Jerusalem: A Tale of One  City 
The New Republic, Nov.  14, 1994 
By Martin Gilbert 
On August 18 Yasir Arafat, speaking as head of the  Palestinian National Authority in Gaza and Jericho, told Arab youngsters at a  summer camp, "Those of you who lit the intifada fire must now act as defenders  of this young state, whose capital is Jerusalem. It is Bir Salem [the fountain  of Salem]. Salem was one of the Canaanite Kings, one of our forefathers. This  city is the capital of our children and our children's children. If not for this  belief and conviction of the Palestinian nation, this people would have been  erased from the face of the earth, as were so many other nations." 
King Salem is a newcomer on the historical scene.  No such Canaanite, Jebusite or Philistine king is known to history. No wonder  most inquirers into the status of Jerusalem, including the Anglo-Catholic writer  Terence Prittie and the Israeli publicist Elyahu Tal, both authors of books  titled Whose Jerusalem?, start with the historic nature of Jewish,  Muslim and Christian links with the city. This is not a mere historical or  religious curiosity. As Israel forges ahead on separate peace tracks with Jordan  and the PLO, this age-old issue is emerging on the international agenda, despite  Israel's insistence that Jerusalem is not negotiable. The signing of the  Israeli-Jordanian peace agreement this week and President Clinton's visit to  East Jerusalem have led to Jerusalem's being once more on the international  agenda. 
That Jerusalem is "holy to the three monotheistic  religions" is a frequent assertion by those who wish to make the city's future  status the subject of negotiation. For Muslims, however, even those who regard  the city as theirs from Canaanite times, it is not Jerusalem but the Saudi  Arabian city of Mecca that is the paramount shrine. Mecca, not Jerusalem, is the  object of the most important pilgrimage a Muslim must try to make at least once  in a lifetime. 
For Christians, Jerusalem contains some, but not  all, of their holiest shrines. In Jerusalem are the reputed sites of the Last  Supper and the Crucifixion, the tomb of Jesus, the tomb of the Virgin and the  Place of the Ascension. But there are also Christian holy places elsewhere in  Israel, among them the birthplace of Jesus (Bethlehem), the scenes of his  childhood (Nazareth), the site of his Baptism (by the Jordan River) and the  locale of his main preaching and miracles (Galilee). 
In contrast, all the main holy sites for Jews lie  within the post-1967 municipal borders of Jerusalem. Foremost are the Temple  Mount and the Western Wall, both of which came within Jordanian jurisdiction in  1949, and to which Israeli Jews were denied access for nearly two decades. Since  1967, on the other hand, Israel has allowed worshipers of all three faiths  unrestricted access to their holy places throughout the city, although Jewish  and Christian prayer are barred on the Temple Mount to avoid disturbing Muslim  sensitivities. 
Jews at prayers all over the world face toward the  Temple Mount. Muslims, even those praying on the Mount, face away from it,  toward Mecca. Indeed, when they pray on the Mount, they have their backs toward  its most splendid structure, the Dome of the Rock, while those praying in the  Al-Aqsa mosque also look away from the city and toward Mecca. In the Old  Testament, Jerusalem is mentioned on 656 occasions; the city's well-being is  central to Jewish prayer. In the New Testament, the city is the scene of the  climacteric events of the Christian faith. In the Koran, Jerusalem is not  mentioned at all. Later Muslim tradition linked the Koran's reference to al  masjid al-aqsa (the furthest sanctuary) with the Al-Aqsa mosque in  Jerusalem. But there was no building on the Temple Mount at the time of the  Prophet; the Holy Land itself is called the "nearest" elsewhere in the Koran;  and the verse is held to refer, in Islamic tradition, to a nighttime ascension  to a heavenly sanctuary. 
Even though the Jewish religious claim to  Jerusalem is persuasive, it is not the religious importance of the city that is  truly at the center of the current debate. Rather, the city's status as a  national capital is at issue. For Muslims, Jerusalem has never served as a  capital. Muslim rule generally is held to have begun in Jerusalem in the year  638. But when Suleiman became ruler in 715, he took as his permanent residence,  and as the economic and administrative center of the country, not Jerusalem but  Ramla, a town he had founded some years earlier for that very purpose. A Muslim  resident of Jerusalem complained at the time of the decline in his city's  status: 'Jerusalem is a provincial town attached to Ramla, having been the seat  of the government in the days of Solomon and David." 
For Israeli Jews, and for Jews throughout the  diaspora, Jerusalem has been neither a provincial town nor a "mere" capital: it  holds the central spiritual and physical place in the history of the Jews as a  people. It became the capital of the first Jewish kingdom in 1004 B.C., almost  3,000 years ago. With the brief exception of the Crusader period, no other  non-Jewish ruling power of Jerusalem made the city a capital; but it was  consistently a capital for the Jews. Driven into exile by Nebuchadnezzar in 586  B.C., the Jews returned fifty years later and rebuilt Jerusalem as their  capital. It was their capital, too, under the Maccabees. The unity of the city  achieved in 1967, then, was more than a quirk of military geography: it was the  fulfillment of unbroken historical longings. 
No other nation or empire held Jerusalem in such  regard. Neither the Egyptian Mamluk rulers from 1260 to 1516, nor the Ottoman  Turks, who ruled from 1516 to 1917, even contemplated making the city their  capital. Although the British made Jerusalem the administrative seat of the  Palestine Mandate in 1922, the location of ultimate authority for Palestine  remained in London. At the same time, the British were committed under the  League of Nations Mandate for Palestine to help create a Jewish National Home in  which, from its inception, all Jewish self-governing institutions were located  in Jerusalem. 
The sensitivities of both Jews and Christians were  trampled on by successive Muslim conquerors of Jerusalem. Churches became  mosques. Evil smelling slaughterhouses and tanneries were set up near Jewish  places of worship. Mosques were built close to churches (including the Church of  the Holy Sepulchre) and synagogues, their minarets deliberately overtowering  them. Sometimes mosques were simply erected on top of churches. During the three  decades of British rule, from 1917 to 1948, however, freedom of worship was  respected and many new churches, mosques and synagogues were built. But between  1948 and 1967, in a retrogressive move that was to have a long-lasting impact on  Jewish fears, the Jordanians excluded Israeli Jews even from the Western  Wall. 
The Jordanians also denied Israeli Jews access to  the fifty-eight synagogues in the occupied Jewish Quarter of the Old City.  Indeed, most of these synagogues were deliberately destroyed or vandalized. Jews  also were barred from their other holy sites under Jordanian jurisdiction,  including the tombs of the Prophet Samuel and Simon the Just; the Jewish  cemetery on the Mount of Olives; the tomb of Rachel, on the Jerusalem-Bethlehem  road; and the burial site of the patriarchs. 
As a result of the war of 1948, both Jews and  Arabs lost areas of Jerusalem in which they previously had lived. In addition to  the populous Jewish Quarter of the Old City, Israel lost two small residential  areas east of the dividing line. Several substantial Arab residential areas came  under Israeli control, becoming integral parts of West Jerusalem. The legal  status of the divided city was established in a series of unilateral measures  and decrees on both sides of the divide. In December 1948 Trans-Jordan annexed  all the Arab-held areas of western Palestine, including those parts of Jerusalem  that were under its military occupation. East and West Jerusalem had come into  being, the creation of war, delineated by cease-fire lines. Shortly after the  first Israeli general election in January 1949 Israel established its Knesset in  West Jerusalem. 
The Israel-Jordan armistice agreement of April  1949 envisaged free Israeli access to Mount Scopus enclave, and also the Western  Wall. The Jordanian authorities never allowed this to be put into effect. One  reason for Israeli determination not to see the repartition of Jerusalem, or any  diminution of Israel's sovereignty over the united city, is the way in which the  Jordanian government so rigorously refused to allow the university to function,  or the Wall to be visited, despite the armistice pact. These were not marginal  border deprivations, but blows at two central facets of Israeli and Jewish  life. 
During the War of Independence, the Jewish Quarter  of the Old City was occupied by Jordan and its inhabitants expelled. With the  ending of the war, Israel, in December 1949, proclaimed Jerusalem its capital.  The country's Parliament, Supreme Court, Chief Rabbinate and Jewish Agency were  among the institutions located there. Across the barbed wire and no-man's-lands  that marked the dividing line, Jordanian-ruled East Jerusalem was not made the  capital, either for its Palestinian residents or for its Jordanian occupiers.  This remained in Amman. The citizens of Israel had no intimate neighboring state  to which to turn, and no other city in Israel approaching Jerusalem in spiritual  or administrative importance. Just as during thirteen centuries of Muslim  control over the region, no Arab ruler or conqueror made the city his capital,  the Jordanian king did not do so either. This was quite normal: no Muslim holy  place is today the capital city of an Arab or Muslim land. Tehran, not Meshed or  Qum, is the capital of Iran. Riyadh, not Mecca or Medina, is the capital of  Saudi Arabia. 
Only the Jews regard Jerusalem as both their  spiritual and temporal center. (For Christians worldwide, Jerusalem is a  spiritual not a temporal realm.) The city is the focal point of Jewish  pilgrimage during the three annual "pilgrim festivals," and the one city toward  which Jews are enjoined to set their feet as a matter of religious piety, as in  the Passover and Yom Kippur invocation, "Next year in Jerusalem." 
For Jews in all centuries, Jerusalem was a place  not only of distant longing but of actual settlement. When the city was declared  the capital of the State of Israel in 1949, it already had a substantial Jewish  majority. In 1845, more than half a century before the first Zionist Congress in  Basle set out the territorial aims of political Zionism, the Prussian Consul in  Jerusalem, Dr. Schultze, estimated that there were 7,120 Jews, 5,000 Muslims and  3,390 Christians in the city. From that moment, the Jews were to remain the  largest single religious community. Their numerical dominance increased, despite  periods of first Turkish and then British restrictions on their entry into  Palestine. Two years after Schultze's estimate, a British visitor, Dr.John  Kitto, wrote in his book Modern Jerusalem: "Although we are much in the  habit of regarding Jerusalem as a Muslim city, the Moslems do not actually  constitute more than one third of the entire population." 
In the nineteenth century, Jews came to Jerusalem  from distant lands to live as well as to pray. Some worked on farms and in  fields on the outskirts of the city. Some taught, some practiced medicine. By  1841 a Jewish printing press had been established, and seven years later came a  Jewish bank. For four centuries the Ottomans neglected the city, which was for  them a distant provincial town far from the capital, Constantinople, but the  Jewish population grew steadily and increased its total percentage. On April 15,  1854, The New York Daily Tribune ran an article that declared: "The  sedentary population of Jerusalem numbers about 15,500 souls, of whom 4,000 are  Mussulmans and 8,000 Jews." The author was Karl Marx. Fourteen years later, the  Jerusalem Almanack, an early guidebook to the city, listed twenty-one  synagogues, twenty-one convents and eleven mosques. 
Jewish enterprise after 1860 included a hospital,  a library, schools, hotels and commercial houses. By the end of the nineteenth  century, the Jews had become the largest builders of suburbs beyond the walls.  In 1888 Jews from the Yemen established a quarter in the village of Silwan. Also  in 1888 a Jerusalem Jew, Joseph Navon, obtained the Sultan's permission to build  a railway to the city. This helped increase the immigrant Jewish population  considerably, making the city more accessible to those who landed at Jaffa by  boat from the Russian and Romanian Black Sea ports. In 1891 a Scottish Christian  visitor, the Rev. Hugh Callan, asked of the city: 
"What is to be her future? Shall the Russians rule  through their Greek Church (as they are like to), or shall the Jews possess her?  This at least is sure, while the rest are strangers, the Jews are still the only  patriots there." In the last decade of the nineteenth century, the influx  Ashkenazi Jews, especially from Tsarist Russia, raised the Jewish population to  more than 28,000 in 1896. At that time the Christian Arabs and Muslims Arabs  each numbered less than 9,000. The new Jewish arrivals lived mostly in the new  Jewish suburbs outside the walls. These suburbs even had their own Jewish post  office. By 1914 the Jewish population had reached 45,000 out of 65,000. Only the  coming of the First World War halted the continuing demographic dominance of the  Jews, many of whom were expelled to Egypt or deported to Turkey. 
The Zionists, encouraged after 1917 by the Balfour  Declaration and the British Mandate, established self-governing institutions in  Jerusalem. Despite the Jewish majority in the city, the British chose an Arab as  the first mayor, and from then on appointed only Arabs as his successors. The  growing Jewish presence included the Jewish National Library, the Hadassah  hospital and medical center and the Hebrew University, where Winston Churchill  planted a palm tree in 1921. Three Jewish garden cities were set up, pioneers of  modern suburban planning. But three Arab uprisings within two decades led to the  effective separation of Arab and Jewish neighborhoods, including the creation of  separate bus routes. Among the Jews murdered by Arabs in 1936 was Levi Billig,  an advocate of Arab-Jewish reconciliation. He was in his study working on a  medieval Islamic text when he was killed. 
British rule brought the amenities of modern city  life to Jerusalem, leading to a rise in Arab as well as Jewish immigration.  British census reports show that the increase in Jerusalem's population between  1921 and 1933 by immigration amounted to 20,000 Jews and more than 21,000 Arabs.  These Arab immigrants came , like the Jews, from distant lands, including  Morocco, Algeria, Libya and the Yemen. 
In 1938, shortly after Britain raised the  possibility of separate Jewish and Arab states in Palestine, the Jewish Agency  proposed a partition of Jerusalem itself based on the main areas of urban  settlement. In an attempt to create a map that would obtain Arab approval, the  agency offered to exclude seven Jewish residential areas from the sovereign  Jewish city: the Jewish Quarter of the Old City; Yemin Moshe, founded in 1892;  and five post-1920 suburbs in the south, which lay beyond a belt of Arab  neighborhoods. 
The Arab states around Palestine refused to accept  the idea of Jewish statehood and rejected this compromise. A violent decade  followed, culminating in the battle for Jerusalem in 1948. At that time, 100,000  Jews and 65,000 Arabs inhabited the city. The Jewish Agency accepted the U.N.  plan for a U.N.-administered Jerusalem, calling it a "heavy sacrifice" that  nevertheless would serve as "the Jewish contribution to the solution of a  painful problem." The Arabs rejected this proposal, too. The U.N. plan contained  a proviso that after ten years a referendum would be held to explore the desires  of the inhabitants about the future regime of the city. Demographically, this  almost certainly would have given the Jews the controlling voice. 
Following the battle for Jerusalem, in which  Egyptian forces entered the southernmost Jewish suburb, kibbutz Ramat Rahel, a  divided Jerusalem emerged, delineated by the cease-fire lines and separated by  large areas of no-man's land. The Arabs lost all their flourishing suburbs west  of the cease-fire line; the Jews lost all theirs to the east and north. 
In May 1948 Israel declared statehood. The Arab  countries denied statehood to the Palestinian Arabs, who did not much protest.  Jordan annexed the land not occupied by Israel. Israel built up Jerusalem as a  capital, with its parliament building, law courts and government ministries.  Because Mount Scopus was surrounded by Arab forces, the university had to build  a second campus in the western part of the city. Jordan, despite Palestinian  wishes, declined to establish a Palestinian university in Jerusalem. Nor did the  question ever arise, during the nineteen years of Jordanian rule, of making East  Jerusalem the Palestinian capital. 
The population growth between 1949 and 1966  underlined this disparity of interest. The Arab population increased to 70,000.  The Jewish population increased to 195,000. This number included many Jewish  immigrants from Morocco, Iraq and other Arab lands where they had long been  harassed and persecuted. 
On July 27, 1953, King Hussein of Jordan declared  East Jerusalem to be "the alternative capital of the Hashemite Kingdom." Yet  Amman remained the real center of Jordanian rule. When on June 5, 1967,  Jordanian troops bombarded Mount Scopus and Ramat Rahel, the die was cast. The  Israeli government had urged Hussein not to enter the war. His decision to do so  was decisive for the future of Jerusalem and has determined its situation until  today. 
Within two days of Hussein's troops' opening fire,  the Jordanian sector of the city was under Israeli control. The physical  barriers were thrown down. "We earnestly stretch out our hands to our Arab  brethren in peace," declared Moshe Dayan, then minister of defense, "but we have  returned to Jerusalem never to part from her again." East Jerusalem, which  constituted one-fifth of the built-up area of the city, was then incorporated by  Israel and the city was given new municipal boundaries. New Jewish suburbs were  built across the former Jordanian border, the cease-fire line of 1949 . An  influx of immigrants from the Soviet Union helped populate these new  neighborhoods. By the end of 1993, the Jewish population of Jerusalem had risen  to more than 400,000, the Arab population to 155,000. 
As a result of the policies of Teddy Kollek, the  mayor of Jerusalem from 1966 to 1993, facilities were provided for the Arab  minority of East Jerusalem far beyond anything introduced under Jordanian rule,  including a sewer and piped water system, clinics, libraries, parks and gardens.  Access to Israeli hospitals was unrestricted. The Arab neighborhoods also grew  in both size and prosperity. The Christian Arab communities declined, however,  with many leading Christian Arab families emigrating, as they had in what had  been largely Christian Bethlehem, because of Muslim hostility. 
The Christian communities inside Jerusalem have  suffered throughout the centuries from chronic disagreements among themselves,  and from frequent hostility and neglect by the city's rulers. With reunification  in 1967, Israel pledged to uphold freedom of access and worship, and this pledge  has been kept. The Via Dolorosa is among the city's busiest routes. Christians  of every denomination (there are more than thirty in the city) worship at their  holy places, which are often divided between two or more denominations, and were  in the past much fought over, amid blows and curses. Those in search of the  Garden of Gethsemane can ,choose among three different sites, depending on the  branch of their faith. Two different sites, one inside and one outside the  present Old City walls, are both claimed as the true Calgary. Within the Holy  Sepulchre, where the most visited of these Calgarys is located, six separate  Christian denominations have their custodians; each has its own altars and  places of worship. Orthodox Christians, Roman Catholics, Greek Catholics,  Armenians, Protestants and Copts are the main Christian groups in the city. Each  has its own needs, aspirations, properties, leaders and worshipers. For several  years a Mormon university has been an impressive feature of Mount Scopus,  adjacent to the Hebrew University. 
Under Israeli rule, Christian worship is  unimpeded. Churches can now be freely built and freely repaired. Outside  Christian interests are continually asserted. This summer, the first Vatican  emissary to Israel since 1948 asked for special consideration of Roman Catholic  needs. Within a month, an emissary from President Boris Yeltsin of Russia  pressed the concerns of the new Russia for a voice. Israel responded by agreeing  to continue to uphold the needs of all Christian religious denominations.  Foreign Minister Shimon Peres informed the Russian emissary that whereas  political rights, of which the Russians also had spoken, must be retained by  Israel, the spiritual rights of all religious groups would be scrupulously  upheld. 
Each Israeli government since 1967, while  maintaining open access to the holy sites of Christianity and Islam, has been  committed to maintaining Jerusalem both as its capital and as an undivided city.  Kollek, although no longer mayor, observed in a recent conversation that any  division, however amicably achieved as part of a peace negotiation, would still  involve demarcated borders, customs posts, check-points and the cutting in half  of the city's integrated facilities, including postal, electricity, water and  drainage services. Since 1967, however, the American and British governments  have continued to take a lead internationally in refusing to move their Israeli  embassies to the capital city that they do not recognize. One senior American  diplomat was recently refused permission by the State Department to participate  in a meeting at the Jerusalem Hyatt Hotel on the grounds that the hotel was  located in East Jerusalem; it was in fact a few yards inside the Jordanian side  of the 1949-1967 line. On April 27 of this year, a letter from the Downing  Street office of the British prime minister stated that "the British Government  does not recognize Israeli sovereignty over any part of Jerusalem." The British  ambassador to Israel later explained that what Britain did recognize was that  Israel "exercises de facto authority in West Jerusalem." As far as Britain and  the United States are concerned, Israel has neither de-jure authority in West  Jerusalem, nor de facto authority in East Jerusalem, where since 1967 it has  been considered the occupying power. 
This summer's Rabin-Hussein agreement in  Washington confirmed the special position of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan  with regard to the Muslim holy places in the city. The Israel-Jordan agreement  was formally signed on October 26 in the presence of President Clinton. Yet also  this summer, Palestinian Arab leaders, meeting at Orient House in East Jerusalem  throughout this year, indicated by their very meetings the Palestinian desire to  see East Jerusalem as their capital. This desire was only articulated for the  first time twenty-five years ago, after the unification of the city under  Israeli rule. Now it has become a staple of Palestinian rhetoric and actions.  Thus, the August Palestinian Pharmaceutical Conference, convened outside  Jerusalem, held its final session in a hotel in the city. 
Under its Muslim name, Haram esh-Sharif, the  Muslim, as opposed to Palestinian, focus on Jerusalem, is on the Temple Mount.  This summer, King Hussein, flying over Jerusalem from west to east as a gesture  of Jordanian-Israeli friendship, circled the Mount. Seventeen years earlier,  Anwar Sadat had gone to East Jerusalem and prayed on the Mount before addressing  the Israeli Parliament in West Jerusalem. Shortly after Sadat's visit, a  distinguished Israeli public servant, Walter Eytan, advocated giving the Mount  "to an Arab sovereign as his wholly sovereign territory." Eytan was convinced  that "unfettered Arab sovereignty" over the Mount was the only solution for the  Jerusalem problem, and he suggested "a unilateral, unsolicited offer." 
Does such an idea have to be at variance with  practical politics? In Madrid in 1991, the Israeli government headed by Yitzhak  Shamir declared that the future status of Jerusalem was not negotiable, and that  the city would remain the "undivided" capital of Israel. This policy was  reiterated by Yitzhak Rabin's government after it came to power in 1992. Yet  there are many scenarios whereby Israel retains sovereignty over the whole city,  while the Muslim holy places keep their already substantial autonomies, which  could be enhanced, even to the extent of a Walter Eytan-style Arab sovereignty  over the Mount itself. At the same time the predominantly Arab residential  neighborhoods could be closely linked administratively and economically with the  Palestinian National Authority, without any derogation of Israeli sovereignty.  It should not be beyond the wit of good constitutional and international lawyers  to devise such a scheme. 
On August 17 Peres and chief PLO negotiator Nabil  Shaath agreed that Israel would transfer control of education of Palestinians  throughout the West Bank to the PLO before the start of the school year. This  agreement was carried out two weeks later, on September 1. Given political  progress elsewhere, it could be extended to the Arab neighborhoods of Jerusalem  without affecting Israeli sovereignty, while at the same time enhancing Arab  self-government and self-esteem. The agreement signed on August 24 by Israel and  the Palestinian National Authority (the Early Transfer of Authority Agreement),  is leading, even as I write these words -- and despite the recent spate of Hamas  terror -- to the Israeli government's transfer of authority throughout the West  Bank of Palestinian control over education, health, tourism, social affairs and  taxation, the so-called Early Empowerment. The area covered by this wide-ranging  and historic agreement actually includes the populous Jerusalem Arab suburb of  Ar-Ram, which, while situated alongside the city's north-south highway, lies in  fact just outside the post-1967 municipal border. Nor has Israel ever sought to  incorporate this suburb within the city border. Indeed, the first and only  Israeli extension of the Jerusalem municipal borders since 1967, announced a  little more than a year ago, was limited to land in pre-1967 Israel. 
A pattern for Jerusalem's future may be seen in  Israel's present willingness, despite earlier reluctance, to permit several  aspects of Palestinian national activity to be directed from East Jerusalem, and  to allow leading members of the former enemy, the PLO, to visit Jerusalem to  pray on the Temple Mount and to conduct negotiations in the city. If the pace  and direction of the current autonomy agreements is maintained, there ought to  be a political way forward that could satisfy both Israeli and Palestinian  aspirations, while maintaining the current growth and expansion of all  neighborhoods. Jerusalem both East and West could remain the capital of Israel,  a shared city under Israeli sovereignty, with no internal borders. Within a  united Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty, the East Jerusalem Arabs could  obtain such status and self-governing instruments, and administrative and even  political links with the Palestinian Authority, as to satisfy their emotional  and practical desires for a capital of their own. This would be in addition to  their existing, and increasingly self-governing, large urban centers of Nablus,  Ramallah, Bethlehem and Hebron. 
Meeting in Vienna early this year, Israeli and  Palestinian officials exchanged views on "the future status" of Jerusalem. On  August 16 these talks were resumed in Casablanca, and a week later moved to  Marrakesh. They have not been widely publicized or dramatically promoted, but  through them may emerge a political formula, and a reality on the ground,  acceptable to both sides. That reality need not be based on repartition of the  city. Most Arab areas are adjacent to Jewish ones, some closely so, but not  enmeshed with them. Jewish and Arab activities proceed alongside each other, on  parallel rather than intertwined paths. 
The pattern of urban settlement is intricate, but  not inextricable. In the north of the city, beyond the substantial Arab suburb  of Shuafat, lie the Atarot industrial zone and the Jerusalem Municipal Airport.  It is not acceptable to Israel, nor is it in the realm of reality, that this or  any other Jewish suburb built across the 1967 cease-fire line be excluded from  Israeli Jerusalem, nor need it be for Arab aspirations to be satisfied. The  Palestinian Arabs of Jerusalem do not need sovereignty to flourish: a sovereign  Israel is already ensuring that it can be an effective master in its own house,  with considerable building, intellectual and commercial activity, newspapers and  services. It was in fact not Israel but Yasir Arafat who recently closed down  Jerusalem's most independent-minded Arab newspaper. 
As the sovereign power, Israel can offer an  enlightened rule that is the envy of many cities in the Arab world. It also can  offer close links to the growing Palestinian autonomy immediately beyond the  municipal border. All sorts of ideas can be floated: were, for example, the  suburb of Ar-Ram to become the location of the Palestinian capital, it would be  within the built-up area of Jerusalem, and yet outside Israel's sovereign area.  Despite the reluctance of the outside world to recognize Israel's sovereignty  over the current municipal boundaries of Jerusalem, such sovereignty serves as a  basic protection for Israel, not only to maintain the unity of its capital, but  also as a safeguard against those terrorist elements that would disrupt the  peace process, and the peace itself. 
Today, as for the past twenty-seven years of the  reunited city, the Jewish and Arab communities of Jerusalem live virtually  separate lives. Some points of physical contact exist: hospitals, museums, the  lobbies of hotels and an increasing number of social welfare and charitable  institutions. The summer of 1994 saw a joint Arab-Jewish performance of Romeo  and Juliet in the city. But this does not add up to the mixing or even  overlapping of the communities. West Jerusalemites rarely visit the Arab  residential neighborhoods on a social basis, and vice versa. Shopping, eating  out and recreation are seldom across the divide. Neither side has much idea, if  any, of the daily life of the other, of the urban developments across the  invisible border or of needs and desires beyond the undemarcated divide. Perhaps  in this very separation, topographical and social, may lie the best hope for the  peace, growth and prosperity of a permanently united city. United means, in this  perspective, united within the borders of Israel. For the Palestinian Arabs of  East Jerusalem to live under Israeli sovereignty, as they have done since 1967,  is not unlike the situation in many capitals and large cities throughout the  world, where minority groups have a respected, protected and independent place  within a wider sovereign entity. Muslims in Delhi, Christian Copts in Cairo,  Hong Kong Chinese in Vancouver, Russians in Kiev and Kharkov, and Hindus in  London and Leicester are among those who seek not political independence but the  right to participate and contribute as equal and respected citizens. Such an  approach can certainly offer a bright future for the Arabs, both Muslim and  Christian, in East Jerusalem. Given the facts on the ground, not just of the  past twenty-five years but of the past century, and also the very different  meaning of the city to Jews and Arabs, participation and contribution may also  be the best the Palestinians can achieve.
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