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Tourism in Service of Israeli Settler Colonialism with Halah Ahmad image

Tourism in Service of Israeli Settler Colonialism with Halah Ahmad

S1 E13 ยท Rethinking Palestine
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125 Plays3 years ago

Halah Ahmad joins Yara Hawari to discuss how tourism, specifically religious tourism, has been a key pillar of the Israeli settler-colonial project, legitimizing and expanding the theft of Palestinian land, since the first Zionists settled in Palestine.

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Tourism and Displacement in Palestine

00:00:00
Speaker
up to 4 million tourists coming each year to historic Palestine, most of them visiting Jerusalem and the Dead Sea. And there's a clear connection here between both not only the displacement and the illegal land theft that predicates tourism at these illegal settlements, but also the economic deprivation and suppression that results from that as well.

Platform for Palestinian Voices

00:00:31
Speaker
This is Rethinking Palestine, a podcast from Ashabaka, the Palestinian Policy Network. We are a virtual think tank that aims to foster public debate on Palestinian human rights and self-determination. We draw upon the vast knowledge and experience of the Palestinian people, whether in Palestine or in exile, to put forward strong and diverse Palestinian policy voices. In this podcast, we will be bringing these voices to you so that you can listen to Palestinians sharing their analysis wherever you are in the world.

Impact of COVID-19 on Tourism

00:01:04
Speaker
Next month, the Israeli regime is set to open its borders to tourists who meet the various COVID requirements after over 18 months of being pretty much closed. Its tourism industry has taken a serious blow, as of course has the Palestinian tourism industry.
00:01:20
Speaker
Now, we may think of tourism as a rather benign aspect of the Israeli apartheid regime, but actually it plays a key role, specifically religious tourism, in legitimizing and expanding Israeli theft of Palestinian land.

Tourism and Occupation

00:01:37
Speaker
Joining me to discuss this on this episode is Hala Ahmed, a writer and policy analyst with a particular focus on social welfare, equitable development and economic justice. She's also a former US policy fellow with a Shabaka. Now Hala wrote a policy brief on this topic entitled, Tourism in the Service of Occupation and Annexation, which was published last year.
00:02:01
Speaker
and you can find it on our website. Hala, thank you so much for joining me for this episode. Thank you so much for having me, Ada. Hala, perhaps we could start off with a historical background on Zionist tourism in Palestine and how this contributed to the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948 on top of what is now colonized Palestine.
00:02:22
Speaker
Thank you so much for hosting this topic and this podcast, Yada. It's true that this issue of tourism in service of occupation and annexation and in service of the Zionist settler colonial project has a long history. And in fact, despite COVID-19 closures, the Israeli state has been working
00:02:42
Speaker
to dramatically build out its tourism in the occupied territories in preparation for the return of tourists and in preparation for the turn of administrations and support presumed within the White House with the change of hands from the Trump administration to the Biden administration. So in fact, it's a crucial time to talk about this. But let me back up a little bit and start with the early days of Zionist colonization of Palestine.
00:03:08
Speaker
In the meetup to World War II, the Zionist movement did not have the kind of widespread support you might expect for a colonial effort that was just a few years away from committing the neckband.
00:03:20
Speaker
displacing close to a million Palestinians and establishing the state of Israel. And many European Jews were not convinced that an ethno-religious state made sense. You know, they spoke different languages, were embedded in different civil and political life throughout Europe. And of course, there are a lot of things that changed the calculus for the success of Zionism and the settler colonial movement that it represented. But early Zionist settlers in that vein founded what was called the Tourist Development Association of Palestine.
00:03:47
Speaker
And that entity alongside the Jewish Colonization Association were key actors in the social and economic project which was being undertaken for Zionist colonization of Palestine. And they engaged in a number of projects to encourage migration to Israel, what they would call Israel.

Zionist Tourism and Colonization

00:04:08
Speaker
So some of the activities of the Tourist Development Association of Palestine included the creation of posters, the commissioning of posters, included the commissioning of maps, and in coordination with the Jewish Colonization Association also included other areas of touristic investment, including hotels. So just to give a picture of what those looked like, you know, some of the posters
00:04:34
Speaker
the most famous example of which is the Visit Palestine poster by Franz Krauts. It pictures a silhouette of an olive tree in the foreground and looks out on the old city of Jerusalem, which has sort of a glow, an orange-yellow hue, greenery just within the walls, and dome of the rock in focus.
00:04:53
Speaker
It was among many posters with a vibrant landscape, but also many religious symbols which were meant to sort of create part of this important mythology that the Zionist colonization efforts relied on to build the case for migration to Palestine.
00:05:10
Speaker
In addition to those posters, like I mentioned, were Zionist maps which would impose presumed biblical sites on top of existing cities and topographies to create a visual anchor both for Christian and Jewish audiences to see the land of Palestine through the lens of antiquity and create an imaginary that there was this empty land of Palestine and an imaginary of Jewish continuity there.
00:05:32
Speaker
And the maps actually became serious anchors for planning extensive colonial settlement that would then actually obscure and erase indigenous Palestinians from the landscape.

Archaeology and Erasure

00:05:43
Speaker
And these posters were important for establishing a number of founding myths and characterizing the landscape in ways that
00:05:50
Speaker
are very similar to other colonial movements of the time. You know, the founding leaders of the Zionist movement, you know, famously David Ben-Gurion and Moshe Shrutok, the first and second prime ministers of Israel, used explicitly pejorative views to characterize the Palestinians living there at the time. They would say that they would bring modern cultural and scientific knowledge to make the wilderness bloom and they would
00:06:14
Speaker
bring this sort of intellectual labor to Palestine. And in some cases, explicitly reflect that Zionists had come to conquer the land from people who had been inhabiting it with what he called savage culture. These were images and ideas that were reflected back in some of the tourist development
00:06:35
Speaker
materials and the posters that were put forward. And in fact, surprisingly, despite the relative poverty that many Zionists will talk about for early Zionist settlers in Palestine, several dozen hotels emerged between 1917 and 1948, and some are still standing.
00:06:54
Speaker
including the King David Hotel in Jerusalem. So tourism was a fundamental part of the founding mythology and the founding ideology for settling in Palestine and erasing Palestinians from the landscape, but also characterizing Jewish settlement as a sort of natural continuity with the past, which rested on, of course, the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians.
00:07:20
Speaker
Hela, you mentioned that really key to all of this was erasing Palestinians from the landscape. Can you explain to us a bit more how this was and continues to be done through the merging of archaeological practices with biblical narratives?
00:07:40
Speaker
archaeology becomes much like tourism hand in hand, a political tool for Palestinian erasure. Edward Saeed writes about this in Orientalism. There was a concerted effort by Zionists to remove Palestinians from historical record. And this was done through selective archaeology and sort of an orientalizing depiction of indigenous Palestinians as, as I said, uncivilized, unadvanced and
00:08:06
Speaker
all of this relative to this European settler population. And this was very important after the Nakba because although early Zionists were very clearly and self-described as a settler colonial movement, after 1948 they sought to transform that identity both internally and externally and certainly wanted to quash any claims Palestinians to indigeneity and statehood.
00:08:30
Speaker
So, you know, Zionists use archaeology as a tool to continue legitimizing their claim to the land that they had confiscated by force. And so the fields of archaeology, you know, this is a very deep topic, and there's a lot of contestation in the matter in Palestine. And, you know, I only treat it very lightly in the brief, but a great source on this is Nadiya Abdul-Hajj, her book Facts on the Ground. And she writes about the ways in which, you know, in the 50s and 60s, Zionists
00:08:57
Speaker
would treat archaeology as a kind of national hobby. It was both communal activity and communal recreation and tourism around historic Palestine. And the key focus of that archaeological project was to validate the founding myths of this territorial claim of these European Jews to the land, which
00:09:17
Speaker
meant whether the archaeology was scientifically rigorous. That's another question, but it was very important to try to lay facts on the ground, as Nadia says, surrounding this idea of Jewish continuity in Palestine and particularly drawing on religious symbols and ideas as evidence.

Colonial Projects and Archaeology

00:09:38
Speaker
In some cases, archaeological sites will have
00:09:40
Speaker
very little tangible artifacts, let's say, but a lot of biblical narratives surrounding it. And that becomes very important. And many of the sites that were a focus in that time became key touristic sites in the present. So archaeology and the tourism tied to a nationalistic practice of that, it continues to be central, both in Palestinian lands, theft and legitimization of the Israeli colonial project across
00:10:04
Speaker
historic Palestine. And this is especially true, I would say, in the West Bank and Jerusalem, which I'm sure we can talk about more modern examples of the ways that archaeology is used in the displacement of Palestinians. And Halla, you mentioned
00:10:19
Speaker
importantly that archaeology became a hobby for a lot of Zionists in the early days and indeed actually many archaeologists in the 60s and 70s were former army generals during the Nakaba and it was said that they would carry a trowel in one hand and the Old Testament in the other and I think that's you know really testament to what they were searching for and what kind of archaeological practices they were engaging in and as you said this continues to today and I think
00:10:47
Speaker
One example of this par excellence is what's happening in Silwan, the Palestinian neighborhood in Jerusalem in Silwan. The Zionist regime is literally digging archaeological tunnels under the homes of Palestinians, dislodging the foundations of these homes in the service of what they call archaeology, but also tourism to put on a full display of continuous and ancient
00:11:11
Speaker
Jewish history in the city and much of the archaeology and the archaeological practices that are actually contested by various different international bodies. There are several important examples in Jerusalem that we could talk about and the backbone to much of that problematic, to put it lightly, archaeological practice in Jerusalem is that there are two primary right-wing settler organizations
00:11:39
Speaker
that are operating in Jerusalem and seeking to, in their own terms, really, Judaize the neighborhoods of East Jerusalem, create a different demographic reality. And the two are Atarat Kohanim and Elad. And Elad, very interestingly, as a right-wing settler organization, very explicit right-wing ideologies, owns the primary contract for archaeological work in Jerusalem.
00:12:01
Speaker
In fact, they are meant to be a nonprofit organization, but a lot of their financial information is private because of this very crucial, let's say, archaeological contract that they have with the government. They have this famous center that many, many religious tourists stop at, the Air David Center and the City of David National Park in Wazi Silwan.
00:12:22
Speaker
These centers, first of all, they create heavy policing within the Palestinian neighborhoods, but they are on confiscated land.

Tourism Narratives and Exclusion

00:12:31
Speaker
The archaeological projects that they have undertaken are putting many, many Palestinians at risk of eviction. There was an Edwistan neighborhood, there was an eviction order for 1300 or 1500
00:12:44
Speaker
families. And that was particularly for an archaeological theme park to be built in place of their homes. And this is just one of multiple examples, not only an effort to Judaize the neighborhood, but also to use archaeology and also the pretense that archaeology is to expand as well. The Bible Trail, what they call the Bible Trail throughout East Jerusalem,
00:13:05
Speaker
All of these archaeological pretenses are in service of displacement and ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in East Jerusalem. So the tide there is very explicit and explicitly backed by the Israeli state as well. If you are enjoying this podcast, please visit our website, www.al-shabaka.org, where you will find more Palestinian policy analysis and where you can join our mailing list and donate to support our work.
00:13:35
Speaker
And part of that religious tourism also takes place in illegal settlements in the West Bank. Can you outline what the impact of this is on Palestinians there? There's so much to say here. It's hard to give a full picture. But at baseline, the tourism and illegal settlements in the West Bank represents almost the most basic example of Israeli apartheid. What happens is, in the simplest terms,
00:14:02
Speaker
Illegal settlers claim the land, they build on it, are later recognized by the Israeli government, they build roads to and from the settlements that Palestinians cannot use, and they build touristic enterprises on that land. They then host tourists, particularly Christian tourists, and completely obscure and hide the theft and the military rule that enables them to be there on Palestinian land.
00:14:25
Speaker
They both profit from this enterprise and exclude Palestinians from those historical, cultural, and touristic sites, which would otherwise benefit the Palestinian economy. This is a violation of Palestinian self-determination and their right to sites of cultural, religious, and historical significance.
00:14:42
Speaker
And really, I mean it to spit in the face of Palestinian claims to statehood. So now you have the brutal Israeli occupation forces protecting these sites, and on top of that you have Palestinian deprived of this economic development. You know, the tourists leave these sites with a false and constructed narrative of what the West Bank is like, with a confused notion of Palestinian realities within the West Bank, in particular with the Israeli occupation.
00:15:06
Speaker
And frankly, oftentimes with the reinforced Zionist narrative, that age-old narrative of superior Israeli development in contrast to Palestinian development, which is suppressed by Israel and really predicated on Palestinian oppression. So to give a scale of how much this is happening, settlers and the illegal settlement enterprise
00:15:28
Speaker
may account for some would say up to 10% of the territory of the West Bank. But actually, a UN Human Rights Council report found that settlement councils control actually over 43% of the West Bank. And as part of that, 86% of the Jordan Valley and the Dead Sea, which are key areas not only for tourism,
00:15:49
Speaker
but also rich agricultural resources as well. There was actually a PLO report that was put out in 2017 to talk a little bit about the direct ways that the Israeli state is partaking in depriving Palestinian economy of the benefit of its own tourism sector and tourism resources. It found that it had Area C, which
00:16:09
Speaker
comprises 60% of the West Bank, which means it's under complete Israeli military rule. If that was transferred to Palestinians under the long-failed Oslo Accords, there would be an unprecedented increase in the GDP of the Palestinian economy, up to 35%.
00:16:26
Speaker
You have up to four million tourists coming each year to historic Palestine, most of them visiting Jerusalem and the Dead Sea. There's a clear connection here between both not only the displacement and the illegal land theft that predicates tourism at these illegal settlements, but also the economic deprivation and suppression that results from that as well, in addition to the narrative piece that we've talked about. There are many examples.
00:16:57
Speaker
Right, and very often the tourists don't even realise that they are entering into the West

Christian Zionism and Tourism

00:17:03
Speaker
Bank. You know, Israel blurs those lines on purpose. They bus in tourists to Bethlehem and they bust them out. And they also bust them into the illegal settlements. And to the unknowing tourists, they are still in Israeli territory. They have no idea that they've crossed into what's internationally considered as Palestinian territory.
00:17:26
Speaker
Now, the Israeli regime is said to be opening up its borders to tourists next month, November. And we already know, of course, that the first people that will be here will be Christian Zionist groups coming from the US. And as you write in your policy brief, these groups consider it a rite of passage to visit the Holy Land. So what exactly does that mean and what does it entail for these groups?
00:17:51
Speaker
It's very important to understand the role of Christian Zionists here and the dominant role that they then play as tourists in this economic engine for the continued theft of Palestinian land. The major advocacy organization in the United States that represents Christian Zionists is Christians United for Israel, and it boasts 10 million members.
00:18:14
Speaker
That is 100 times as large as the members that represent APAC, which is the most notorious pro-Israel Zionist lobby in the US. And Christian Zionists are the largest and most significant source of support for Israel, both as an electorate and as donors. And in coordination with Jewish Zionist groups, Christians, Christian Zionists have successfully conflated Christian religious identity with support for Israel.
00:18:39
Speaker
That's what it means to talk about this as a rite of passage. This is an explicit effort to use tourism as a political tool, to use religious tourism especially, to create support for Israel as part of a Christian identity. The two things that Christianity and support for Zionism would seem so distinct, particularly because Christian Palestinians have long preserved Christian traditions and
00:19:03
Speaker
belief in the Holy Land, but are naturally opposed to Israeli apartheid, colonization, and oppression of Palestinians, which affects even their own practice of their faith. Whether it's practicing or celebrating Easter or Christmas, whatever it may be, the occupation forces will no less obstruct their lives as Palestinians. So evangelicals believe that supporting Jewish migration to Israel brings them closer to the return of Jesus.
00:19:29
Speaker
oddly enough, when they also believe that Muslims and Jews alike would be annihilated. And there is a key case study of a Christian Zionist group that I talk about in the brief, which is really emblematic of the kinds of religious tourism that become extremely complicit in furthering the settler colonial agenda. So the example is passages. It's a US-based group that was modeled after the birthright trips that are much more notorious.
00:19:58
Speaker
They provide a free trip to Israel for Christians at over 150 universities across the United States. This includes many Christian colleges, but also a number of major public universities, Texas A&M, the University of Florida, and the University of Minnesota host these trips. They have over the past six years or so
00:20:18
Speaker
They've brought 7,000 students to Israel. Now, the trip itself, it is not apolitical, much as it is also meant to be ostensibly religious. It was the brainchild of former Israeli Ambassador Ron Dermer, who hosted the launch of this program at the Israeli Embassy in D.C. with none other than other former ambassadors, Michael Oren and most recently David Friedman.
00:20:41
Speaker
And the trip is meant to encourage this Christian support for the Zionist state. Quite cynically, the itinerary is quite explicit in its support for the Zionist colonization of Palestine. They visit the Syrian occupied Golan Heights on the itinerary, and this is based on
00:20:56
Speaker
research that was done by the Friends of Sabil North America and alongside some Palestinian student solidarity groups on campuses. Give them credit for that great research. And they explore Israeli startup culture. They tour the Knesset. They learn about Christian and Jewish
00:21:11
Speaker
persecution in the Middle East. And the idea here is that they are centering a very different narrative around Israel, first of all, leaning on that historic colonial mythology that Jewish settlement was this sort of modernizing force in Palestine of the more uncivilized, as they would say, Palestinian population. This focus on Israeli modernity is very problematic in that sense. And then visiting occupied territory, the Golan Heights is
00:21:41
Speaker
That's totally in the face of many, many other trips that would even attempt to build a so-called two-sided perspective, let's say, of the issue. So what it does is it makes Christian tourism and Palestinian oppression really kind of two sides of the same coin by reinforcing this idea of Jewish continuity in Palestine and really overlooking any of the land theft that predicates
00:22:11
Speaker
this tourism industry. In fact, they even visit Sterot, which is this small city near Reza. No religious significance at all, but it was notorious in 2014 for residents putting up lawn chairs to watch the assault on Reza, which killed 2,000 Palestinians and 73 Israelis in the
00:22:34
Speaker
in the process as well. And those kinds of itineraries are very clear and explicit in their attempt to create, you know, particular sympathies for the Zionist project. And it's a major source of continued support for the state of Israel among especially Christian tourists from the US.

Palestinian Resistance through Tourism

00:22:56
Speaker
Now, Haile, we've given a lot of space as to what the Israeli regime is doing and what Christian Zionists are also doing.
00:23:03
Speaker
But I really want to end on Palestinians and really to hone in on how they have resisted this because obviously they have not been passive. And so I wanted, in the final question, wanted to ask you how have Palestinians resisted this form of settler colonial tourism? And in that same tangent, what are the alternatives for people who want to practice the tourism that is in solidarity with the Palestinian struggle?
00:23:33
Speaker
So firstly, Palestinians, of course, have never responded to this passively, this effort to erase their narrative. Palestinians have consistently both applied to build on their own touristic sites, whether it's in East Jerusalem or in the West Bank. And the PLO documents that many of those endeavors to develop their own cultural and touristic resources are denied by whether it's the Israeli Ministry of Tourism or the Israeli military.
00:24:01
Speaker
runs the occupation of the West Bank, and yet Palestinians have created alternative itineraries. Both Palestinians in historic Palestine and throughout the diaspora have created together alternative itineraries for both recreational and religious tourism that doesn't cross the picket line, so to speak.
00:24:18
Speaker
and avoids complicity with the settler colonial enterprise. And Palestinians continue to manifest the reality of the apartheid system by being the first to document companies that have been complicit in the theft of their land and in the illegal settlement enterprise. Al Haq is one organization that has done immense research on this. Much before groups like Amnesty International took up the helm as well to identify companies that have been complicit
00:24:43
Speaker
in this tourism industry on Palestinian stolen land and members of Palestinian civil society have called for tourism to engage in ethical tourism that does not go to touristic sites that are run by Israeli authorities and claimed as Israeli sites within Palestinian territories.
00:25:01
Speaker
There's a lot to say on that topic, but there are a number of resources and alternatives for people to the Palestinian academic and cultural boycott, put out a series of resources for creational and religious tourism. Eyewitness Palestine has a number of resources as well. WOC Palestine, the Ciudad Center for Holy Land Studies, and on campuses throughout the United States as well and even the UK.

Tourism as Colonial Strategy

00:25:26
Speaker
Palestine treks are growing at campuses to provide an alternative to see Palestine from a Palestinian perspective without being complicit in the theft of Palestinian land and the continued oppression that Palestinians face across historic Palestine.
00:25:43
Speaker
These are really important because, as I mentioned, during the period of COVID-19 and prior, tourism has been an explicit strategic investment of the Israeli state. When Trump took office in 2016, Israel celebrated by approving what was
00:26:00
Speaker
a pretty unprecedented $20 million in settlement funding. The tourism minister and Netanyahu both had emphasized that tourism sites and construction of hotels in the West Bank settlements were primary targets for those funds, and then anticipating
00:26:15
Speaker
potentially a turnover in administration. In January 2020, Defense Minister Naftali Bennett approved the construction of national parks, nature reserves, and the West Bank as part of over $110 million spent in the first quarter of the year on West Bank settlements, which was the highest in a decade and even definitely several times more than
00:26:36
Speaker
even the unprecedented numbers in prior years that had been spent. So tourism continues to be an explicit strategic priority because it is part of the larger effort to legitimize the settler colonial project that continues in the West Bank and the theft of Palestinian land
00:26:52
Speaker
in East Jerusalem and throughout the West Bank, and it is an economic engine for that enterprise as well. But there are alternatives, and investing in those alternatives in Palestinian tourism is both a way to economically support Palestinians and be in solidarity with them as they resist the apartheid regime that exists across historic Palestine.
00:27:17
Speaker
Another great resource is the grassroots Jerusalem book Wajud, which was published a couple of years ago back now, which is a guidebook to Jerusalem and promotes much more politically responsible tourism and really focuses on Palestinian existence within the city.
00:27:37
Speaker
Hala, you've in such a short time very clearly and succinctly laid out how Israeli tourism and the Israeli tourism industry contributes to the theft of Palestinian land and is deeply complicit and active in the oppression and continued occupation of the Palestinian people. So thank you so much for joining me. I'd love to continue this discussion, but I think we'll leave it there for now.
00:28:06
Speaker
Thank you so much for having me.