Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acronyms and Abbreviations
- Foreword by Ranabir Samaddar
- Preface
- ETHICAL ISSUES
- LAWS
- SOUTH ASIA
- INDIA
- GENDER
- INTERVIEW/CORRESPONDENCE
- Introduction
- Voices from Exile – 1
- Voices from Exile – 2
- Daughter of Isis
- Right of Return
- Letters from a Palestinian Refugee Camp
- REPRESENTATIONS
- Index
Right of Return
from INTERVIEW/CORRESPONDENCE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acronyms and Abbreviations
- Foreword by Ranabir Samaddar
- Preface
- ETHICAL ISSUES
- LAWS
- SOUTH ASIA
- INDIA
- GENDER
- INTERVIEW/CORRESPONDENCE
- Introduction
- Voices from Exile – 1
- Voices from Exile – 2
- Daughter of Isis
- Right of Return
- Letters from a Palestinian Refugee Camp
- REPRESENTATIONS
- Index
Summary
Lev Grinberg, political sociologist at Ben Gurion University, and public intellectual of Israel discusses the issue of Palestinian refugees and their ‘right of return’ in an interview with Aditi Bhaduri.
You are both a Zionist and a supporter of the Palestinians, who has branded Israel's military action in the occupied territories as ‘state terrorism’. How do you explain this dichotomy?
There is no contradiction in being a Zionist and recognizing the national rights of the Palestinians. In common perception, Zionism is synonymous with Palestinian dispossession and colonization. For me, Zionism is completely different – meaning living in a Jewish community, speaking in Hebrew, celebrating Jewish culture and holidays without fear that I shall be persecuted for my Jewishness. But it also does not mean the repression of the Palestinian people. On the contrary, since my arrival in Israel I started to struggle against discrimination of the Palestinians Arabs in Israel and against the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza strip – the Palestinian territories. Two years after my arrival in Israel I founded a students' movement called ‘Campus’, which had both Jewish and Arab students. Some of the Arabs of that movement are today members of Knesset and gained their political experience in that movement. As a Zionist, for me it was clear that if I was against the discrimination of Jews in the Diaspora I must be against the discrimination of the Arabs.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Fleeing People of South AsiaSelections from Refugee Watch, pp. 382 - 386Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2009