that perception
through declaring the infamous three no's: "no to
negotiations, no to recognition, no to peace". Finally
with the launch of the Oslo peace process in 1993,
Israelis and Palestinians began to speak with one
another in an attempt to find a lasting end to their
conflict. But, with the trauma of conflict underlying
their discussions, and the utter lack of trust,
neither side believed the words of the other. From the
Israeli point of view, they negotiated as Hamas and
other extremist Palestinian groups gained strength and
committed a savage campaign of suicide bombings across
Israel, only to be further intensified by the Second
Intifada upon the collapse of the Oslo talks. The
Israeli view that the Palestinians do not really want
peace gained further currency following Israel's
withdrawals from Lebanon and the Gaza Strip. Instead
of using the evacuated territories as an opening for
improved relations, they became a staging ground for
the launching of rockets on Israeli cities.
Meanwhile, from the Palestinians' perspective, they
negotiated as Israeli settlement construction grew
exponentially in the West Bank, in a rapid land grab
that the Palestinians had imagined for a state of
their own. The Palestinians insist that Israel could
not possibly negotiate in good faith as long as it
continued to deepen the roots of occupation while
undermining any real prospects for establishing their
own state. The Palestinian's perception of a continued
Israeli threat and the lingering fear of Israel's ill
intentions further deepened their sense of insecurity
which justified their use of force against the source
of the threat. Moreover, whereas the Israelis linked
the continuation of the occupation to national
security, the Palestinians' heightened intergroup
solidarity against the occupation wanted to
demonstrate that the occupation must become the source
of insecurity for Israel. To be sure, Israel's deep
sense of insecurity was similarly experienced by the
Palestinians to no lesser a degree, which made them
resort to violence to ensure their own safety.
Here too, events and circumstances have led both sides
to develop a mindset based on fear and uncertainty,
forcing them to dig in their heels. This sense of
heightened insecurity was further aggravated by
ideological Israeli and Palestinian leaders that made
little or no effort to correct these perceptions,
deciding instead to stoke nationalist fervor and angst
against the "Other".
Delegitimization of Each Other
Although many people on both sides realize that
coexistence is inevitable, there are still very strong
voices among the Israelis and the Palestinians who
simply don't accept it. There are Israelis who deny
that the Palestinians are a nation with national
aspirations, believing that they can be given
independence in municipalities but remain perpetually
under the jurisdiction and control of the Israeli
authorities. And there are Palestinians who deny that
Israelis constitute a people worthy of a nation, let
alone one that should settle in the land they seek for
their own. As a result, this further enhances the will
to sustain the occupation by the Israelis and
emboldens resistance to the occupation by the
Palestinians.
Too often, the leadership on both sides has sought to
exploit these nationalistic denials for their own
political and ideological gains, at the expense of
understanding the narrative of the other side. For
example, for the Israelis this has meant a denial of
the dilemma of Palestinian refugees and on the
Palestinian side, a denial of Israel's genuine
security concerns. As a result, the public discourse
has advanced the notion that the other side has no
genuine claims and that one day they will be defeated
with hardened, resolute positions. Therefore there is
no compelling rationale to compromise in order to find
a formula for co-existence. This blind refusal of
reality by influential voices on both sides
strengthens those on the fringes seeking to delay a
solution. The quintessential example of the denial of
the need to coexist is the development of
unilateralism as a policy of choice. The Israelis'
continued settlement expansion and the Palestinians'
drive to seek UN recognition of their own state
suggests a bold attempt to shape their respective
national futures as if it were possible to do so,
independent of the other side.
To be sure, the conscious effort to delegitimize each
other not only causes self-harm and harm to the other
side but it also permits and justifies moral
infractions against each other. It helps sustain the
conflict, minimize the importance of any concession
made by either side and inadvertently leads to renewed
violence.
Conclusion
By insisting on far-fetched formulas, both sides are
creating states of self-entrapment by imprisoning
themselves in positions that are not sustainable and
are locking themselves into postures without
admirable ways out. To illustrate this
self-entrapment consider the following: Israelis
insist that the Palestinians should have no
jurisdiction over any part of Jerusalem and that they
must recognize Israel, "as a Jewish state."
Palestinians continue to perpetuate the fantasy that
refugees will one day return to Israel en masse,
thereby destroying Israel's Jewish character. As long
as these positions, however untenable, continue to
dominate public discourse, they not only impede any
serious dialogue or discussion but also paint the
Israeli and Palestinian leadership into a corner with
increasingly diminishing prospects of finding a
dignified way out.
Overcoming these fundamental obstacles to a two-state
agreement requires more than negotiations between
political leaders. What is needed is to bring
together noted and most-respected religious leaders,
historians and NGO's that engage in separate talks
about each of the conflicting issues between Israelis
and Palestinians without outside political pressure as
long as all participants believe in the inevitability
of coexistence. Airing these issues and reaching a
better understanding could have a tremendous impact on
public opinion on both sides and provide the political
leadership with the necessary public support and the
political cover they need to accommodate each other.
Understanding and appreciating each other's position
and mindset, and reaching a consensus governed by the
reality on the ground, will be a game-changer.
Only with such a broader, deeper dialogue, and the
shared pursuit of understanding the issues on the
psychological, historical, religious and emotional
levels, can the roots of the conflict be addressed and
substantive negotiations begin to end the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
In the following seven articles I will discuss how the
psychological dimension of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict continues to impact the conflicting issues
between the two sides and what can be done to address
the imperatives of the conflict and make the right
choices.
A noted journalist and author, Dr. Alon Ben-Meir
is professor of international relations and Middle
East studies at the Center for Global Affairs at New
York University. Ben-Meir holds a masters degree in
philosophy and a doctorate in international relations
from Oxford University.