
Linguist, peace activist Tanya Reinhardt
dies in New York, age 63
By Haaretz
Service,18th March 2007
Linguist and
peace activist Prof. Tanya Reinhardt died Saturday in New
York at age 63.
Reinhardt, one of the most outspoken representatives of
the radical Israeli left, was a fierce critic of the 1993
Oslo Accords between Israeland the Palestine Liberation
Organization, saying they represented a perpetuation of
the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and
called for an academic boycott of Israelto protest the
occupation.
After receiving a master's degree at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, Reinhardt wrote her doctoral
thesis at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under
renowned linguist Noam Chomsky.
Her contributions to linguistic
theory dealt with the connection between meaning and
context, and the interface between syntax and systems of
sound.
From 1977, Reinhardt taught courses in linguistics and
literature at TelAvivUniversity, including classes in
critical reading of media and the analysis of discourse
based on Chomsky's methods.
For the past 15 years she also
taught at Utrecht Universityin the Netherlands.
In December 2006, Reinhardt left Israel and settled in New
York to teach at New York University.
Reinhardt and those close to her said the change in the
university's relationship to her was made in response to
her statements calling for an academic boycott of Israel.
Reinhardt espoused the principle of non-violent
resistance, and was among the leaders of the left-wing
activists who called for boycotts of the 1996 and 2001
elections.
She was active in recent years in Israeli-Palestinian
efforts against the West Bankseparation fence and the
seizure of land from Palestinians for its construction.
Reinhardt was married to poet and translator Aharon
Shabtai.
She Drew
Away the Veil on Criminal and Outrageous Conduct
In
Memory of Tanya Reinhart
By NOAM CHOMSKY
Editors' note: We
have lost an outstanding intellect and one of the
bravest voices from Israel with the death of Tanya
Reinhart. Last October, on this site, we published
Eric Hazan's interview with Tanya Reinhart (see below this text.)on the
occasion of the publication of her latest book, Roadmap to Nowhere. In conclusion Haas asked
her,
Despite the grim
events described in the book, the overall feeling
that comes through is that of hope. Why?
Reinhart: "I
argue that the reason that the U.S. exerted even
limited pressure on Israel, for the first time in
recent history, was because at that moment in history
it was no longer possible to ignore world discontent
over its policy of blind support of Israel. This
shows that persistent struggle can have an effect,
and can lead governments to act. Such struggle begins
with the Palestinian people, who have withstood years
of brutal oppression, and who, through their spirit
of zumud--sticking to their land - and daily
endurance, organizing and resistance, have managed to
keep the Palestinian cause alive, something that not
all oppressed nations have managed to do. It
continues with international struggle--solidarity
movements that send their people to the occupied
territories and stand in vigils at home, professors
signing boycott petitions, subjecting themselves to
daily harassment, a few courageous journalists that
insist on covering the truth, against the pressure of
acquiescent media and pro-Israel lobbies. Often this
struggle for justice seems futile. Nevertheless, it
has penetrated global consciousness. It is this
collective consciousness that eventually forced the
U.S. to pressure Israel into some, albeit limited,
concessions. . The Palestinian cause can be silenced
for a while, as is happening now, but it will
resurface."
Tanya Reinhart was
one of those whose determined voice and writings did
just that: change global consciousness. AC / JSC
It is painful, and hard, to write
about the loss of an old and cherished friend. Tanya
Reinhart was just that.
Tanya was a brilliant
and creative scientist. I can express my own evaluation
of her work most concisely by recalling that years ago,
when I was thinking about the future of my own department
after my retirement, I tried to arrange to offer Tanya
the invitation to be my eventual replacement, plans that
did not work out, much to my regret, mostly for
bureaucratic reasons.
I will not try to review
her remarkable contributions to virtually every major
area of linguistic studies. Included among them are
original and highly influential investigations of
syntactic structure and operations, referential
dependence, principles of lexical semantics and their
implications for syntactic organization, unified
approaches to cross-linguistic semantic interpretation of
complex structures that appear superficially to vary
widely, the theory of stress and intonation, efficient
parsing systems, the interaction of internal computations
with thought and sensorimotor systems, optimal design as
a core principle of language, and much else. Her academic
work extended well beyond, to literary theory, mass media
and propaganda, and other core elements of intellectual
culture.
But Tanya's outstanding
professional work was only one part of her life, and of
our long and intimate friendship. She was one of the most
courageous and honorable defenders of human rights whom I
have ever been privileged to meet. As all honest people
should, she focused her attention and energy on the
actions of her own state and society, for which she
shared responsibility including the responsibility,
which she never shirked, to expose crimes of state and to
defend the victims of repression, violence, and conquest.
Her numerous articles
and books drew away the veil that concealed criminal and
outrageous actions, and shone a searing light on the
reality that was obscured, all of immense value to those
who sought to understand and to react in a decent way.
Her activism was not limited to words, important as these
were. She was on the front line of direct resistance to
intolerable actions, an organizer and a participant, a
stance that one cannot respect too highly. She will be
remembered not only as a resolute and honorable defender
of the rights of Palestinians, but also as one of those
who have struggled to defend the moral integrity of her
own Israeli society, and its hope for decent survival.
Tanya's passing is a
terrible loss, not only to her family and those fortunate
enough to come to know her personally, and to those she
defended and protected with such dedication and courage,
but to everyone concerned with freedom, justice, and an
honorable peace.
An Interview with
Tanya Reinhart
The
Roadmap to Nowhere
By ERIC HAZAN
Your new book, Roadmap to Nowhere, covers the history of the
Israeli occupation of Palestine in the last three years,
a period dominated by Ariel Sharon's leadership. You
argue that during this period it became evident that in
Israel, decisions are taken by the military, rather than
the political echelons. Can you elaborate?
Israeli military and
political systems have always been closely intertwined,
with generals moving from the army straight to the
government, but the army's political status was further
solidified during Sharon's ascendancy. Senior military
officers brief the press (they capture at least half of
the news space in the Israeli media), and brief and shape
the views of foreign diplomats; they go abroad on
diplomatic missions, outline political plans for the
government, and express their political views on any
occasion.
In contrast to the
military stability, the Israeli political system is in a
gradual process of crumbling. In a World Bank report of
April 2005, Israel is found one of the most corrupt and
least efficient in the Western world, second only to
Italy in the government corruption index, and lowest in
the index of political stability. Sharon personally was
associated, together with his sons, with severe bribery
charges, that have never reached the court. The new party
that Sharon founded, Kadima, and which now heads the
government, with Olmert as Sharon's successor, is a
hierarchical agglomeration of individuals with no party
institutions or local branches. Its guidelines, published
in November 22 2005, enable its leader to bypass all
standard democratic processes and appoint the list of the
party's candidates to the parliament without voting or
approval of any party body.
The Labor party has not been able to offer an
alternative. In the last two Israeli elections, Labor
elected dovish candidates for prime ministry--Amram
Mitzna in 2003, and Amir Peretz in 2006. Both were
initially received with enormous enthusiasm, but were
immediately silenced by their party and campaign advisors
and by self imposed censorship, aiming to situate
themselves "at the center of the political
map". Soon, their program became indistinguishable
from that of Sharon. Peretz even declared that on
"foreign and security" matters he will do
exactly as Sharon (but he will also bring a social
change). Thus these candidates helped convince the
Israeli voters that Sharon's way is the right way. In the
last years, there has never been a substantial left-wing
opposition to the rule of Sharon and the generals, since
after the elections, Labor would always join the
government, providing the dovish image that the generals
need for international show.
With the collapse of the
political system, the army remains the body that shapes
and executes Israel's policies. During the recent Israeli
attack on Lebanon (not covered in the book), it became
common knowledge in Israel that the military is leading
the government, with Peretz, now Defense minister, often
appearing on tv looking like a puppet operated by the
generals surrounding him.
Sharon is widely
viewed in Israeli and Western discourse as a leader who
has undergone a transformation from a philosophy of
eternal war to moderation and concession. This is not
quite the picture that emerges from your book.
One of the questions in
the book is how it happened that Sharon, the most brutal,
cynical, racist and manipulative leader Israel has ever
had, ended his political career as a legendary peace
hero? The answer, I argue, is that Sharon has never
changed. Rather, the birth of the Sharon myth reflects
the present omnipotence of the propaganda system in
manufacturing consciousness.
During his four years in
office, Sharon stalled any chance of negotiations with
the Palestinians. In 2003 - the road map period -the
Palestinians accepted the plan and declared a cease fire,
but while the Western world was celebrating the new era
of peace, the Israeli army, under Sharon, intensified its
policy of assassinations, maintained the daily harassment
of the occupied Palestinians, and eventually declared an
all-out-war on Hamas, killing all its first rank of
military and political leaders. Later, as the Western
world was holding its breath again, in a year and a half
of waiting for the planned Gaza pullout, Sharon did
everything possible to fail the Palestinian president,
Mahmoud Abbas, who was elected in January 2005. Sharon
declared that Abbas is not a suitable partner (because he
does not fight terror) and turned down all his offers of
renewed negotiations.
The daily reality of the
Palestinians in the occupied territories was never as
grim as in the period of Sharon. In the West Bank, Sharon
started a massive project of ethnic cleansing in the
areas bordering with Israel. His wall project robs the
land of the Palestinian villages in these areas,
imprisons whole towns, and leaves their residents with no
means of sustenance. If the project continues, many of
the 400.000 Palestinians affected by it will have to
leave and seek their livelihood in the outskirts of
cities in the center of the West Bank, as happened
already in northern West Bank town of Qalqilia. The
Israeli settlements were evacuated from the Gaza Strip,
but the Strip remains a big prison, completely sealed
from the outside world, nearing starvation and terrorized
from land, sea and air by the Israeli army.
Sharon's legacy, as it
unfolds in the period covered in this book, is eternal
war, not just with the Palestinians, but with what the
Israeli army views as their potential network of support,
be it Lebanon now, or Iran and Syria tomorrow. At the
same time, what Sharon's legacy has brought to perfection
is that war can be always marketed as the tireless
pursuit of peace. Sharon proved that Israel can imprison
the Palestinians, bombard them from the air, steal their
land in the West Bank, stall any chance for peace, and
still be hailed by the Western world as the peaceful side
in the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Did the Road Map plan
of 2003, with which your book opens, offer any real
prospect for peace?
To answer this question,
it is necessary first to refresh our memory regarding
what the conflict is about. From Israeli discourse one
might get the impression that it is about Israel's right
to exist. On this view, the Palestinians are trying to
undermine the mere existence of the state of Israel with
the demand to allow their refugees to return, and they
are trying to achieve that with terror. It seems that it
has been forgotten that in practice this is a simple and
classical conflict over Palestinian land and resources
(water) that Israel has been occupying since 1967. The
Road Map document as well manifests complete absence of
any territorial dimension. In the final, third phase, of
the plan the occupation should end. But the plan's
document doesn't put any demands on Israel at this third
phase. Most Israelis understand that there is no way to
end the occupation and the conflict without the Israeli
army leaving the territories and the dismantlement of
settlements. But these basic concepts are not even hinted
at in the document, which only mentions freezing
settlements expansion and dismantling new outposts,
already at the first phase of the plan.
Nevertheless, the road
map plan is substantial and important because of what it
determines should happen in its first phase. This phase
repeats the cease-fire plan proposed by then CIA head
George Tenet, in June 2001. The essence of this phase is
that to restore calm, a cease-fire should be declared, to
which both sides should have to contribute. The
Palestinians should cease all terror and armed activity,
and Israel should pull its forces back to the positions
they held before the Palestinian uprising, in September
2000. This is a substantial demand of Israel, because in
September 2000, there were large areas of the West Bank
that were under Palestinian autonomous control.
Implementing the demand to restore the conditions that
existed then, should mean also lifting the many road
blocks and army posts that Israel has placed in these
areas since that time.
There is no doubt that
fulfillment of this demand would contribute greatly to
establishing some calm, and creating, at least,
conditions for negotiations. But, as I mentioned, Israel
refused to accept even that much, and stalled the road
map in the same way that it had stalled the Tenet plan
before.
A central event that
you cover in the book is the Gaza pullout and the
evacuation of the Gaza settlements. But your analysis of
what went on behind the scenes of the pullout is quite
different than the way it was perceived even in critical
circles.
A prevailing view in
critical circles is that Sharon decided to evacuate the
Gaza settlements because maintaining them was too costly,
and he preferred to focus efforts on his central goal of
keeping the West Bank and expanding its settlements.
There is no doubt that Sharon openly used the
disengagement plan to expand and strengthen Israel's grip
of the West Bank. But I argue that there is no evidence
that he decided to give Gaza up because keeping it proved
too costly.
Of course, the
occupation of Gaza has always been costly, and even from
the perspective of the most committed Israeli
expansionists, Israel does not need this piece of land,
one of the most densely populated in the world, and
lacking any natural resources. The problem is that one
cannot let Gaza free, if one wants to keep the West Bank.
A third of the occupied Palestinians live in the Gaza
strip. If they are given freedom, they would become the
center of Palestinian struggle for liberation, with free
access to the Western and Arab world. To control the West
Bank, Israel had to stick to Gaza. From this perspective,
the previous model of occupation was the optimal choice.
The Strip was controlled from the inside by the army, and
the settlements provided the support system for the army,
and the moral justification for the soldiers' brutal job
of occupation. It makes their presence there a mission of
protecting the homeland. Control from the outside may be
cheaper, but in the long run, it has no guarantee of
success.
Furthermore, since the
Oslo years, the settlements were conceived both locally
and internationally as a tragic problem that, despite
Israel's good intentions to end the occupation, cannot be
solved. This useful myth was broken with the evacuation
of the Gaza settlements, which showed how easy it is, in
fact, to evacuate settlements, and how big the support is
in Israeli society for doing that.
I argue that Sharon did
not evacuate the Gaza settlements out of his own will,
but rather, that he was forced to do so. Sharon cooked up
his disengagement plan as a means to gain time, at the
peak of international pressure that followed Israel's
sabotaging of the road map and its construction of the
West Bank wall. Even then, there are some indications
that he was looking for ways to sneak out of this
commitment, as he did with all his commitments before.
But this time he was forced to actually carry it out by
the Bush administration. Though it was kept fully behind
the scenes, the pressure was quite massive, including
military sanctions. The official pretext for the
sanctions was Israel's arm sale to China, but in previous
occasions, the crisis was over as soon as Israel agreed
to cancel the deal. This time, the sanctions were
unprecedented, and lasted until the signing of the
crossing agreement in November 2005.
But currently there
is no sign of any U.S. pressure on Israel?
Yes, U.S. pressure ended
right with the evacuation of the settlements, and Israel
was given a free hand to violate all the agreements
signed ceremonially in November 2005, under the
supervision of Condoleezza Rice. Since then, the U.S. has
given full backing to Israel, as it turned the Gaza strip
into an open-air prison, and began to starve and bombard
the besieged Palestinians. We should note that at no
stage, did Sharon take a commitment to actually give up
the full Israeli control of the Gaza strip. From its
outset, the disengagement plan, as published in Israeli
media in April 16, 2004 determined that Israel would
maintain full military control of the strip from the
outside, as before the pullout.
From the U.S.
perspective, its goal was achieved with the evacuation of
the settlements. As long as international calm is
maintained, Palestinian suffering plays no role in US
calculations. To maintain the Iraq occupation, while
preparing its next steps in the "war on
terror", It was important for the U.S. to appease
the world's sentiment that something should be done to
end the Israeli occupation. This goal was achieved for
the time being. The Western world, or at least its
leaders and media, were euphoric with the new turn in the
Middle East. The dominant world-view in the Western media
is still that Israel has done its part, and now it is the
Palestinians' turn to show their peaceful intentions.
With the victory of Hamas in the Palestinian elections,
this view has even strengthened. Israel's eternal claim
that it has no partner for peace is now having a renewed
impact. Those who have accepted for years Israel's claim
that Arafat was not a partner, and then that Abbas was
not, are certainly willing to hear also that Hamas is
not.
Since the end of 2005,
the Bush administration has seemed determined to move its
planned "Iranian campaign" into high gear, so
Israel's stocks have been rising again. In its concerted
campaign to prevent international recognition of the new
Hamas administration, and to impose tough sanctions on
the Palestinians, Israel has been exploiting the
Islamophobic atmosphere that resurfaced in the US.
Israeli security officials flooded the West with reports
on the dangers of Hamas' future ties with Iran and Syria,
painting a disturbing picture of a global fundamentalist
Islamic threat. The conditions were ripe for such
propaganda. On February 3, the Pentagon released its 2006
Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), where it lays out its
vision for what it describes as a long war:
"Currently, Iraq and Afghanistan are crucial
battlegrounds, but the struggle extends far beyond their
borders. With its allies and partners, the United States
must be prepared to wage this war in many locations
simultaneously and for some years to come".
With the drums of the
long war banging, Israel's line on Hamas has been well
received. The US administration urged European and Arab
countries to freeze direct aid to the Palestinian
Authority,and on February 15, the U.S. congress started
moves in the same direction. Israeli security officials
had been involved for quite some time before in urging
the U.S. administration to increase its operations in
Iran, including covert acts of regime change - efforts
that were yielding their fruits in 2006. As was disclosed
by Seymour Hersh and others, during Israel's recent war
on Lebanon, the U.S. administration has viewed this as
preparation, and a "test" for the option of an
attack on Iran.
What has been the
role of the Pro-Israel lobby in shaping U.S. policies?
Interestingly, in 2005,
during the whole period of U.S. heavy pressure on Israel,
AIPAC (the American Israel Public Affairs Committee) and
other lobby groups were completely silent. As I detail in
the book, this compliance was helped by the
investigation, and later the indictment of two AIPAC
officials - its policy director, Steven Rosen, and Iran
specialist Keith Weissman. It transpired that the
powerful Pro-Israel lobby could be silenced easily, if
the White House so desired. This confirms what Chomsky
and others have been arguing for years - that the
Pro-Israel lobbies are powerful only as long as their
pressure is in line with U.S. policies.
But the renewed wave of
Islamophobia has also bolstered AIPAC's newfound
self-confidence. Its annual policy conference in March
2006 was held in an atmosphere of neocon celebration,
with star appearance of several of the most hard-line
administration officials, including Vice President Dick
Cheney and Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton.
The Jewish newspaper Forward noted at the time that AIPAC
"appears to be out of step with the American Jewish
community on Iraq... 70% of American Jews oppose the Iraq
war, according to a poll commission by the American
Jewish Committee at the end of 2005." But regardless
of the opinions of the Jewish community they are supposed
to represent, the leaders of the Pro-Israel lobby
"are optimistic that, paradoxically, the drop in
Bush's approval ratings in American public opinion will
force him to adopt the hard line advocated by AIPAC and
Israel".
Despite the grim
events described in the book, the overall feeling that
comes through is that of hope. Why?
I argue that the reason
that the U.S. exerted even limited pressure on Israel,
for the first time in recent history, was because at that
moment in history it was no longer possible to ignore
world discontent over its policy of blind support of
Israel. This shows that persistent struggle can have an
effect, and can lead governments to act. Such struggle
begins with the Palestinian people, who have withstood
years of brutal oppression, and who, through their spirit
of zumud--sticking to their land - and daily endurance,
organizing and resistance, have managed to keep the
Palestinian cause alive, something that not all oppressed
nations have managed to do. It continues with
international struggle--solidarity movements that send
their people to the occupied territories and stand in
vigils at home, professors signing boycott petitions,
subjecting themselves to daily harassment, a few
courageous journalists that insist on covering the truth,
against the pressure of acquiescent media and pro-Israel
lobbies. Often this struggle for justice seems futile.
Nevertheless, it has penetrated global consciousness. It
is this collective consciousness that eventually forced
the U.S. to pressure Israel into some, albeit limited,
concessions. . The Palestinian cause can be silenced for
a while, as is happening now, but it will resurface.
You note that since
2003, a new form of struggle has been formed along the
route of the West Bank wall?
Largely unreported,
there is a growing non-violent popular struggle aimed at
stopping, or at least slowing down, Israel's massive work
of destruction that, once completed, will disconnect
400,000 Palestinians from their land and means of
sustenance. In the Palestinian Nakba (catastrophe) of
1948, 730,000 Palestinians were driven out of their
villages. But rather than waiting for the history books
to tell the story of the second Palestinian Nakba, the
Palestinians along the wall are struggling to save their
land. Armed only with the marvelous spirit of people who
have held to their land one generation after the other,
they stand in front of one of the most brutal military
machines of the world. An amazing development of the last
three years is that Israelis have joined the Palestinian
struggle. For the first time in the history of the
occupation, we are witnessing joint Israeli-Palestinian
struggle.
For almost two years
now, the center of struggle has been the village Bil'in,
in the center of the West Bank, whose lands are being
transferred to the Israeli settlement of upper Modi'in.
Every Friday there is a central demonstration that
gathers the whole village as well as Israelis and
internationals. The army has used brutal force to try to
stop the protest, but the demonstrations continue. Along
with Israel of the army and the settlers, a new
Israel-Palestine is forming along the route of the wall.
In the last chapter of the book I survey in detail the
development of this joint struggle--the history of the
people, which emerged along the history of the powerful.
Tanya Reinhart is
a Professor of Linguistics at Tel Aviv University and the
author of Israel/Palestine: How to End the
War of 1948 and The Roadmap to Nowhere. She can be reached through her
website: http://www.tau.ac.il/~reinhart
|