Uri Avnery
9.6.07
40 Bad Years
"REST HAS come to the tired / Repose to the toiler / A pale night covers
/ The fields of the Jezreel valley / Dew below and
moon above / From Kibbutz Bet-Alfa to Moshav Nahalal…"
This is what we sang when we were young. Now it is a TV nostalgia show, youngsters
of the 50s singing pioneer songs.
The thoughts wander. Who were the pioneers, the first to sing these
songs?
They came from rich homes in
They were real idealists. It did not occur to them that they were hurting
human beings of another people. The Arabs were to them a part of the romantic
landscape. They believed in all innocence that they were bringing blessings and
progress to all inhabitants of the country.
As seen from today, four or five generations later, they look quite
different. Their innocence is forgotten. It looks to
many like rank hypocrisy, a cover for robbery and oppression.
That is one of the results of 40 years of occupation. The current settlers
claim to be the successors of those pioneers of the 20s and 30s. They say that
they are today's pioneers. These violent, thieving thugs really expect us to
view the pioneers of old as their spiritual forebears.
When we add up all the damage that the occupation has done to us - to us
too, and not only to the direct victims, the inhabitants of the occupied
territories - let's not forget this. The occupation poisons the national
memory. It soils not only the present, but also the past, not only in the eyes
of the world, but also in our own eyes.
IT IS enough to see what the occupation has done to the Jewish religion.
In my childhood I was taught at home that Judaism was a humane religion,
a "light unto the Gentiles". Judaism means to loathe violence, to value
the spiritual above the powerful, to turn an enemy into a friend. A Jew is
allowed to defend himself - "If somebody comes to kill you, kill him
first", as the Talmudic injunction goes - but not as a lover of violence
and the intoxication of power.
What has remained of that?
Concerned friends recently e-mailed me some hair-raising quotes from a
statement by Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu,
former Sephardic Chief Rabbi of
What is the connection between this "religious" view and the
God who (in Genesis 18) promised not to destroy
What is the difference between this moral perception and that of the Nazis
who executed 10 hostages for every German soldier killed by the resistance?
The rabbi's decree did not arouse any reaction. There was no outcry, neither
from his flock nor from the general public. The number of rabbis who publicly
support such methods has risen to the hundreds. Most of them come from the
settlements. This is a "religious" outlook that grew up in the
poisoned atmosphere of the occupation, a religion of occupation. It shames the Jewish religion, present and
past.
No wonder that a person with a strong religious conscience, Avraham Burg, former Speaker of the Knesset and Head of the
Jewish Agency, this week renounced Zionism and demanded to abolish the
definition of
IT IS no longer anything new to point out that the occupation is
destroying the Israeli army.
An army cannot fulfill its mission to defend the state against potential
enemies when it has been engaged for decades as a colonial police force. One
can give attractive names to a death-squad - Team Mango or Unit Peach - but it
remains what it is: an instrument of brutal killing and oppression.
An officer who today plans the Mafia-style
killing of a "senior militant" by an undercover action in the Kasbah
of Nablus, will not be able tomorrow to lead a tank battalion against a
sophisticated enemy. An army that shoots stone-throwers, chases children in the
alleys of Balata refugee camp or drops a one-ton bomb on a residential building
cannot turn overnight into an efficient
force on a modern battlefield in a war of last resort.
No need to read this in the Winograd
committee's report. It is enough to compare the commanders of 1967 - people
like
In the Six-day War we had a small, sophisticated army that defended the
state from within the Green Line, once described by Abba Eban
as the "
From a military point of view, the occupation is a grave threat to the
security of the state.
THAT LEAVES the Supreme Court. Opinion polls have shown that the public derides
the Knesset and scorns the government, but respects the Supreme Court as a
bastion of democracy and a source of pride.
Lately, it is becoming apparent that there was no solid basis for this. A
moment after Chief Justice Aharon Barak
retired from the Court, the entire judicial system started
sinking into a morass of intrigues, mutual accusations and even slander. Not
only in anonymous internet blogs, but also in the
statements of the new Minister of Justice, the appointee of a Prime Minister dogged
by personal corruption scandals.
How has this happened?
For many years now, the court has lived in a world of illusion. The
judges have closed their eyes to their own doings. While believing that they
are a pillar of liberalism and democracy, they have allowed extra-judicial
executions. They have closed their eyes while torture has become routine. They
have created mountains of sophistry arguing that the monstrous Wall is essential
to security, trying to obscure the obvious fact that its main aim is the grabbing
of land for the settlements.
When the
A court that lies to itself in one sector cannot maintain its integrity
in another. The "bastion of democracy" has been undermined, and may
collapse entirely.
In the meantime, the book of laws is besmirched with racist legislation -
from the law that prevents Israeli citizens from living in Israel with
Palestinian spouses, to the bill which received this week primary approval in
the Knesset, and which allows 80 members of the Knesset to expulse a Knesset
member for voicing, both in the Knesset or outside, criticism of cabinet
ministers or senior army commanders.
IT CANNOT be denied: 40 years of occupation have changed the State of
Israel beyond recognition.
That is obvious in all spheres of life. All of them have been
contaminated.
18-year old youngsters, most of who have been brought up by decent
parents as moral human beings, are drafted into the army, enter the brutal subculture
of their units and receive an indoctrination that justifies every act of
brutality against Arabs. Only a few rare individuals are able to withstand the
pressure. After three years, the majority leave the army as tough men with
blunted sensibilities. The brutality in our streets, the routine killings
around the discotheques, the proliferation of rape and violence within the
family - all these have undoubtedly been influenced by the day-to-day reality
of the occupation. After all, it's the same people who are doing it.
A policeman who is sent to Hebron and the Hawara
checkpoint, who treats the inhabitants there as inferior creatures, who acts sadistically
or condones the sadism of his comrades -
will he turn into a different person when he returns the next day to Tel Aviv,
Haifa or Shefa-Amr? Will he wake up the next morning,
miraculously, as a devoted servant of his fellow-citizens in a democratic
society?
For years now, the security services, the police and the army have been lying
about events in the occupied territories. Lying has become routine. Few
journalists in the world now accept these statements unquestioningly. And when lying
becomes the norm in one sector, the mendacity doesn't stop there. The liars of
the army, the police and the other services have gotten used to lying about
other matters, too.
In the "territories", corruption has a ball. Military
government officers take off their uniforms and get involved in shady
businesses. Capitalist barons also profit from connections with them. Of
course, this is not the only source of the corruption that has become a bane of
the state, but it is surely a contributing factor.
THE OCCUPATION causes rot, which then penetrates all the pores of the
national organism.
After 40 years, there is little similarity between the State of Israel as
it is today and the state that the founders saw in their mind's eye: a model of
social justice, equality and peace. The founders dreamed about a modern, enlightened,
secular, liberal, socially progressive society with a flourishing economy benefiting
all. Reality, as we known, has turned out very, very different.
True, the occupation cannot be blamed for everything. Before 1967, too,
the young state was far from perfect. But the public felt then that this was a
temporary situation. Things could be corrected and improved. When the Israeli
republic turned into a nascent Israeli empire, the dramatic deterioration
started.
AT THE end of the Six-Day War, the entire world saluted us. Little, brave
David had won against Goliath. Now it is we who are seen as a heartless, brutal
Goliath.
The boycott against
One can treat the opinion of mankind with disdain, in the spirit of
Stalin's question "How many divisions does the Pope have?" But that
is stupid. International opinion can express itself in a thousand different
ways. It influences the policy of governments and civil society. The attempts
at boycott are only an early symptom.
But beyond all the bad things the occupation has brought upon
ON THE 40th anniversary of the occupation of East Jerusalem, a foreign TV
station wanted to interview me in the Muslim quarter of the
From time to time, small groups of tourists went past. Each group was
accompanied by four security guards in white overalls, two in front and two
behind. Every one of them was holding in his hand a loaded pistol, ready to
open fire within a split second. That's how they walked in the street.
That is the reality of "Jerusalem Reunited and Indivisible, the
Capital of Israel for All Eternity", as the official slogan goes, 40 years
after its "liberation".