You haven't addressed where these palestinians will live, or what they will do, of course neither have they.
Where they will live is in the united Israel-Palestine land. Where EXACTLY they will live will, as in most countries, depend on what they can afford. These 150k nationalized Pals live somewhere in that land, the idea is to basically continue that process. What they will do is the same as any refugee integration plan, probably unskilled labor. These details aren't major obstacles, they can be overcome.
How long have these people been out of israel? If they were removed 5 years ago that is one thing, if they have never lived in Israel that is another.
Agreed, determining which Palestinians qualify for citizenship over the 20-50 implementation period is tough. I don't have enough knowledge to provide a good answer, but again this is just a detail that someone with more expertise can work through. I think agreeing on the concept of the plan (uniting the two groups in one secular country with equal rights regardless of religion/ethnicity) is more important than hammering out the devilish details at this point.
For instance if their Grandfather lived in Israel, and they want his house back and there are 50 descendants, how will that work. 5 Families in one house might be an option. 50 families isn't. Who is supposed to support these people. It should not fall on the jews to feed them. How will that work?
Come on, you're diving to quickly into detailed specifics. These are things to be discussed once the basic premise of the plan has been accepted. I can't tell you where, under my proposal, stateless Pal refugee Ahmed Kabeer will live and what his job position will be! And I certainly don't know who is going to prepare his lunch. |