OF WAR, ISLAM, AND ISRAEL
By John Chuckman
Thursday, April 5th, 2002
"(YellowTimes.org) – War between Islam and the nations of the West?
          There have been a good many careless words printed and broadcast in America touching on this simplistic idea. And an American president who lacks the most superficial knowledge of the world or its history offers no
reassurance, as he lurches from one misstatement to another, that this
idea is not being incorporated into national policy.
YellowTimes.ORG Columnist
(Canada)
          The concept of Islam as an intrinsically violent, anti-progressive opponent in the modern world is both ignorant and dangerous. The new
prominence of this idea in America provides a good measure of the distorted
information that exists in our political environment. It's almost as
though the bloody, parochial views of Ariel Sharon on the nature of
Palestinians had been exalted to a world view, worthy of every statesman's
consideration. How easily we forget that the history of organized Christianity
provides almost certainly the bloodiest tale in all of human history.
          The Crusades, that dark saga of Christianity written in blood and terror, continued sporadically over hundreds of years. They served little
other purpose than gathering wealth through spoils and sacking cities and
easing the periodic domestic political difficulties of the papacy and
major princes of Europe.
          We hear of the treatment of women under Islam in certain places, not remembering that Christian women were left locked in iron chastity belts
for years while their husbands raped their way across the Near East.
          And the character of Saladin, hard warrior that he was, shines nobly in history compared to the moral shabbiness of Richard Lionheart.
          Europe wove a remarkable tapestry of horrors in the name of
Christianity from the beginning of the modern era. There was the Holy Inquisition,
the Expulsion of the Jews from Spain, the Reformation, the Counter-Reformation, the Thirty Years' War, the English Civil War, the St Bartholomew Massacre, Cromwell's slaughter in Ireland, the enslavement and widespread extermination of native peoples in the Americas, the Eighty Years' War in Holland, the expulsion of the Huguenots from France, the pogroms, the burning of witches, and numberless other horrific events right
down to The Holocaust itself, which was largely the work of people who
considered themselves, as did the slave drivers of America's South, to
be Christians. Over and above the conflicts motivated by religion, European and
American history, a history dominated by people calling themselves Christian,
runs with rivers, lakes, and whole seas of blood. Just a sampling
includes the Hundred Years' War, the War of the Spanish Succession, the
Seven Years' War, the slave trade, the French Revolution, the Vendée, the
Napoleonic Wars, the Trail of Tears, the Opium War, African slavery in
the American South, the American Civil War, the Franco-Prussian War, the
massacre in the Belgium Congo, the Crimean War, lynchings, the Mexican
War, the Spanish-American War, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, World
War I, the Spanish Civil War, and World War II.
          How anyone with this heritage can describe Islam as notably
bloodthirsty plainly tells us that immense ignorance is at work here.
What limited knowledge I have of Islam is enough to know that there is
no history, despite bloody characters like Tamerlane, to overtop
Europe's excesses, and, in some cases, there has been generosity of spirit
exceeding that shown by Christians.
          The Moorish kings of Spain tended to follow the same tolerant attitude towards religion that the classical Romans had done. The Romans allowed
any religion to flourish, often officially adopting the gods of a
conquered people, so long as the religion represented no political threat to
Rome's authority.
          People today point to a well-publicized excess like the Taliban's destruction of ancient statues, apparently completely oblivious to the fact
that the religiously-insane Puritans, direct ancestors of America's
Christian fundamentalists, ran through the beautiful, ancient cathedrals
of England after the Reformation, smashing stained glass, desecrating
ancient tombs, destroying priceless manuscripts, and smashing sculptures.
A remarkably tolerant society flourished under the Moors in Spain for
hundreds of years. Jews, Christians, and Muslims were tolerated, and the
talented served the state in many high capacities regardless of
religion. Learning advanced, trade flourished.
          During the centuries of the Jewish Diaspora, the Arab people of the Holy Land looked after the holy places and largely treated Jewish visitors
with hospitality and respect. There was none of the bitter hatred we see today. All this changed at the birth of modern Israel and the expulsion of Palestinians from places they had inhabited for centuries. No reasonable, decent-minded person can deny that the manner of Israel's rebirth did a great injustice to the Palestinians. And the great
powers, first Britain and then the United States, had entirely selfish
motives in seeing this done.
          Under the original UN proposal for Israel, there were to be two roughly-equal states carved out of Palestine, and the city of Jerusalem was to
have an international status. More than half a century later, what we have is an Israel that covers three-quarters of Palestine and militarily occupies the rest.
          Yet somehow, the burden of appropriate behavior, in a fuzzily-defined "peace process" leading to some fuzzily-defined Palestinian state at
some undefined date, is always placed upon the Palestinians. They are
supposed to live patiently, exhibiting the peacefulness of model citizens
in Dorothy's Kansas, while under a humiliating occupation in order just
to earn the privilege of talking to Israel about the situation.
I often wonder how Americans, with their Second-Amendment rights and
hundreds of millions of guns, would behave under such circumstances.
Would they patiently wait decade after decade, watching "settlers" fresh
from other places build on what was their land? Watching bulldozers
flatten their orchards? Watching their people harassed and often demeaned at
checkpoints as they simply travel from one point to another near their
homes? Not being able to so much as build a road or a sewer without the
almost impossible-to-get permission of the occupying authorities? Being
told that only their patient behavior can earn them the right to talk
with those who control their lives?
          Looking at the situation in that hypothetical light may offer a better appreciation for what the Palestinians have endured with considerable patience. The simple fact is that it has been the clear policy of Israeli
governments over the last half century to avoid, at all costs, the creation of
a Palestinian state. Every effort at delay, every quibble over
definitions, every tactical shift that could possibly be made has been made,
many times over, in an effort to buy time, hoping that time alone will
somehow make the problem of the Palestinians go away.
          This policy may have changed, ever-so-slightly, under Mr. Barak from one of preventing the creation of a Palestinian state to one of
preventing the creation of a viable Palestinian state, but that is not the same
thing as "the great opportunity missed" that has been dramatized, over
and over again, in America's press. And even this slight change in
policy remains unacceptable to many conservatives in Israel.
          And when the Palestinians, morally exhausted by endless waiting that yields no change, resist the occupation they are under with the limited,
desperate means they possess, they are regarded as unstable lunatics who don't love their children. A number of apologists for Israel's worst excesses have repeated this theme, an extension of a remark attributed to the late Golda Meir about peace coming "when the Palestinians learn to love their children more than they hate us." The actual quote from
Ms. Meir that is most applicable here is one she made to the Sunday Times of June 15, 1969, "They [the Palestinians] did not exist."
          We are repeatedly told that Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East and it is defending itself against malevolent forces. This
vaguely-defined image of enlightenment versus darkness appeals to Americans.
But democracy has never been a guarantee of fairness or decency. It is only a means of selecting a government.
          Under any democracy, a bare majority of people with an ugly prejudice can tyrannize over others almost in perpetuity. Indeed, this very
experience is a large part of the history of the United States, even with its
much-vaunted Bill of Rights. But Israel has no Bill of Rights, and
what's more important for actual day-to-day fairness and decency, the very
will to act in a fair manner appears to be absent. What else can one
say where assassination, torture, and improper arrest have been
management tools of government for decades?
          Israel's politics are highly polarized, undoubtedly far worse than those of the United States, and the balance of power needed to form any
parliamentary coalition is always in the hands of far-out religious
parties. The interests of these people are anything but informed by
enlightenment values and democracy, holding to views and ideas, as they do, that
predate the existence of democracy or human rights.
          It is not an exaggeration to say that killing the Philistines or tearing down the walls of Jericho are regarded as current events by a good
many of these fundamentalist party members. A number of their leaders
have, time and again, described Palestinians as "vermin."
          The extreme conservatives receive many special privileges in Israel that distort the entire political mechanism. For example, their rabbis
decide the rules governing who is accepted as a Jew or what are acceptable
religious, and religiously-approved social practices. The students in
the fundamentalist religious schools traditionally have been exempt
from the army. In effect, they are exempt from the violent results of the
very policies they advocate.
          These parties generally believe in a greater Israel, that is, an Israel that includes what little is left of Palestine, the West Bank and Gaza,
minus its current undesirable inhabitants. It has been the view of Israeli government after Israeli government over the last half century to consider Jordan as the Palestinian's proper home. Thus, when Israeli governments talked of peace, it meant something entirely different than what Palestinians meant.
          And when, finally, an offer for a Palestinian state was made by Mr. Barak at Camp David - an offer that, by all reports, was made quite
angrily and contemptuously to Mr. Arafat - under any honest, rational analysis, it reduced to one for a giant holding facility for people not wanted in Israel. How surprising that Mr. Arafat left in anger when after days of being subjected to good-cop/bad-cop treatment by Mr. Clinton and Mr. Barak, this was the end result. Surely, this was an immensely-frustrating disappointment to the Palestinians after years of effort and
compromise to achieve and implement the Oslo Accords.
          Mr. Bush's War on Terror, a mindless crusade against disagreeable Islamic governments, has had the terrible effect of casting the
bloody-minded Mr. Sharon in the role of partner against the forces of terror and
darkness. He has received a new mantle of legitimacy for continued destruction and delay, for continued injustice against those too powerless to effectively oppose him.
          As Israel's leaders well know, the Palestinian population is growing rapidly. Rapid population growth is the general case for poor people
throughout the world. Israel's highly organized and costly efforts to support Jewish immigration reflect awareness of this fact. But a combination of large birth rates on one side and heavy immigration on the other is a certain formula for disaster in the long term. The region's basic resources, especially water, will sustain only a limited population. A large population, outsizing its resources, almost certainly is the
major underlying reason for the immense slaughters and numberless coups and civil wars of Western Africa in recent years, a region whose population growth has been high but whose usable resources are limited. And the history of civilization tells us that vast changes and movements of population have been far more decisive in human affairs than atomic weapons. So it appears that not only in the short term, but over some much longer time horizon, Israel and the Palestinians are on a deadly collision course. There is hope. Modern societies have all experienced a phenomenon called demographic transition. This term simply means that, faced with a reduced death rate, people's normal response is a reduced birth rate, yielding a net result of slow, or even negative, population growth. Couples prefer to have only two or three children who are almost certain to survive instead of six or more, at least half of whom die before growing up. This is the reason why modern countries depend entirely on migration for growth, or to avoid actual decline, in population.
          Israel, populated largely by people from Europe and North America and being a fairly prosperous society, follows the pattern of advanced nations. The West Bank and Gaza, with some of the world's highest birth rates, do not. Now, the only way to trigger demographic transition is through healthful measures like adequate diet, good public sanitation, and basic health care, especially measures for infant care. These things done, nature takes a predictable path and people stop having large families.
But these are not measures that can be accomplished quickly, and the need to get on with them should add some sense of urgency to ending the occupation and helping the alestinians achieve a state with some degree of prosperity.
          By now, it should be clear that life in Israel for the foreseeable future cannot be quite the same as life in Dorothy's Kansas no matter who
leads the government. No one has been more ruthless or bloody-minded than Mr. Sharon, and he has only succeeded in making every problem worse. Yet life in Israel similar to Dorothy's Kansas - that is, a life as though you were not surrounded by people seething over injustice and occupation and steeped in poverty - is a condition that Mr. Sharon insists on as a precondition even for talking about peace. Somehow, Mr. Arafat, with a wave of his hand, is to make all the violence disappear. This is not only unrealistic, it is almost certainly dishonest.
          Israel herself, in any of the places she has occupied, and despite having one of the best equipped armies in the world, has never been able to do that very thing. All those years in Lebanon, and the violence continued at some level for the entire time. Indeed, a new enemy, Hizballah, rose in response to Israel's activities. It is simply a fact that there has always been some level of violence in any place occupied by Israel. How is Mr. Arafat, with his limited resources and in the face of many
desperate factions, supposed to be able to accomplish what the Israeli army and secret services cannot?
          And were he to try running the kind of quasi-police state one assumes Israel favors, with regular mass arrests of suspects, how long would he
remain in power?
          Moreover, Mr. Sharon treats Mr. Arafat with utter contempt, dismissing him as insignificant, and has destroyed many of the means and symbols of his authority. How can a leader, treated as contemptible, exercise authority? For all his faults, and he has a number of them, Mr. Arafat has demonstrated through many compromises related to the Oslo Accords that he is a man who sincerely desires peace and a onstructive relationship with Israel.
          Mr. Sharon's entire adult life has been dedicated to killing. I do believe there is more blood on his hands than any terrorist you care to
name. Mr. Sharon first made a name for himself with the Qibya massacre in 1953, when a force under his command blew up forty-five houses and killed sixty-nine people, most of them women and children.
          Nearly thirty years later, in 1982, he was still at it when Lebanese militia forces under his control murdered and dumped into mass graves, using Israeli-supplied bulldozers, between two and three-thousand civilians in the refugee camps called Sabra and Shatila.
          Mr. Sharon was responsible for the disastrous invasion of Lebanon which saw hundreds of civilians killed by Israel's shelling of Beirut and
precipitated a bloody civil war in which thousands more died. Mr. Sharon's policies of assassination and bombing have succeeded only in multiplying the suicide bombings beyond anything in recent memory.
          It is almost impossible to imagine this man as capable of making a meaningful gesture towards peace. Yes, of course he wants peace, peace on his terms, a cheap peace without giving anything, but by definition that is not peace for the Palestinians.
          We always hear about what is required of the Palestinians for peace, but a genuine peace requires some extraordinary things on Israel's part.
First, she must at some point accept a Palestinian state. This condition is a necessary one, but it is far from sufficient, for she must be prepared to generously assist this state towards achieving some prosperity, reducing the causes of both run-away population growth and the dreary hopelessness that causes people to strap bombs to their bodies.
Most difficult of all, it is hard to see how Israel can avoid some level of violence during a period of Palestinian nation-building. This is something no ordinary state would consciously embrace, but then Israel is no ordinary state. The norms of Dorothy's Kansas simply do not apply. The hatreds generated by a half century of aggressive policies are not going to just melt away, but if there is enough genuine, demonstrated goodwill, it does seem likely that such violence would be minimal. It is an unappetizing risk that almost certainly needs to be taken, for no one is going to run a police state on Israel's behalf in the West Bank. Considering the immense difficulty of these things and political
barriers that exist against them in Israel, it does not seem likely that peace is coming any time soon. The prospect seems rather for low-grade, perpetual war, paralleling that Mr. Bush so relishes speaking of. For someone of Mr. Sharon's turn of mind, this may be a wholly acceptable alternative.
John Chuckman encourages your comments: jchuckman@YellowTimes.ORG
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