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Why Bangladesh Should, Belatedly, Recognize Israel

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A Bangladeshi man wearing a facemask as a coronavirus precaution sits in front of a poster of the country’s independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman near the Buriganga River. Dhaka on April 27, 2020 AFP
Opinion Why Bangladesh Should, Belatedly, Recognize Israel

Israel offered to recognize newly-founded Bangladesh in 1972. Despite similar independence struggles, the logic of a strategic relationship, and the lack of direct hostilities, they still have no economic, defense or diplomatic ties. It's time for change

Umran Chowdhury
15:18

In the years following the Second World War, the political maps of South Asia and the Middle East were redrawn. The British Raj came to an end with partition into the two states of India and Pakistan. On the eastern flank of the subcontinent, the borders of East Pakistan were created by the Radcliffe Line in 1947. The State of Israel was created in 1948 with the end of the British Mandate for Palestine.

Both Israel and Bangladesh were founded in the wake of genocides. For Israel, the Holocaust; for Bangladesh, the atrocities during the 1971 Liberation War in which the pro-independence Bengali population was systematically targeted for their political beliefs, cultural identity and religious diversity. Just as there is the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum in Israel, there is a Liberation War Museum in Bangladesh.

The war which transformed East Pakistan into Bangladesh had several parallels with the Israeli experience, including the displacement of millions of refugees and a global stalemate involving the superpowers and their regional allies. A Jewish Indian military commander, J. F. R. Jacob, played a crucial role in negotiating the surrender of West Pakistani forces on 16 December 1971.

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Both Israel and Bangladesh committed themselves to democracy at the time of independence. Bangladesh’s Proclamation of Independence enunciated the values of "equality, human dignity and social justice"; Israel’s Declaration of Independence promised a state "based on the principles of liberty, justice and freedom expressed by the prophets of Israel; it will affirm complete social and political equality for all its citizens."

Religion and secular democracy are important to both nations. The two countries have a shared heritage of English common law as former parts of the British Empire. Both countries have parliamentary governments influenced by the Westminster tradition.

Israel was one of the earliest countries in the Middle East to recognize Bangladesh in 1972. It was reported on 7 February 1972 that the Israeli government offered diplomatic recognition to the newly independent nation. It came on the heels of Bangladesh’s quest for recognition since April 1971. However, Bangladesh did not accept the Israeli offer. It was keen to win the trust of Arab states.

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Bangladesh passports bear the stipulation: 'Valid for all countries of the world except Israel' Wikimedia
Today, many of those same Arab states are warming up to Israel in unprecedented fashion. Israel is also an emerging ally of India – Bangladesh’s giant neighbor. Security cooperation could be an important part of Israel's potential role in South Asia, and with Bangladesh in particular.

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Israel and India have developed impressively close defense and strategic ties over the past few years; an extension of that relationship of trust to Bangladesh – which enjoys a robust security partnership with India, especially in intelligence sharing – would be logical and mutually beneficial. Bangladesh also follows a "zero-tolerance" policy on terrorism and has largely been successful in containing the terror threat.

There is another shared heritage – even if largely unknown. Individual Jews have intersected with Bangladesh’s modern history in significant and surprising ways.

Rabindranath Tagore, one of Bangladesh’s key cultural icons, and the statesman Sir Khawaja Nazimuddin, cooperated in the matter of a Jewish academic from Germany who lived in British Bengal, Dr. Alex Aronson. It was a remarkable example of Hindu-Muslim unity borne out of appreciation for an exceptional individual. When WWII broke out, the British colonial rulers of India considered Aronson, a Jew and refugee from Nazi Germany, an "enemy alien" for Aronson was sent to several internment camps and only due to repeated interventions by Tagore and Nazimuddin was he released and remained free. Dr. Aronson spent two years living in Dhaka before migrating to Israel and settling down in Haifa.




In the 1960s, the American Jewish architect Louis I. Kahn was commissioned to design the parliament building in Dhaka which would become one of the world’s largest legislative complexes. After Bangladeshi independence, he continued traveling to Dhaka to check on the progress of its construction but did not live to see its completion in the 1980s. My father, who served in parliament during the 1980s, often describes the modernist grandeur of the building. The complex’s sprawling gardens and lakes are an oasis in the heart of Dhaka.

The last remnants of Bangladesh’s tiny Jewish community appear to be extinct. The last well-known Jewish resident in the country was a news anchor for state television. More and more Bangladeshis are aware of the history of anti-Semitism and its parallels with other peoples who have faced genocide – and the notorious politics of genocide denial. That denial is a sad reality for Jews, but also for Armenians (who were once a strong community in Dhaka but have also disappeared) and Bengalis, who have increasingly encountered a genocide denial campaign in recent years.

In Israel, children often grow up hearing the extraordinary tales of valor and survival during the Holocaust. In Bangladesh, we grow up hearing tales of liberation in 1971. But there is also a crossover: we also read about Anne Frank. One birthday, my maternal grandparents and uncles gifted me The Diary of Anne Frank which they bought from a bookshop in Dhaka. I was a young teenager at the time. The story of Anne Frank evokes the same emotions as hearing our grandparents’ tales of the Liberation War: how they hid from a marauding occupation army and yearned for freedom.

The Palestinian struggle continues to be important to the people of Bangladesh. Dhaka currently hosts a Palestinian embassy. I have in my family’s possession a photograph signed by the late Yasser Arafat, who often visited Dhaka to meet with Bangladeshi leaders. Arafat wrote on the back of that photograph of his wish to meet with us Bangladeshis in a "free Palestine."

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Supporters of Bangladesh's biggest Islamic party, Jamat-e-Islami, march during a protest against Israeli actions in Lebanon and the Palestinian territories. Dhaka, July 24, 2006 REUTERS
However, the breakdown of Palestinian governance poses questions about the future of the two-state solution. In the absence of democratic governance, the Palestinian issue has been hijacked by Islamic extremists across large parts of the Muslim world. Unfortunately, in Bangladesh itself, the Palestinian issue is seen by some through a bigoted prism with little regard for realities on the ground.

Israel has emerged as an exception in the Middle East with strong democratic institutions. Bangladesh was similarly founded on the common values of democracy and civil liberties. Bangladesh continues to face challenges in consolidating the rule of law and economic development. Nevertheless, the inherent pluralism of Bangladeshi society, which is multi-religious and multi-ethnic, is enduring and resilient. Freedom of religion is a cornerstone of the constitutional order in Bangladesh. National holidays include festivals celebrated by Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, and Christians.

But despite similarities in their independence struggles, the strong logic of a strategic relationship, and the lack of any direct hostilities between them, Bangladesh and Israel have no diplomatic ties. This is an illogical situation. After independence, both countries worked hard to ensure the survival of their states.

Both Bangladesh and Israel survive in difficult neighborhoods: Israel, as a Jewish state surrounded by the Arab world, with a cold peace with two of her neighbors; and Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority state surrounded by a neighborhood of non-Muslim majority states.

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Indian Muslim women participate in a rally to protest against a new citizenship law in east Gauhati in the Indian state of Assam. Feb. 16, 2020 Anupam Nath,AP
Bangladesh has to contend with growing Islamophobia and the rise of saffron (Hindu or Buddhist) nationalism in India and Myanmar. India’s new citizenship law has also been described by the United Nations as "fundamentally discriminatory" against Muslims. The controversial citizenship registration process in the Indian state of Assam (next door to Bangladesh) and which could potentially cause a flood of refugees, violates international law. This is in sharp contrast to Bangladesh’s own citizenship database fundedby the World Bank.

Israel was founded on the principle of being a sanctuary for Jewish refugees who faced persecution. At the time of the Partition of India, Muslims from across British India began to migrate to the eastern and western wings of Pakistan. More recently, Bangladesh has emerged as a haven for stateless refugees, including 1.1 million Rohingya refugees who fled religious and ethnic persecution in Myanmar.

Members of Myanmar's Rohingya ethnic minority walk past rice fields after crossing the border into Bangladesh near Cox's Bazaar, fleeing a harsh crackdown by Myanmar's military. Sept. 1, 2017Bernat Armangue,AP
Bangladesh and Israel should build on common values. Perhaps, it can start with informal ties and develop towards full diplomatic recognition. There is much potential for cooperation.

Israeli companies can take advantage of Bangladesh’s growing economy, including the "Digital Bangladesh" scheme to develop hi-tech industries in the South Asian country. Defense procurement is another potential opportunity for Israeli companies and security cooperation: defense spending in Bangladesh grew 123 percent between 2008 and 2017, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

Bangladesh, as the world’s second largest textile exporter, can find a new market in Israel. Bangladeshi and Israeli businesses can also cooperate in sectors such as pharmaceuticals, agriculture, diamonds, jute, leather, retail, food, banking, healthcare and tourism. Cooperation can be spurred in education, science, cultural relations, and inter-faith dialogue.

For any of this to take place, travel restrictions need to be lifted. Bangladeshi passports still bear the stipulation: "This passport is valid for all countries of the world except Israel."

2020 marks the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz and the end of the Holocaust. 2021 marks the 50th anniversary of Bangladesh’s liberation and the golden jubilee of its independence. The irony remains that Bangladesh and Israel still lack formal relations despite coming close to doing so back in 1972. It's time to, belatedly, move forward and start a new chapter in bilateral relations.

Umran Chowdhury is a lawyer focusing on international law based in Dhaka, Bangladesh. He is a graduate of the Sorbonne-Assas International Law School. Twitter: @umranchowdhury

www.haaretz.com/amp/world-news/.premium-why-bangladesh-should-belatedly-recognize-israel-1.8834838
 
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Is the idiot of a writer seriously comparing BD's independence struggle with that of settlers that displaced the Palestinians from their rightful land of Palestine?

I sometimes wonder on the intelligence of some people.
 
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Is the idiot of a writer seriously comparing BD's independence struggle with that of settlers that displaced the Palestinians from their rightful land of Palestine?

I sometimes wonder on the intelligence of some people.

The guy is a paid shill for someone, I can't figure out who this is. :-)

Plus it is Ramadan, time for restraint from excesses.

In any case, Bangladesh will seriously need to consider this when Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia and Turkey does.

Which is pretty close to when Jahannam freezes over.
 
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The guy is a paid shill for someone, I can't figure out who this is. :-)

Plus it is Ramadan, time for restraint from excesses.

In any case, Bangladesh will seriously need to consider this when Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia and Turkey does.

Which is pretty close to when Jahannam freezes over.

The Jews were offered a very generous settlement from the Arabs back in 2002 where they got to keep 78% of historic Palestine but they are so greedy they turned that down as they want the whole of Palestine.

BD has nothing to gain and will lose it's soul by recognising those land thieves.

PS - Turkey has recognised the land thieves since they came into existence and does roaring trade with them despite Erdogan's pro-Palestine rhetoric.
Strange world we live in.
 
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Turkey has recognised the land thieves since they came into existence and does roaring trade with them despite Erdogan's pro-Palestine rhetoric.
Strange world we live in.

Politics and money makes strange bedfellows. Erdogan is apparently also very pro-Islam in Turkey itself but I could be wrong.

Turkish people themselves are very pro-Palestine and have given lives in trying to break the Gaza blockade sometime back with Israel bombing a Turkish ship offering supplies to Gaza. I wonder what our Turkish brothers say about this.

@cabatli_53 brother your brief opinion...
 
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Is the idiot of a writer seriously comparing BD's independence struggle with that of settlers that displaced the Palestinians from their rightful land of Palestine?

I sometimes wonder on the intelligence of some people.
Thank Allah for sane Bangli brothers like you. These idiots amongst us will sell their soul for 2 dime
 
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The Jews were offered a very generous settlement from the Arabs back in 2002 where they got to keep 78% of historic Palestine but they are so greedy they turned that down as they want the whole of Palestine.

BD has nothing to gain and will lose it's soul by recognising those land thieves.

PS - Turkey has recognised the land thieves since they came into existence and does roaring trade with them despite Erdogan's pro-Palestine rhetoric.
Strange world we live in.
Exactly, this is why Palestine is a lost dream. I know many Palestinians who have Israeli citizenship and ofc all the perks that comes with that, it’s the uneducated poor twats that still cries Palestine. Palestine’s cause was killed by the Palestinians but
We should recognize Israel. It benefits us more than to not, if we can put up diplomatic relations with Burma or Pakistan, we can with Israel too.

Politics and money makes strange bedfellows. Erdogan is apparently also very pro-Islam in Turkey itself but I could be wrong.

Turkish people themselves are very pro-Palestine and have given lives in trying to break the Gaza blockade sometime back with Israel bombing a Turkish ship offering supplies to Gaza. I wonder what our Turkish brothers say about this.

@cabatli_53 brother your brief opinion...
I might be wrong but all Turks I met have no respect for Palestinians and neither does the Palestinians for the Turks. Turks see them as imbeciles who are greedy and switch sides, Palestinians hate their occupation of Arab land (Ottoman Empire)
But regular Palestinians usually are the most humble people I know.
As for religiousness of Turkish people, Idk dude cross the bridge to Istanbul or be in the west of the country, prostitution/casual sex and other stuff are rife... definitely doesn’t seem Islamic to me. Usually most of the Islamic roots are based on heritage and not practice in present times. People in the eastern parts of the country are however humble af, religious too. Idk I met too many wild people the past 3 years
 
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LOL @ the differing conclusions here from same set of words.

Then there's the whole inferiority complex (yet again) at play "we have to wait for A B C and D to recognise israel before we can even consider it" Totally and soundly affirms BD-stronk dynamics elsewhere

Not to mention one of the ABCD's last time I checked (Turkey)... recognised+recognises Israel....
 
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I might be wrong but all Turks I met have no respect for Palestinians and neither does the Palestinians for the Turks. Turks see them as imbeciles who are greedy and switch sides, Palestinians hate their occupation of Arab land (Ottoman Empire)
But regular Palestinians usually are the most humble people I know.

As for religiousness of Turkish people, Idk dude cross the bridge to Istanbul or be in the west of the country, prostitution/casual sex and other stuff are rife... definitely doesn’t seem Islamic to me. Usually most of the Islamic roots are based on heritage and not practice in present times. People in the eastern parts of the country are however humble af, religious too. Idk I met too many wild people the past 3 years

Thanks for the insights.

Of course like every country, in Turkey you have religious folks (who are not rich) and educated intelligentsia (not very religious) and then again the upper middle to upper class who don't care either way. There will always be a range of different types...
 
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Politics and money makes strange bedfellows. Erdogan is apparently also very pro-Islam in Turkey itself but I could be wrong.

Turkish people themselves are very pro-Palestine and have given lives in trying to break the Gaza blockade sometime back with Israel bombing a Turkish ship offering supplies to Gaza. I wonder what our Turkish brothers say about this.

@cabatli_53 brother your brief opinion...


Brother, All countries have some individual reasons to generate a proper foreign policy and You know Palestine policy of our government is solid and apparent. Our government gave all kind of support to Palestine at all conditions. Top officials including PM criticized Israel in front of World community to create an awareness about Palestinian people. All these are the another reasons our relations with US has broken down and We are now facing some kind of embargo in defense and security matters (Israeli lobby in US). However, If you check the Palestine government policy regarding the matters related with Turkiye, The desicions that they have given is absolutely shocking for all Turkish people.

  • They officially condemned Turkey's Afrin operation that was done against PYD terrorist organisation and put a sign on decleration.
  • They officially joined into the camp of Greece/Greek Cypriot/Israel/Egypt for the participation of EEZ rights of E. Med illegally, while Turkey was struggling to protect the rights against these states by sending naval forces in dangerous locations.

After I saw all these shocking desicions, I had to re-check my consideration about Palestine. I realised that Turkey wasted good relationship (some part) for the sake of people who don't know the actual meaning of fidelity and gratitute so You may guess my response If you take these matters into consideration. I want to side with our Muslim brothers at all conditions but All sides should protect the back of others. You can not walk on difficult roads with people who is waiting correct time to stab you in accordance to changing climate. I wish I had spoken about solidarity and friendship of Muslim states among eachother but Such a thing doesn't exist unfortunately.
 
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As if BD would get 900% growth rate when it recognizes Israel as the excitements become obvious among some BD growth fans. Many banana republics already did recognize Israel if you go through the list and see their achievements. Lol

This brings us to two immediate measures which BD desperately needs to get higher growth. Make Sylheti as your Federal state with Sylheti as the official language and then recognize Israel. Then bring your 'husban-wife theorist' Sylheti Foreign Minister Momen to oversee the process. He will decide who will play the roles of husband and wife between BD-Israel. Below you can see the latest poster boy of Sylhetis who is also the inventor of husband-wife Theory with successful hair implants.

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What benefit will Israel get from recognising Bangladesh other then 'Muslim' country ticked off list? What agenda has Bangladesh got that Israeli lobbying can take care of?

Not taking the piss but you guys don't really offer anything strategically on the world stage to anyone.

Maybe you'll become a buyer of Israeli defence equipment...and claim 'yeh man...we made it'
 
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Brother, All countries have some individual reasons to generate a proper foreign policy and You know Palestine policy of our government is solid and apparent. Our government gave all kind of support to Palestine at all conditions. Top officials including PM criticized Israel in front of World community to create an awareness about Palestinian people. All these are the another reasons our relations with US has broken down and We are now facing some kind of embargo in defense and security matters (Israeli lobby in US). However, If you check the Palestine government policy regarding the matters related with Turkiye, The desicions that they have given is absolutely shocking for all Turkish people.

  • They officially condemned Turkey's Afrin operation that was done against PYD terrorist organisation and put a sign on decleration.
  • They officially joined into the camp of Greece/Greek Cypriot/Israel/Egypt for the participation of EEZ rights of E. Med illegally, while Turkey was struggling to protect the rights against these states by sending naval forces in dangerous locations.

After I saw all these shocking desicions, I had to re-check my consideration about Palestine. I realised that Turkey wasted good relationship (some part) for the sake of people who don't know the actual meaning of fidelity and gratitute so You may guess my response If you take these matters into consideration. I want to side with our Muslim brothers at all conditions but All sides should protect the back of others. You can not walk on difficult roads with people who is waiting correct time to stab you in accordance to changing climate. I wish I had spoken about solidarity and friendship of Muslim states among eachother but Such a thing doesn't exist unfortunately.

Understood brother - it is sad that some leaders of Palestinians failed to show backbone and gratitude to Turkey and were so easily swayed by anti-Turkish elements. Hopefully other Muslim countries stay true to Islamic solidarity above all else...
 
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As if BD would get 900% growth rate when it recognizes Israel as the excitements become obvious among some BD growth fans. Many banana republics already did recognize Israel if you go through the list and see their achievements. Lol

This brings us to two immediate measures which BD desperately needs to get higher growth. Make Sylheti as your Federal state with Sylheti as the official language and then recognize Israel. Then bring your 'husban-wife theorist' Sylheti Foreign Minister Momen to oversee the process. He will decide who will play the roles of husband and wife between BD-Israel. Below you can see the latest poster boy of Sylhetis who is also the inventor of husband-wife Theory with successful hair implants.

View attachment 631353
What kind of weird fetish this guy has? Why does he bring husband and wife talk in everything xD
 
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LOL @ the differing idiot conclusions here from same set of words.

Then there's the whole inferiority complex (yet again) at play "we have to wait for A B C and D to recognise israel before we can even consider it" :rofl: Totally and soundly affirms BD-stronk dynamics elsewhere:coffee:

Not to mention one of the ABCD's last time I checked (Turkey)... recognised+recognises Israel....

The level of unintelligent worthlessness (on rote) here is :pop:
You yourself reported a post in another thread because someone used a word 'Gangu' and yet here you are involved in derailing, going off-topic and flamebaiting ....tell me why there shouldn't be an action against this post of yours
 
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