Why the Peace Process Doesn’t Rank High on Israeli Voters’ Agenda https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2019/01/why-the-peace-process-doesnt-rank-high-on-israeli-voters-agenda/

January 16, 2019 | Evelyn Gordon
About the author: Evelyn Gordon is a commentator and former legal-affairs reporter who immigrated to Israel in 1987. In addition to Mosaic, she has published in the Jerusalem Post, Azure, Commentary, and elsewhere. She blogs at Evelyn Gordon.

Although Americans are inclined to assume that the conflict with the Palestinians will be a foremost issue in Israel’s upcoming national elections, party leaders have hardly been addressing it, and surveys show that few Israelis see it as the major issue in determining their votes. Evelyn Gordon explains why:

There are many well-known reasons why Israelis have stopped believing peace is possible anytime soon. They range from the failure of every previous round of negotiations, to Palestinians’ refusal to negotiate at all for most of the last decade, to the fact that every bit of land that Israel has so far turned over to the Palestinians—both in Gaza and the West Bank—has become a hotbed of anti-Israel terror. Yet the root cause of all the above receives far too little attention overseas: Israel’s ostensible peace partner, the Palestinian Authority (PA), educates its people to an almost pathological hatred of Israel. . . .

The most shocking [demonstration of this problem] occurred in November when a Palestinian accused of selling real estate to Jews in eastern Jerusalem was denied a Muslim burial by order of the imams of Jerusalem’s Muslim cemetery, religious officials at al-Aqsa Mosque, and Jerusalem’s PA-appointed grand mufti. . . . [I]n Islam, as in Judaism, proper burial is a religious commandment. Consequently, even the most heinous crime—for instance, killing fellow Muslims—does not preclude someone from burial in a Muslim cemetery. . . . Thus, PA clerics effectively ruled that a major religious commandment was less important than opposing a Jewish presence in Judaism’s holiest city. . . .

That same month, the PA suspended Hebron’s police chief after social-media posts showed him trying to help Israeli soldiers fix a stalled jeep. Ahmed Abu al-Rub was just doing his job: the jeep was stalled on a Palestinian road and blocking Palestinian traffic, so, as a policeman, it was his duty to try to remove the obstacle and get traffic moving again. . . .

Peace can [only] be made with people who want peace. . . . There are too many issues where government policy really matters for Israelis to waste their votes on something beyond the government’s power to change.

Read more on Evelyn Gordon: http://evelyncgordon.com/peace-the-missing-israeli-election-issue/