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Written by Hazem Jamjoum, The Electronic Intifada Hazem Jamjoum, The Electronic Intifada
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Category: News News
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Published: 27 April 2009 27 April 2009
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Last Updated: 27 April 2009 27 April 2009
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Created: 27 April 2009 27 April 2009
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Hits: 3371 3371
In recent years, increasing
numbers of individuals around the world have begun adopting and
developing an analysis of Israel as an apartheid regime. This can be
seen in the ways that the global movement in support of the Palestinian
anti-colonial struggle is taking on a pointedly anti-apartheid
character, as evidenced by the growth of Israeli Apartheid Week ( http://apartheidweek.org/).
Further, much of the recent international diplomatic support for Israel
has increasingly taken on the form of denying that racial
discrimination is a root cause of the oppression of Palestinians. This
has taken on new levels of absurdity in Western responses to the April
2009 Durban Review Conference, a follow-up to the 2001 World Conference
Against Racism held in Durban, South Africa in which Palestinians were
identified as victims of racism (the US, Israel, Canada and Italy have
already announced that they will not participate because of the
potential for criticism of Israel).
Many of the writings stemming from this analysis work to detail levels
of similarity and difference with apartheid South Africa, rather than
looking at apartheid as a system that can be practiced by any state. To
some extent, this strong emphasis on historical comparisons is
understandable given that boycott, divestment and sanctions is the
central campaign called for by Palestinian civil society for solidarity
with the Palestinian liberation struggle, and is modeled on the one
that helped end South African apartheid. However, an over-emphasis on
similarities and differences confines the use of the term to narrow
limits. With the expanding agreement that the term "apartheid" is
useful in describing the level and layout of Israel's crimes, it is
important that our understanding of the "apartheid label" be deepened,
both as a means of informing activism in support of the Palestinian
anti-colonial struggle, and in order to most effectively make use of
comparisons with other struggles.