One-State Declaration
November 29,
2007
For decades, efforts to bring about a two-state solution in
historic Palestine have failed to provide justice and peace for the
Palestinian and Israeli Jewish peoples, or to offer a genuine
process leading towards them.
The two-state solution ignores the physical and political realities
on the ground, and presumes a false parity in power and moral
claims between a colonized and occupied people on the one hand and
a colonizing state and military occupier on the other. It is
predicated on the unjust premise that peace can be achieved by
granting limited national rights to Palestinians living in the
areas occupied in 1967, while denying the rights of Palestinians
inside the 1948 borders and in the Diaspora. Thus, the two-state
solution condemns Palestinian citizens of Israel to permanent
second-class status within their homeland, in a racist state that
denies their rights by enacting laws that privilege Jews
constitutionally, legally, politically, socially and culturally.
Moreover, the two-state solution denies Palestinian refugees their
internationally recognized right of return.
The two-state solution entrenches and formalizes a policy of
unequal separation on a land that has become ever more integrated
territorially and economically. All the international efforts to
implement a two-state solution cannot conceal the fact that a
Palestinian state is not viable, and that Palestinian and Israeli
Jewish independence in separate states cannot resolve fundamental
injustices, the acknowledgment and redress of which are at the core
of any just solution.
In light of these stark realities, we affirm our commitment to a
democratic solution that will offer a just, and thus enduring,
peace in a single state based on the following principles:
- The historic land of Palestine belongs to all who live in it and
to those who were expelled or exiled from it since 1948, regardless
of religion, ethnicity, national origin or current citizenship
status;
- Any system of government must be founded on the principle of
equality in civil, political, social and cultural rights for all
citizens. Power must be exercised with rigorous impartiality on
behalf of all people in the diversity of their identities;
- There must be just redress for the devastating effects of decades
of Zionist colonization in the pre- and post-state period,
including the abrogation of all laws, and ending all policies,
practices and systems of military and civil control that oppress
and discriminate on the basis of ethnicity, religion or national
origin;
- The recognition of the diverse character of the society,
encompassing distinct religious, linguistic and cultural
traditions, and national experiences;
- The creation of a non-sectarian state that does not privilege the
rights of one ethnic or religious group over another and that
respects the separation of state from all organized religion;
- The implementation of the Right of Return for Palestinian
refugees in accordance with UN Resolution 194 is a fundamental
requirement for justice, and a benchmark of the respect for
equality.
- The creation of a transparent and nondiscriminatory immigration
policy;
- The recognition of the historic connections between the diverse
communities inside the new, democratic state and their respective
fellow communities outside;
- In articulating the specific contours of such a solution, those
who have been historically excluded from decision-making --
especially the Palestinian Diaspora and its refugees, and
Palestinians inside Israel -- must play a central role;
- The establishment of legal and institutional frameworks for
justice and reconciliation.
The struggle for justice and liberation must be accompanied by a
clear, compelling and moral vision of the destination a solution in
which all people who share a belief in equality can see a future
for themselves and others. We call for the widest possible
discussion, research and action to advance a unitary, democratic
solution and bring it to fruition.
Madrid and London, 2007
Signed:
Ali Abunimah
Naseer Aruri
Omar Barghouti
Oren Ben-Dor
George Bisharat
Haim Bresheeth
Jonathan Cook
Ghazi Falah
Leila Farsakh
Islah Jad
Joseph Massad
Ilan Pappe
Carlos Prieto del Campo
Nadim Rouhana
The London One State Group