Israel Palestine Infos
Uri Avnery
November 13, 2010
Vox Taxi – Vox
Dei
ON SATURDAY
evening, two weeks ago, we returned in a taxi from the annual memorial rally for
Yitzhak Rabin, and as usual got into a conversation with our driver.
Generally, these
conversations flow pleasantly, with lot of laughs. Rachel loves them, because
they bring us face-to-face with people we don’t meet otherwise. The
conversations are necessarily short, the people express their views concisely,
without choosing their words. They are of many kinds, and in the background we
generally hear the radio news, talk shows or music chosen by the driver. And, of
course, the soldier-son and the student-daughter are mentioned.
But this time,
things were less smooth. Perhaps we were more provocative than usual, still
depressed by the rally, which was devoid of political content, devoid of
emotion, devoid of hope. The driver became more and more upset, and so did
Rachel. We felt that if we had not been paying customers, it might have ended in
a fight.
THE VIEWS of our
driver can be summed up as follows:
There will never be
peace between us and the Arabs, because the Arabs don’t want it.
The Arabs want to
slaughter us, always wanted to and always will.
Every Arab child
learns from early childhood that the Jews must be killed.
The Koran preaches
murder.
Fact, wherever
there are Muslims, there is terrorism. Wherever there is terrorism, there are
Muslims.
We must not give
the Arabs one square inch of the country.
What did we get
when we gave them Gaza back? We got Qassam rockets!
There’s nothing to
be done about it. Only to hit them on the head and send them back to the
countries they came from.
According to the
Talmudic injunction: He who comes to kill you, kill him first.
THIS DRIVER
expressed in simple and unvarnished language standard conviction of the great
majority of Jews in the country.
It is not something
that can be identified with any one sector of society. It is common to all
sectors. The owner of a stall in the market will express it crudely, a professor
will set it down in a learned treatise with numbered footnotes. A senior army
officer regards it as a self-evident assumption, a politician bases his election
campaign on it.
This is the real
obstacle facing the Israeli peace camp today. Once upon a time, the discussion
was about whether a Palestinian people exists at all. That’s already behind us.
After that we had to discuss “Greater Israel” and “Liberated Territory Will No
Be Given Back”. We overcame. Then there was the discussion about whether to
return the “Territories” to King Hussein or to a Palestinian state to be
established next to Israel. We overcame. After that, whether to negotiate with
the PLO, which was defined as a terrorist organization, and with the
arch-terrorist, Yasser Arafat. We overcame. All the leaders of the nation later
stood in line to shake his hand. Than there was the quarrel about the “price” –
return to the Green Line? Swap of territories? A compromise in Jerusalem?
Evacuate settlements? We overcame.
All these debates
were, more or less, rational. Of course, deep emotions were involved, but so was
logic.
But how to speak
with people who believe wholeheartedly that the discussion itself is irrelevant?
That it is divorced from reality?
In the eyes of our
conversation partners, questions about whether it is worthwhile to make peace or
not, whether peace is good or bad for the Jews, are meaningless, if not
downright stupid. Questions which make no sense, since we are having a debate
only with ourselves.
There will never be
peace, because the Arabs will never want peace. End of discussion.
WHO IS to blame for
this attitude? If there is one person who is guilty more than anyone else, it is
Ehud Barak.
If there existed an
international court for peace crimes, like the international court for war
crimes, we should have to send him there.
When Barak won the
1999 elections against Binyamin Netanyahu by a landslide, he had no idea about
the Palestinian problem. He talked as if he had never had a serious conversation
with a Palestinian. But he promised to achieve peace within months, and more
than a hundred thousand jubilant people acclaimed him on the evening of election
day in the square where Rabin had been murdered.
Barak was certain
that he knew exactly what to do: to summon Arafat to a meeting and offer him a
Palestinian state. Arafat would thank him with tears in his eyes and give up
everything else.
But when the Camp
David conference convened, he was shocked to see that the Palestinians, evil as
they were, had some demands of their own. The conference ended in failure.
Coming home, Barak
did not declare: “Sorry, I was ignorant. I shall try to do better.” There are
not many leaders in the world who admit to stupidity.
A normal politician
would have said: “This conference has not yet born fruit, but there was some
progress. There will be more meetings, and we shall try to bridge the
differences.”
But Barak produced
a mantra that every Israeli has since heard a thousand times: “I have turned
every stone on the way to peace / I have offered the Palestinians unprecedented
generous offers / The Palestinians have rejected everything / They want to throw
us into the sea / WE HAVE NO PARTNER FOR PEACE!”
If Netanyahu had
said something like this, nobody would have been impressed. But Barak had
appointed himself the leader of the Left, the head of the peace camp.
The
result was disastrous: the Left collapsed, the peace camp almost
disappeared. Barak himself lost the elections by a landslide, and justly so: if
there is no chance for peace, who needs him? Why vote for him? After all, Ariel
Sharon, his adversary in the elections, was much better equipped for war.
The result: the
ordinary Israeli was finally convinced that there is no chance for peace. Even
Barak said that there is no partner. So that’s that.
NO SINGLE person,
even a genius like Barak, would have been able to bring about such a disaster if
the conditions had not been there.
The conflict
between the Israelis and the Palestinians began 130 years ago. A fifth and sixth
generation have been born into it. A war deepens myths and prejudices, hatred
and distrust, demonization of the enemy and blind conviction of one’s own
righteousness. That is the nature of war. On both sides it shapes a closed and
fanatical world, which no counter-argument can penetrate.
Consequently, if an
Arab declares his willingness to make peace, it only confirms that all Arabs are
liars. (And conversely: if an Israeli offers a compromise, it only reinforces
the Palestinian’s belief that there is no limit to the tricks of the Zionist
Enemy, which is planning to drive them out.)
AND WHAT is most
important, the belief that “we have no partner for peace” is extremely
convenient.
If there is no
chance for peace, there is no need to rack our brains about it, much less to do
anything about it.
No need to waste
words on this silliness. Indeed, the very word “peace” has gone out of fashion.
It is no longer mentioned anymore in polite political society. At most, one
speaks about “the end of the occupation” or “the final status settlement” –
presenting both, of course, as quite impossible.
If there is no
chance for peace, the whole matter can be forgotten. It’s unpleasant to think
about the Palestinians and what is happening to them in the “Territories”. So
let’s devote all our attention (which has a limited span anyhow) to the really
important matters, such as the squabble between Barak and Ashkenazi, Olmert’s
business affairs, the fatal road accidents and the critical state of the Lake of
Tiberias.
And while we are at
it, if there is no chance for peace, why not build settlements? Why not Judaize
East Jerusalem? Why not forget about the Palestinians altogether?
If there is no
chance for peace, what are all these bleeding heart in the world lecturing us?
Why is Obama bothering us? Why is the UN boring us? If the Arabs want to
massacre us, we clearly have to defend ourselves, and everybody who wants us to
make peace with them is nothing but an anti-Semite or self-hating Jew.
THE HEBREW saying
“The voice of the masses is like the voice of God” is derived from the Latin
saying vox populi, vox dei” (“the voice of the people, the voice of God”). It
was first used by an Anglo-Saxon clergyman some 1200 years ago in a letter to
the Emperor Charles the Great, and in a negative way: one should not listen to
those who say so, since “the feelings of the masses always border on madness”.
I am not ready to
subscribe to such an anti-democratic statement. But if we want to move towards
peace, we undoubtedly have to remove this huge rock that blocks the road. We
must infuse the public with another belief – the belief that peace is possible,
that it is essential for the future of Israel, that it depends mainly on us.
We shall never
succeed in inspiring such a belief by routine discussions. Anwar Sadat taught us
that it can be done, but only through dramatic actions that rock the foundations
of our spiritual world.
For the attention
of Mr. Obama.