Caught between sobbing and war chants
By Gilad Atzmon
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 22, 2008, 00:17
Monitoring the current Israeli collective pornographic
lament in the Hebrew press, I found, to my amazement, a critical editorial
written by Dr Mordechai Keidar, an Israeli right-wing academic.
�Our enemies,� says Keidar, �see in front of them a
frenetic, emotional, weeping, corrupted, hedonistic, possessive and liberal
nation. People who grab and eat, people who lack historical roots, people who
are short of ideology, naked of values, lack a sense of solidarity. People who
are only concerned with the �here and now,� people who are happy to pay any
price without taking into account the grave consequences of their reckless
behaviour.�
It is slightly encouraging to find out that someone in
Israel may realize how severely the Israeli reality is viewed. Keidar grasps
how pitiable the current collective mourning festival appears to outsiders and
Israel�s neighbours in particular. As much as one can empathise with the pain
of the soldiers� families, Regev and Goldwasser were IDF soldiers in uniform
serving a very hostile army. When abducted they were in a military patrol on
the disputed Lebanese border. For those who still didn�t get the picture, they
were soldiers rather than merely �innocent civilians.� They were theoretically
capable of defending themselves. The case of Gilad Shalit is not very
different. Shalit, who is presented in the world media as an �innocent victim�
was nothing less then a post guard in an Israeli concentration camp, namely
Gaza. Shalit, like Goldwasser and Regev, was wearing an IDF uniform when
captured. Neither Regev, Goldwasser nor Shalit were victims. They were all
serving a state that employs some devastating genocidal tactics including
starvation, ethnic cleansing and assassination of those it views as its
enemies.
However, it is rather astonishing to find out how short the
Israeli collective memory is. The failed IDF rescue of Regev and Goldwasser,
following Hezbollah�s successful ambush evolved into Israel launching the
Second Lebanon War. In an act of retaliation, retribution and vengeance Israel
demolished Lebanon�s infrastructure, it flattened southern Lebanon towns and
villages as well as some neighbourhoods in Beirut. It killed thousand of
Lebanese civilians. Somehow the Israelis managed to forget all of this. The
only thing the Israelis see is two black coffins. They even managed to neglect
the fact that in return they themselves traded 190 plain coffins containing the
bodies of Hezbollah militants.
The Israelis are pretty gifted in seeing themselves only. In
their eyes, their pain is somehow superior to the pain others feel. Yet
something puzzles me. In the light of the Israeli collective necrophilic
weeping event I find myself rather confused. If Israel and the Israelis can
hardly get over two tragic Israeli military casualties, how will they be able
to cope with the global war they insist upon launching against Iran. If the
Israelis cannot cope with two coffins, how will they ever be able to cope with
Tel Aviv turning into the site of a mass grave? Their war cries suggest that
this is something they seem to insist upon involving themselves in.
Funnily enough, Dr Keidar suggests an answer, �Only a nation
full with ideological conviction, a nation with a sense of a strong belief in
its just way, a nation who feels part of an historical process, a nation that
can take the pain and buy its survival with blood, sweat and tears, only such a
nation can last in the Middle East. This region,� says Keidar, �doesn�t have
room for Post Jewish Rugs who sooner or later will reveal their true face as
post Zionists.�
I must admit that Keidar, the Israeli right-wing zealot has
a point. People who collapse in front two coffins better not initiate another international
conflict. The Israelis are just not made of the right stuff. They are not
exactly a nation of Spartan warriors. As much as they enjoy inflicting pain on
others, they really can�t abide the idea of suffering themselves, they are
clearly not ready to sacrifice, actually, they are a bunch of defeated cowards.
They better run away for their lives. As Keider pointed out, their chance to
survive in the region is zilch.
Gilad Atzmon is an Israeli jazz
musician, author and political activist.
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