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A Day In The Life Of Coexistence

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  • A Day In The Life Of Coexistence

    A DAY IN THE LIFE OF COEXISTENCE
    By Seth J. Frantzman, [email protected]

    Jerusalem Post
    Sep 24, 2008 22:02
    Israel

    In its book review section on August 23, the Economist included two
    books by the late Edward Said and Daniel Barenboim. Although the review
    was ostensibly about music, which the books are also ostensibly about
    (Everything Is Connected: The Power of Music by Barenboim and Music at
    the Limits by Said) the article was titled "Friends across the divide"
    and included the cliche "working together from opposite ends of the
    Israeli-Palestinian divide."

    The article thus claims that Barenboim and Said are practicing
    "coexistence" and "learning about the other" when they discuss music
    and discuss politics. Thus Barenboim's West-East Divan Orchestra
    which he founded with Said in 1999 is part of this coexistence. The
    article once again reminds us of the how most coexistence is really
    just about two people who already agree masquerading as coexisting.

    It was the same story with a BBC article on August 28, entitled
    "Summer camp sows seeds of peace," which is ostensibly about the
    Seeds of Peace organization which sends young Palestinian and Israeli
    teenagers to the Maine woods for summer camp where they learn about
    "the other" and practice coexistence. The BBC showcases two girls
    who are practicing this coexistence, Nadia Tibi, the Israeli, and
    Majdoline Shahed, the Palestinian.

    But Tibi and Shahed are both Arabs - and presumbably both Muslim -
    the only difference being that one is from Israel and the other from
    the Palestinian territories.

    Then there is the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker
    non-profit, whose "Profiles of Peace: celebrating 40 years of Israeli
    and Palestinian peace builders" ostensibly provides profiles of Jews
    and Arabs who are practicing peace. But the only Jews selected seem
    to be the most extreme anti-Israel voices and most of them are only
    Israeli in citizenship, they were almost all born in the United States
    or elsewhere. They include Jeff Halper, who recently went to Gaza
    illegally to campaign on behalf of Palestinians, and Amira Hass,
    who lived in Gaza for the better part of a decade reporting only
    on Palestinians.

    The Palestinians, such as Jad Issac, practice peace by doing the same
    thing the Israelis do, working with Palestinians and encouraging
    Palestinian nationalism. This coexistence project doesn't involve
    people who are coexisting at all, they all agree on their condemnation
    of Israel and they all focus exclusively on the rights of Muslim
    Arab Palestinians.

    RETURNING TO Barenboim and Said, it is worthwhile examining just how
    much of a charade it is to claim they are different in any way. Both
    were born to wealthy families. Both enjoy the music of Richard Wagner,
    the famous anti-Semite who inspired Hitler, and they both condemned
    Israel at every opportunity to the extent that Barenboim even holds
    Palestinian citizenship, just like Jeff Halper.

    But Said's masquerading as a Palestinian Arab is almost as comical as
    Barenboim's attempt to masquerade as an Israeli Jew. Said spent less
    than a few years of his life in Jerusalem and this was not because
    he was barred from going there. He spent his childhood at one of his
    parents' multiple homes in Egypt and Lebanon, living with servants,
    and later immigrated to the US. His father had American citizenship
    because he had volunteered to fight in World War I, and Said spent a
    few of his youthful summers in the Maine woods at camp, perhaps the
    same camp where Seeds of Peace is now located.

    Said was an Anglican Christian, and his English was better than his
    Arabic. His parents were disdainful towards the culture of the Middle
    East and made fun of the idea of an "Arab general" leading the Arabs
    against Israel in 1948. Said's early experience at coexistence with
    others was with his family's Jewish female servants and his Greek and
    Armenian drivers. His house was located in a posh area alongside the
    houses of Europeans who resided in Egypt, and he rarely even met the
    Arabs he would spend his life defending.

    He was so ensconced in European culture that on one summer holiday
    in Jerusalem he was taken to a photo studio in the Old City where he
    dressed up in fake Beduin clothes alongside his sister and had his
    photo taken by an Armenian photographer, much as many Europeans used
    to do at that time (dressing up like Lawrence of Arabia) and much
    as Americans do in Tombstone, Arizona when they dress up as cowboys
    and play the part of Billy the Kid. Said captions this photo in his
    autobiography Out of Place, "traditional Palestinian dress" but his
    wealthy Arab family never dressed this way and no wealthy Jerusalemite
    Arab family did either. Later Said would term this portrayal of the
    romantic Arab world of Lawrence of Arabia, "Orientalism," a term that
    applied, ironically, as much to himself as those he critiqued.

    But just as the Argentinian-born Barenboim plays the Israeli, a country
    he has rarely resided in, to claim that he is somehow critiquing
    his country, Said played the Palestinian. Neither had anything to do
    with Israel or the Palestinians in their daily lives and neither was
    ensconced in the everyday culture of a place such as Jerusalem. They
    aped the culture and recalled a few youthful moments spent in the
    country to weave a tale of coexistence and Arab-Israeli conflict into
    their writings and professional lives as an academic and a musician.

    Together they symbolize the extent to which coexistence more often
    than not means two people who have everything in common pretending
    that they are from different backgrounds to make themselves more
    interesting to the outside world.
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