http://www.gdnonline.com/Details/66326
In the last
week’s column, I wrote on the banned love story from the Israeli high school
reading list. The Israeli education ministry claimed that young Jewish students
might not comprehend “the significance of miscegenation” for “maintaining the
national-ethnic identity of the [Jewish] people.”
Oddly
enough, the Israeli argument to maintain the Jewish “ethnic identity” from
dilution finds similar root in long gone or irrelevant racist movements
spanning from Nazi Germany to the Ku Klux Klan in America. From my own life experience, and in the small
circle of friends I had in California, I enjoyed the company of several mixed
couples. Out of those, I had known at least three Jewish and Arab
intermarriages.
The first
involved a Palestinian, the second a Lebanese woman and the third was a Saudi
man.
In the early
80s, my best friend met a young Jewish girl who lived next door. It was during
the peak of our student activism confronting Zionist Jewish students at the
university campus on a daily basis. Yet, my best friend saw his new girlfriend
only as a human being who happened to be Jewish. Fortunately, she did the same.
In the late
80s, I met a Lebanese woman while doing community outreach during the first
Palestinian Intifada. She was married to a Jewish man. Not surprisingly, their
love transcended the Zionist’s parochial race. We became best of friends and
two years later our first sons were born. We still cherish our memory our two
babies pictured lying side by side on our bed when they we were only weeks old.
During the
same period, I met a friend from Saudi Arabia who was raising his children with
his ex-Jewish wife. While divorced, they both were dedicated to their half Arab
half Jewish American children.
In the three
cases, they all were blessed with well acculturated and naturally more tolerant
children who weren’t any less Jewish or any less Arabs. They did not threaten
the “identity of the Jewish people,” but rejected the premise of separation
advocated by the Zionist ideology. Zionism is an 18th century European
chauvinistic movement that exploited historical injustice against Jews to
justify inflicting the same against non-Jewish Palestinians.
Back to
Israel’s intimidating novel, a little over a year ago I was asked by American
Jewish best-selling author Michelle Cohen Corasanti to co-write a love story
between a Jew and a Palestinian who came from diametrically opposed
backgrounds. Michelle was the author of The Almond Tree, a book that was
published in 19 languages. I wrote a review of it on the pages of this
newspaper almost three years ago.
In
preparation for her book, Michelle lived in Palestinian villages inside Israel
and mastered the Arabic language. The experience gave the writer the insight to
write about Palestinian life and social customs. Hence, the ability to
genuinely depict the life and struggle of Palestinians who remained in what
became Israel in 1948. In a rarely seen authentic display, she showed a people
who held tight to their Arab Palestinian identity despite Zionist attempts to
erase their national memory.
After
initial reluctance, I was in the midst of writing my own novel. Here we are
today having completed two novels. I wrote from the point of view of the
Palestinian protagonists, while Michelle used her background and personal
experiences to step into the American Jewish character. Rich in history, the
stories are about breaking down stereotypes and discovering the human inside
Jews and Palestinians.
The novels
will present an antithesis character to the omnipresent Zionist painted image
of the dehumanised Palestinian; a hero the reader can truly root for and
identify with. Thus, introducing the most “dangerous” Palestinian, Israel
doesn’t want the world to meet.
* Mr Kanj
(www.jamalkanj.com) writes regular newspaper column and publishes on several
websites on Arab world issues. He is the author of “Children of Catastrophe,”
Journey from a Palestinian Refugee Camp to America. A version of this article
was first published by the Gulf Daily News newspaper.