ADELAIDE, Australia -- Prominent left-wing Israeli
academic and author Tanya Reinhart plans to quit as
professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University
in protest against her Government's handling of the
Palestinian issue.
Professor Reinhart, who recently gave a public lecture at
the
University of Melbourne, said Israel's walling of the
large and prosperous West Bank was cutting off the
Palestinian people from their lands and each other. She
said she could no longer live in Israel while it did what
she
said was the first attempt in history to imprison a nation
with a wall that
cut off villages from their farmland.
"This is not something I know from history, that you could
control people by simply locking them in designated
areas," Professor Reinhart said in Adelaide, where she
delivered the Edward Said Memorial Lecture. "This is not
the imprisonment of dissidents but the imprisonment of a
whole nation."
She said the walling of the West Bank was causing mounting
international opposition, and the International Court of
Justice found Israel was
Taking land deep inside Palestine for its own. If
completed, the wall would displace up to 400,000
Palestinians and force them to move to the
Outskirts of the bigger cities.
"It's not just a land grab, it's turning the West Bank
into a natural
open- air prison, just like Gaza," she said.
Professor Reinhart, whose Melbourne lecture, "What Are
They Fighting
For?" was sponsored by Women for Palestine, grew up with
Palestinian
friends. She has been a harsh critic of Israel's
occupation of Palestinian land since the 1967 Israeli-Arab
Six Day War.
In her latest book, Road Map to Nowhere, she argues that
the Israeli Government, including former prime minister
Ariel Sharon, lied to the
World by using arguments about Israel's right to exist as
a cover for
taking land and resources from the Palestinian people.
"Palestinians should not have to pay the price of the
Holocaust," she
said. "It seems that it has been forgotten that this is a
simple and classical conflict over Palestinian land and
resources that Israel has been
occupying since 1967." She said the recent attacks on
Lebanon were similarly unjustified and that Israel used
the capture of their soldier, Gilad Shalit, as a pretext
for war with Hezbollah. But the war had been planned for
some time and was based on a vision of Israel that
extended into southern Lebanon.
"Lebanese know that (1948 prime minister David)
Ben-Gurion's vision
for the state of Israel was based on the Litani (River) as
the natural northern border of Israel," she said.
"Everything they did suggested they have
never given up the idea of the Litani."
She said Israeli people would never defend taking land
from Lebanon
but the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier was used by the
Government as a failed pretext for attempting to
ethnically cleanse southern Lebanon.
Professor Reinhart said she was leaving Tel Aviv with
great regret.
"I can't stay, I can't, it's very sad," she said.