Who are the real terrorists in the Middle East?
What exactly is being defended? Is it the citizens of Israel or the
nature of the Israeli state?
By Oren Ben-Dor
07/26/07 "The
Independent" -- -- As its citizens are being killed,
Israel is, yet again, inflicting death and destruction on Lebanon.
It tries to portray this horror as necessary for its self-defence.
Indeed, the casual observer might regard the rocket attacks on
Israeli cities such as Haifa and my own home town, Nahariya, as
justifying this claim.
While states should defend their citizens, states which fail this
duty should be questioned and, if necessary, reconfigured. Israel is
a state which, instead of defending its citizens, puts all of them,
Jews as well as non-Jews, in danger.
What exactly is being defended by the violence in Gaza and Lebanon?
Is it the citizens of Israel or the nature of the Israeli state? I
suggest the latter. Israel's statehood is based on an unjust
ideology which causes indignity and suffering for those who are
classified as non-Jewish by either a religious or ethnic test. To
hide this primordial immorality, Israel fosters an image of
victimhood. Provoking violence, consciously or unconsciously,
against which one must defend oneself is a key feature of the
victim-mentality. By perpetuating such a tragic cycle, Israel is a
terrorist state like no other.
Many who wish to hide the immorality of the Israeli state do so by
restricting attention to the horrors of the post-1967 occupation and
talking about a two-state solution, since endorsing a Palestinian
state implicitly endorses the ideology behind a Jewish one.
The very creation of Israel required an act of terror. In 1948, most
of the non-Jewish indigenous people were ethnically cleansed from
the part of Palestine which became Israel. This action was carefully
planned. Without it, no state with a Jewish majority and character
would have been possible. Since 1948, the "Israeli Arabs", those
Palestinians who avoided expulsion, have suffered continuous
discrimination. Indeed, many have been internally displaced,
ostensibly for "security reasons", but really to acquire their lands
for Jews.
Surely Holocaust memory and Jewish longing for Eretz Israel would
not be sufficient to justify ethnic cleansing and ethnocracy? To
avoid the destabilisation that would result from ethical inquiry,
the Israeli state must hide the core problem, by nourishing a victim
mentality among Israeli Jews.
To sustain that mentality and to preserve an impression of
victimhood among outsiders, Israel must breed conditions for
violence. Whenever prospects of violence against it subside, Israel
must do its utmost to regenerate them: the myth that it is a
peace-seeking victim which has "no partner for peace" is a key panel
in the screen with which Israel hides its primordial and continuing
immorality
Israel's successful campaign to silence criticism of its initial and
continuing dispossession of the indigenous Palestinians leaves the
latter no option but to resort to violent resistance. In the wake of
electing Hamas - the only party which, in the eyes of Palestinians,
has not yet given up their cause - the Palestinian population of
Gaza and the West Bank were subjected to an Israeli campaign of
starvation, humiliation and violence.
The insincere "withdrawal" from Gaza, and the subsequent blockade,
ensured a chronicle of violence which, so far, includes Palestinian
firing of Kasem rockets, the capture of an Israeli soldier and the
Israeli near re-occupation of Gaza. What we witness is more hatred,
more violence from Palestinians, more humiliation and collective
punishments from Israelis - all useful reinforcement for the Israeli
victim mentality and for the sacred cow status of Israeli statehood.
The truth is that there never could have been a partition of
Palestine by ethically acceptable means. Israel was created through
terror and it needs terror to cover-up its core immorality. Whenever
there is a glimmer of stability, the state orders a targeted
assassination, such as that in Sidon which preceded the current
Lebanon crisis, knowing well that this brings not security but more
violence. Israel's unilateralism and the cycle of violence nourish
one another.
Amidst the violence and despite the conventional discourse which
hides the root of this violence, actuality calls upon us to think.
The more we silence its voice, the more violently actuality is sure
to speak.
In Hebrew, the word elem (a stunned silence resulting from
oppression or shock) is etymologically linked to the word almut
(violence). Silence about the immoral core of Israeli statehood
makes us all complicit in breeding the terrorism that threatens a
catastrophe which could tear the world apart.
The writer teaches the philosophy of law and political philosophy at
University of Southampton - okbendor@ yahoo.com