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Living in a Bubble by Uri Avnery
A
chance to escape from reality for a day, at a time when the whole
country was braced for suicide-bombings to avenge the assassination of
Sheik Ahmed Yassin and Dr. Abd-al-Aziz al-Rantissi. A day of nostalgia
for the Not
a word about the Palestinians, God forbid! Not a word about the
transformation of the glorious Israeli Defense Army into a blood-stained
colonial police force. No mention that the celebrated Air Force which
destroyed the air forces of three Arab states in a few hours in 1967,
has now become a specialist in extra-judicial executions, often killing
not only the targeted Palestinian militants but also their wives and
children, as well as random bystanders. In
a few days, the Palestinians will commemorate the catastrophe that
befell them 56 years ago, according to the general (solar) calendar. It
will be a day of mourning, of longing, and anger about all that happened
and is still happening. There will be demonstrations, speeches, shooting
in the air. Everybody will remember the Naqbah, the catastrophe, when
half the Palestinian people were expelled from their homes and fields by
a cruel enemy. Many of them are still languishing in miserable refugee
camps, where they survive by the grace of international institutions
that provide them with food and education. The
refugees will remember with longing the 450 villages that were conquered
by the enemy and razed to the ground, each of which lives on in their
imagination as a little paradise, surrounded by lush fields and
plantations. They will yearn for the streets of The
Palestinians will look into the magic mirror of the past and they will
see a people that lived idyllically on their land until the appearance
of cruel foreigners who condemned them to a life of humiliation and
misery, oppression and exile, with no redemption in sight. These
two events may look as if they happened on two different planets, say on
Mars and Saturn. But both happened on our small planet, in one small
country. The
two events are, actually, one and the same event. It
is natural that two peoples at war will view the events in different and
contradictory ways. But war is generally an exceptional state that lasts
only a few years. Before and after the war there is peace, and in a
state of peace the normal life and new contacts cause bitter memories to
fade and differences between the perceptions to narrow. In
World War II the Germans conquered During
the same war, the Germans killed a third of the Jewish people with slave
labor, starvation, mass execution and the gas chambers. This is a crime
without parallel in modern history, as far as its character and methods
are concerned. But less than ten years after the crematoria of Nothing
like that is happening with the two peoples in this country. The war
between them is not an extraordinary state, but has become normality.
All the toxins produced by war – fear, hatred, prejudices – continue
to poison the minds of the new generation, the fifth that has been born
into this war, a generation whose entire mental world is shaped by the
war. Thus
each of the two peoples lives sealed in its closed bubble, cut off from
the other, and, indeed, from the world at large. Inside its bubble, each
people cultivates their grievances, the conviction of being the ultimate
victim, the memory of the injustices done to them, the anger at the
other, cruel, murderous and detestable people. Each side believes that
absolute justice is on its side, and hence in the absolute injustice of
the other side. This
bubble is a prison, closed and secured by more than walls and barbed
wire. Israelis and Palestinians are hostages of their mental worlds.
They are unable to see each other, unable to see the world as it is.
They see only the mirror, the magic mirror that shows them what they
want to see. For
both, the bubble is a vital need. It is a means of self-protection which
provides them with mental security, the certainty in the rightness of
their cause and a sense of orientation. The world outside is cold and
hostile, inside the bubble there is warmth and a sense of belonging.
Anyone who tries to break the bubble will be exposed to a wave of hatred
and anger that may be lethal. This
does not apply only to what is happening now. It concerns everything
that has happened between the two peoples in the last 120 years, since
the beginning of the Zionist enterprise in this country. Every event,
large or small, without exception, appears in the collective memory of
the two peoples in a different and contrary fashion. As a result,
everything that is said now, everything that is proposed by one side
sounds different, suspicious and menacing to the other. Every
negotiation becomes a battle, every summit meeting only increases the
mutual hatred. A
vicious circle is operating: Without removing the bubbles, there can be
no peace, without peace it is impossible to remove the bubbles. And
a personal note: I became convinced many years ago that this vicious
circle not only must, but can be broken. Since then I have been trying
to build a joint, common Israeli-Palestinian narrative that incorporates
the narratives of both peoples, not by contriving an artificial
compromise but by seeking the truth. I have already written books and
essays about this. This week a booklet called “Truth Against Truth”
has been published by Gush Shalom. In it we have tried to outline a
common narrative of the conflict, taking into account the viewpoints of
both sides. It
has become clear to me that without a sincere endeavor by each side to
become fully aware of the viewpoint of the other, no effort to achieve
real peace between the two peoples will bear fruit.
discuss this column in the forum Uri Avnery is a peace activist. |