By moving to Galilee, settlers will turn from national problem to a
solution
Yair Lapid
One of the most well known arguments advanced by settlers is that it
doesn’t matter whether they would be evacuated or not – after all, once
the struggle for Judea and Samaria ends, the battle for the Galilee
will get underway (they also really like to add “and the battle for
Jaffa as well” in order to scare the Tel Avivians, but it’s just a case
of hilltop humor.)
Based on figures published by the Central Bureau of Statistics on
Wednesday, this argument is well founded. At this point already, 53.1
percent of Galilee residents are Arab, while only 46.9 percent are
Jewish, and the gap has been growing consistently for a decade now.
Those concerned about Israel’s existence as a Jewish state cannot
ignore this trend. In order to change it we need a very specific type
of Israelis: People who are not interested in living in urban centers
and who prefer small communities, while being able to adjust to new
places. We need people who love mountain air as fresh as a Galilee-made
cabernet wine and know how to battle our indifferent government
establishment, which insists on ignoring the demographic problem at its
doorstep.
The problem, of course, is that such Israelis are not commonplace
around here. In fact, at this time there is only one place where we can
find them – at the settlements. There alone we have about 250,000
people who have the ability, with one swift gesture, to turn from being
a national problem to being a solution.
The “politics of settlement,” as it was referred to by the late Rabbi
Zvi Yehuda Kook, must move house. Not only because of the problems and
disagreement it stirs in its current location, but also because we need
it much more urgently elsewhere.
Real Zionist challenge
The settlers arrived at Judea and Samaria because they felt – whether
justifiably or not – that they were called up for a mission by the
State. This explains a large part of their sense of insult these days,
when it appears to them that this very same State treats them as if
they were a nuisance. The proposed “evacuation-compensation” law in
fact calls on them to trade their values for money. This is precisely
what many of them think about the value system of the new Israeliness.
It would be better for us to offer them something that is more suitable
for them: A real Zionist challenge that is incredibly vital for the
maintenance of a Jewish majority, along with a three-bedroom house
overlooking a spring.
If they agree, the Galilee would never become the next issue. If they
refuse, at least we would know what really matters to them. The only
question left is whether we still know how to make such offers.
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Move to the Galilee
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)