The Shot
Heard All Over the Country
By Uri Avnery
August 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- ON JUNE 28, 1914, the Austrian heir to the
throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, visited Sarajevo,
the main town of Bosnia, then an Austrian province.
Three young
Serbian inhabitants of Bosnia had decided to
assassinate him, in order to achieve the attachment
of Bosnia to Serbia. They threw bombs at the car of
the archduke. All three failed to harm him.
Later on,
one of the assailants, Gavrilo Princip, chanced upon
his intended victim again. The archduke's car had
made a wrong turn, the driver tried to reverse, the
car stalled, and Princip shot the duke dead.
That was
"the shot heard around the world". This small
incident led to World War I, which led to World War
II, with altogether some 100 million dead, to
Bolshevism, Fascism, Nazism and the Holocaust. Yet,
while the names of Lenin, Stalin and Hitler will be
remembered for centuries, the name of Gavrilo
Princip, the most important person of the 20th
century, is already forgotten.
(Because he
was only 19 years old, Austrian law did not allow
him to be sentenced to death. He was sent to prison,
where his death from tuberculosis went unnoticed in
the middle of World War I.)
For some
reason, this insignificant person who made history
reminds me of an insignificant young Israeli named
Elor Azaria, whose act may well change the history
of the State of Israel.
THE FACTS
of the case are quite clear.
Two young
Palestinians attacked an Israeli soldier with a
knife in Tel Rumaida, a settlement of extremist Jews
in the center of Hebron. The soldier was slightly
wounded. The attackers were shot, one died on the
spot, the other was severely wounded and lay
bleeding on the ground.
What
happened next was photographed by a local
Palestinian with one of the many cameras distributed
by the Israeli human rights association "B'Tselem"
to the local population.
The crew of
an Israeli ambulance was treating the wounded
soldier, ignoring the seriously wounded Arab who was
lying on the ground. Several Israeli soldiers were
standing around, also ignoring the Palestinian.
About 10 minutes later Sergeant Elor Azaria, a
medic, appeared on the scene, approached the wounded
Palestinian and shot him point-blank in the head,
killing him.
According
to eye-witnesses, Azaria declared that "the
terrorist must die". Later, on the advice of his
phalanx of lawyers, Azaria claimed that he was
afraid that the wounded Palestinian had an explosive
charge on his body and was about to kill the
soldiers around him - an assertion clearly disproved
by the pictures which showed the soldiers standing
nearby obviously unconcerned. Then there was a
mysterious knife which was not there at the
beginning of the clip and could be seen lying near
the body at the end.
The film
was widely distributed on social media and could not
be ignored. Azaria was brought before a military
court and became the center of a political storm
that has been going on for weeks. It is splitting
the army, the public, the political scene and the
entire state.
LET ME
interject a personal note. I am not naive. In the
1948 war I was a combat soldier for ten consecutive
months, before being severely wounded. I saw all
kinds of atrocities. When the war was over, I wrote
a book about these atrocities, called "The Other
Side of the Coin"(in Hebrew). It was widely
condemned.
War brings
out the best and the worst in human nature. I have
seen war crimes committed by people who, after the
war, became nice, normal, law-abiding citizens.
So what is
so special about Elor Azaria, apart from the fact
that he was photographed during the act?
We all saw
him on TV, sitting in the military courtroom during
his trial, which is still going on. A
childish-looking soldier, seeming quite lost. His
mother sits directly behind him, cradling his head
in her arms and stroking him all the time. His
father sits nearby and in the intermissions shouts
abuse at the military prosecutor.
So what is
so special about this case? Similar acts happen all
the time, though not on camera. It's routine.
Especially in Hebron, where a few hundred fanatical
settlers live among 160,000 Palestinians. Hebron is
one of the oldest cities in the world. It existed
long before Biblical times.
In the
center of Hebron there is a building which,
according to Jewish belief, houses the graves of the
Israelite patriarchs. Archaeologists dispute this
claim. Arabs believe that the tombs belong to
venerable Muslim sheiks. For them, the building is a
mosque.
Since the
beginning of the occupation, this has been a place
of continued violent strife. The main street is
reserved for Jews and closed to Arab traffic. For
soldiers sent there to guard the settlers, it is
hell.
In the
clip, Azaria is seen shaking hands with somebody
immediately after the killing. This person is no
other than Baruch Marzel, the king of the Tel
Rumaida settlers. Marzel is the successor of "Rabbi"
Meir Kahane, who was branded as a fascist by the
Supreme Court of Israel. (Marzel once openly called
for my assassination.)
During the
trial it was revealed that Marzel plays host every
Saturday to the entire company of Israeli soldiers
guarding the settlement, including the officers.
This means that Azaria was exposed to his fascist
ideas before the shooting event.
WHAT MAKES
the case of the "shooting soldier" (as he is called
in the Hebrew press) a turning point in the history
of the Zionist enterprise?
As I
mentioned in a recent piece, Israel is now rent into
diverse "sectors", with the rifts between them
growing ever wider. Jews and Arabs; Orientals
(Mizrahim) and Europeans (Ashkenazim); secular and
religious; exclusive orthodox and inclusive
"national religious"; male and female; heterosexual
and homosexual; old-timers and new immigrants,
especially from Russia; rich and poor; Tel Aviv and
the "periphery"; Left and Right; inhabitants of
Israel proper and the settlers in the occupied
territories.
The one
institution which unites almost all these diverse -
and mutually antagonistic - elements is the army. It
is far more than a mere fighting force. It is where
all Israeli youngsters (except the orthodox and the
Arabs) meet on equal terms. It is the 'melting pot".
It is the holiest of the holy.
Not any
more.
This is
where Sergeant Azaria comes in. He did not just kill
a wounded Palestinian - named, by the way, Abd
al-Fatah al-Sharif. He mortally wounded the army.
FOR SOME
years now, a secret endeavor of the
"national-religious" has been going on to conquer
the army from below.
This sector
was once a small and disdained group, since
religious Jews by and large rejected Zionism
altogether. According to their belief, God exiled
the Jews because of their sins, and only God has the
right to allow them back. By appropriating God's
task for themselves, Zionists were committing a
grievous sin.
The mass of
religious Jews lived in Eastern Europe and were
destroyed in the Holocaust. A number of them came to
Palestine and are now a secluded, self-sufficient
community in Israel, taking huge sums of money from
the Zionist state and not saluting the Zionist flag.
The
"national-religious", on the other hand, grew in
Israel from a small, timid community into a large
and powerful force. Their tremendous birthrate - 7-8
children is the norm - gives them a large advantage.
When the Israeli army conquered East Jerusalem and
the West Bank, studded with holy places, they also
became assertive and self-assured.
Their
present leader, Naftali Bennett, a successful
high-tech entrepreneur, is now a dominant member of
the government, in constant competition and conflict
with Binyamin Netanyahu. The party has its own
education system.
For decades
now this party has been engaged in a determined
effort to conquer the army from below. It has
pre-army preparatory schools which produce
highly-motivated future officers, and is slowly
infiltrating the lower officer corps. Kippah-wearing
captains and majors, once a rarity, are now very
common.
ALL THIS is
exploding now. The Azaria affair is blowing the army
apart. The high command, still mainly composed of
old-timers, Ashkenazim and (comparative) moderates,
put Azaria on trial. Killing a wounded enemy is
against army orders. Soldiers are allowed to shoot
and kill only if they are in immediately danger to
their lives.
A large
part of the population, especially the religious and
rightist sectors, protested loudly against the
trial. Since the Azaria family is oriental, the
protesters include the bulk of the oriental sector.
Netanyahu's
acute political nose immediately scented the trend.
He decided to visit the Azaria family, and was only
held back at the last moment by his advisors.
Instead, he called Elor's father, and conveyed his
personal sympathies on the phone. Avigdor Lieberman,
before his appointment as Minister of Defense,
personally visited the courtroom in order to
demonstrate his support for the soldier.
It was an
open slap in the face of the army command.
Now the
army, the last bulwark of national unity, is being
torn apart. The high command is openly attacked as
leftist, a term not far removed from traitorous in
current Israeli discourse. The myth of military
infallibility lies shattered, the authority of the
high command profoundly damaged, criticism of the
Chief of Staff is rampant.
In the
contest between Sergeant Elor Azaria and the Chief
of Staff, Lieutenant General Gadi Eizenkot, the
sergeant may well win. If convicted at all for
blatantly disobeying orders, he will get off with a
light sentence.
Killing a
defenseless human being has turned him into a
national hero. His was the shot that was heard all
over the country. Perhaps all over the world.
Uri
Avnery is an Israeli writer and founder of the Gush
Shalom peace movement. A member of the Irgun as a
teenager, Avnery sat in the Knesset from 1965 to
1974 and from 1979 to 1981.
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