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Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University -
Danny Rubinstein (Dept of Communication Studies) can't help but
slander the settlers and complain about the "Judaization of
Jerusalem"
Creates a Pre-1967 Palestinian Independence
Movement out of thin air
There is no doubt that Fayyad, supported by
Chairman Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), is attempting to create a new
reality in the West Bank… His success has been limited for the
simple reason that without progress on the political front, there is
no possibility of establishing a serious infrastructure for a
Palestinian state. For example, in keeping with the Oslo Accords,
Israel continues to rule over 60 percent of the West Bank—"Area C."
This includes all the settlements, the main roads, and the whole of
the Jordan Valley and the Judean Desert. In these areas, the
settlers and the Israeli Defense Force have almost complete control,
and within Area C are "reserved tracts" through which Israel
regulates the water supply and the flow of traffic on the roads.
Without control over these lands, the Palestinian Authority cannot
construct a physical infrastructure (for example, the national
airport that Fayyad wants to establish in the Jordan Valley). In
fact, there is no possibility of establishing Palestinian control,
and Fayyad knows this. In consultation with Abu Mazen, he arranged a
series of demonstrations and protests against the separation
barrier; against the provocations of the settlers, whose produce the
Palestinians ban and burn; against the strengthening of the Israeli
hold on East Jerusalem (which the Palestinians refer to as the
Judaization of Jerusalem); and against the continuing expansion of
the settlements.
…
From its beginnings at the start of the twentieth century, the
Palestinian movement has had one clear goal: to free itself from
foreign occupation, first from the British and then from the
Israelis. The demand to create a Palestinian state does not appear
in the national covenant that the PLO proclaimed in the 1960s. And
in the short period in which most Palestinians lived under Arab rule
(from 1948 to 1967), they did not work for the establishment of a
state in the West Bank and Gaza.
http://www.dissentmagazine.org/article/?article=3254
One State/Two States: Rethinking Israel and
Palestine
By Danny Rubinstein
Summer 2010
Against
the background of Barack Obama's attempt to defend the idea of "two
states for two peoples" in Israel/Palestine, consider a recent talk
given by the Palestinian Sufian Abu-Zayda. Abu-Zayda is fifty years
old. He was born in the Jabalya refugee camp in northern Gaza, the
largest of the Palestinian camps, and he is considered the
Palestinian spokesman most fluent in Hebrew, which he learned during
the fourteen years that he spent in an Israeli prison on charges of
participating in terrorist activities. After his release in 1993, he
was one of the senior Fatah leaders in Gaza and was appointed to
various positions in the Palestinian government. Among other
activities he has been active in the Israeli-Palestinian Geneva
Initiative, in which moderates from both sides argue that it is
possible to find a just two-state solution.
It was quite surprising, therefore, that Abu-Zayda,
in his talk to an Israeli audience, announced that he had changed
his mind. Like other Palestinians who spoke to the Israeli media
over the last months, he was responding to Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's speech at Bar Ilan University—itself a response of sorts
to President Obama's June 2009 speech at the University of Cairo.
With some drama, Netanyahu had agreed that a Palestinian state
should be established in territory of the Land of Israel to the west
of the Jordan River. This was a significant change for Netanyahu,
whose roots are in the nationalist movement that has given up its
earlier slogan—"There are two banks to the Jordan, this one is ours,
and so is that one"—but that still demands Israeli rule in the
"Greater" Land of Israel west of the Jordan. Commentators talked of
a "fissure" on the Israeli Right; it was widely believed that as
long as Ben Zion Netanyahu is still alive, his son wouldn't dare
rebel against the nationalist traditions of the family.
But what might have seemed unbelievable a short
time ago has become a reality. Netanyahu, at the head of the
nationalist, right-wing government with members like Benny Begin
(son of Menachem Begin) who have consistently rejected all
concessions, has accepted the idea of a Palestinian state.
In his talk at Tel Aviv University, Abu-Zayda
responded to what the prime minister had said: "Many thanks to
Benjamin Netanyahu. After twenty years of the peace process [since
the Madrid Conference in 1991], and after the mutual recognition of
Israel and the PLO [in the Oslo Accords], he finally agrees to a
Palestinian state." There was irony in his voice as he continued,
"Do you think you are doing us a favor when you agree to two states?
No favor at all. From my side, from the Palestinians' side—let there
be one state, not two.... I was introduced to you as Sufian Abu-Zayda
from the Jabalya camp, but I'm not from Jabalya. I might have been
born there, but my family had been exiled in 1948 from a village
named "Breer," where Kibbutz Bror Hayill now stands, near the Gaza
border. If there will be one state, I'll be happy to rent or buy a
house near the kibbutz and live there." And then Abu-Zayda said in a
loud voice, "You are doing yourselves a favor by establishing two
states, not us."
He isn't alone in his opinion. One can sense a
great change among Palestinians—a new lack of trust in the
possibility of a Palestinian state. In Ramallah, Nablus, and Hebron,
people are talking and writing about this. It is interesting that
the shift is taking place at the very time when the whole world is
united in pressing Israel to help the Palestinians create a state of
their own. The Obama administration, the European Union, Russia,
those Arab states that still maintain their initiative of almost a
decade ago (to establish peace with Israel in exchange for its
withdrawal to the 1967 border)—all of them seek a two-state
solution. Even Netanyahu's Israel is ready for it. So who thinks
that it's no longer a useful idea? The Palestinians—but not all of
them, of course.
The most prominent Palestinian figure of the
past two years, Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, is one of the few who
not only say that they want to establish a state but are actually
working energetically to make it happen. Fayyad is close to sixty
and was born and brought up in Tulkarm. He studied and worked for
many years in the United States, served as a high-ranking official
in the International Monetary Fund, and entered politics about ten
years ago. He established his reputation among the Palestinians
when, serving as minister of finance and prime minister, he
reorganized finance and administration in the Palestinian
government. At the head of a new political party, he ran for office
in the Palestinian parliamentary elections of 2006. But in those
elections Hamas won big, while Fayyad's small party elected only two
representatives.
There is no doubt that Fayyad, supported by
Chairman Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), is attempting to create a new
reality in the West Bank. Last summer, he publicized a plan to
establish Palestinian institutions that will serve as a framework
for an independent state within two years—a plan that doesn't depend
on negotiations with Israel. Every day he travels throughout the
West Bank, meeting with community leaders in cities and villages.
With the aid of funds from donor states, he tries to solve local
problems: roads, factories, electricity, schools, water, public
health. His success has been limited for the simple reason that
without progress on the political front, there is no possibility of
establishing a serious infrastructure for a Palestinian state. For
example, in keeping with the Oslo Accords, Israel continues to rule
over 60 percent of the West Bank—"Area C." This includes all the
settlements, the main roads, and the whole of the Jordan Valley and
the Judean Desert. In these areas, the settlers and the Israeli
Defense Force have almost complete control, and within Area C are
"reserved tracts" through which Israel regulates the water supply
and the flow of traffic on the roads. Without control over these
lands, the Palestinian Authority cannot construct a physical
infrastructure (for example, the national airport that Fayyad wants
to establish in the Jordan Valley). In fact, there is no possibility
of establishing Palestinian control, and Fayyad knows this. In
consultation with Abu Mazen, he arranged a series of demonstrations
and protests against the separation barrier; against the
provocations of the settlers, whose produce the Palestinians ban and
burn; against the strengthening of the Israeli hold on East
Jerusalem (which the Palestinians refer to as the Judaization of
Jerusalem); and against the continuing expansion of the settlements.
Fayyad, who is not a member of Fatah, the
nationalist party, comes across as the exceptional figure who
believes in the establishment of a state. At the same time, among
the Palestinian public there is a growing lack of belief. One of the
witticisms most favored by journalists is that the Israelis want to
carry on an interminable set of negotiations without reaching an
agreement, and the Palestinians want an agreement without engaging
in negotiations.
ON BOTH SIDES, the accepted assumption is that
although everyone wants a two-state solution, the actual situation
is pushing everyone toward a one-state solution. This is a solution
that no one wants, but that's what is happening. In the background
is the most important political development of the past few
years—the decline of the Palestinian nationalist movement.
From its beginnings at the start of the
twentieth century, the Palestinian movement has had one clear goal:
to free itself from foreign occupation, first from the British and
then from the Israelis. The demand to create a Palestinian state
does not appear in the national covenant that the PLO proclaimed in
the 1960s. And in the short period in which most Palestinians lived
under Arab rule (from 1948 to 1967), they did not work for the
establishment of a state in the West Bank and Gaza.
It was after the 1967 War that the demand for a
state was formulated and the Palestinian national movement reached
its peak strength. Yasser Arafat and his comrades from the Fatah
movement took over the PLO, which had been founded by the attorney
Ahmad Shuqayri with the support of Egyptian president Gamal Abdul
Nasser. In Arafat's renewed PLO, all the ideological tendencies
found a home: nationalists, religious believers, socialists,
Marxists, communists, Pan-Arabists, and conservatives—as well as
groups operating under the sponsorship of the "revolutionary"
regimes of Syria and Iraq. There were even groups sponsored by King
Hussein of Jordan, who was suspicious of all Palestinian
nationalists and who in the end fought against them in the "Black
September" of 1970, which ended with the flight of the PLO
leadership to Beirut. Even from there, it continued to shape the
Palestinian struggle as a unified national cause.
Those glory days are long gone. Since the
failure of the Oslo Accords and the outbreak of the bloody clashes
in 2000 (the "al-Aqsa Intifada"), the Palestinian public has been
split and fragmented—and so has the PLO. In Gaza, Hamas, a movement
tied to the Muslim Brotherhood, rules. Throughout its history, the
Brotherhood has made nationalism secondary to Islamic religious
identity. Hamas was never part of the PLO, and it does not see
itself obligated to keep agreements with Israel or to subscribe to
the ideology of Palestinian nationalism. Because of the failure of
the PLO and Fatah to create a Palestinian state and because of the
widespread sense that their leadership is corrupt, Hamas has gained
strength on the West Bank.
In the past, thousands of young Arab citizens
of Israel supported the PLO. One example is the poet Mahmoud Darwish,
who left Israel to work with the PLO. But for the past few years the
aspiration of many has been in the opposite direction. Some
Palestinians who defined themselves as PLO loyalists have returned,
or asked to return, and become regular Israeli citizens. One of
them, Sabri Jiryis, editor of Palestinian journals and the head of
the PLO archive, has come back to his birthplace, the village of
Fasuta in the Galilee. After the Palestinian Authority was
established in 1994, researchers asked Israeli Arabs if they would
like to live under Palestinian national rule. Those polled lived in
"the triangle," the Arab areas of Israel closest to the West Bank
border. The response of the majority of those polled (approximately
80 percent) was always negative. In the past few years, this
majority has grown. In one of the last polls, 96 percent of the
villagers of Wadi Ara said that they were not willing to accept any
arrangement in which the Palestinian Authority would rule their
area.
EXTRAORDINARY THINGS are now happening, without
much publicity, in another Palestinian community, that of the
300,000 Arabs of East Jerusalem. In the past few years, tens of
thousands of them have applied to the Ministry of the Interior for
full Israeli citizenship. In 1967, when East Jerusalem was annexed
to Israel, its inhabitants were given "temporary resident" status,
not citizenship. This resembles the U.S. green card, except that it
does not serve as a way-station to full citizenship. Temporary
residents have all the rights and obligations of a regular
citizen—they pay taxes and receive the benefits of the social
welfare system. But they cannot vote in parliamentary elections or
carry an Israeli passport.
That they can't vote for Knesset members has
not bothered the Jerusalem Arabs, nor has the lack of a passport—the
government gives travelers an Israeli "Laisser-Passer." The problem,
from their vantage point, is that they can lose their temporary
resident status if they don't continue to live in Jerusalem. Indeed,
the Interior Ministry has taken away temporary resident cards from
thousands of Jerusalem Arabs who moved to areas in the West Bank or
who have lived overseas for a few years.
Hence the growing number of requests for full
Israeli citizenship. There are many difficulties in the way. The
most serious is that such a request is considered as collaboration
with the enemy, the conqueror, and therefore a betrayal of
Palestinian nationalism. That's why so few applied in the years
after the 1967 War—and most of them were Jerusalem Arabs who married
Israeli Arabs. The PLO and the Palestinian Authority government in
Ramallah have decided to fight the new trend. They sent
representatives to the East Jerusalem office of the Interior
Ministry and warned those standing on line not to request the
citizenship application forms.
Despite the warnings, the number of applicants
is growing. A spokesman for the ministry told me that in the last
two years, about twelve thousand Palestinians from East Jerusalem
have received Israeli citizenship. What is most significant here is
that there isn't any embarrassment about applying for it. A
Palestinian journalist told me, "Not only are they not embarrassed,
they are proud that they have succeeded in getting Israeli
citizenship." This is the strongest possible example of the low
point that Palestinian nationalism has reached—at least in the eyes
of the Palestinians of Jerusalem. They now believe that the Israeli
(Jewish) presence in the eastern part of the city is so powerful
that it cannot be shaken or dislodged. The city won't be divided,
and so they are adapting to a situation that will lead in the end to
a single state.
THE DECLINE OF the Palestinian national
movement can be seen in even sharper relief in the center of its
power on the West Bank. Since its founding in 1964, the PLO's three
leading bodies have been the National Council, the Central Council,
and the Executive Committee. Representation in those bodies was
apportioned among the various Palestinian organizations that existed
fifty years ago. This proportional representation remains as it was,
and it has turned the PLO into an outdated, pathetic, useless
institution that barely functions. Its whole purpose is to provide
meager salaries to its functionaries. In its councils and
committees, Marxist groups like the Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine, which has split into factions over the years, are
still represented, as are the Democratic Front, the Communist Party,
and other ephemeral organizations whose existence has been forgotten
and who have almost no public support.
By contrast, the PLO has no representatives of
Hamas and Islamic Jihad, two movements that together probably have
the support of more than a third of the Palestinian public.
Abu Mazen continues to convene the councils of
the PLO, but it is hard to find people who take seriously their
deliberations and decisions. The Israeli and Arab media report every
utterance made by the leaders of Hamas, but pay much less attention
to the pronouncements of PLO spokesmen.
Similar observations could be made about the
decline of the Fatah movement, the ruling party in the PLO and the
Palestinian Authority. Fatah was weakened when some of its leaders,
like Farouk Kaddoumi, objected to the Oslo Accords and refused to
live under the Palestinian autonomy, the "state-in-the-making" that
was established in the West Bank and Gaza. When he died in 2004,
Arafat left behind a movement that was also dying and a leadership
widely thought to be corrupt. At the head of the Fatah movement is
the Central Committee, a group of eighteen people whose power
resembles that of the Politburo in communist regimes. Only fourteen
members were still alive, all over seventy, in August 2009, when a
new committee was finally elected.
Journalists in Ramallah estimate that, since
2000, about fifty thousand people have left the West Bank and Gaza.
It is worth noting that despite the high birth rate among
Palestinians, their number is shrinking in comparison to the great
increase in the Israeli and Jordanian populations. This has
important economic and social implications. In the past generation,
over one million immigrants have come to Israel from the former
Soviet Union, and a million Iraqis have moved to Jordan. In
contrast, the West Bank and Gaza are stagnating—economically,
socially, and, of course, politically. Among those who have left the
West Bank and Gaza are many of the elites. Thousands have left Gaza,
among them the leadership of Fatah, who have moved, mostly, to
Cairo, Amman, or Ramallah. Most of the tens of thousands who left
the West Bank went to Jordan. Among them were many members of
Fatah's Central Committee. As a journalist who visits Ramallah
regularly, I can testify that on at least three occasions when I met
senior members of Fatah, I found them living in empty houses. Family
members—wives, children, and grandchildren—had left to live and work
in Amman, where most of the senior members have houses and other
property and some of them have businesses. They came back to
Palestine immediately after the Oslo Accords with the intention of
building the great national project of the Palestinian state. In its
stead they got shootings, bombings, closure, and checkpoints. Why
stay? The families left for Amman, and the senior party members come
to Ramallah only for meetings and to hold down positions in the
government, the Fatah movement, and the PLO organizations—from which
they receive their salaries and payment for their expenses.
For most Palestinians, life east of the Jordan
is not life in exile. They might not call Jordan their homeland, but
they certainly wouldn't call it a foreign country. Almost three
million Palestinians live east of the Jordan (four million live in
the West Bank and Gaza and over a million in Israel). About two
million of the Palestinians in Jordan are registered as descendants
of refugees from the 1948 War, but only a minority of them (about 17
percent, according to UN records) live in refugee camps. Some
Jordanian camps have become villages and neighborhoods, in a process
similar to what happened in the West Bank. But Palestinians have
also built the most luxurious residential areas of the Jordanian
capital. Anyone who visits neighborhoods like Shemisani or Adbun is
impressed by the palatial villas. Most if not all of these belong to
wealthy Palestinian families, some of them the children of refugees.
"THE CUNNING OF HISTORY" combined the Nakba,
the catastrophic exile of Palestine's Arabs in 1948, with the
discovery and exploitation of oil in the Persian Gulf (known to
Arabs as the Arab Gulf). Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who
lost home and homeland in 1948 left Gaza, Egypt, the West Bank,
Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon in the fifties, sixties, and seventies,
and went to look for jobs in the oil-producing countries. In 1990,
the number of Palestinians in these states was estimated to be over
a million. About 400,000 of them were concentrated in oil-rich
Kuwait. They went there to serve as teachers, technicians, managers,
economists, construction contractors, engineers, bankers, and
journalists. Arafat, who studied engineering in Egypt, arrived in
Kuwait in 1957 to work as a highway construction engineer. It was
there that he and his friends founded the Fatah organization. In
those same years, Abu Mazen came to Qatar to work as a teacher. The
best-known Palestinian writer, Ghassan Kanafani (a member of the
Popular Front killed by a car bomb in 1972), wrote a novel, Men
in the Sun, about Palestinians whose aspiration was to reach the
oil-rich countries—the "America of the Arabs."
Large numbers of Palestinians, refugees and
non-refugees, got rich. But after the first Gulf War, most of them
were expelled from Kuwait. The reason for the expulsion was the
support given by Arafat and the PLO to Saddam Hussein, who had
promised to bomb Israel if he was attacked. But there was another
factor behind the expulsion—the entry, on a massive scale, of cheap
and efficient workers from Southeast Asia.
One way or another, the great majority of
Palestinians who left the oil states in the past two decades went to
Amman. They came with money, built the luxury neighborhoods of the
city, and made Jordan their home. There are no precise statistics as
to the number of Palestinians in Jordan and their percentage in the
population. Jordanian sources speak of approximately 50 percent. The
Palestinians say that it is at least 70 percent. What is clear is
that the Palestinians are the economic and social backbone of the
state. They are citizens with equal rights and responsibilities,
occupy key positions in the kingdom, and since the events of Black
September (1970) have never questioned the legitimacy of Hashemite
rule. The heroes of the bloody confrontation of those days—Arafat on
one side, King Hussein on the other—are no longer with us. Their
heirs, Abu Mazen and Abdullah the Second, are to a large extent
friends and allies. Both of them are committed to the struggle
against Israel's conquest and settlement of the West Bank.
From the vantage point of the Jordanian regime,
the great nightmare is the possibility of riots and war in the West
Bank, leading to Israeli annexation, which would send a wave of
Palestinian refugees across the Jordan. The two previous inundations
shook the stability of the regime in Amman. After 1948, Palestinians
killed the first King Abdullah (in July 1951), and
Egyptian-Palestinian subversion threatened to bring down Hashemite
rule. Similarly, after the 1967 War, the second wave of Palestinian
refugees precipitated the battle between Jordan and the PLO in 1970,
a crisis, like the previous one, that the Jordanian regime barely
survived.
What the Jordanians want is quiet and stability
in the West Bank. And they want to see a Palestinian national
entity, non-militant and non-revolutionary, which will collaborate
with the conservative regime in Amman. This is also the objective of
Abu Mazen and his colleagues from the Fatah leadership, most of whom
have homes and property in Jordan.
In Bethlehem, in August of 2009, the Fatah
general assembly met for the first time in almost twenty years. At
this meeting, new leaders were elected. For the Central Committee
positions there were twenty-two candidates, fourteen of whom were
new figures in the movement. Left on the committee were some of the
old-timers, members of Abu Mazen's faction. But the main change was
in the profile of the younger elected members (Khalil Shikaki, the
sociologist and researcher from Ramallah, calls them the "young
guard," but the truth is that most of them are over fifty).
Prominent among them are Marwan Barghouti, now
imprisoned in Israel after being convicted of organizing terror
attacks; Jibril Rajoub and Muhammad Dahlan, the two heads of the
Palestinian Security Services, who spent many years in Israeli
jails; and other activists, such as Muhammad Shatiyah, Hussein al-Shaykh,
and Muhammad al-Maddani. These younger men were born, grew up, and
came to maturity in the Palestinian territories of the West Bank and
Gaza under Israeli rule. Their background is totally different from
those of Abu Mazen and his generation, the Fatah veterans. The
veterans grew up in refugee camps in Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon, or
they left the camps of Gaza when they were still children. They
studied in the universities of Cairo, Damascus, and Beirut—and
traveled on Fatah business all over the world. Most of them have a
revolutionary and secular orientation, the result of the support
that the Palestinian movement once received from the communist bloc.
When they arrived with Arafat at the West Bank and Gaza, they were
seen as somewhat "foreign." The accusation was that they brought
with them a culture that was not appropriate to the traditional
culture of the territories—nightclubs, parties, large expenditures,
and a luxurious lifestyle. These were the legacy of the years when
the PLO was flush with funds—especially after Sadat's "peace
initiative" of 1977, when the Arab states, especially Iraq, bought
and paid for PLO resistance to the Egyptian initiative.
After many years outside of Palestine, the
older activists have a familiarity with, and an attachment to, the
Arab world. They are at home in the countries in which they grew up,
studied, and lived. This is not true of the recently elected younger
guard. Their whole lives have been spent in the homeland, in the
cities, villages, and refugee camps of the West Bank and Gaza. They
know Tel Aviv and the Israeli reality far better than the reality of
Damascus and Cairo. After years in Israeli prisons or at work in
Israel, there are those among them who have total mastery of the
Hebrew language. They are interviewed regularly in Hebrew in the
Israeli media, and they participate in Israeli events. They have
Israeli friends, both Jews and Arabs, and they visit these friends
at home in West Jerusalem, Herzliya, Haifa, or Nazareth.
They have no family or property in Amman or
Cairo, and thus they are more like the Palestinian citizens of
Israel than they are like the members of the old guard. It would not
be a great exaggeration to assert that the new Palestinian
generation in the West Bank (less so in Gaza), who know Israel so
well, would prefer to fight for equal rights in a single binational
state rather than continue a struggle that seems almost hopeless—to
establish an independent state.
THIS IS NOT a casual suggestion or a guess. In
the past few years, Palestinian figures have talked about ending the
discouraging struggle to create Palestinian rule in the territories.
Sari Nusseibeh, president of Al-Quds University, once suggested,
with a degree of cynicism, that the Palestinians should demand total
annexation so that they could receive the same rights as Israelis in
the common homeland. Ali Jirbawi of Beir Zeit University has raised
the possibility of a voluntary dismantling of the Palestinian
Authority.
In international diplomacy there is a pervasive
idea that it is possible and necessary to establish a Palestinian
state in the West Bank and Gaza that will exist side by side with
Israel. Many Israelis and Palestinians want this and believe in it.
But the forces working against this possibility are many and
powerful. Israeli governments have enabled the settlement of over
half a million Jews beyond the 1967 borders. This represents almost
10 percent of the Jews in Israel. About 300,000 of them live in
settlements in the West Bank and about 200,000 are in the Jewish
neighborhoods of East Jerusalem. There are those among them who will
fight with all their strength to prevent an Israeli withdrawal and
the establishment of a Palestinian state. But what is no less
important is that on the Palestinian side as well a new situation
has emerged. National unity has dissolved, the national movement has
atrophied and declined, and the idea has become acceptable that if
there won't be two states for two peoples, it is better that there
be one state.
Read Alexander Jakobson's response here
Danny Rubinstein, until 2008 a
member of the editorial board of the newspaper Haaretz, is an author
and specialist on Arab and Palestinian affairs. He teaches at Ben
Gurion University and The Hebrew University in Jerusalem. This
article was translated from the Hebrew by Shalom L. Goldman.
========================================
Articles appearing on IsraCampus.Org.il are those of the writer and
do not necessarily represent the opinion of IsraCampus.Org.il
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