Israel
Palestine Middle East Conflict
Uri Avnery
29.8.09
Tutu’s Prayer
HOW MUCH did the boycott
of South Africa actually contribute to the fall of the racist regime? This week
I talked with Desmond Tutu about this question, which has been on my mind for a
long time.
No one is better qualified
to answer this question than he. Tutu, the South African Anglican archbishop
and Nobel prize laureate, was one of the leaders of
the fight against apartheid and, later, the chairman of the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission which investigated the crimes of the regime. This
week he visited Israel with the “Elders”, an organization of elder statesmen
from all over the world set up by Nelson Mandela.
The matter of the boycott
came up again this week after an article by Dr. Neve
Gordon appeared in the Los Angeles Times, calling for a world-wide boycott of
Israel. He cited the example of South Africa to show how a world-wide boycott could
compel Israel to put an end to the occupation, which he compared to the
apartheid regime.
I have known and respected
Neve Gordon for many years. Before becoming a
lecturer at Ben Gurion University in Beersheba, he
organized many demonstrations against the Separation Wall in the Jerusalem
area, in which I, too, took part.
I am sorry that I cannot
agree with him this time – neither about the similarity with South Africa nor about the efficacy of a boycott of Israel.
There are several
opinions about the contribution of the boycott to the success of the
anti-apartheid struggle. According to one view, it was decisive. Another view
claims its impact was marginal. Some believe that it was the collapse of the
Soviet Union that was the decisive factor. After that, the US and its allies no
longer had any reason for support the regime in South Africa, which until then had
been viewed as a pillar of the world-wide struggle against Communism.
“THE BOYCOTT was
immensely important,” Tutu told me. “Much more than the armed
struggle.”
It should be remembered
that, unlike Mandela, Tutu was an advocate of non-violent struggle. During the
28 years Mandela languished in prison, he could have walked free at any moment,
if he had only agreed to sign a statement condemning “terrorism”. He refused.
“The importance of the
boycott was not only economic,” the archbishop explained, “but also moral.
South Africans are, for example, crazy about sports. The boycott, which
prevented their teams from competing abroad, hit them very hard. But the main
thing was that it gave us the feeling that we are not alone, that the whole
world is with us. That gave us the strength to continue.”
To show the importance of
the boycott he told me the following story: In 1989, the moderate white leader,
Frederic Willem de Klerk, was elected President of South Africa. Upon assuming
office he declared his intention to set up a multiracial regime. “I called to
congratulate him, and the first thing he said was: Will you now call off the
boycott?”
IT SEEMS to me that
Tutu’s answer emphasizes the huge difference between the South African reality
at the time and ours today.
The South African
struggle was between a large majority and a small minority. Among a general
population of almost 50 million, the Whites amounted to less than 10%. That
means that more than 90% of the country’s inhabitants supported the boycott, in
spite of the argument that it hurt them, too.
In Israel, the situation
is the very opposite. The Jews amount to more than 80% of Israel’s citizens,
and constitute a majority of some 60% throughout the country between the
Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River. 99.9% of the Jews oppose a boycott on
Israel.
They will not feel the
“the whole world is with us”, but rather that “the whole world is against us”.
In South Africa, the
world-wide boycott helped in strengthening the majority and steeling it for the
struggle. The impact of a boycott on Israel would be the exact opposite: it would
push the large majority into the arms of the extreme right and create a
fortress mentality against the “anti-Semitic world”. (The boycott would, of
course, have a different impact on the Palestinians, but that is not the aim of
those who advocate it.)
Peoples are not the same
everywhere. It seems that the Blacks in South Africa are very different from
the Israelis, and from the Palestinians, too. The collapse of the oppressive racist
regime did not lead to a bloodbath, as could have been predicted, but on the
contrary: to the establishment of the Truth and Reconciliation Committee. Instead of revenge, forgiveness. Those who appeared before
the commission and admitted their misdeeds were pardoned. That was in tune with
Christian belief, and that was also in tune with the Jewish Biblical promise: “Whoso
confesseth and forsaketh [his
sins] shall have mercy.” (Proverbs 28:13)
I told the bishop that I
admire not only the leaders who chose this path but also the people who
accepted it.
ONE OF the profound
differences between the two conflicts concerns the Holocaust.
Centuries of pogroms have
imprinted on the consciousness of the Jews the conviction that the whole world
is out to get them. This belief was reinforced a hundredfold by the Holocaust.
Every Jewish Israeli child learns in school that “the entire world was silent”
when the six million were murdered. This belief is anchored in the deepest
recesses of the Jewish soul. Even when it is dormant, it is easy to arouse it.
(That is the conviction
which made it possible for Avigdor Lieberman, last
week, to accuse the entire Swedish nation of cooperating with the Nazis,
because of one idiotic article in a Swedish tabloid.)
It may well be that the
Jewish conviction that “the whole world is against us” is irrational. But in
the life of nations, as indeed in the life of individuals, it is irrational to
ignore the irrational.
The Holocaust will have a
decisive impact on any call for a boycott of Israel. The leaders of the racist
regime in South Africa openly sympathized with the Nazis and were even interned
for this in World War II. Apartheid was based on the same racist theories as
inspired Adolf Hitler. It was easy to get the civilized world to boycott such a
disgusting regime. The Israelis, on the other hand, are seen as the victims of
Nazism. The call for a boycott will remind many people around the world of the
Nazi slogan “Kauft nicht bei Juden!” - don’t buy from
Jews.
That does not apply to
every kind of boycott. Some 11 years ago, the Gush Shalom movement, in which I
am active, called for a boycott of the product of the settlements. Its
intention was to separate the settlers from the Israeli public, and to show that
there are two kinds of Israelis. The boycott was designed to strengthen those
Israelis who oppose the occupation, without becoming anti-Israeli or
anti-Semitic. Since then, the European Union has been working hard to close the
gates of the EU to the products of the settlers, and almost nobody has accused
it of anti-Semitism.
ONE OF the main battlefields
in our fight for peace is Israeli public opinion. Most Israelis believe
nowadays that peace is desirable but impossible (because of the Arabs, of
course.) We must convince them not that peace would be good for Israel, but
that it is realistically achievable.
When the archbishop asked
what we, the Israeli peace activists, are hoping for, I told him: We hope for
Barack Obama to publish a comprehensive and detailed peace plan and to use the full
persuasive power of the United States to convince the parties to accept it. We
hope that the entire world will rally behind this endeavor. And we hope that
this will help to set the Israeli peace movement back on its feet and convince
our public that it is both possible and worthwhile to follow the path of peace
with Palestine.
No one who entertains
this hope can support the call for boycotting Israel. Those who call for a
boycott act out of despair. And that is the root of the matter.
Neve
Gordon and his partners in this effort have despaired of the Israelis. They
have reached the conclusion that there is no chance of changing Israeli public
opinion. According to them, no salvation will come from within. One must ignore
the Israeli public and concentrate on mobilizing the world against the State of
Israel. (Some of them believe anyhow that the State of Israel should be
dismantled and replaced by a bi-national state.)
I do not share either
view – neither the despair of the Israeli people, to which I belong, nor the
hope that the world will stand up and compel Israel to change its ways against
its will. For this to happen, the boycott must gather world-wide momentum, the
US must join it, the Israeli economy must collapse and the morale of the
Israeli public must break.
How long will this take?
Twenty Years? Fifty years? Forever?
I AM afraid that this is
an example of a faulty diagnosis leading to faulty treatment. To be precise:
the mistaken assumption that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict resembles the
South African experience leads to a mistaken choice of strategy.
True, the Israeli
occupation and the South African apartheid system have certain similar
characteristics. In the West Bank, there are roads “for Israelis only”. But the
Israeli policy is not based on race theories, but on a national conflict. A
small but significant example: in South Africa, a white man and a black woman
(or the other way round) could not marry, and sexual relations between them were
a crime. In Israel there is no such prohibition. On the other hand, an Arab
Israeli citizen who marries an Arab woman from the occupied territories (or the
other way round) cannot bring his or her spouse to Israel. The reason:
safeguarding the Jewish majority in Israel. Both cases are reprehensible, but
basically different.
In South Africa there was
total agreement between the two sides about the unity of the country. The
struggle was about the regime. Both Whites and Blacks considered themselves
South Africans and were determined to keep the country intact. The Whites did
not want partition, and indeed could not want it, because their economy was
based on the labor of the Blacks.
In this country, Israeli
Jews and Palestinian Arabs have nothing in common – not a common national
feeling, not a common religion, not a common culture and not a common language.
The vast majority of the Israelis want a Jewish (or Hebrew) state. The vast majority of the Palestinians want a Palestinian (or
Islamic) state. Israel is not dependent on Palestinian workers – on the
contrary, it drives the Palestinians out of the working place. Because of this,
there is now a world-wide consensus that the solution lies in the creation of
the Palestinian state next to Israel.
In short: the two
conflicts are fundamentally different. Therefore, the methods of struggle, too,
must necessarily be different.
BACK TO the archbishop, an attractive person whom it is impossible not to
like on sight. He told me that he prays frequently, and that his favorite prayer goes
like this (I quote from memory):
“Dear God, when I am
wrong, please make me willing to see my mistake. And when I am right – please
make me tolerable to live with.”