Uri Avnery
23.2.08
Three Cheers for Kosova!
A Serbian is driving down the highway in the wrong direction, listening
to music on the radio. Suddenly the program is interrupted by an urgent announcement:
"Warning! A crazy driver on the highway is going in the wrong
direction!"
"Only one?" the Serb exclaims, "All of them!"
"Wow!" the thought crossed my mind when a Serbian friend told
me this joke, "How much they resemble us!"
And indeed, much as Serbs are different from Israelis, it seems that we
have a lot in common. Both peoples believe that "the whole world is
against us". Both are completely convinced that they are absolutely in the
right, even when everybody else is telling them otherwise.
Like the Israelis, the Serbs are also immersed in their past. For them as
for us, history is more important than the present. The future is a hostage of
the past.
Many centuries ago, the Serbs lived in Kosovo. According to them, that
patch of ground was the cradle of their nation. There, in June 1389, the defining
event of their history took place: the great battle against the Ottoman Turks.
The fact that the Serbs were decisively beaten does not diminish the memory. It
also does not matter to them that afterwards a people of Albanian descent took
root in the country. In their eyes, the people that has now been living in Kosovo
for many centuries is "foreign", the country is "the patrimony
of our forefathers" and "belongs to us because our religion (the
Eastern Orthodox) says so." Doesn't that sound at bit familiar?
In World War II, the feeling of solidarity between Serbs and Jews was
cemented. Our heart was, of course, with the courageous partisans. The Jews who
succeeded in reaching Tito's liberated areas were saved from the Holocaust.
Serbs and Jews were murdered together in the Croatian concentration camps, which
were so gruesome that even SS officers shuddered when they visited them.
The death of Tito and the collapse of his regime did not put an end to
the feeling of solidarity. On the contrary. Our Rightists
fell in love with Slobodan Milosevic. Ariel Sharon supported him publicly. Perhaps
he liked the combination of deeply-felt victimhood and merciless brutality.
All this explains the mixed feelings many Israelis have towards the
declaration of independence of Kosova (as the Kosovars themselves call their country.)
I AM AFRAID that in this matter, too, my views diverge from those of many
other Israelis. My heart was with the masses of Albanian Kosovars
who rejoiced and danced this week in the streets of Pristina.
They reminded me of the masses celebrating in the streets of Tel Aviv
some 60 years ago, when the UN General Assembly decide to set up a Jewish state
(It also decided to set up a Palestinian-Arab state, but that has been
well-nigh forgotten.)
This week, people throughout the world are debating the question: do the Kosovars have the right to a state of their own - or not?
International law is being analyzed, possible precedents examined, learned
arguments raised pro and contra.
To me this seems irrelevant. When a population decides that it is a
nation, behaves like a nation and fights like a nation - well, then it is a
nation and has the right to its own nation-state.
(I once told this to Golda Meir in the Knesset. She had denied, as usual,
the existence of a Palestinian nation, repeating her famous dictum that
"there is no such thing". Madam Prime Minister, I answered her, perhaps
you are right, and the Palestinians are quite wrong when they believe that they
are a nation. But when millions of people erroneously believe that they are a
nation, conduct themselves like a nation and fight like a nation - well, then
they are a nation.)
That is the only test that counts. And the Kosovars
have stood this test. Therefore, there is a Kosovar
nation, and it has a right to a state. Long live the
THE MIDWIFE of the independent
Milosevic, like his admirer Sharon, had only contempt for the opinion of
mankind. They were both wrong, as was Stalin when he asked contemptuously:
"How many divisions has the Pope?" The
establishment of the
The conscience of mankind was outraged by the monstrous expulsion, and
this time it did have divisions - or at least squadrons. The US Air Force
bombed
(Many of my friends were shocked when I supported the bombing. To their
mind, everything that NATO or the Americans did was necessarily bad. I told
them that I am allergic to genocide. Even if God himself decrees genocide [as,
according to the Bible, he did to the Amalekites, the
Canaanites and the Persians of Esther's time], I am against it. In order to
prevent genocide, I am even ready to take the devil's side.)
The lesson of the Kosova chapter is simple:
since World War II, one can no longer commit genocide without the conscience of
the world being aroused and action taken to stop it. Sometimes this happens late,
even shockingly late, but in the end the selected victim will stand on his feet
again.
SHOULD
This week I saw an interview on TV with Knesset Member Arieh Eldad of the ultra-Right.
For a moment I was about to panic: it seemed as if he was supporting the
independence of Kosova. But his next sentence put me
at ease. He vigorously objected to recognition.
What are we coming to?! he exclaimed. If the
The parallel is, of course, absurd. First of all,
because the Arab citizens in
So who can be compared to the Kosovars - the
Israelis or the Palestinians? That depends on the point of view. Israelis can
say: Kosova resembles
BUT A more general question arises: when does a
national minority have the right to secede and establish a nation-state of its
own? If the Kosovars have this
right, why not the Basques in
That is a subject best left to professors of political science. Reality
has its own language. No one case is the same as another. There is no
international tribunal to decide, according to established standards, who has
this right - and who does not. The matter is decided in practice: when a particular
population is determined to achieve independence at any cost,
and when it is ready to fight and sacrifice for its independence - then they
have the "right" to independence.
The aspirations of a minority depend also on the attitude of the
majority. A nation that is wise enough to treat its national minorities with
decency and accord them real equality will succeed in keeping the state intact.
Countries like
I REMEMBER a conversation I had with Helmut Kohl, then the German Kanzler, when he was visiting
While the corpulent Kanzler was eating his
meager meal (and protesting to no avail as he was served the tiniest of
portions) we had a lively discussion about Bosnia-Herzegovina, which was then the
focus of international attention. I expressed my view that there was no alternative
to partitioning the country between the Bosnian Serbs and the Bosniaks (Muslims). One cannot compel two peoples to live
together against their will, I said.
"We cannot set up new states!" Kohl asserted vigorously. "Borders
in
I wanted to say that, with all due respect, this attitude is wrong. But I
checked myself. After all, he was a head of government, and I only a lowly
peace activist. But later, when I visited
Now
YUGOSLAVIA HAS broken up, and now even
Apparently, a paradox. A small state,
even a medium-sized state cannot maintain real independence in a world that is
inevitably moving towards globalization. States like
The answer lies with the power of nationalism, which is not decreasing,
but rather the opposite. One hundred or two hundred years ago,
That is a world-wide tendency. Separate nations do not unite in new
states, but on the contrary, existing states break up into national components.
Anyone who believes that Israelis and Palestinians will unite tomorrow in one
state does not live in the real world. The slogan "two states for two
peoples" is relevant today more than ever.
So