Israel Palestine Infos
Uri Avnery
February 5, 2011
A
Villa in the Jungle?
WE ARE in the middle of a
geological event. An earthquake of epoch-making dimensions is changing the
landscape of our region. Mountains turn into valleys, islands emerge from the
sea, volcanoes cover the land with lava.
People are afraid of
change. When it happens, they tend to deny, ignore, pretend that nothing really
important is happening.
Israelis are no
exception. While in neighboring
But what is happening now
in
AS USUAL, nobody foresaw
it. The much-feted Mossad was taken by surprise, as was the CIA and all the
other celebrated services of this kind.
Yet there should have
been no surprise at all - except about the incredible force of the eruption. In
the last few years, we have mentioned many times in this column that all over
the Arab world, multitudes of young people are growing up with a profound
contempt for their leaders, and that sooner or later this will lead to an
uprising. These were not prophesies, but rather a sober analysis of
probabilities.
The turmoil in
In Arab culture, nothing
is more important than honor. People can suffer deprivation, but they will not
stand humiliation.
Yet what every young Arab
from Morocco to Oman saw daily was his leaders humiliating themselves, forsaking
their Palestinian brothers in order to gain favor and money from America,
collaborating with the Israeli occupation, cringing before the new colonizers.
This was deeply humiliating for young people brought up on the achievements of
Arab culture in times gone by and the glories of the early Caliphs.
Nowhere was this loss of
honor more obvious than in Egypt, which openly collaborated with the Israeli
leadership in imposing the shameful blockade on the Gaza Strip, condemning 1.5
million Arabs to malnutrition and worse. It was never just an Israeli blockade,
but an Israeli-Egyptian one, lubricated by 1.5 billion US dollars every year.
I have reflected many
times – out loud – how I would feel if I were a 15 year-old boy in Alexandria,
Amman or Aleppo, seeing my leaders behave like abject slaves of the Americans
and the Israelis, while oppressing and despoiling their own subjects. At that
age, I myself joined a terrorist organization. Why would an Arab boy be
different?
A dictator may be
tolerated when he reflects national dignity. But a dictator who expresses
national shame is a tree without roots – any strong wind can blow him over.
For me, the only question
was where in the Arab world it would start.
THIS IS a wonder in
itself. If
I love the Egyptian
people. True, one cannot really like 88 million individuals, but one can
certainly like one people more than another. In this respect, one is allowed
generalize.
The Egyptians you meet in
the streets, in the homes of the intellectual elite and in the alleys of the
poorest of the poor, are an incredibly patient lot. They are endowed with an
irrepressible sense of humor. They are also immensely proud of the country and
its 8000 years of history.
For an Israeli, used to
his aggressive compatriots, the almost complete lack of aggressiveness of the
Egyptians is astonishing. I vividly remember one particular scene: I was in a
taxi in
A Westerner coming to
It’s like a faulty dam on
a river. The water rises behind the dam, imperceptibly slowly and silently – but
if it reaches a critical level, the dam will burst, sweeping everything before
it.
MY OWN first meeting with
It took no more than a
few months for this to change profoundly. Sadat hoped – sincerely, I believe –
that he was also bringing deliverance to the Palestinians. Under intense
pressure from Menachem Begin and Jimmy Carter, he agreed to a vague wording.
Soon enough he learned that Begin did not dream of fulfilling this obligation.
For Begin, the peace agreement with
The Egyptians – starting
with the cultural elite and filtering down to the masses – never forgave this.
They felt deceived. There may not be much love for the Palestinians – but
betraying a poor relative is shameful in Arab tradition. Seeing Hosni Mubarak
collaborating with this betrayal led many Egyptians to despise him. This
contempt lies beneath everything that happened this week. Consciously or
unconsciously, the millions who are shouting “Mubarak Go Away” echo this
contempt.
IN EVERY revolution there
is the “Yeltsin Moment”. The columns of tanks are sent into the capital to
reinstate the dictatorship. At the critical moment, the masses confront the
soldiers. If the soldiers refuse to shoot, the game is over. Yeltsin climbed on
the tank, ElBaradei addressed the masses in
Then there is the “
And there is the
“Ceausescu moment”. The dictator stands on the balcony addressing the crowd,
when suddenly from below a chorus of “Down With The Tyrant!” swells up. For a
moment, the dictator is speechless, moving his lips noiselessly, then he
disappears. This, in a way, happened to Mubarak, making a ridiculous speech and
trying in vain to stem the tide.
IF MUBARAK is cut off
from reality, Binyamin Netanyahu is no less. He and his colleagues seem unable
to grasp the fateful meaning of these events for
When
Everything the Israeli
leadership has done in the last 44 years of occupation or 63 years of its
existence is becoming obsolete. We are facing a new reality. We can ignore it –
insisting that we are “a villa in the jungle”, as Ehud Barak famously put it –
or find our proper place in the new reality.
Peace with the
Palestinians is no longer a luxury. It is an absolute necessity. Peace now,
peace quickly. Peace with the
Palestinians, and then peace with the democratic masses all over the Arab world,
peace with the reasonable Islamic forces (like Hamas and the Muslim Brothers,
who are quite different from al Qaeda), peace with the leaders who are about to
emerge in Egypt and everywhere.