Israel Palestine Infos
Uri Avnery
April 17, 2010
A Birthday Present
YESTERDAY I went to the health clinic to get a vaccination. It was a pleasant
day, sunny but not too hot. The trip to the clinic and back, including the
waiting, took just over an hour. During this time, I had the following
experiences:
The taxi driver told me that years ago he was living next to Asher Yadlin, the
man at the center of a major corruption affair in the 70s, which was uncovered
by my magazine, Haolam Hazeh. “How we were shocked then!” he exclaimed, “we did
not believe that such a thing was possible! And look what’s happening now!”
He meant the scandal around the huge Holyland housing project in
While waiting at the clinic, I was accosted by an old man (who turned out to be
a year younger than I), a thin person who wore a golf cap and started to tell me
his life story. “I fought in the
When the Ghetto revolt started in 1943, he was living opposite the home of the
legendary leader, Antek Zuckerman, in the famous Milla street. He was then
hardly 18 years old. Somehow he survived and landed (I didn’t get how) into the
central
In August, 1944, when the great
The Polish insurgents did not cooperate with the Russians, who were already
nearby (“They hated the Russians more than the Germans,” Yachek commented).
Stalin stopped his forces, and the rebels were compelled to capitulate to the
Germans after 63 days of fighting. Yachek and another Jewish boy found a bunker
in the destroyed ghetto where they hid below ground for 10 months, until the
arrival of the Red Army.
All this he told me while we were standing, his face a few inches from mine, his
light blue eyes betraying his frustration at having to tell his story in this
manner, when dozens of hours would not have sufficed. I was glad to hear that
somebody was writing a book about him.
In the middle of it, a man of about 60 approached us and told me that he had
twice voted for me. “Not that I agreed with your views,” he confided, “but I
wanted to have intelligent people in the Knesset.” I must admit that this motive
was new to me.
Before going home I entered a nearby store. There I met a woman I had known some
40 years ago, when her husband had been the manager of the “Chamber Quartet”,
perhaps the most outstanding satire group in the annals of Israel. Her
brother-in-law, Yehiel Kadishai, had been the loyal secretary of Menachem Begin.
He was famous for his total devotion to his leader, for no personal gain
whatsoever. We briefly compared
The cab driver who brought me home told me that he had recently moved back from
THIS IS a random sample of Israelis on the eve of the 2010 Independence Day.
Memories from the Holocaust, nostalgia for a more innocent Israel, anger about
corruption, satisfaction with the Israeli economy which is flourishing at a time
when the entire world is still stuck in an economic
crisis. Not a single word about peace. Not a single word about the
occupation.
If I had asked these people what they think about it, I would probably have
received one and the same answer from all of them: Peace is a good thing. We
want peace. For peace we are ready to give up occupied territories, even
If I had spent the same hour in similar company in Ramallah, the answers I
received would probably not have been very different. Bitter memories from the
Naqba, anger about the corruption in high circles, perhaps even some
satisfaction about the improvement of the economic situation in the West Bank.
And a total lack of belief in peace. They would certainly have said: ”The
Israelis don’t want peace. Nothing to be done. That’s how it is.”
If Barack Obama and his assistants intend to start a serious peace effort, as it
now seems, that is the main thing they have to take into consideration: before
addressing the hard problems of peacemaking, the profound lack of belief on both
sides has to be overcome. Either side is completely convinced that the other
side does not want peace and will bring a dozen proofs from real life.
This lack of belief is the product of 120 years of the conflict, an endless
chain of violence, wars and crises, for which each side blames the other. The
Palestinians see the Israelis as land-grabbing robbers, the Israelis see the
Arabs as cannibals with knives between their teeth.
This lack of belief is also somehow comfortable. When there is no chance, there
is no need to do anything. No need to rise up, to act, to demonstrate, to
change. Nothing can be done anyhow. That’s how it is.
SOME DAYS ago, two American personalities published an important document.
Zbigniew Brzezinski was the national security advisor to President Jimmy Carter.
He was considered a hawk, but first of all a realist. He played an important
role in bringing China closer to the US, armed the Mujahidin in Afghanistan
against the Soviet invaders, was one of the hosts at the 1978 Camp David
conference which laid the foundation to the Israeli-Egyptian peace. There he
played chess with Begin. (I don’t know if they spoke Polish together.) Some
years ago he called upon President George W. Bush to change American policy in
the
Stephen Solarz was a congressman. A Jewish New-Yorker, he specialized in foreign
affairs and played a role in American relations with
When two such persons publish a manifesto together, they are bound to attract
attention in the
The two put on the table a practical and detailed proposal, which includes the
following steps:
-
President Obama will come to
-
He will do the same in Ramallah and address the Palestinian public.
-
He will make a speech in the
To all these audiences, Obama will submit an American peace plan.
I BELIEVE that this is an excellent idea (and not only because President Anwar
Sadat of
For many years I believed that there is no substitute for a direct face-to-face
dialogue, without a third party. Peace is a framework for life for the two
peoples, and the very mechanism of peacemaking can contribute much to their
reconciliation. Moreover, when there is a third party, each side addresses it
and not the adversary, at the same time radicalizing its position so as to have
something to compromise on.
The
But it failed. When one side is immensely stronger than the other, the stronger
one is tempted to dictate its will. Rabin was publicly murdered, and Arafat died
in circumstances that leave little room for doubt that he, too, was murdered.
The grand experiment foundered and left behind a situation worse than the one
before. In such a situation, the involvement of a third party – the
People speak of an “imposed peace”. But that is not the right expression. It is
impossible to impose peace on peoples which do not want it. In the best case,
that would lead to a signature on a piece of paper that had no chance of being
implemented.
The task of the
To convince means: to lead Israeli and Palestinian public opinion to the
conviction that peace is possible, that the other side also needs it, that
somebody will see to it that the terms are fully kept, that somebody will
guarantee their security in the short and long term. And the main point: that
each party has got to gain from it.
In Israel, Obama will have to take into consideration the real fears of a
Holocaust-troubled people, to plant again the seeds of hope, to create the faith
that there is a place for Israel in the family of Middle Eastern nations, to
reinforce the conviction that the US will not abandon Israel in any future
crisis, but also to warn of the severe dangers facing Israel if the two-state
solution is not realized very soon.
In Palestine he will have to take into consideration the fears of a
Naqba-injured and occupation-damaged people; to promise the realization of the
Palestinians’ hope for independence within two years, to guarantee that the US
will not allow ethnic cleansing, but also to point out the existential danger
that threatens them if the State of Palestine does not soon come into being next
to Israel. He must also lift the veto the
To both peoples Obama must submit a fair, balanced and realistic peace plan,
going into the smallest details and with a reasonable yet fixed time-table, a
plan that allows each side to claim victory.
OBAMA IS a man of many talents, but most of all he has the ability to convince.
He is capable of touching the profoundest emotions of people and peoples. I hope
he uses this talent for the good of the two long-suffering peoples of this
tortured country.
On the 62nd anniversary of the founding of the State of