By
Fausto Giudice (f.giudice@gwadaoka.org). Translated into english by Noel
Ignatiev (Race Traitor)
To those who say, "But you are dreaming," Sami Aldeeb, the "Global
Palestinian" who presides over the Association for One Democratic
State in Palestine/Israel (AODSPI), regularly responds, "Oh, you
prefer the present nightmare."
One must dream. To encourage dreaming, I offer this little tale, written
September 28, 2003, on the eve of the third anniversary of the Al Aqsa
Intifida, but still current, especially since the circus at Geneva. Let
each build on this daydream according to his own imagination.
Fatima
Karamazov Prime Minister of a New Country: the Republic of Canaan
Jerusalem
/ Al Qods, Jan. 30, 2030. For the first time in this century and for the
second time in history, Israel has a female Prime Minister. But more important
than her sex is the identity of this young womanæshe is only fortyæwhose
coalition has just carried the elections to the Knesset. Fatima Karamazov
is the offspring of a Russian non-Jewish fatheræin the Soviet Union
an atheist and Communist Party officialæand a Palestinian Islamic
mother. Born in 1990 in Moscow, she came at the age of three to Umm El
Fahm, where her mother was originally from. Her parents met in 1987 in
Leningrad, where her mother was studying medicine.
Fatima Karamazov, leader of the Slavic Union, the most popular Israeli
party, headed the New Alliance coalition, which brought together 127 Jewish
and non-Jewish groups and movements, including 42 Palestinian and 50 mixed
groups. Her platform, both simple and revolutionary, won the support of
32% of the voters, putting it far ahead of the traditional zionist parties,
which scored between 2% and 15%. In light of the inability of the latter
parties to reach an accord, the New Alliance has been given the task of
forming the government. Its path will be strewn with obstacles.
Commenting on the result of the elections, the Jerusalem Post ran a front
page in the form of an obituary, proclaiming in large black type the "death
of zionism." Ha'aretz
ran a full-color front page of its own, with Israeli and Palestinian flags
crossed, proclaiming in Hebrew, Arabic, and English, "Welcome to
the Republic of Canaan!"
Among the controversial points in the platform of the New Alliance are
the call for the dismantling of the 800-kilometer wall which has divided
the country in two for twenty-five years, the proclamation of a Constitution
following a referendum, and the granting of citizenship rights to all
inhabitants of "zone B," the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem,
which were annexed between 2008 and 2010 but whose inhabitants were denied
full Israeli citizenship. It will be recalled that the annexation sparked
the "Six-month War" of 2011 against Syria and the Islamic Republic
of Iraq, which led to 50,000 deaths on the Israeli side and 600,000 deaths
on the Syrian-Iraqi side. No one gained a victory in that war, which marked
the beginning of Israeli decline.
The New Alliance platform calls for a 25% reduction of the military budget,
the reduction of military service from three years to eighteen months,
the introduction of a civil service for appointments, and the incorporation
of Palestinians into the Army and the police. In addition, the New Alliance
has promised to allow immigrant workers residing in the country for more
than five years to obtain Israeli nationality or a ten-year resident permit.
But what fed the most debate during the electoral campaign was the proposal
attributed to Madame Karamazov to change the name of the country and to
inscribe the change in the projected Constitution to be submitted to a
referendum. The new name of the Israeli-Palestinian state would be Republic
of Canaan. Arabic would become an official state language along with Hebrew
and Russian; English and French would have the status of national languages.
The New Alliance carried the elections by creating an alliance among three
main components of the electorate: Slavic immigrants and their children,
Jews originally from Arab and African countries, and "Israeli Arabs."
The architects of the campaign were young people born in the "mixed
villages" created by their parents in Israel and the West Bank after
2005, which brought together native-born Israelis, Slavic immigrants,
and Palestinians. This initiative came from the leaders of the Slavic
Union, created in 2002 by immigrants from the former Soviet Union. The
population of these "mixed villages" now stands around 120,000.
This relative "new majority" is the first electoral _expression
of a demographic reality. It will become an absolute majority when the
five million voting-age inhabitants of "Zone B" become voters.
To make room for new "Zone B" voters, the New Alliance proposes
to increase the number of seats in the Knesset (Majlis in Arabic) from
120 to 201.
The "Zionist Rejection Front," which brought together seventeen
fundamentalist groups, has warned that in the event of a Karamazov victory
it would bring the country to "fire and blood rather than live bound
hand and foot to Muslim and Christian hordes." Karamazov, who was
guarded throughout the electoral campaign by a corps of bodyguards, half
Russian and half Palestinian, has promised a general amnesty for all political
and military prisoners, Palestinians as well as dissident Jews.
If zionism died on January 30, 2030, there still remains the task of turning
the new country into a stable and tangible reality. Until then, the government
would have to reflect the demographic composition of the country, with
a balance of Jewish and non-Jewish ministers. A Palestinian Christian
is foreseen as Minister of Justice and a descendant of Ethiopians as Minister
of Sport. The Ministers of the Interior and Defense would be Jews of Moroccan
and Iraqi origin. The Minister of Foreign Affairs would be the number-two
person in the Slavic Union, Konstantin Fedorov, also born in 1990 of parents
who had emigrated from the Soviet Union, who had been totally de-Judaized
for three generations. Throughout the campaign he refused to answer the
question, "Are you Jewish," declaring, "That is a private
affair, nobody's business but my own. When the Israelis understand that,
they will be able to have a normal, ordinary human society."
Jerusalem-Al Qods, capital of a new universal republic? With the election
of Karamazov, the dream at last becomes a reality. And the new Prime Minister
has a new relation by choice: the U.S. President Marta Emilia Hernandez,
leader of the Rainbow Coalition, now halfway into her second term (she
was elected in 2024 and reelected in 2028), who has been a model for Fatima
Karamazov.
Madame Hernandez was the first to address a long warm and congratulatory
telegram to Madame Karamazov, whose first official trip would have to
be to Washington. She is currently putting together an agenda for a round
of visits to the principal capitals of the region and of the world, to
allow the voice of the "new country" to be heard.
Note
on the author : journalist and writer, author of Turk Heads in France
(editions La Decouverte, 1989), Arabicides, A French Chronicle (editions
La Decouverte, 1992), Lost Youth (editions Autrement, 1995, . Member of
the Association for One Democratic State in Palestine/Israel [http://www.one-democratic-state.org/].
President of the Collectif guantanamo (France).
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