Israel-Palestine Infos
Uri Avnery
7.4.07
Shalom, Shin Bet
RECENTLY, THE CHIEF of the Shin Bet declared that the
"Israeli Arabs", a fifth of Israel's population, constitute a danger
to the state.
He requested permission for the General
Security Service to act against anyone who aims at changing the official
designation of Israel as a "Jewish and democratic state" - even if they
use nothing but completely legal means.
It follows that In the view of the chief of
the Security Service, a central figure in the Israeli leadership, the task of
the Shin Bet (now commonly known in Israel as Shabak)
is not only to protect the state from spies and terrorists, but also from any
challenge to its ideological designation, like the KGB in the former Soviet Union
and the Stasi in communist East Germany. (The
excellent Oscar-winning movie "The Life of the Others",
now screening in Israel, shows how this worked in practice.)
ALL THIS is reminiscent of things past. Rather naively,
I had thought that they belonged to bygone days which could never return.
Two weeks ago, the Israeli tabloid Yedioth Aharonoth published an
interview with the lawyer Arieh Hadar,
nicknamed Pashosh, a former chief of the interrogation
department of the Shin Bet.
Pashosh disclosed that "In the 50s,
the great enemies of the Labor Party - and therefore of Issar
Harel, the chief of the security services, the Shin Bet
and the Mossad - were Uri Avnery and his weekly
magazine, Haolam Hazeh. Avnery
called the Shin Bet "the Apparatus of Darkness", and Issar was convinced that Uri Avnery would destroy the state. Avnery and his magazine were
under constant surveillance. A colleague of mine earned himself quick promotion
by recruiting an employee of Haolam Hazeh's printing press. Every week, this employee gave him
a smuggled copy of the magazine a day before its official publication date. My
colleague gave it to Issar, who brought it every week
personally to Ben-Gurion."
Pashosh added: "Issar
had the Shin Bet publish a competing magazine, disguised as privately owned.
The aim was to destroy Avnery."
These revelations were not news to me. Years
ago, Issar Harel himself disclosed
that he regarded me as "Enemy No. 1 of the regime". It may be
remembered that in those days, three bombs were laid in our editorial offices
and printing plant and two employees were injured. The fingers of both my hands
were broken in an (unsuccessful) attempt to kidnap me. None of these crimes was
ever solved.
In 1977, after coming to power, Menachem Begin revealed in an interview that at the end of
the 50s Issar Harel approached
him and told him that he had proposed to the Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion,
to put me in "administrative detention" - arrest without trial and without
time limit. Ben-Gurion agreed, but posed a condition: that Begin, then the
leader of the opposition, agree to it too, so that it
could be done quietly. Begin demanded that Issar show
him the evidence that I was a traitor, otherwise, he said, not only would he not
agree, but he would raise hell. Issar never mentioned
the matter again.
Begin did not leave it at that. He sent me
his trusted lieutenant, Yaakov Meridor,
to warn me. In spite of the extreme difference of opinion between us, which
found its expression many times in Knesset debates, Begin accepted me, it seems, as an Israeli patriot.
THE QUESTION is, of course, why Ben-Gurion and the
security service chief considered me "Enemy No. 1 of the regime".
That brings us to the subject now raised
again by the Shin Bet chief.
I attacked Ben-Gurion on many subjects: the
total domination of all affairs in the country by the Labor Party (then called Mapai), the corruption that was then starting to infect the
ruling class, the discrimination suffered by Jewish immigrants from Oriental
countries, the religious coercion, etc.
But the pivot of this struggle was the
definition of Israel as a "Jewish state".
What is a "Jewish state"? That was
never made clear. A state whose citizens are all Jewish? A
state that belongs to Jews only? The "state of the Jewish
people", which also belongs to millions of Jews who do not live here and
are citizens of the US, Argentina and France? A state ruled by the Jewish
religion? A state that expresses Jewish values (and if so,
which ones?)
Furthermore - who is a Jew, in this context?
After many hesitations, the Knesset adopted the religious definition: a Jew is
a person born to a Jewish mother or who has converted to the Jewish faith, and
who has not adopted another religion. The contradiction between the definition
of Judaism as a religion and the assertion that the Jews are a nation was solved
by adopting the fiction that with us, unlike other nations, religion and nation
are one and the same.
The term "Jewish state" is nebulous.
It can be interpreted in several ways. When one adds the word
"democratic", it becomes an oxymoron - if a state belongs only to a
part of its population it is not democratic, and if it is democratic then it cannot
belong to a part of its population, even if they compose the majority.
Instructing the Security Service - our name
for the secret police - to act against those who strive by legal means to
change the "Jewish state" definition - simply means to cripple
Israeli democracy. It is one of the basic principles of democracy that everyone
has the right to propagate his views and convince people to change the laws and
the constitution, as long as only legal means are used. If he or she succeeds
in convincing the majority of the citizens, the desired change comes about.
Activating the secret police to abort this
process would mean turning Israel into a police state. Not a "democracy
protecting itself", but, rather, a state protecting itself from democracy.
I HOPE that the State of Israel remains a state
with a Hebrew majority, that the Hebrew language will remain its main language,
that it will express the modern Hebrew society and its culture and also keep
alive the Jewish tradition of generations past. (About the Arab side of the matter
- see below.)
But it must not do so by force, by way of
oppression, by using the secret police and other means of compulsion. Natural
processes must be allowed to work freely, whatever the results. We are not the
only nation in the world in this situation.
If Israel is an attractive country, natural
increase will rise and many will knock on its doors, people who desire to join
our nation. The Israeli nation - unlike the Jewish religion - can in principle absorb
everyone who wants to belong to it.
The relationship between a modern state and
its citizens must be based on one consideration only: citizenship. The state
belongs to all its citizens, and all of them must be equal before the law. That
is what the 1948 Declaration of Independence promised: "The State of
Israel… will ensure complete equality of social and
political rights to all its inhabitants irrespective of religion, race or sex."
Some Israelis use the term
"nation-state" as a pretext to oppress the Arab minority. They think
about a nation-state in the spirit of the late 19th and early 20th century. In
Poland, for example, where many of Israel's founders were born, the state
fought against large communities of its own citizens - Ukrainians, Lithuanians,
Jews and others.
The most extreme example was the
Nazi state, which was based on the idea that the individual exists only as a
part of his nation, as a mere cell in the national organism. This model drowned
in blood and has been besmirched for all eternity by the horrors of the
Holocaust.
Today the model that appeals to many is the American one. The American nation includes
everybody who holds a US passport. A person who receives American citizenship -
whether Mexican, Korean, Indian or Nigerian - at that moment joins the American
nation and becomes an heir to George Washington, Abe Lincoln and Franklin D.
Roosevelt.
All modern nations are moving
towards this model, each according to its own rhythm. Poland, too, now belongs
to the EU, where millions of people are moving from country to country without restrictions.
In most countries there now live millions of foreigners who are gradually being
absorbed into the national population. Their children grow up with the local
culture and the local language and study in the local schools. Without this
massive reinforcement, many Western societies could not exist any more, as far
as the economy and demography are concerned.
Will Israel, which misses no opportunity
to describe itself as a Western country, turn its back on this reality and
adopt the model of Pakistan, a state that was founded - at the same time as
Israel - on an ethnic-religious basis?
MY IDENTITY consists of many
different layers.
I am a human being, and as a
human being I am a citizen of the world, bearing responsibility for the entire planet.
I am committed to humanist values, to the ecology of the globe, to freedom,
peace and justice for all. I hope that in the not too distant future, these
values will be guaranteed by an effective world order.
I am a member of the Israeli
nation, together with all the other people who hold an Israeli passport. Israel
is my state. I want it living in peace,
secure, flourishing and respected throughout the world. I want a state in which
it is good to live, and of which I can be proud.
I am a
son of the Jewish people. I am an heir to Jewish tradition, much as Australians
and Canadians are heirs to the Anglo-Saxon tradition. There are Jewish values
in which I believe, values of justice, peace and
non-violence, which are very different from the values of the settlers in Yitzhar and Tapuah. I am close to
the Jews around the world, and I am very glad that Jews around the world feel
close to Israel. That is an emotional matter, which should not concern the
state.
When
the State of Israel really belongs, practically and officially, to all its
citizens, it will be much easier for the Arabs here to decide on their status.
If they choose to belong to the Israeli nation, much as Hispanics in the US belong to the American nation, that will be fine. If they
prefer the status of a national minority, they should enjoy the rights of such
a minority in a modern state. Either way, the Arabic language and Arab culture must be fully recognized by the state. The
affinity of the Arab citizens with the Palestinian people and the Arab world
must be considered just as legitimate as the affinity of the Hebrew citizens
with the Jewish people throughout the world.
THAT IS my view. I intend to advocate it by all the legal means at my disposal
in the democratic state that I helped to establish.
And if
the Shin Bet does not like it, well, that is a pity. I just hope that they will
not put me under administrative detention because of it.