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WORDS MATTER, Part 3: Settlements

Michael Lame, posted August 11, 2009

[Note: This short series, WORDS MATTER, is not designed to answer the questions of what should be done about Palestinian refugees or Israeli settlers. Rather, the author hopes to raise questions in the mind of the reader about the language that we use and the way that we think about these issues.

Anyone who carefully listens to politicians or who reads political columnists knows that certain words and phrases are employed with the intention of eliciting an emotional response from the audience. Do you want a negative response to an idea? Then preface it with an adjective like unfair, undue, immoderate, extreme, unhelpful, old, tired, elitist, sexist, racist, etc. If you want a positive response to an idea, add the descriptor reasonable or prudent, frugal or thoughtful. Good legislation is carefully crafted; poor legislation is hastily slapped together. These characterizations are perhaps simplistic but, apparently, still effective. After all, who doesn’t want good government, efficient administration, and honest officeholders who give careful consideration to the insightful suggestions of senior citizens?

In my youth, I served as press secretary to a congressional candidate. One day a long-serving U.S. senator came through town to campaign for my guy, and in his speech the senator described the candidate as “a courageous, creative man of integrity and great ability.” I’ve never forgotten the phrase; it became a joke among the campaign staff.

Our candidate was a good man, but the senator’s description – especially since the two of them had just met – seemed like such generic political rhetoric that we imagined the senator using it to describe every candidate across the country that he supported that year. After the senator’s visit, whenever staff members were asked their opinion about anyone at all, the answer would come back loud and clear: “He’s a courageous, creative man of integrity and great ability!”]

SETTLEMENTS
The myth of the temporary Palestinian refugee camp mirrors the myth of the impermanent Israeli settlement. Camps and settlements are parallel linguistic constructs. In the context of the Middle East, neither name fits reality. Each name creates a false impression.

The term settlement shapes what we think is there and what we believe should happen to it. Even before defining the term, for those who equate morality with legality or who view Middle East conflict through the prism of international law, the moment the term settlement is prefaced with illegal or unlawful, then it is only natural to think the worst of the place and of the people who live there.

Settlement, when modified by Israeli, is a loaded term, though it doesn’t seem that way from the dictionary:
a: occupation by settlers b: a place or region newly settled c: a small village
(http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/settlement).
The term settlers summons up images in my mind – history-lover that I am – of Daniel Boone leading a band of hearty men and women into the wilds of Kentucky or of Ward Bond (the 1950’s television star of Wagon Train) shepherding intrepid pioneers across the plains of the Midwest.

Like the term camp, the word settlement often refers to simple dwellings, for a few people, which are temporary or of recent vintage. Settlement, in the context of Israeli housing in the West Bank, can refer to anything from a single caravan on a hilltop with a handful of occupants to an entire suburb of Jerusalem – like French Hill (7,000), Gilo (27,000), or Pisgat Ze’ev (40,000) – to small cities such as Ariel (16,000), Betar Illit (32,000), Modi’in Illit (38,000), or Ma’aleh Adumim (33,000). [2007 population figures]

Today, close to 200,000 Israelis live within the expanded city limits of Jerusalem on the Palestinian side of the Green Line (separating pre-1967 Israel from the West Bank and East Jerusalem). Another 290,000 Israelis dwell elsewhere in the West Bank. To provide a sense of proportion, the Palestinian population of east Jerusalem and the West Bank is approximately 2.5 million.

When hearing the word settlement, I still think of a make-shift bunch of shelters – tents, shacks, or lean-to’s. I imagine that a well-established, thriving settlement would at some point graduate to a different designation, such as village or town. In reading the word settlement, I certainly don’t think of a decades-old centrally-planned community with parks, playgrounds, and shopping malls, with stone or concrete multi-storey buildings and industrial parks. Yet that is what the settlement of Ma’aleh Adumim looks like, just five miles east of Jerusalem, and when I first saw the place, its appearance surprised me. Whether it should be there or not, whether it is legal or not, whether it will eventually become part of a Palestinian state or not, it was clearly built to last. Calling it a settlement can mislead us into thinking of it as something small and easily removable.

The words settlements and settlers hold a different, more ideological meaning for some on the Left. In 1967 (just before the war that year) the French Marxist and Islamic scholar Maxime Rodinson, himself a Jew, wrote a provocative essay, later published in book form in English as Israel: A Colonial-Settler State? For Marxists, anti-imperialists, and supporters of third world liberation movements, the term “settler” has always been highly pejorative. It represents Europe and America at its imperialist-colonialist worst.

The 21st century usage of settlers and settlements often echoes that anti-Western perspective. Settlers and settlements are frequently portrayed in the media and in political discourse as inherently illegitimate, as holdovers from the now-discredited bad old days of colonialism. This meaning of settlement has nothing to do with the size of the community or its longevity. According to this view, settlers are foreigners. Settlers don’t belong. Settlers have imposed themselves on the legitimate and legal residents of the area – the indigenous peoples, the natives, the locals. Looking from this perspective on the Middle East, the term settler is not merely an identification but an indictment. It serves as a validation of the wrongfulness of Israelis’ presence on the West Bank: The Boers of South Africa were in the wrong. The Pied-Noirs of Algeria were in the wrong. The Dutch in Indonesia, the French in Indochina, and the British damn near everywhere were in the wrong. Now it’s the Israelis’ turn, in the West Bank.

For some reason, this pejorative sense of settler is not universally applied to all peoples who “intrude” on others’ long-inhabited lands. For an example of how else “newcomers” can be viewed, compare coverage of West Bank Israelis to the portrayal of the Han Chinese who, with the backing of Beijing, have flocked to the Muslim Uighur-inhabited Xinjiang region of western China and to the rugged plateaus of Buddhist Tibet. They are not vilified by Western media for their settlements but rather are criticized for their treatment of the local inhabitants. Their presence is seen as the result of migration. [See the recent NY Times article, Migrants to China’s West Bask in Prosperity, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/07/world/asia/07xinjiang.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=Chinese%20settlers&st=cse.]

What might you call Israeli settlements in the West Bank if you were to use another term? If you want them dismantled, then you don’t want to use a term that seems benign. If you want them to remain, then you prefer a term without negative baggage. And if you search for a neutral term without clear-cut positive or negative connotations, then you will likely be accused by one side or another of bias.

The suggestion box is now open. . .What else could we call Israeli places of abode on the West Bank and how might we relate to them differently if they had a different name?
Communities? – Jewish Communities? Bedroom Communities? Gated Communities (my favorite)? Towns? Development Towns? Villages? Built-Up Areas?
Or we could go overtly partisan:
Colonies? Imperialist Outposts? Potemkin Villages?

What about the people? What else could we call Israelis living in the West Bank other than settlers?
We could go positive: immigrants or pioneers.
We could go negative: interlopers, usurpers, colonizers, squatters.
We could go neutral: inhabitants, populace, residents.

Small settlements not authorized by the Israeli government are called outposts. They could just as easily and just as legitimately be called camps.

Indeed, imagine if we switched the names and began to speak of Palestinian refugee settlements and of Israeli camps in the West Bank. Or what if we used the exact same words to describe Israeli and Palestinian settlements/camps? Communities could cover both. So could enclaves in many cases, as in Palestinian refugee enclaves in Lebanon or the Israeli enclave in downtown Hebron.

Enclave: a distinct territorial, cultural, or social unit enclosed within or as if within foreign territory enclaves>”
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/enclave

Are these terms likely to change? Probably not. Too many people – from the Middle East and from the West – want to continue using words like settlements and camps precisely because such words imply a makeshift impermanence. They want the settlements to disappear. They want the camps to eventually close.

Certainly, vast differences exist between the Israelis’ Ma’aleh Adumim settlement and the Palestinians’ Balata refugee camp, not only in infrastructure but in the rights and privileges, status, income and opportunities of the inhabitants. And, of course, there exists the most fundamental of psychological differences in how the residents view their communities. The Israelis hope to stay and build. The Palestinians dream of going home.

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WORDS MATTER, Part 2: Camps

Michael Lame, posted August 4, 2009

What is a camp?
In my youth, I sometimes went camping. In particular I remember a backpacking trip of several days in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California, my home state. At night, my friend Paul and I would set up camp, erect our two-man tent, build a fire, cook dinner, and crawl into our sleeping bags. In the morning we would disassemble the tent, pack up our gear, and begin our hike for the day. That, to me, is camping. Tents are associated with camping. When I hear or read the word camp, I think of a temporary site for food and shelter, with simple structures that are easily assembled and easily dismantled.

“CAMP: 1 a: a place usually away from urban areas where tents or simple buildings (as cabins) are erected for shelter or for temporary residence (as for laborers, prisoners, or vacationers) b: a group of tents, cabins, or huts http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/camp

Some friends of mine send their kids to summer camp. The buildings there may be permanent but the period of residency is not. That’s my second word-association for camp.

“CAMP: d: a place usually in the country for recreation or instruction often during the summer ; also: a program offering access to recreational or educational facilities for a limited period of time http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/camp

The third kind of camp I think of when hearing the word is for refugees. I imagine vast tent cities, with outdoor latrines and no electricity. Temporary facilities for temporary residents. I have seen films and photos of row upon row of canvas tents in such places in Africa and Asia run by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

Palestinian refugee camps don’t fit any of these mental pictures. That surprised me when I first visited such camps in the West Bank, Gaza, and Jordan twenty-five years ago. There is nothing camp-like about many Palestinian refugee camps.

Just as the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) provides its own definition of who is a refugee which is specific to Palestinians, so it gives us a similarly unique definition of a camp. “A camp, according to UNRWA’s working definition, is a plot of land placed at the disposal of UNRWA by the host government for accommodating Palestine refugees and for setting up facilities to cater to their needs. Areas not designated as such are not considered camps.” (http://www.un.org/unrwa/refugees/wheredo.html)

Initially, the Palestinian refugees were housed in tents. But eventually UNRWA replaced the tents with more durable shelters. Yet when catastrophe strikes, as it did in Gaza during the most recent Israeli incursion in December and January, or during the 2007 battles between the Lebanese Army and Fatah al-Islam militants in the Nahr el-Bared refugee camp, tents once again provide shelter to thousands while destroyed housing is rebuilt. That process can last months or even years.

Someone once said, “There is nothing as permanent as the continuous temporary.” The continued existence of Palestinian refugee camps, sixty years after most were originally established, proves the point. The very longevity of Palestinian refugee camps makes them unique in the world. Administratively, financially, even architecturally, these camps are anything but temporary.

If you were to visit one of the dozens of refugee camps (58 to be precise) in the West Bank, Gaza, Lebanon, Jordan, or Syria, and if you didn’t already know what it was, you might not suspect that you were in a refugee camp. You might think of it as something else – perhaps a slum or shanty town, a poor neighborhood or run-down suburb, or simply a city or village.

Sometimes it’s hard to know where a camp ends and the rest of the neighborhood begins. In some camps you will see multi-storey apartment buildings and paved roads; in others, tin-roofed hovels and narrow alley-ways. Some camps are set apart, in rural areas. Others are in the middle of cities. It’s not easy to generalize about their appearance, as they vary greatly from one to another, but the UNRWA description is a good place to start: “Socio-economic conditions in the camps are generally poor with a high population density, cramped living conditions and inadequate basic infrastructure such as roads and sewers.” (http://www.un.org/unrwa/refugees/wheredo.html).

In Gaza alone, half a million Palestinians live in the camps. The total number of Palestinian refugees registered with UNRWA who live in camps exceeds 1.37 million people. (Another 3.3 million registered refugees live outside the camps.)

The names by which we call things shape how we think about them. It makes a difference whether we call the ’48 war the War of Independence or Al-Naqba (the Catastrophe), whether we say Israel or the Zionist entity, Palestine or the Occupied Territories, the West Bank or Judea and Samaria. It makes a difference whether we call the areas where displaced Palestinians live camps or communities or something else.

The word camp implies a small temporary set of shelters, but when three or four generations have been born in a community, it is misleading to speak of it in terms that suggest the temporary. And when a hundred thousand people live in one locale, calling it a “large camp” doesn’t even come close to conveying the reality of the situation. The longer we go on thinking of a Palestinian refugee camp as temporary, the longer we will tolerate the perpetuation of that limbo existence – even if for just one more year, which becomes five and then fifty.

[Next blog posting: Words Matter, Part 3: Settlements]

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