Ha’aretz 8 oktober
Permission
to kill
By Yitzhak Laor
On Sunday,
November 30, 1972, British paratroops attempted to
prevent a march
for human rights in the Northern Ireland city of Derry
on the basis of
a judicial order making the Catholic march illegal. That
Sunday ended in
the massacre of 14 demonstrators. Bloody Sunday
will never be erased from the
blood-drenched history of the
Anglo-Irish
struggle. The British are still studying the events that took
place that day
in Derry's working-class neighborhoods.The massacre
of Palestinians
in recent days will be with us for many years, not only
because it won
the full backing of the media - Israel Television led the
favorable
coverage, but the entire Israeli press followed in the
footsteps of
the holiday-eve television reports. The old instincts came
into play:
criticism of the Israel Defense Forces is prohibited, because
the IDF - God -
acted this time as well.
The IDF did not defend Israel. Israel was not in danger. Permission to
kill has become
"self-evident" even when it comes to defending the
thorn-in-the-side settlement of Netzarim. It is permissible to kill a
child in the
arms of his father and to afterward deny that killing
"because
he had no reason to be there." It is permissible to shoot
missiles at
demonstrators, because at stake is not just defense of the
state or its
citizens, but a "principle": one does not surrender to
violence. It is
permissible to use violence to make others surrender.
And as usual,
in summing up the entire event, human life is important
only when the
human is not Arab.
The Israeli
"self-evident" proposition worked overtime. The masses of
Palestinian
demonstrators had the privilege to be shot at with live
ammunition and
earned strong denunciations from the entire Israeli
media.
"What can you do?" as if it were self-evident that live
ammunition be
used to end such a struggle, as if it were obvious that
"we are
all united" in demanding those liters of blood.
In exactly the
same way, the closure of roads from Lake Kinneret to
the center of
the country gave the right to treat the country's Arab
citizens as if
they were children in the heart of the colonial wilderness
of the end of
the 19th century, as if we had not seen the television
footage of truck and taxi drivers in Europe blocking
roads on the
Continent to
the point of totally paralyzing the economy, without a
single shot
being fired. The press and the establishment stood up for
the
"policeman of the Arabs," Police Major-General Alik Ron. In any
civilized
country he would have been forced out long ago, if only for
his racist
statements about the mayor of Umm al Fahm and head of
the northern
branch of the Islamic Movement, Sheikh Ra'ed Salah:
"Sheikh
Ra'ed has a fertile, Middle Eastern imagination."
But one can look for the background to
the great massacre of these
terrible Days
of Awe in the place where the great silence of the media
and the
academic establishment can always be found: the main thing is
who is
governing us when such things occur. If Benjamin Netanyahu
were prime
minister now, we would have already heard cries to the
heavens, or at least some tough
questions. This war is being waged by
the government
of Prime Minister Ehud Barak, "our" government, of
"the
left." And so, for the sake of peace of course, since after all
everything is
for the sake of peace, everything is permitted.
The signal was
given and the ground prepared for this horror after the
collapse of the
Camp David talks. Out-and-out "doves" gave
interviews and
wrote articles: Yasser Arafat, chairman of the
Palestinian
Authority, betrayed them, Heaven forbid. They always
wanted peace, they paid a heavy price for peace, and
now, when the
Palestinians
could get from them the best peace that could be given to
them (that is,
without quarreling with the settlers, without causing a
"rift
within the people," without dissolving the coalition, without giving
up the
"dreams of sanctity" that were born in the five historical minutes
that preceded the negotiations), Arafat - that is,
the Palestinian people
- turns his
back on them, the cooing doves, and listens to the yearning
of his
hard-pressed people, without water or work, crowded
between bypass
roads and sanctified settlements, because everyone
knows that
"Beit El is the eyes of the country," or whatever organ it is
the latest trite metaphor.
How easy it is
to beat your breast in contrition this Yom Kippur,
when the fist
lands on the chest of your neighbor, Arafat or Ariel
Sharon. And
you, your hands did not spill this blood, your hands did
not fire
missiles at demonstrators, your voice did not denounce