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				May 16th, 2003, 07:26 PM
			
			
			
		
			
			       
				Relocating Israeli Arabs makes sense (commentary) 
 This piece is a bit old, but I feel it's relevant with what's going on now. What are some opinions on this tactic? Are we seeing a "creeping" version of this being put into use now???
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 Relocating Israeli Arabs makes sense
 
 By Robert I. Lappin
 The Jewish Advocate
 
 Boston, Massachusetts
 December 27, 2002 ?January 2, 2003
 
 Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz has promulgated a practical way for
 Israel to deal with terrorism. He proposes that Israel, with fair, advance
 warning, destroy Arab villages that have been used as a base for terrorist
 operations. The residents would have 24 hours to leave, and then Israeli
 troops would come in and bulldoze the buildings. Israeli leaders would do
 well to implement Dershowitz뭩 proposal.
 
 A detail that Dershowoutz has not dealt with is the relocation of those
 displaced.
 
 The Arab world and the world of Islam are saturated with hatred of Jews and
 of Israel, beyond the point of no return. That Israel is an interloper of
 Arab hegemony that must be expunged is an Islamic dictum. It is now widely
 recognized that negotiations, including the Oslo peace process and the Barak
 initiative, have been a snare and a delusion, and that negotiations are not
 a realistic option, given the existing and foreseeable circumstances.
 Terror, by suicide-homicide, is the Arab tactic of choice to destroy Israel,
 and indeed to intimidate the world.
 
 To protect its citizens, Israel must occupy then West Bank and Gaza Strip
 for the foreseeable future, thereby ruling, de facto, over several million
 Palestinians. If Israel relinquishes its hold on the territories and
 retreats, as it has so many times, terror and suicide attacks resume. This
 is intolerable.
 
 To rule over another people is an assault on the Jewish conscience, and
 unacceptable over the long run to the world as well. However, the very
 process of relocation, once started, may result in shocking the Arabs into a
 condition of reality, even to the point of moderating their behavior.
 
 Nonetheless, an option that must be considered is the unspeakable:
 relocating Arabs from the West Bank and Gaza to Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and
 other Arab countries. Relocation can be a gradual process, starting with
 those who will be displaced under the Dershowitz plan.
 
 In tandem with this policy of relocation, Israel should pass a bill, already
 presented in the Knesset, encouraging Arab emigration to Arab lands by
 offering a basket of financial assistance. Israeli Arabs, most of whom
 identify with Israel뭩 enemies, are a deadly source of terrorism. Another
 bill, already in the Knesset, calls for every citizen of Israel to take an
 oath of loyalty to the state of Israel as a Jewish state as a condition for
 citizenship. As a nation under siege, from both within and without,
 inhabitants of Israel who are unwilling should be subject to relocation.
 
 It is time, too, for Israel to affirm its rightful claim to Judea, Samaria
 and Gaza. Our Torah provides a solid deed to this land, which should be
 asserted. The historical roots of the idea of relocation must be vigorously
 presented to the world. Since the time of Mohammed, relocations of
 Christians, non-Islamic people, and Jews have been commonplace in the
 Islamic world. Elsewhere in the world, relocation of tens of millions of
 hostile populations have taken place, particularly following World War II.
 It is not acceptable for the world to impose on Israel, or for Israel to
 impose on itself, standards that no other
 nation has assumed. It cannot be required that Israeli Jews live permanently
 with people whose greatest joy is the mass murder of Jewish civilians.
 Events have borne out that Jewish-Arabs coexistence is no more than a cruel
 fantasy.
 
 As difficult as it will be, Israel will have to hunker down and make the
 best of the extreme economic and political adversities that it will face
 under this plan. Solidarity and support of Diaspora Jewry for Israel will be
 essential, perhaps as never before, since Israel뭩 rebirth.
 -30-
 
 Robert I. Lappin of Massachusetts is a businessman, philanthropist and past
 president of the Jewish Federation of North Shore.
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