The
Children's Teeth
By Uri Avnery
22 May, 2003
One of the most progressive
Jewish principles of old is now being put to the test: "In those
days they shall say no more, The fathers have eaten a sour grape,
and the children's teeth are set on edge'. But every one shall die for
his own iniquity: every man that eateth the sour grape, his teeth shall
be set on edge." (Jeremia, 31.)
05/21/03: A suicide bomber
kills himself. Should his orphan children be punished for that?
The Israeli army of occupation
says: Yes, indeed! Furthermore, anyone who helps the children is a criminal,
an accomplice, a supporter of terrorism. If the potential suicide bomber
knows that his family will starve after his death, he might shrink from
committing the deed. But if he knows that somebody will take care of
his family, his readiness to become a martyr will be strengthened.
That is to say: "The
fathers have eaten a sour grape and the children's teeth shall be set
on edge. Every one shall die for his fathers iniquity, the teeth of
his whole family shall be set on edge."
In recent times, this logic
has frequently been acted upon. When Stalin's secret police arrested
a man as an "imperialist spy", his family was dispersed, his
wife sent to the Gulag and the children to the party's orphanage. The
Nazis created the term "Sippenhaft", meaning that the whole
family is responsible for the acts of any of its members. Until now,
such methods were associated with totalitarian regimes.
Even if this method were
effective, if starving the wives and children of suicide bombers deter
others, we must still say: No. We cannot allow our state to behave like
this, just as we do not take hostages and shoot them or wrap the corpses
of suicide bombers in pigs' skins, as has been suggested by some (to
prevent them from entering paradise). In the final analysis, that is
not wise, either. The prophets of Israel were no fools.
And to the matter at hand:
This week the leaders of the Islamic Movement in Israel ("Northern
Branch") were arrested. The huge propaganda apparatus of the army
and Security Service, which controls all our media, accused them of
"helping Palestinian terrorism".
Two days later, the mountain
gave birth to a mouse (as the Hebrew saying goes). The main accusation
against the Islamists was that they are supporting the family members
of suicide bombers and other "martyrs". The police officer
in charge declared that, beyond that, there is no evidence of support
of terrorism. All in all, the only offences allegedly discovered were
of an economic nature, such as money laundering. "Economic offenses",
and for that such a gigantic operation!
The arrests were conducted
like a military operation against a dangerous enemy. In the middle of
the night, a convoy of 800 police rolled into the township of Um-al-Fakhem,
accompanied by a company of reporters and photographers. Policemen in
bulletproof vests surrounded the homes of the "suspects",
all of them respected public figures. Snipers were at the ready, as
the policemen burst in and dragged the leaders out of their beds.
The climax of the operation
was the arrest of the head of the movement, Sheikh Ra'ed Salah. His
father was dying in hospital, the Sheikh was lying next to him to give
him support in his last hours. The policemen woke him up and took him
out in his underclothes to the waiting photographers, as we saw on TV.
If they wanted to humiliate him, they failed. The dignified bearing
of the Sheikh put the policemen to shame. His father died a few hours
later, alone.
I must disclose here that
I am not entirely objective where Sheikh Ra'ed is concerned. Ten years
ago, in the winter of 1993, when Yitzhaq Rabin expelled 415 Islamic
activists and left them in a deserted field on the Lebanese border,
we set up protest tents opposite the Prime Minister's office. With us
in the tent was Sheikh Ra'ed. For 45 days and nights in the fierce cold
of snow-covered Jerusalem, we lived together - the Sheikh and his followers,
I and my spouse Rachel and a changing number of guests, Jews and Arabs.
We spent hundreds of hours talking about everything under the sun, and
the Sheikh taught us a lot about the Kor'an and Islam, especially its
tolerant face.
I admit that the Sheikh,
who was 34 years old at the time, charmed us. Unlike the stereotype
of a religious extremist, he was full of humor. He is a wise person.
In daily life he was pleasant, courteous and modest. I was impressed
by his leadership style: early in the morning he got up and started
to clean the area around the tents. His men were quick to join him.
No orders, no requests.
This does not mean, of course,
that I accepted his ideas. I reject any religious regime. I support
the total separation of religion from politics, between church (or mosque
or synagogue) and state. Religious fanaticism is completely alien to
me. That did not prevent me from liking Ra'ed Salah. End of personal
note.
The solidarity of the Arab
citizens of Israel with their kin in the Palestinian territories in
their struggle against the occupation seems to me quite natural. I understand
their feelings and their desire to tender humanitarian aid. All the
more so as Gush Shalom, the movement to which I belong, collects money
and sends food to the beleaguered Palestinian villages and refugee camps,
as an act of solidarity. This can also be construed as "aid to
terrorists" - after all, if the army wants to starve the population
into surrender, who are we to alleviate their hunger?
Clearly, all these are pretexts.
One does not send 800 policemen just to prevent children from getting
bread or to arrest people laundering money. If so, what was the real
aim?
The Sharon government is
now engaged in an all-out struggle to destroy the Palestinian people
as a national entity. The re-conquest of the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip, the enlargement of the settlements at a frantic pace, the building
of the "separation walls" that will cut off about half of
area of the West Bank, the daily assassinations and other killings,
the starving of the population, the wholesale demolition of homes and
the building of bypass roads - all these are meant to beat the Palestinian
people into submission and to break their will to resist.
Sharon is now opening a second
front. The million and a quarter Palestinians who are Israeli citizens
were not directly involved up till now. A lot of declarations of support
for their compatriots beyond the Green Line, some humanitarian actions,
here and there some individuals who actively helped bombers. All in
all, very little, under the circumstances.
Sharon is going to change
that. The attack on the Islamic Movement is the beginning of a concentrated
onslaught that will drag the "Israeli Arabs" into the bloody
fight. Breaking the back of this population is aimed at driving the
Palestinians deeper into despair. It is, of course, convenient to start
with the Northern Branch of the Islamic Movement, because it is the
most distant from the Jewish public. It does not participate in the
Knesset elections. It is easy to create suspicion and to attack it.
But let there no doubt: if this operation succeeds, all the other sections
of the Arab population, from Azmi Bishara to Hadash, will follow. The
recent attempt to get them out of the Knesset was just the beginning.
After that, it may be the turn of the Jewish peace forces which support
the establishment of a viable Palestinian state in all the occupied
territories.
Let there be no illusions:
Sharon's final goal is turning the whole country, from the Mediterranean
to the Jordan river, into an exclusively Jewish state. In this vision
there is no place for Arabs, whether in the occupied territories or
in Israel proper. Whoever opposes this vision is an enemy (if an Arab)
or a traitor (if a Jew).
Therefore, paradoxically,
the struggle over Sheikh Ra'ed, the religious extremist, is also a battle
for the future of Israel as a democratic, secular and liberal state.