To: the Israeli Ambassador in Ireland
info@dublin.mfa.gov.il
Sunday, July 27, 2014
info@dublin.mfa.gov.il
Sunday, July 27, 2014
Forwarded from original by Gabor Maté
Beautiful dream of Israel has become a nightmare
Everyone ought to be sad at what the beautiful old dream of Jewish redemption has come to. Everyone ought to grieve the death of innocents.
As a Jewish youngster growing up in Budapest, an
infant survivor of the Nazi genocide, I was for
years haunted by a question resounding in my brain
with such force that sometimes my head would spin:
“How was it possible? How could the world have let
such horrors happen?”
It was a naïve question, that of a child. I know
better now: such is reality. Whether in Vietnam or
Rwanda or Syria, humanity stands by either
complicitly or unconsciously or helplessly, as it
always does. In Gaza today we find ways of
justifying the bombing of hospitals, the
annihilation of families at dinner, the killing of
pre-adolescents playing soccer on a beach.
In Israel-Palestine the powerful party has
succeeded in painting itself as the victim, while
the ones being killed and maimed become the
perpetrators. “They don’t care about life,”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says,
abetted by the Obamas and Harpers of this world,
“we do.” Netanyahu, you who with surgical
precision slaughter innocents, the young and the
old, you who have cruelly blockaded Gaza for
years, starving it of necessities, you who deprive
Palestinians of more and more of their land, their
water, their crops, their trees — you care about
life?
There is no understanding Gaza out of context —
Hamas rockets or unjustifiable terrorist attacks
on civilians — and that context is the longest
ongoing ethnic cleansing operation in the recent
and present centuries, the ongoing attempt to
destroy Palestinian nationhood.
The Palestinians use tunnels? So did my heroes,
the poorly armed fighters of the Warsaw Ghetto.
Unlike Israel, Palestinians lack Apache
helicopters, guided drones, jet fighters with
bombs, laser-guided artillery. Out of impotent
defiance, they fire inept rockets, causing terror
for innocent Israelis but rarely physical harm.
With such a gross imbalance of power, there is no
equivalence of culpability.
Israel wants peace? Perhaps, but as the veteran
Israeli journalist Gideon Levy has pointed out, it
does not want a just peace. Occupation and
creeping annexation, an inhumane blockade, the
destruction of olive groves, the arbitrary
imprisonment of thousands, torture, daily
humiliation of civilians, house demolitions: these
are not policies compatible with any desire for a
just peace. In Tel Aviv Gideon Levy now moves
around with a bodyguard, the price of speaking the
truth.
I have visited Gaza and the West Bank. I saw
multi-generational Palestinian families weeping in
hospitals around the bedsides of their wounded, at
the graves of their dead. These are not people who
do not care about life. They are like us —
Canadians, Jews, like anyone: they celebrate life,
family, work, education, food, peace, joy. And
they are capable of hatred, they can harbour
vengeance in the hearts, just like we can.
One could debate details, historical and current,
back and forth. Since my days as a young Zionist
and, later, as a member of Jews for a Just Peace,
I have often done so. I used to believe that if
people knew the facts, they would open to the
truth. That, too, was naïve. This issue is far too
charged with emotion. As the spiritual teacher
Eckhart Tolle has pointed out, the accumulated
mutual pain in the Middle East is so acute, “a
significant part of the population finds itself
forced to act it out in an endless cycle of
perpetration and retribution.”
“People’s leaders have been misleaders, so they
that are led have been confused,” in the words of
the prophet Jeremiah. The voices of justice and
sanity are not heeded. Netanyahu has his reasons.
Harper and Obama have theirs.
And what shall we do, we ordinary people? I pray
we can listen to our hearts. My heart tells me
that “never again” is not a tribal slogan, that
the murder of my grandparents in Auschwitz does
not justify the ongoing dispossession of
Palestinians, that justice, truth, peace are not
tribal prerogatives. That Israel’s “right to
defend itself,” unarguable in principle, does not
validate mass killing.
A few days ago I met with one of my dearest
friends, a comrade from Zionist days and now
professor emeritus at an Israeli university. We
spoke of everything but the daily savagery
depicted on our TV screens. We both feared the
rancour that would arise.
But, I want to say to my friend, can we not be
sad together at what that beautiful old dream of
Jewish redemption has come to? Can we not grieve
the death of innocents? I am sad these days. Can
we not at least mourn together?
Gabor Maté, M.D., is a Vancouver-based
author and speaker.
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