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The Best Show in Town by
Uri Avnery
Television
viewers all over the world saw heroic Israeli soldiers on their screens
battling the fanatical settlers. Close-ups: faces twisted with passion,
a soldier lying on a stretcher, a young woman crying in despair,
children weeping, youngsters storming forward in fury, masses of people
wrestling with each other. A battle of life and death. There
is no room for doubt: Ariel The
conclusion is self-evident, both in This
must have impressed George Bush and his people. Unfortunately, it has
not impressed me. It
makes me laugh. In
the last few years I have witnessed dozens of confrontations with the
army. I know what they really look like. The
Israeli army has already demolished thousands of Palestinian homes in
the occupied territories. This is how it goes: early in the morning,
hundreds of soldiers surround the land. Behind them come the tanks and
bulldozers, and the action starts. When despair drives the inhabitants
to resist, the soldiers hit them with sticks, throw tear gas grenades,
shoot rubber-coated metal bullets and, if the resistance is stronger,
live ammunition, too. Old people are thrown on the ground, women dragged
along, young people handcuffed and pushed against the wall. After a few
minutes, it’s all over.
Well,
they’ll say, that’s done to Arabs. They don’t do this to Jews. Wrong.
They certainly do this to Jews. Depends who the Jews are. I,
for example, am a Jew. I have been attacked with tear gas five times so
far. Once it was a special gas, and for a few moments I was afraid that
I was going to choke to death. During
one of the blockades on Ramallah, we decided to bring food to the
beleaguered town. We were some 3,000 Israeli peace activists, both Jews
and Arabs. At the A-Ram checkpoint, north of I
have witnessed demonstrations in which rubber-coated bullets were shot
at Israeli citizens (generally Arabs). Once I was in the gas-filled
rooms of a school at Um-al-Fahem in If
the army had really wanted to evacuate Mitpe-Yitzhar quickly and
efficiently, it would have used tear gas. The whole business would have
been over in a few minutes. But then there would not have been dramatic
pictures on TV, and George W. would have asked his friend Arik: “Hey,
why don’t you finish with all the outposts in a week?” In
other words, this was a well-produced show for TV. A
few days before, the leaders of the settlers met with Ariel Why?
Because all of them knew that everything has been agreed in advance. The
army chiefs and the leaders of the settlers, comrades and partners for a
long time, sat together and decided what would happen, and, more
importantly, what would not happen: no sudden attack, no efforts to
prevent thousands of young people from reaching the place well in
advance, no use of sticks, water cannon, tear gas, rubber-coated bullets
or any other means beyond the use of bare hands. The soldiers would not
wear helmets nor be equipped with shields. The settlers would shout and
push, but would not hit the soldiers in earnest. The whole show would be
less violent then a normal scuffle with British soccer hooligans, but
would look on TV like a desperate battle between titanic forces. Ariel
All
the arms of the establishment cooperated this week in the big show. The
media devoted many hours to the “battle.” Dozens of settlers were
invited to the studios and talked endlessly – while, as far as I saw,
not a single person belonging to the active peace camp was called to the
microphone. The
courts, too, did their duty: the handful of settlers who were arrested
for resisting violently were sent home after spending a day or two in
jail. The courts, who never show any mercy when Arabs appear before
them, treated the fanatical settlers like erring sons. The
whole comedy would have been funny, if it did not concern a very serious
problem. Such an “outpost” looks like a harmless cluster of mobile
homes on top of a god-forsaken hill, but it is far from being innocuous.
It is a symptom of a cancerous growth. Not for nothing did Ariel Sharon
– the very same The
disease develops like this: a group of rowdies occupies a hilltop, some
miles from an established settlement, and puts a mobile home there.
After some time, the “outpost” already consists of a number of
mobile homes. A generator and a water-tower are brought in. Women with
babies appear on the scene. A fence is set up. The army sends some units
to defend them. They declare that for security reasons, Palestinians are
not allowed to come near, in order to prevent them from spying and
preparing an attack. The security zone becomes bigger and bigger. The
inhabitants of the neighboring Palestinian villages cannot reach some of
their orchards and fields any more. It someone tries, he is liable to be
shot. Every settler has a weapon, and he has nothing to fear from the
law if he uses it against a suspicious Arab. All Arabs are suspicious,
of course. As
it so happens, I have some experience with Mitzpe Yitzhak, the
particular outpost that figured in this week’s show. Some months ago
we were called by the inhabitants of the Palestinian village Habala to
help them pick their olives in a grove near this “outpost.” When the
pickers came near to the outpost, the settlers opened fire. An Israeli
in our group was wounded when a bullet struck a rock at his feet. The
“unauthorized” outposts were in fact established systematically,
with the help of the army and according to its planning. When several
outposts take root in a region, the Palestinian villages are choked
between them. Their life becomes hell.
The settlers and officers clearly hope that in the end they will
give up and clear out. Will
This
means that Sharon has only to produce a few more shows of this sort for
television, and then he and the settlers will be able to breathe freely
once again. discuss this column in the forum Uri Avnery is a peace activist. |