'Watershed moment': Over 700 academics equate Israeli occupation with apartheid
Israeli figures who
previously refused to equate occupation with apartheid have changed their views
amid judicial overhaul and occupied West Bank violence
By MEE staff
Published date: 8 August 2023
More than 700 academics and public figures from Israel, Palestine and other countries have signed an open
letter equating Israel’s occupation of the West Bank with apartheid, signalling what
supporters say is a "watershed moment" for how Israel’s occupation is
viewed.
The letter, which began circulating on Friday, has received
around 200 signatures per day with “more coming in, quite literally, by the
minute”, Omer Bartov, professor of Holocaust and genocide studies at Brown
University and organiser of the letter, told Middle East Eye.
The letter featured 752 signatories at the time of
publication.
The authors said there was a direct link between Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s attempt to overhaul Israel’s judiciary and its
illegal occupation of millions of Palestinians in the occupied Palestinian
Territories.
“The ultimate purpose of the judicial overhaul is to
tighten restrictions on Gaza, deprive Palestinians of equal rights both beyond
the Green Line and within it, annex more land, and ethnically cleanse all
territories under Israeli rule of their Palestinian population,” the letter
said.
Notably, the letter made a clear reference to “the
elephant in the room: Israel’s long-standing occupation that, we repeat, has
yielded a regime of apartheid.”
“There cannot be democracy for Jews in Israel as long
as Palestinians live under a regime of apartheid,” it added.
Bartov told MEE that there were a number of Israeli
academics who signed the letter who previously would have likely refused to
equate the occupation with apartheid. One of the most prominent he identified
was Benny Morris, professor emeritus at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.
“The main change is that Israeli behavior, in the West
Bank, but also apparently unfolding vis-a-vis Israel’s Arabs now, has become
increasingly brutal over the past few years, and especially more in the past
half year. It has made more and more people realise that continued occupation
is morally and politically impossible,” he said.
'Watershed moment'
Leading academics such as Peter Beinart from the City
University of New York, and Avrum Burg, the former speaker of the Knesset and
chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel also signed the letter.
Academics whose backgrounds span from evolutionary
biology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem to choreography and rabbinical
studies at Hebrew College also endorsed the letter. Besides leading academics
in Israel, it received support from professors at Yale, Brown, Columbia, and
Harvard University in the United States.
On social media platform X, previously known as
Twitter, one user anticipated potential accusations of anti-semitism.
"The broad inclusion of so many academics
representing a stunningly broad spectrum of distinguished Jewish voices, indicates
a watershed moment also in American Jewish views about Israel, and a new
willingness by public figures, reflecting the sentiments of the younger
generation, to honestly criticise Israeli policies,” Bartov added.
According to a Middle East Eye tally, at least 208
Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire this year, including 36 children
- a rate of nearly one fatality per day.
A total of 172 people have died in the West Bank
and East Jerusalem, making 2023 one of the bloodiest years in the occupied
Palestinian territories. Another 36 people were killed in the Gaza Strip.
Lior Sternfeld, an associate professor of history and
Jewish studies at Penn State University and organiser of the letter, said
people were beginning to see a link between the moves by Israel’s far-right
government to remake the country’s judiciary and the occupation.
“Now more than ever before, regular middle-way people,
intellectuals, and leaders see that unbreakable connection between the
occupation and the current political moment,” she told MEE.
“Israelis and Americans who in the past disagreed with
the occupation but were willing to look past it are fed up.”
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