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To understand where
things
in Israel are going with regard to a "solution" to the Palestine
crisis, just read this. You'll get a very good idea. - J
As the Hamas team
laughs
By Gideon Levy
Last update - 08:47 19/02/2006
The Hamas team had not laughed so much in a
long
time. The team, headed by the prime minister's advisor Dov Weissglas
and including the Israel Defense Forces chief of staff, the director of
the Shin Bet and senior generals and officials, convened for a
discussion with Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni on ways to respond to the
Hamas election victory. Everyone agreed on the need to impose an
economic siege on the Palestinian Authority, and Weissglas, as usual,
provided the punch line: "It's like an appointment with a dietician.
The Palestinians will get a lot thinner, but won't die," the advisor
joked, and the participants reportedly rolled with laughter. And,
indeed, why not break into laughter and relax when hearing such a
successful joke? If Weissglas tells the joke to his friend Condoleezza
Rice, she would surely laugh too.
But Weissglas' wisecrack was in particularly
poor
taste. Like the thunder of laughter it elicited, it again revealed the
extent to which Israel's intoxication with power drives it crazy and
completely distorts its morality. With a single joke, the successful
attorney and hedonist from Lilenblum Street, Tel Aviv demonstrated the
chilling heartlessness that has spread throughout the top echelon of
Israel's society and politics. While masses of Palestinians are living
in inhumane conditions, with horrifying levels of unemployment and
poverty that are unknown in Israel, humiliated and incarcerated under
our responsibility and culpability, the top military and political
brass share a hearty laugh a moment before deciding to impose an
economic siege that will be even more brutal than the one until now.
The proposal to put hungry people on a diet
is
accepted here without shock, without public criticism; even if only
said in jest, it is incomparably worse than the Danish caricature. It
reflects a widespread mood that will usher in cruel, practical
measures. If until now one could argue that Israel primarily
demonstrated insensitivity to the suffering of the other and closed its
eyes (especially the stronger classes, busy with their lives of plenty)
while a complete nation was groaning only a few kilometers away, now
Israel is also making jokes at the expense of the other's suffering.
This was not the first joke or contribution
by
Weissglas to the racist and lord-like public discourse vis-a-vis the
Palestinians. His true face was already revealed about a year and a
half ago in the famous interview with Ari Shavit in Haaretz, when he
stated,"And we educated the world to understand that there is no one to
talk to. And we received a no-one-to-talk-to certificate ... The
certificate will be revoked only when this-and-this happens - when
Palestine becomes Finland." This was the peak of cynicism: The man who
was involved up to his neck in the Annex Research affair - the shell
company for channeling huge contributions to the prime minister - is
conditioning negotiations with the Palestinians on transforming them
into the country ranked as least corrupt in a survey in which Israel
was ranked in the unenviable 26th place.
The recommendation for a "diet," along with
the
edicts Israel is poised to impose on the Palestinian people, should
have aroused a hue and cry among Israeli society. Even if we put aside
the awful political inanity of pushing Hamas into a corner instead of
giving it a chance to change its ways, and even if we ignore the fact
that Israel plans to confiscate tax revenues that do not belong to it,
the policy of the Kadima government raises questions about its
humanity. Where do we get the right to abuse an entire people this way?
Is it only because of our great power and the fact that the U.S. allows
us to run wild and do whatever we want?
We stopped talking about morality a long time
ago -
after all, we are not living in Finland. Still, it would be good to
ask: What country would dare to exacerbate the living conditions (which
are so miserable in any case) of the residents of a territory under its
occupation? What was the sin of the 4,000 lucky people from Gaza whom
Israel still allowed to work within its borders, and to whom it is now
closing the gates? Did the decision-makers call to mind the sight of
these downtrodden people, crowded and humiliated at the Erez crossing
on their way home from an exhausting day of work? More than half of all
Palestinians are already living in poverty according to the last United
Nations report, published in December. Last year, 37 percent had
difficulties obtaining food and 54 percent of the residents of the
"liberated" Gaza Strip cut back the amount of food they consume. Child
mortality rose by 15 percent and the average unemployment rate reached
28 percent. To travel in the West Bank, the Palestinians have to
traverse no fewer than 397 checkpoints and, in addition to this, Israel
now wants to wield an even heavier hand.
If there is still a staying obstacle, it is
only
the constraint of image: Israel fears the spread of hunger only because
of the world's reaction and not because of the bestiality it entails.
Nonetheless, politicians here are competing with a range of extreme
proposals, including cutting off electricity and water and abandoning
millions of innocent residents. Is this also election spin? Is this
what the Israeli voter wants?
What you see from there is truly not what you
see
from here: From the posh restaurants where Weissglas and his colleagues
from the Hamas team dine, from the sophisticated road system on which
they race along in their official vehicles, from the splendid concert
halls and frequent trips abroad - you cannot see the suffering. From
there, it is easy to impose more edicts with the flick of a tongue,
without considering their frightful implications in the miserable
alleyways of Jenin and ruined huts of Rafah. From there you can even
joke about it.
Jennifer Loewenstein amadea311@earthlink.net Stay up to date: Write to have your name added to the mailing list.
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