Friday, March 2, 2012

Harvard Had no Room for a One Jewish State Solution


Harvard Had no Room for a One Jewish State Solution

This Harvard alumnus applied to speak at the Harvard One State Solution Conference, but his solution was not seen as deserving of a voice in the "free market of ideas" advertised by the university.

From Wallace Edward Brand, JD
The question of the day is: how much lasting influence does Prince Talal's $20 million check have, the one he donated to Harvard in 2009?   To my knowledge, donating to colleges is not a part of  AIPAC's operations.
What I do know is that here is no room for a one Jewish state solution with a continuing Jewish majority population at the Harvard Conference on March 3 on one state solutions to the Arab-Israel Conflict. 
Alan Dershowitz talks about this biased conference in Newsmax at http://www.newsmax.com/AlanDershowitz/harvard-conference-palestinians-israel/2012/02/26/id/430605

A Mr. S. Benzimra  of Toronto and I have been trying to get Harvard to accept a speaker on the panel to talk about a one Jewish state solution. He just had his book on the San Remo Agreement of 1920 published last November. The San Remo Agreement granted the Jews exclusive political rights to Palestine.  

The speaker would have also talked about the Palestinians being a people invented in 1964 by the Soviet dezinformatsia.  The term "Palestinian Arab People"  appears three times in the preamble to the 1964 Charter of the PLO as if to comply with the Humpty Dumplty standard.  It is the first time it had been seen anywhere so far as I can tell.  It is corroborated only by affirmation of the first 422 members of the Palestinian National Council, formed contemporaneously, each hand picked by the KGB.  

The PLO Charter was drafted in Moscow, according to the reports of Major General Ion Pacepa.  He was the highest ranking defector from the Soviet bloc during the Cold War.  He has personal knowledge of the matter.  Newt Gingrich recently said they were an "invented people",  but didn't say who invented them, Pacepa did.
The speaker would also talk about the fiduciary obligations of Britain under the trust or guardianship and of Britain ignoring them in the White Papers of 1922, 1930 and especially the Chamberlain White Paper of 1939 that blocked Jews trying to flee for their lives from the Holocaust from entering what was to become Israel.  In the debates on Chamberlain's 1939 White Paper, Winston Churchill charged that Britain was reneging on its promise to the Jews.

The speaker could also dispel some of the canards about Israel, including the lie that the Jews expelled the Arabs from Israel, by showing that the Wall Street Journal reported that Mahmoud Abbas has written to the contrary in "Filastin", the official organ of the PLO. He wrote that almost all left at the call and threats of the Arab Higher Executive without ever seeing a Jewish soldier; and after a manufactured report of a massacre at Deir Yassin, ultimately corrected by the BBC interviewing the  Arab news commentator of 1948.

Harvard put out a statement on this conference extolling its free market of ideas -- this about a conference that has only Arab and Israeli anti-Zionists and apologists for terrorism speakers on its schedule. Try as we may, we cannot get our speaker on the panel or even have an op-ed published in the Harvard Crimson that would let the students know about the possibility we raise, based on a Jewish one state solution in the San Remo agreement.  San Remo is obscured by time and the action of anti-Zionists and anti-Semites.  It would be an excellent history lesson for the students.

I have a connection to Harvard.  My late wife and I were in the Law School class of '57; she also was in the Radcliffe class of '54.  Her mother was President of the Radcliffe Class of 1920, her father was at the law school then; her two brothers went there in the '50s.

I attended the funeral of a relative last week in North Carolina whose family connections to Harvard go back to the time of the sinking of the Titanic.  But no access to the panel for our speaker.

Prince Talal went to Menlo College in California and did graduate work at Syracuse, but I have found no evidence of his donations to them.  He is known as a shrewd businessman.

Harvard has put out a statement about its free market of ideas, but access to that market is blocked to us. 
It really would be an excellent history lesson, commencing with the drafting of Part I of the Treaty of Versailles that is the Covenant of the League of Nations.  Article 22 provides for trusts or guardianships over parcels of land captured from the Ottoman Empire in WWI by the Allies. 

The speaker could show that the Allies intended to reconstitute a Jewish state by granting exclusive political rights to the Jews, but these were not to vest until the Jews were a majority population, a goal to be attained from immigration from the diaspora.  If it had been allowed to vest immediately, the plan would have been anti-democratic, as the Jews were only 10% of the population in 1917.  

This was referred to in a memo of the British Foreign Office in September 1917 by Arnold Toynbee and Lewis Namier during the drafting of Lord Balfour's declaration. and also confirmed by Winston Churchill after WWI as stated in the Arabs' submission to UNSCOP in 1948.  (See: Musa Alami, The Future of Palestine, Hermon Press, Beirut and London, 1970.)  That policy is what was later adopted by the Allies at San Remo.

Ironically, Alan Dershowitz although a strong pro Zionist, is a liberal and supporter of Obama, and is pushing for a two state solution that would needlessly give away much of the Jewish and Christian heritage in Palestine. such as Rachel's Tomb, Tomb of the Patriarchs and sites in Bethlehem. 

But a Jewish one-state solution would end up. in the short run. with one less enemy on Israel's borders. and in the long run. with sovereignty over Gaza as well if it doesn't stop firing rockets at Israel.

Home Rule could be provided for the Gazans, but no vote on Israeli policy, until the Jewish population expands enough so that annexing Gaza would not destroy the Jewish democracy, Israel, the only MIddle East country with western values.  

That is all that was guaranteed by the cession of sovereignty over Palestine by the Ottomans in Article 95 of the Treaty of Sevres -- unamended in the Treaty of Lausanne.  It preserved the civil rights of the non-Jews in Palestine prior to the Mandate, but no more. That is all the rights the Arabs in Palestine had for 400 years of rule by the Turkish Ottomans before 1920. It is also all that was required by the French process verbal to the British Mandate for Palestine -- that the non-Jews do not lose any rights.

According to Abbas Zaki, a member of the Fatah Central Committee, and quasi Ambassador to Lebanon,  "With the two-state solution, in [his] opinion, Israel will collapse, because if they get out of Jerusalem, what will become of all the talk about the Promised Land and the Chosen People? What will become of all the sacrifices they made - just to be told to leave? They consider Jerusalem to have a spiritual status. The Jews consider Judea and Samaria to be their historic dream. If the Jews leave those places, the Zionist idea will begin to collapse. It will regress of its own accord. Then we will move forward".

He suggested, however, also in Arabic, that this view not be made known to the West.

Mr. Benzimra and I have fashioned a one Jewish state solution that proposes a continuing Jewish majority for one Jewish state in cisJordan, as transJordan was traded in 1994 for a Jordanian quiet claim to cisJordan. 
It would commence with a prompt annexation of Judea, Samaria and East Jerusalem, where the Arab claims of population are much overstated. 

Gaza's continuing attacks on Israel are a casus belli that would justify Israel taking over Gaza.  As stated above, it could be given Home Rule but no vote in Israeli elections until growth in Jewish population warranted its annexation. 

This, in our opinion, would satisfy the requirement that the civil rights of non-Jews must not be impaired, as the Arabs in Gaza never had rights to vote in elections determining the policy of the Ottoman empire.  That met the test of the French "process verbal" appended to the British Mandate for Palestine and the San Remo Agreement of 1920. 

It would leave one Jewish state with a western valued democracy and borders that are more defensible than those of the two state solution.

We will be sending an oped shortly with more details on the San Remo Agreement, using it as a basis to secure a "One Jewish State Solution".

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/11323#.T09rTXJSR0U

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