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How Can India be Israel’s Friend?
What would
Mahatma Gandhi make of this newfound love of Indian leaders for the
apartheid state of Israel?
By Aijaz Zaka Syed
Sunday February 03, 2008
PalestineChronicle.com
http://palestinechronicle.com/story-020308150843.htm
It’s hard not to admire Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi whose 60th death
anniversary India commemorated last week. Without Gandhi, the
history of India’s freedom struggle would be as incomplete as
Shakespeare’s Hamlet without Prince of Denmark.
But the lasting impact of the man derided by Churchill as a
‘half-naked fakir’ is hardly limited to the sub-continent. From
Nelson Mandela to Martin Luther King, every aspiring leader has
turned to him for inspiration and guidance. What really wins hearts
and minds of ordinary people like me is Gandhi’s utter humility and
equally unshakable faith in his beliefs and ideals.
And the more you read about him, the more he impresses you as a
leader who looked far ahead of his time. More importantly, he had
the courage of conviction and spoke the truth as it is.
Look at the following lines, written 70 years ago, in 1938.
Commenting on the campaign by imperial powers and Zionist groups to
found Israel on Palestinian land, Gandhi wrote in his paper Harijan
on Nov 26, 1938: “My sympathies are all with the Jews. They have
been the untouchables of Christianity. The parallel between their
treatment by Christians and the treatment of untouchables by Hindus
is very close.
“But my sympathy does not blind me to the requirements of justice.
The cry for the national home for the Jews does not make much appeal
to me. The sanction for it is sought in the Bible and the tenacity
with which the Jews have hankered after return to Palestine. Why
should they not, like other peoples of the earth, make that country
their home where they are born and where they earn their livelihood?
“Palestine belongs to Arabs in the same sense that England belongs
to the English or France to the French. It’s wrong and inhuman to
impose the Jews on the Arabs. What is going on in Palestine today
cannot be justified by any moral code of conduct. It would be a
crime against humanity to reduce the proud Arabs so that Palestine
can be restored to the Jews partly or wholly as their national home.
The nobler course would be to insist on a just treatment of the Jews
wherever they are born and bred.”
Historic words or what? It’s as if the Mahatma’s far-sighted eyes
saw the disastrous consequences the creation of Israel in the heart
of the Arab world at the gunpoint by the Western powers would
unleash.
Reading Gandhi’s prophetic words today, I wonder how the Mahatma
would react to the growing proximity between the country he fought
hard to liberate and the state whose creation he warned would be a
‘crime against humanity’.
Given his strong views on Palestine and the imperial attempts to
impose their own Jewish population on the Arabs, I wonder what the
visionary leader would have said on the Indian establishment’s
current wooing of Israel, the world’s most racist and ruthless
regime. It was Gandhi’s unwavering support for Arab position that
set the direction of independent India’s foreign policy and
consistent backing for the Palestinian cause.
Jawaharlal Nehru, the first prime minister and a formidable leader
in his own right, carried the Gandhian legacy forward with his
passionate championing of the Palestinian cause and identification
with the Arabs.
Nehru’s successors including his daughter Indira and grandson Rajiv
Gandhi followed in his footsteps. India led the developing world in
vehemently speaking out against Israel’s persecution of the
Palestinians at every available opportunity and platform. No wonder
India had a special place in the hearts of the Palestinians too. The
inimitable Yasser Arafat used to be a frequent visitor to India and
very close to the Gandhis, especially to Indira. She had been the
sister Abu Ammar (Arafat) never had.
This is exactly why this newfound love of the current Indian leaders
for Israel and all that it stands for is most bewildering, to say
the least. It’s all the more disconcerting considering the present
government is led by the Congress, the party of the Gandhis, the
Nehrus, the Ali brothers, Azad and millions of other freedom loving
people.
I wonder what Gandhi and Nehru would make of the recent launch of an
Israeli spy satellite by India. Even though the Indian government
has been rather coy about this whole spooky business, Israel itself
has reassured its people that the satellite would help it spy on
Iran, Syria and ‘other enemies of Israel’ in the Middle East.
You don’t have to be a genius to know who Israel’s enemies are. In
other words, the whole of Arab and Muslim world has come under the
hawk eyes of this satellite.
What was the Indian government thinking? Are we now going to spy on
our friends for Israel?
India’s ties with the Middle East go way back in time, even before
Islam. These relations have developed and strengthened over the past
thousand years or so, thanks to India’s large Muslim community. With
a population of over 200 million, the community is the world’s
biggest Muslim community.
No wonder the whole of Arab and Muslim world including Iran has
always seen India as a great friend and ally; a friend who has
always stood by them and spoken out against injustice everywhere.
On the other hand, the only thing common between India and Israel is
the letter ‘I’.
This is why these growing ties between India and Israel are so
profoundly disturbing.
This is what we had all feared when US president Bush inked that now
infamous nuclear deal with PM Manmohan Singh.
As many courageous Indian leaders including Prakash Karat of CPM
have warned, this deal with the US comes at a great price to India’s
ideals and interests.
The reigning superpower, already thinly spread in the Middle East
and Central Asia, is desperately looking for a surrogate power to
promote its own agenda and protect its geopolitical interests. And
India is that surrogate power.
There are no free lunches in the world of international relations.
Everything is quid pro quo. And India’s growing ‘cooperation’ with
Israel is part of this quid pro quo.
You marry Uncle Sam and you end up with Israel as stepson.
But even if this new love of Indian leadership for Israel is driven
by the national interest, it’s overlooking some fundamental facts at
a great cost to India’s long-term geopolitical interests.
In case the memory of the South Block mandarins has deserted them,
here are some home truths to refresh it:
The Middle East is home to a large Indian population. In fact, it is
the biggest Indian Diaspora, much bigger than our more pampered
cousins in the US and Europe. While the people of Indian origin in
the West are never likely to return home for good, Indians in the
Gulf eventually go home. More important, the Indians in the Gulf are
the biggest single source of vital foreign exchange for their
country.
If India is one of the fastest growing economies today and has
emerged as a key economic player on the world stage, this steady
source of income from the Gulf has played a crucial role in it.
Does the Indian leadership want to jeopardize all this by dumping
its traditional friends in the Muslim world for a murderous,
apartheid state based on lies and deception?
Besides, isn’t it strange that at a time when an energy-hungry world
is increasingly reaching out to the Middle East -- home to the
world’s most known reserves of oil and gas -- India is snapping out
of its historical ties with the Muslim world? Just look at China.
Why do you think it’s bending backwards to woo the Arabs and
Iranians?
But even if we rise above this business of national interest, just
look at what Israel, backed by the US, has been doing to the
Palestinians? The whole of Palestine has been transformed into a
large concentration camp and gulag with its people being deprived of
daily basics like food, water and fuel? Hundreds of thousands of
innocents have paid with their lives for the Holocaust the Zionists
have inflicted on the Holy Land. And we want to be partners and
friends with such people?
Would Gandhi approve of it? Given his beliefs and ideals, I bet the
Mahatma would be leading another long march against this betrayal of
India’s cherished ideals.
-Aijaz Zaka Syed is a senior editor and columnist of Khaleej Times.
Write to him at
aijazsyed@khaleejtimes.com
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