RUGEN PILLAY Durban North IN 1961, Hendrik Verwoerd declared that “Israel, like South Africa, is an apartheid state”.
As an architect of apartheid, and South African prime minister at the time, he spoke from a position of some authority.
In the 60 years since, the suggestion of Israeli apartheid has never gone away. In 1965, Fayez Sayegh wrote about the “practitioners of apartheid in Palestine”.
In the 1970s, Edward Said characterised the Israeli-Palestinian relationship as a “specific, continuing process of dispossession, displacement, and colonial de facto apartheid”.
Since the 1980s, Palestinian and Israeli scholars – like Elia Zureik, Uri Davis, Leila Farsakh, Raef Zreik, Ilan Pappé, and many others – have produced ever-deeper analysis of Israeli apartheid. Prominent South Africans – from Desmond Tutu to Ronnie Kasrils – say the…