The Desert Blooms
I remember the propaganda I believed years ago. In particular it was the idea that the modern state of Israel was causing the desert to bloom. This was supposedly a fulfillment of Bible prophecy.
Isaiah 41:18-20
I will make rivers flow on barren heights, and springs within the valleys. I will turn the desert into pools of water, and the parched ground into springs. I will put in the desert the cedar and the acacia, the myrtle and the olive. I will set pines in the wasteland, the fir and the cypress together, so that people may see and know, may consider and understand, that the hand of the Lord has done this, that the Holy One of Israel has created it.
And this:
Isaiah 51:3
The Lord will surely comfort Zion and will look with compassion on all her ruins; he will make her deserts like Eden, her wastelands like the garden of the Lord. Joy and gladness will be found in her, thanksgiving and the sound of springs.
Has Israel has caused the desert to bloom? The statistics do not bear this out.
But even if Israel has made the desert bloom, and I would say Israel, to some extent, has; there is an unasked question that bears on the story of the Pima Indian.
Again I quote from Why We Get Fat: And What to Do About it.
With the California gold rush, the relative paradise of the Pima came to an end and, with it, their affluence. Anglo-Americans and Mexicans began settling in large numbers in the region. These newcomers—“some of the vilest specimens of humanity that the white race has produced,” wrote Russell—hunted the local game near to extinction, and diverted the Gila River water to irrigate their own fields at the expense of the Pimas’.
A portion of the success of Arizona agriculture was based on stolen water. The unasked question when we see a blooming desert in Israel is—Where did the Israeli farmer get the water? Where did the Israeli farmer get the land?
When we see the abysmal conditions of a Palestinian settlement camp, remember the Pima Indians and ask the important question. Who "owns" the water? If you wonder why the Moslems and Jews cannot sit down and settle their differences “like good Christians”—one answer is the issue of who controls the water.
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