By: Ilan Pappe
My visit back home to the Galilee
coincided with the genocidal Israeli attack on Gaza. The state, through
its media and with the help of its academia, broadcasted one unanimous
voice — even louder than the one heard during the criminal attack
against Lebanon in the summer of 2006. Israel is engulfed
once more with righteous fury that translates into destructive policies
in the Gaza Strip. This appalling self-justification for the inhumanity
and impunity is not just annoying, it is a subject worth dwelling on,
if one wants to understand the international immunity for the massacre
that rages on in Gaza.
It is based first and foremost on sheer lies transmitted with a
newspeak reminiscent of darker days in 1930s Europe. Every half an hour
a news bulletin on the radio and television describes the victims of
Gaza as terrorists and Israel's massive killings of them as an act of
self-defense. Israel presents itself to its own people as the righteous
victim that defends itself against a great evil. The academic world is
recruited to explain how demonic and monstrous is the Palestinian
struggle, if it is led by Hamas. These are the same scholars who
demonized the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat in an earlier era
and delegitimized his Fatah movement during the second Palestinian
intifada.
But the lies and distorted representations are not the worst part of
it. It is the direct attack on the last vestiges of humanity and
dignity of the Palestinian people that is most enraging. The
Palestinians in Israel have shown their solidarity with the people of
Gaza and are now branded as a fifth column in the Jewish state; their
right to remain in their homeland cast as doubtful given their lack of
support for the Israeli aggression. Those among them who agree —
wrongly, in my opinion — to appear in the local media are interrogated,
and not interviewed, as if they were inmates in the Shin Bet's prison.
Their appearance is prefaced and followed by humiliating racist remarks
and they are met with accusations of being a fifth column, an
irrational and fanatical people. And yet this is not the basest
practice. There are a few Palestinian children from the occupied
territories treated for cancer in Israeli hospitals. God knows what
price their families have paid for them to be admitted there. The
Israel Radio daily goes to the hospital to demand the poor parents tell
the Israeli audience how right Israel is in its attack and how evil is
Hamas in its defense.
There are no boundaries to the hypocrisy that a righteous fury
produces. The discourse of the generals and the politicians is moving
erratically between self-compliments of the humanity the army displays
in its "surgical" operations on the one hand, and the need to destroy
Gaza for once and for all, in a humane way of course, on the other.
This righteous fury is a constant phenomenon in the Israeli, and
before that Zionist, dispossession of Palestine. Every act whether it
was ethnic cleansing, occupation, massacre or destruction was always
portrayed as morally just and as a pure act of self-defense reluctantly
perpetrated by Israel in its war against the worst kind of human
beings. In his excellent volume The Returns of Zionism: Myths, Politics
and Scholarship in Israel, Gabi Piterberg explores the ideological
origins and historical progression of this righteous fury. Today in
Israel, from Left to Right, from Likud to Kadima, from the academia to
the media, one can hear this righteous fury of a state that is more
busy than any other state in the world in destroying and dispossessing
an indigenous population.
It is crucial to explore the ideological origins of this attitude
and derive the necessary political conclusions form its prevalence.
This righteous fury shields the society and politicians in Israel from
any external rebuke or criticism. But far worse, it is translated
always into destructive policies against the Palestinians. With no
internal mechanism of criticism and no external pressure, every
Palestinian becomes a potential target of this fury. Given the
firepower of the Jewish state it can inevitably only end in more
massive killings, massacres and ethnic cleansing.
The self-righteousness is a powerful act of self-denial and
justification. It explains why the Israeli Jewish society would not be
moved by words of wisdom, logical persuasion or diplomatic dialogue.
And if one does not want to endorse violence as the means of opposing
it, there is only one way forward: challenging head-on this
righteousness as an evil ideology meant to cover human atrocities.
Another name for this ideology is Zionism and an international rebuke
for Zionism, not just for particular Israeli policies, is the only way
of countering this self-righteousness. We have to try and explain not
only to the world, but also to the Israelis themselves, that Zionism is
an ideology that endorses ethnic cleansing, occupation and now massive
massacres. What is needed now is not just a condemnation of the present
massacre but also delegitimization of the ideology that produced that
policy and justifies it morally and politically. Let us hope that
significant voices in the world will tell the Jewish state that this
ideology and the overall conduct of the state are intolerable and
unacceptable and as long as they persist, Israel will be boycotted and
subject to sanctions.
But I am not naive. I know that even the killing of hundreds of
innocent Palestinians would not be enough to produce such a shift in
the Western public opinion; it is even more unlikely that the crimes
committed in Gaza would move the European governments to change their
policy towards Palestine.
And yet, we cannot allow 2009 to be just another year, less
significant than 2008, the commemorative year of the Nakba, that did
not fulfill the great hopes we all had for its potential to
dramatically transform the Western world's attitude to Palestine and
the Palestinians.
It seems that even the most horrendous crimes, such as the genocide
in Gaza, are treated as discrete events, unconnected to anything that
happened in the past and not associated with any ideology or system. In
this new year, we have to try to realign the public opinion to the
history of Palestine and to the evils of the Zionist ideology as the
best means of both explaining genocidal operations such as the current
one in Gaza and as a way of pre-empting worse things to come.
Academically, this has already been done. Our main challenge is to
find an efficient way to explain the connection between the Zionist
ideology and the past policies of destruction, to the present crisis.
It may be easier to do it while, under the most terrible circumstances,
the world's attention is directed to Palestine once more. It would be
even more difficult at times when the situation seems to be "calmer"
and less dramatic. In such "relaxed" moments, the short attention span
of the Western media would marginalize once more the Palestinian
tragedy and neglect it either because of horrific genocides in Africa
or the economic crisis and ecological doomsday scenarios in the rest of
the world. While the Western media is not likely to be interested in
any historical stockpiling, it is only through a historical evaluation
that the magnitude of the crimes committed against the Palestinian
people throughout the past 60 years can be exposed. Therefore, it is
the role of an activist academia and an alternative media to insist on
this historical context. These agents should not shrink from educating
the public opinion and hopefully even influence the more conscientious
politicians to view events in a wider historical perspective.
Similarly, we may be able to find the popular, as distinct from the
high brow academic, way of explaining clearly that Israel's policy — in
the last 60 years — stems from a racist hegemonic ideology called
Zionism, shielded by endless layers of righteous fury. Despite the
predictable accusation of anti-Semitism and what have you, it is time
to associate in the public mind the Zionist ideology with the by now
familiar historical landmarks of the land: the ethnic cleansing of
1948, the oppression of the Palestinians in Israel during the days of
the military rule, the brutal occupation of the West Bank and now the
massacre of Gaza. Very much as the Apartheid ideology explained the
oppressive policies of the South African government, this ideology — in
its most consensual and simplistic variety — allowed all the Israeli
governments in the past and the present to dehumanize the Palestinians
wherever they are and strive to destroy them. The means altered from
period to period, from location to location, as did the narrative
covering up these atrocities. But there is a clear pattern that cannot
only be discussed in the academic ivory towers, but has to be part of
the political discourse on the contemporary reality in Palestine today.
Some of us, namely those committed to justice and peace in
Palestine, unwittingly evade this debate by focusing, and this is
understandable, on the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) — the
West Bank and Gaza Strip. Struggling against the criminal policies
there is an urgent mission. But this should not convey the message that
the powers that be in the West adopted gladly by a cue from Israel,
that Palestine is only in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, and that
the Palestinians are only the people living in those territories. We
should expand the representation of Palestine geographically and
demographically by telling the historical narrative of the events in
1948 and ever since and demand equal human and civil rights to all the
people who live, or used to live, in what today is Israel and the OPT.
By connecting the Zionist ideology and the policies of the past with
the present atrocities, we will be able to provide a clear and logical
explanation for the campaign of boycott, divestment and sanctions.
Challenging by nonviolent means a self-righteous ideological state that
allows itself, aided by a mute world, to dispossess and destroy the
indigenous people of Palestine, is a just and moral cause. It is also
an effective way of galvanizing the public opinion not only against the
present genocidal policies in Gaza, but hopefully one that would
prevent future atrocities. But more importantly than anything else it
will puncture the balloon of self-righteous fury that suffocates the
Palestinians every time it inflates. It will help end the Western
immunity to Israel's impunity. Without that immunity, one hopes more
and more people in Israel will begin to see the real nature of the
crimes committed in their name and their fury would be directed against
those who trapped them and the Palestinians in this unnecessary cycle
of bloodshed and violence.
Ilan Pappé is chair in the Department of History at the University of Exeter. An Israeli histornian, Pappé was born in Haifa to German-Jewish parents who fled Nazi persecution in the 1930s. At the age of 18, he was drafted into the Israel army and served in the Golan Heights during the 1973 Yom Kippur War.