Self-fulfilling prophecy
It is symptomatic of Western racism that Israel and
its sympathisers are blind to what it is ordinary Arabs
find admirable in Hizbullah, writes Azmi Bishara
Journalist: How will the deaths of Israeli soldiers today
affect your plans?
Israeli Army Spokesman: You saw that massacre of 12
Israelis .. it will ...
Journalist: Massacre you said? But those were soldiers
and this is war.
Spokesman: No, it was a massacre because the people who
fired the missiles weren't targeting soldiers. They were
targeting Israeli civilians but killed the soldiers by
accident.
Journalist: But you also committed massacres in Qana and
elsewhere.
Spokesman: No, there was no massacre in Qana. Hizbullah
fighters were the targets of the bombardment but
civilians were hit by accident.
This nightmarish gibberish, which would make any
journalist quit his job, a spectator smash his TV screen
and a dialogue participant abandon his faith in dialogue,
is not from Alice in Wonderland. It is an excerpt taken
verbatim from an interview on an Arab satellite station
with a young spokesman for the Israeli Defence Forces.
Now, when Israeli soldiers die it's a massacre, whereas
the wiping out of entire families in the course of the
aerial bombardment of their homes and villages doesn't
rate the term. That's not a massacre but an
"accident" or, in the euphemistic jargon of the
science of the war against terrorism, collateral damage.
Much has been written about this term, which explains so
little but hides so much -- which, after all, is the
function of much political jargon: to keep people from
understanding what is really going on. "Collateral
damage" is used to refer to the civilian casualties
in the war against terrorism, or the war against those
who target civilians. Generally the victims of collateral
damage far outnumber the victims of actual terrorist
attacks.
Peoples of the world are divided into those whose
governments possess fighter planes and those whose
governments do not possess them. In like manner, the
victims of bombs are divided into individual human beings
and statistical estimates based on scattered body parts
amidst the rubble, the former being the victims of
terrorism the latter of collateral damage.
The victims of the war against terrorism are indistinct.
They stir a fleeting image of pain, perhaps, as felt by
themselves or their loved ones, but ultimately they are
reduced to a regretful side effect, the responsibility
for which is attributed to their political leaders, or
their national or ethnic affiliation, their erroneous
ideological beliefs or plain stubbornness. They will soon
fade into obscurity. After rescue workers pull the
mangled bodies from under the rubble several days after a
bombing raid, renewed bombardment, the press of the
latest news flashes and another harvest of victims will
have pushed them from the headlines.
The interview cited above is one scene in this saga of
the absurd. Another is the sight of fleeing southern
Lebanese who have sought refuge in Palestinian refugee
camps in their country. Then there is Israel, acting as
though it is the victim, chomping at the bit to avenge
itself against Hizbullah, the criminal attacker. There is
the military circus that pretends it is a parliament, a
tribe that calls itself democratic whooping in a war
dance before TV cameras and marching to martial music in
the studios of a purportedly democratic media.
The majority of victims in this war of terror belong to
ethnic groups, or "cultures" as they are
referred to now, that occupy the lowest rungs of the
global cultural ladder. They belong to the collateral
damage "culture", as opposed to the victims of
terrorism "culture".
Recently the cultures that have been reduced to this
inferior status have attempted to defend themselves by
brandishing the term "state terrorism". One
would think this concept would be an effective weapon to
counter the so-called war on terror and its concomitant
collateral damage. Unfortunately the balances of power
are so heavily tipped against it that it ended up being
trampled on, ridiculed or, at best, turned into a
metaphor for cultural clash. The leaders of terrorist
states don't have to live in hiding. They aren't pursued
by fighter planes. They can be heard live on TV instead
of through prerecorded videos. Human rights activists and
clergymen are not embarrassed to meet them. They can
ensure the word "terrorism" remains the weapon
of their culture, the culture of the strong.
The awkward fact for Israel is that Hizbullah, in its
long war against Israel, never made a policy of targeting
civilians, except in retaliation for Israel's targeting
of Lebanese civilians. This, moreover, is a recent
development. Throughout the 17 years of its fight against
the Israeli occupation of Lebanon, Hizbullah killed only
20 Israeli civilians as opposed to the thousands of
Lebanese killed by Israel. Even in the current war the
ratio of Israeli military to civilian deaths has not
fallen below 60 per cent, whereas the number of Hizbullah
fighters who have died in battle is less than 10 per cent
of the thousand Lebanese dead. This is not to mention the
million Lebanese who have been driven from their homes
and who will find no villages to which to return
following Israel's orgy of destruction.
This "collateral" destruction is deliberate and
calculated. It is an extension of the state terrorism
upon which Israel was built. Israel would not exist today
had it not been for its systematic massacres of the
Palestinian population in 1948. And if these massacres
can be swept into some remote corner of history, written
off as outbursts of Israel's infancy and later repressed
in the collective memory, this cannot apply to later
massacres. By the early 1950s killing civilians had
evolved into a conscious military creed, as epitomised by
Unit 101, founded and commanded by Sharon with the aim of
carrying out retaliatory actions against civilians in
areas where fedayeen operations had taken place. This
targeting civilians has been transmitted from generation
to generation in the Israeli army.
Observers who have heard Israeli politicians and military
officials away from the microphones of press conferences
will have been subjected to daily rants about the need to
flatten every Lebanese village that a missile comes from,
to destroy electricity generators and other
infrastructure and bomb the country back to the dark
ages. These statements, and others, reflect a belief that
the Arabs do not have to be treated according to the
rules that apply to other peoples and nations.
Israeli spokespersons are steadfastly driving home the
idea of two distinct and incompatible cultures, two
civilisations, two worlds. If the world is divided into
cultures and these cultures are divided into friend of
foe, which is to say that the world is embroiled in an
enormous culture clash, then the notion of "double
standards" loses all moral opprobrium, becoming the
natural order of things. In an article appearing in
Yediot Aharanot of 7 August Rabin's former PR advisor,
the rabidly racist Eitan Haber, turned the clash of
civilisations from a theoretical concept, a
made-in-the-US paradigm for understanding the world, into
a real and concrete war. Then, with customary pomposity
he suggested that the current conflict between Israel and
Hizbullah was that very war: "We are at war,"
he writes. "It is not an 'operation' or a 'broad
manoeuvre.' It is war... Failure could bring ghosts out
of the closet -- the entire fundamentalist Islamic world
is baring its teeth at the Western world and moderate
Arab countries."
The French-US sponsored UN Security Council resolution
seems geared to transform this imaginary culture conflict
into a self-fulfilling prophecy. Regardless of its
underlying political position, as a literary text it is
Israel's narrative and the narrator is Israel. Israel, it
tells us, is threatened by Hizbullah rockets. If Israel
is to halt its bombardment Hizbullah must stop firing
missiles into Israel first. Everyone knows that Israel
regards the mere existence of missiles that could
threaten its cities, even if only for deterrent purposes,
as an act of aggression that must be answered It is
Israel's right to threaten Lebanon, not Lebanon's right
to threaten Israel. As for the total destruction of half
of Lebanon and the partial destruction of the other half,
well that's a "matter of opinion".
The document goes on to grant that the conflict began
with the capture of the two Israeli soldiers and that
Israel had the right to declare this a causus belli. The
first step to ending the war is for Hizbullah to release
the soldiers unconditionally. Thus, with feigned
naïveté, the resolution sets an official stamp on
Israel's pretext for going to war and for killing
thousands and displacing a million in order to free two
Israeli soldiers. Clearly, one of the resolution's
collateral purposes is to consecrate the superiority of
one culture over another. The draft resolution concludes
with a call for the disarming of Hizbullah, Israel's
original demand. From beginning to end, in its premises
and aims, the language and substance is Israeli. The
representatives of the nations who drafted it proceeded
entirely from the Israeli perspective.
"Cultural" communality has determined that
Israel must be compensated for its military failures and
that the Lebanese resistance must be prevented from
translating its gains on the ground into political gains.
We should pause for a moment and consider what, exactly,
the Arab people believe Hizbullah has accomplished and
why they might be angered to see Israel's allies on the
Security Council and elsewhere obstruct the translation
of these accomplishments into political gains.
The Arab people admire Hizbullah for reasons completely
different to the ones people in the West and Israel
suspect. The Arab public is drawn to Hizbullah precisely
because it stands apart from Arab regimes and,
simultaneously, from organisations like Al-Qaeda.
Hizbullah is not corrupt and impotent like Arab regimes,
and it does not cowardly target civilians like terrorist
organisations. Rather, it has waged a valiant fight
directly against the Israeli army, rejecting the
disregard of Arab regimes for their own citizens when
Israel attacks or kidnaps them. Hizbullah insists on
avenging its dead and demanding the release of Lebanese
prisoners in Israel. Hizbullah regards the blood of
Lebanese civilians as of no less worth than that of
Israeli civilians, and in taking this stance it has
revived a sense of Arab dignity not only with respect to
Israel but with respect to their own governments.
The Arabs admire Hizbullah not as an Iranian tool but
because it is made up of Arab Muslim fighters who are
rebuilding people's confidence in their identity. If
these Arabs can take on Israel so can others, once they
are free of the fetters of underdevelopment and armed
with resolve. The Arabs admire Hizbullah for the same
qualities that Americans or Europeans would admire a
political party that led them in a struggle against a
foreign enemy: valour, courage, persistence,
organisational skill, modesty in words, strength in
action, a strong grassroots base, a desire to help the
needy and other manifestations of a social conscience.
They admire Hizbullah because it avoids hollow
sloganeering, it is not corrupt and its electoral
victories are not the result of nepotism, favoritism or
bribes.
Israeli and Western politicians, and those Arabs who
share their fear of Hizbullah, believed that the key to
resolving their concerns lay in sectarian differences.
They placed their bets on the Shia-Sunni divide, only to
be surprised at how they had misjudged things.
Hizbullah's religious affiliation is both a strength and
a weakness, but it certainly has not stood in the way of
the party's popularity in the Arab world.
Yet the popularity of Hizbullah remains a mystery to
Western politicians, a manifestation of the irrational
oriental mindset, of a dark and unfathomable culture that
subscribes to martyrdom. They will continue to insist
upon this as they collude to obstruct Hizbullah's right
to capitalise on its gains through its own persistence
and by working together with others in its own society.
They will insist and insist until the culture clash
prophecy fulfills itself, which is to say until Arabs who
admire the Hizbullah model realise that the West is
hostile to it because it represents a
"different" culture and as a consequence grow
increasingly hostile to the West.
Hizbullah has not made it easy for those Arab
intellectuals who do not like to distinguish between the
culprits and the victims, who appeal to Beirut while
ignoring the refugees in that city's parks and schools,
who urge both sides to exercise restraint in spite of the
evidence at Bint Jbeil, Al-Duwair, Mrouhin, Eita
Al-Sha'b, Ansar, Tyre, Shiyah and the Bakaa. Hizbullah
hasn't made it easy for those who make their living from
dialogue with the West, who are ready to squander
whatever autonomous sources of strength they have left in
exchange for US approval of their desire to coexist with
Israel and their readiness to pay whatever price is
exacted for recognising it.
Hizbullah isn't looking for peace with Israel. Nor is it
interested in receiving brownie points for being
"enlightened" or "moderate". It sees
its own enlightenment, as Israel sees hers, in its
rationalisation and organisational strength.
Ideologically, morally and in its origins, Hizbullah is
founded within the Palestinian historical narrative,
related by Palestinian refugees to the farmers and poets
of Lebanon ever since catastrophe brought the poor of the
Lebanese south and Palestinian refugees together in the
same saga. Hizbullah will not lend itself as fodder to
the "dialogue and coexistence industry". It is
too deep for that. It is too busy writing a hands-on
theology for the wretched of the Arab earth. This leaves
very little opening for opportunist intellectuals to sell
Hizbullah to the West. Hizbullah is not concerned with
"the recognition of Israel" and, unlike the PLO
and others, it refuses to engage in a discourse that
involves using basic principles as bargaining chips.
Hizbullah thrives on fighting as an equal, not on being
compensated for its absence in the field by a false
equality around the negotiating table. Hizbullah is not
in the business of selling souvenir pictures of Nasrallah
or in the business of courting the admiration of others.
Hizbullah simply doesn't act like racists think a Muslim
or Arab should act. The Muslim or Arab, according to the
common racist assumption, will either sell out his
principles and identity, toe the moderate line, live in
peace as an inferior and ingratiate himself to his
superiors or he will recoil into a nihilistic hatred and
rejection of the other and of the West, thereby
confirming his backwardness and the racist assumptions.
http://www.islamonline.net/
CAIRO An Israeli Arab Member of Knesset has
accused the Israeli army of using villages and towns
predominantly populated by Israeli Arabs as
"shields" to escape the barrages of rockets
fired by the Lebanese Hizbullah resistance group.
"During a short visit to offer condolences to the
families of victims killed in Hizbullah's rocket attacks,
I saw Israeli tanks shelling (south) Lebanon from the two
towns of Arab Al-Aramisha and Tarshiha, which are
predominantly populated Arabs," MK Sheikh Abbas Zako
said in a statement, a copy of which was received by
IslamOnline.net. Zako stressed that the Israeli tanks are positioned just
next to the houses of citizens.
"Hizbullah's rockets are only a response to shelling
by tanks positioned inside the towns," he said.
Hizbullah chief Hassan Nasrallah had apologized to
Israeli Arab families at the very beginning of war for
the collateral damage caused by the group's rockets,
calling the victims "martyrs." Israeli
army has been accused of using Palestinian civilians as
human shields in an operation in northern Gaza.
According to the Israeli human rights group, B'tselem,
Israeli soldiers seized control of two buildings in the
town of Beit Hanun and used six residents, two of them
minors, as human shields. It said they held them
on the staircases of the two buildings and at the
entrance to rooms, in which the soldiers positioned
themselves, for some twelve hours. During this
time, there were intense exchanges of gunfire between the
soldiers and Palestinian fighters.
Thicker The Israeli lawmaker saw the deployment of
tanks at the entrances and centers of Arab towns and
villages as a sign of continued bias against Israeli
Arabs by their government. "This demonstrates
the fact that the blood of Israeli Jews is thicker than
that of Israeli Arabs," he fumed. Zako called
on Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Defense
Minister Amir Peretz to immediately move these tanks from
Arab towns and villages, and halt the Israeli aggressions
on the Lebanese people.
Up to 1,000 Lebanese, mostly civilians, have been killed
since the start of the war on July 12. A total of 98
Israelis, including 58 servicemen, have also been killed.
Last week, three Arab members of Knesset yelled
out insults against Peretz, who was briefing the
lawmakers on the war developments. Among the
insults heaped on Peretz was "Angel of Death".
Israeli Arabs, who make up nearly a fifth of the
population, are descendants of those who stayed when
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled or were driven
from their homes by Zionist gangs in1948, when Israel was
founded on the rubble of Palestine. They accuse the
government of failing to build bomb shelters in their
towns and villages as it did in other areas.
Relations between Israel's Jews and Arabs have long been
difficult, with Arabs complaining of discrimination at
work place. The Knesset has further made life
unbearable for Israeli Arabs married to Palestinians by
adopting a law denying the latter the right to get an
Israeli residency to live with their spouses. The
Israeli High Court of Justice added insult to injury by
upholding the controversial law, which has been dismissed
by rights groups as racist and discriminatory.
"Regained Dignity" Despite the fact that
Arabs make up a third of the 48 people killed by rocket
fire on northern Israel, the sympathies of some Israeli
Arabs lie very much with Hizbullah. "Hizbullah has
raised up our heads and lifted our spirits", Ali
Manna told Reuters as he mourned two nephews killed in a
rocket attack by the Lebanese resistance group.
And they admire the fact that Hizbullah has proved a
tenacious rival and is till holding out against the
highly sophisticated Israeli military machine.
"For the first time there is a sense of regained
dignity," said Rawda Atallah, head of the Arab
Cultural Association in Haifa, a mixed Jewish-Arab city
that has been one of the main targets of Hizbullah
attacks. "They feel for the first time a
group is resisting and standing steadfast in the face of
the Israeli army," she said.
"Hizbullah's popularity has increased immensely
among the Arabs in Israel."
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