Hillel the Elder is a prominent figure in Jewish history. He
is perhaps one of the most quoted rabbis. One day, a man approached him with a
challenge. �Teach me all the Torah while I stand on one leg,� the man demanded.
The rabbi wisely responded �What is hateful to you, don�t do unto others -- that�s
the whole Torah. The rest is commentary. Go and learn.�
How are Hillel�s words, shared by all Abrahamic faiths
(Judaism, Christianity and Islam) as well as many other faiths, relevant to our
profoundly volatile world? And what role can people of conscience play in
cultivating justice and peace around the world?
Alas, Hillel�s role is now filled by secularist
Machiavellians who exploit faith and claim moral justification in order to
advance a political end. And, carrying the flag for this group is none other
than Charles Krauthammer, the syndicated columnist and diehard neocon
ideological warrior.
In his piece �Moral Clarity in Gaza,� which appeared in the Washington
Post, Krauthammer has this callously offensive declaration to offer: �Some
geopolitical conflicts are morally complicated. The Israel-Gaza war is not. It
possesses a moral clarity not only rare but excruciating.�
This kind of erroneous moral conviction, coupled with blind
U.S. support, is what justifies Israel�s defiance of International Law and its
stubborn pursuit of the ever-failing approach of enforcing a military solution
to a political problem.
With this backdrop, people of conscience must come to the
realization that in their quest for justice -- more particularly in the realm
of peace and human rights -- they will inevitably come to face moments in
history when it becomes profoundly incumbent upon them to assume the role of
the prosecutor.
They must strive to make the case against those accused of
abusing power in the universal court of ethics and moral conduct. This might be
the only way to secure voices for the voiceless, and to protect the common good
of all societies.
However, these foot soldiers of justice must take a
judicious approach that primarily affords the benefit of the doubt to the
declared victims without denying the accused their right to representation. For
blindfolding justice spoils the equilibrium of law and order, and ultimately
destroys peace and security.
As Gaza suffers a brutal collective punishment of economic
strangulation and disproportionate death and destruction, the rest of occupied
Palestine continues to undergo a daily routine of humiliation and inhumane
treatment that many now compare to the old Apartheid system in South Africa.
As reported by different human rights groups -- including
many is Israel -- the Palestinians are routinely subjected to harsh treatments
that make life unbearable for them. Civilians are often subjected to prolonged
detention without charges. They are subjected to strip searches at checkpoints,
torture in prisons, and random home demolitions that throw families into
conditions of instant homelessness.
In the meantime, Israel continues to forbid Palestinian
civilians the right to return (a deal-breaker of a number of peace plans) while
it continues the systematic implantation of �settlers� to �establish new facts
on the ground� that would later justify annexation.
Such population transfer by an occupier against the will of
the occupied is both illegal and immoral; yet, the state of Israel, driven by an
uncontrolled appetite for land-grabbing, insists on the legitimacy of its
current policy of ever-expanding.
This and other such provocative and humiliating policies
push the Palestinians into a position of utter desperation; Hence the firing of
rockets, however ineffective. And their actions in turn creates the impetus
that sets the stage for Israel to continue its brutal oppression and
bombardment of one of the most impoverished and indeed densely populated
geographical areas in the world.
So, what �moral scrupulousness� is there to be attributed to
Israel, Mr. Krauthammer? Is it because Israel warned civilians? How can one
accept reports by the very unrepentant invader who shuns transparency and
deliberately denies the international media to cover the war and offer the
world objective accounts? Are you troubled by Israel�s bombings of UN schools
used as shelters, hospitals, mosques, etc.? Has your judgment been impaired by
emotions or been corroded by hate?
Nothing affirms our humanity more than our capacity to
empathize. It is this frame of heart that enables us to feel the agony of the
pain experienced by others, and to treat others as we like to be treated.
However, empathy seldom develops in a vacuum. For, it
requires a deliberate effort to look within oneself by way of reflection and
observation on one�s attitude toward that which matters and that which seem to
not matter. It requires a sense of introspection- the big mirror that all
individuals, nations as well as religions, need to put in front of themselves
to see the image of their quintessential values. But introspection also has a
prerequisite named willingness. And as the human being has the capacity to
block the entire sun with one or two fingers, so can nations and, indeed, faith
communities.
Ironically, as a state founded by people escaping
oppression, Israel seems to suffer from moral myopia as it paints itself in the
pages of infamy as a symbol of the oppressed that morphed into an oppressor.
�We the Jewish people should know and feel more acutely than
other populations that the murder of innocent civilians is inhuman,� said the
Israeli musician and peace activist Daniel Bareboim.
Abukar Arman is a writer whose work has appeared
on the pages of various print and online media groups around the world.