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Common Ground News Service - Middle East
22 July 2010
JERUSALEM - Jerusalem is revered worldwide as the
cradle of the three monotheistic religions. Moslems, Jews and Christians
– all view it as a holy ground. Thus, full respect for the rights of all
three – one that is based on mutual understanding and recognition – is
an inevitable requirement on the road to peace.
Until each of the parties arrives at the realisation that the city
cannot be solely “his” the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will remain
irresolvable. The past has proven that no one nation or one religion can
claim sole ownership over Jerusalem and receive international
recognition for it. Jordan failed to get such recognition when it ruled
over East Jerusalem and the Old City between 1948 and 1967. Now Israel
faces a similar response. In other words, international recognition will
not be granted to one side at the expense of the other and will be given
only to an arrangement whereby the local parties mutually agree to share
this sacred city.
The late Feisal Husseini, perhaps the most important Palestinian leader
of our age, scion of the Moslem Husseini family of Jerusalem, coined the
term ‘Our Jerusalem’. “A day will come when a Jew speaking about ‘our
Jerusalem’, will mean Israelis and Palestinians, and an Arab speaking
about ‘our Jerusalem’ will mean Palestinians and Israelis,” he said.
Husseini sought to tell Palestinians and Israelis that the claims of
both nations should be fully recognised in this Holy City in order to
reach a resolution to the conflict.
Despite extreme segregation of Jews and Arabs in the city and 43 years
of efforts by consecutive Israeli governments to create a Jewish
majority there is still scope for Palestinian sovereignty over East
Jerusalem. But with Israel continuing to create facts on the ground that
would pre-empt the possibility of Jerusalem serving as capital to two
states, time is running out. This is the reason why the Palestinian
Authority (PA) has been insisting on freezing Israeli settlement
building in East Jerusalem during the current proximity talks.
In a series of closed roundtable discussions conducted by the
Israel/Palestine Center for
Research and Information (IPCRI) a group of Palestinian and Israeli
experts on Jerusalem – many of them well-known public figures – was
brought together for an in depth discussion on the future of the Old
City within its historical walls.
The group arrived at the following conclusions: Israelis must recognise
Palestinian sovereignty over the Moslem and Christian quarters, and the
Palestinians must recognise Israeli sovereignty over the Jewish quarter.
The only area of dispute within the walls of the Old City for the group
was the fate of the Armenian Quarter. Due to its unique population and
its sensitive location near the Jewish quarter – both sides claim
jurisdiction over it.
The competing claims to the Armenian quarter are, in my opinion, a
challenge which is also an opportunity. The best compromise solution to
it could be joint sovereignty. Whereas the rest of the city would be
divided between Israeli and Palestinian rule, the Armenian Quarter would
be ruled by a joint Israeli-Palestinian entity with both countries
having equal rights in the quarter. Joint sovereignty over the Armenian
Quarter could potentially facilitate opportunities for both sides to
learn how to build trust and cooperation, essential ingredients for a
stable future relationship.
Another conclusion reached by the Israeli and Palestinian experts had to
do with maintaining the status quo with respect to Moslem and Jewish
holy places. This means the Haram Al-Sharif, the Noble Sanctuary
compound, known in the Jewish world as the Temple Mount, will fall under
the sovereignty of the Arab nations and Palestinian administration.
Until this moment Haram Al-Sharif has been administered by the Jordanian
government Moslem trust (Jordanian Waqf) and this is recognised by
Israel. The Western Wall (the Kotel in Hebrew) and the plaza facing it
are under the Israeli sovereignty of the Kotel rabbinate and are
administered by it. This status quo has been in place for the past 43
years and accords with mainstream Jewish Halacha. Perhaps only the will
of God or the arrival of the Messiah can change the present set-up.
Beyond the Old City walls, the expert panel agreed that settlements
around East Jerusalem, like Gilo, Pisgat Zeev, Neve Yaacov, Givat Zeev
and others could be part of the agreed upon land swap that will
compensate the Palestinian Authority with land of equal size and quality
in the Jerusalem district.
Despite split sovereignty over the city, Jerusalem as a whole should be
an open undivided city for all its citizens. Checkpoints, if needed,
should be on the periphery of the city and not within the city’s
boundaries.
Feisal Husseini felt strongly that the rights of both nations should be
recognised in Jerusalem. His expression, “our Jerusalem” encapsulates
his uniquely fair and humane approach. “Our Jerusalem”: one city split
between two sovereignties yet geographically undivided with open
borders.
Time is running out for making this vision a real possibility. The
Israeli leadership must stop submitting to pressure by settler groups
and realise that a two state solution with joint sovereignty in
Jerusalem is the desired preference of both peoples and the
international community.
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* Hanna Siniora is publisher of the Jerusalem Times, Chairman of the
European Palestinian Chamber of Commerce, and co-CEO of the
Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information (IPCRI). This
article was written for the Common Ground News Service (CGNews).
Source: Common Ground News Service (CGNews), 22 July 2010,
www.commongroundnews.org
Copyright permission is granted for publication.
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