Israel-Palestine Infos
Uri Avnery
14.4.07
Blood on Our Hands
AT THIS moment, negotiations on a prisoner exchange are in full swing.
The term "negotiations" is really inappropriate. "Haggling"
seems more fitting. One could also use an uglier expression: "trafficking in
human beings".
The planned deal concerns living people. They are being treated like
goods, for which the officials of the two sides are bargaining, as if they were
a piece of land or a load of fruit.
In their own eyes, and in the eyes of their spouses, parents and
children, they are not goods. They are life itself.
IMMEDIATELY AFTER the signing of the Oslo agreement in 1993, "Gush Shalom"
publicly called on the Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, to free all the
Palestinian prisoners.
The logic was simple: they are in reality prisoners-of-war. They did what
they did in the service of their people, exactly like our own soldiers. The
people who sent them were the chiefs of the Palestinian Liberation Organization
(PLO) with whom we have just signed a far-reaching agreement. Is there any
sense in signing an agreement with the commanders, while their subordinates
continue to languish in our jails?
When one makes peace, prisoners-of-war are expected to be released. In
our case, this would not only be a sign of humanity, but also of wisdom. These
prisoners come from all the towns and villages. Sending them home would release
an outburst of joy all over the occupied Palestinian territories. There is
hardly a Palestinian family that does not have a relative in prison.
If the agreement is not to remain just a piece of paper, we said, but be
imbued with content and spirit - there is no wiser act than this.
Unfortunately, Rabin did not listen to us. He had many positive traits,
but he was a rather closed person, devoid of imagination. He was himself a
prisoner of narrow "security" concepts. For him, the prisoners were
goods to be traded for something. True, before the founding of Israel he
himself had been held in detention by the British for some time, but, like many
others, he was incapable of applying the lessons of his own experience to the
Palestinians.
We considered this a fateful matter as far as the peace efforts were
concerned. Together with the unforgettable Faisal Husseini,
the adored leader of the Palestinian population of East Jerusalem, we organized
a demonstration opposite the Jneid prison in Nablus. It was the largest joint Israeli-Palestinian
demonstration ever. More than ten thousand people took part.
In vain. The prisoners were not released.
FOURTEEN YEARS later, nothing has changed. Prisoners have been released
after completing their sentence, others have taken their place. Every night,
Israeli soldiers capture a dozen or so new "wanted" Palestinians.
At any one time, there are some 10,000 Palestinian prisoners, male and
female, from minors to old people.
All our governments have treated them as goods. And goods are not given
away for nothing. Goods have a price. Many times it was proposed to release
some prisoners as a "gesture" to Mahmoud Abbas,
in order to strengthen him vis-à-vis Hamas. All these
suggestions were rejected by Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert.
Now, the security services oppose the prisoner exchange deal for the
release of the soldier Gilad Shalit.
And not because the price - 1400 in exchange for 1 - is
exorbitant. On the contrary, for many Israelis it seems quite natural
that one Israeli soldier is worth 1400 "terrorists". But the security
services raise much weightier arguments: if prisoners are released for a
"kidnapped" soldier, it will encourage the "terrorists" to
capture more soldiers.
At least some of the released prisoners will return to their
organizations and activities, and that will result in more bloodshed. Israeli
soldiers will be obliged to risk their lives in order to arrest them again.
And there is something else lurking in the background: some of the families
of Israelis killed in attacks, who are organized in a very vociferous lobby
connected with the extreme right, will raise hell. How could this pitiful
government, devoid of any public standing, withstand such pressure?
FOR EACH of these arguments, there is a counter-argument.
Not releasing the prisoners leaves the "terrorists" with a
permanent motivation to "kidnap" soldiers. After all, nothing else
seems to convince us to release prisoners. In these circumstances, such actions
will always enjoy huge popularity with the Palestinian public, which includes many
thousands of families that are waiting for the return of their loved ones.
From a military point of view, there is another strong argument: "Soldiers
are not left in the field". This is held as a sacred maxim, a mainstay of
army morale. Every soldier must know that if he or she is captured, the Israeli
army will do everything, but everything, to get him free. If this belief is undermined,
will soldiers be as ready to take risks in battle?
Furthermore, experience shows that a high proportion of released
Palestinian prisoners do not return to the cycle of violence. After years in
detention, all they want is to live in peace and devote their time to their
children. They exercise a moderating influence on their surroundings.
And as for the thirst for revenge
of the families of "terror victims" - woe to a government that gives
in to such emotions, which, of course, exist on both sides.
THE POLITICAL argument goes both ways. There is pressure from the
"terror victims" - but there is even stronger pressure from the
family of the captured soldier.
In Judaism, there is a commandment called "ransom of
prisoners". It arose from the reality of a persecuted community dispersed across
the world. Every Jew is obliged to make any sacrifice and pay any price for the
release of another Jew from prison. If Turkish pirates captured a Jew from
England, the Jews of Istanbul paid the ransom for his release. In today's
Israel, this obligation still holds.
Public meetings and demonstrations are now being held for the release of Gilad Shalit. The organizers do
not say openly that the aim is to push the government to accept the exchange
deal. But, since there is no other way to get him back alive, that is the
message in practice.
One cannot envy the members of the government who find themselves in this
situation. Caught between two bad options, the natural tendency of a politician
like Olmert is not to decide at all and postpone
everything. But this is a third bad option, and one which carries a heavy
political price.
THE STRONGEST emotional argument voiced by the opponents of the deal is
that the Palestinians are demanding the release of prisoners with "blood
on their hands". In our society, the words "Jewish blood" - two
words beloved by the Right - are enough to silence even many on the Left.
But that is a stupid argument. It is also mendacious.
In the terminology of the Security Service, this definition applies not
only to a person who himself has taken part in an attack in which Israelis were
killed, but also to anyone who thought about the action, gave the order,
organized it and helped to carry it out - prepared the weapons, conveyed the
attacker to the scene, etc.
According to this definition, every soldier and officer of the Israeli
army has "blood on his hands", along with many politicians.
Somebody who has killed or wounded Israelis - is he different from us,
the Israeli soldiers past and present? When I was a soldier in the 1948 war, in
which tens of thousands of civilians, fighters and soldiers on both sided
perished, I was a machine-gunner in the Samson's Foxes commando unit. I fired
thousands of bullets, if not tens of thousands. It was mostly at night, and I could
not see whether I hit anybody, and if so - who. Do I have blood on my hands?
The official argument is that the prisoners are not soldiers, and
therefore they are not prisoners-of-war, but common criminals, murderers and
their accomplices.
That is not an original argument.
All colonial regimes in history have said the same. No foreign ruler, fighting
an uprising of the oppressed people, has ever recognized his enemy as
legitimate fighters. The French did not recognize the Algerian freedom
fighters, the Americans do not recognize the Iraqi and Afghan freedom fighters
(they are all terrorists, who can be tortured and held in abominable detention
centers), the South African apartheid regime treated Nelson Mandela and his
comrades as criminals, as the British did to Mahatma Gandhi and the fighters of
the Hebrew underground in Palestine. In Ireland, they hanged the members of the
Irish underground, who left behind moving songs ("Shoot me like an Irish
soldier / Do not hang me like a dog; / For I fought for Ireland's freedom / On that dark September morn…")
The fiction that freedom-fighters are common criminals is necessary for
the legitimation of a colonial regime, and makes it
easier for a soldier to shoot people. It is, of course, twisted. A common
criminal acts in his own interest. A freedom fighter or "terrorist",
like most soldiers, believes that he is serving his people or cause.
ONE PARADOX of the situation is that the Israeli government is
negotiating with people who themselves have served time in Israeli prisons.
When our leaders speak about the need to strengthen the "moderate"
Palestinian elements - they mainly mean these.
That is a feature of the Palestinian situation, which I doubt the
existence of in other occupied countries. People who have spent five, ten and
even twenty years in Israeli prisons, and who have every reason in the world to
hate our guts, are quite open to contact with Israelis.
Since I know some of them, and some of them have become close friends, I have
wondered many times about this.
At international conferences I have met Irish activists. After several
pints of Guinness they have told me that they know no greater joy in life than
killing Englishmen. I was reminded of the song of our poet Nathan Alterman, who prayed to God "Give me hatred grey like
a sack" (for the Nazis). After hundreds of years of oppression, that's how
they felt.
Of course, my Palestinian friends hate the Israeli occupation. But they
do not hate all Israelis, just for being Israelis. In prison, most of them have
learned good Hebrew and listened to Israeli radio, read Israeli newspapers and watched
Israeli TV. They know that there are all kinds of Israelis, just as there are
all kinds of Palestinians. Israeli democracy, which allows members of the
Knesset to vilify their prime minister, has made a deep impression on them. When
the Israeli government showed a readiness to negotiate with Palestinians, the
best partners were to be found among these ex-prisoners.
That is also true for the prisoners that are to be released now. If Marwan Barghouti is released, he
will be a natural partner in any peace effort.
I shall be very happy when both he and Gilad Shalit are free.