In The West Bank, Israel's 'Charity' Comes At A Price
13 December 2016By Jonathan Cook
At first glance, it looked like a generous promotional stunt by Israel to aid
the Palestinians' struggling tourism industry. Israeli military authorities
published this month a video on social media publicising Palestinian
attractions in the West Bank.
Most are Christian, including Jesus's birthplace in Bethlehem – now the Church
of the Nativity – and more obscure locations such as the monasteries of Mar
Saba and Wadi Qelt, in mountainous desert terrain few pilgrim coaches ever
reach.
The video was produced by COGAT, the Israeli military body that rules over
Palestinians. It appears to be the latest initiative in defence minister
Avigdor Lieberman's so-called ''carrot and stick'' policy – a programme that
rewards and punishes Palestinians according to their behaviour.
Mr Lieberman has vowed to bypass the Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas and
deal with Palestinians directly. The head of COGAT, Yoav Mordechai, has become
a familiar face to ordinary Palestinians.
Last month, in his first live chat in Arabic on COGAT's Facebook page, he
answered questions from Palestinians on how they could receive Israeli work
permits or resolve other bureaucratic headaches his officials created for
them. Even Palestinians in Gaza defied Hamas to contact him.
The tourism video is similarly designed to reverse the Oslo accords, which
held out a false promise two decades ago that the Palestinians would one day
enjoy statehood and self-determination. Israel's micromanagement of the
territories is now such that it is even taking responsibility for attracting
visitors to Palestine.
Except that is precisely not where COGAT's video invites them. Instead it
beckons tourists to visit ''Judea and Samaria'', the Biblical names Israel
uses to justify the illegal Jewish settlements that dominate much of the West
Bank.
What is going on?
The deception at the campaign's heart operates on several levels – and reveals
much about Israel's long-term policy towards the Palestinians.
Mr Lieberman wants Palestinians to view Mr Mordechai's military administration
as a benevolent father figure, the address for their problems, rather than Mr
Abbas. Who has the power to bring tourists to the territories and boost the
Palestinian economy? COGAT, not the Palestinian Authority.
But Israel's charity comes at a high price: Palestinians must jettison their
national ambitions. The tourists can visit but Palestinians must first concede
that these are Israeli sites.
A similar message is directed at the tourists. Christian pilgrims with little
understanding of the Palestinians' long history of dispossession are being
encouraged to explore Greater Israel oblivious to which side of the Green Line
they are on. The distinction between Nazareth and Bethlehem, in Israel and the
occupied West Bank, respectively, is increasingly blurred.
Palestinians themselves are all but invisible. The video at no point mentions
that they even live in ''Judea and Samaria''. It shows buildings, not people.
This rebranding process is already well under way in Jerusalem, which Israel
annexed in violation of international law decades ago. Tourism maps are
littered with Jewish settler sites, marked as prominently as important holy
places such as the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and Al Aqsa mosque. The latter
is identified only by Temple Mount.
But in truth the tourism video is even less generous than it appears. Israel
controls all entry into the West Bank, meaning that it is impossible for
pilgrims to visit without contributing to the Israeli economy.
Israel announced in September a record budget for promoting tourism, a
mainstay of its economy. The vast majority of visitors stay in Israeli hotels,
are transported in Israeli coaches, eat in Israeli restaurants, visit Israeli
gift shops to buy Israeli souvenirs using Israeli money.
In fact, most of the sites visited in the West Bank are controlled by Israel –
from the Dead Sea and Hebron's Ibrahimi Mosque to Herod's acropolis near
Bethlehem and the Baptism site on the River Jordan.
Tourists absorb the Palestinian presence only as a distant menace, highlighted
by the bright red traffic signs warning that it is ''dangerous to your lives''
to stray from major roads. Pilgrims dart into Bethlehem for a brief tour of
the Church of the Nativity, passing through a checkpoint in the oppressive,
prison-like wall, hinting that Israel has good reason to treat Palestinians
like felons.
If COGAT really wanted to change that impression, and help the Palestinian
economy, it would encourage tourists to stay in Palestinian cities such as
Hebron, Nablus, Ramallah and Jericho. And meet actual Palestinians.
Last week the Israeli parliament passed the first reading of a so-called
legalisation bill, which will retroactively authorise the settlers' theft of
land and property privately owned by Palestinians in the West Bank. The
legislation extends to the settlers' criminal acts the same legal protection
as the state's theft of Palestinian land.
The privatisation of the looting of Palestinian territory is intimately
connected to the authorities' latest moves to plunder Palestine's tourism
economy. The overarching goal in both is the ''creeping annexation'' of the
Palestinians' homeland. Israel is ready to use any and every means at its
disposal.
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