So,
yes, there is reason for Israelis, and for Jews generally, to think
long and hard about the dark Hitler era at this particular time. For
the significance of the Gaza Flotilla incident lies not in the
questions raised about violations of international law on the high
seas, or even about “who assaulted who” first on the Turkish ship, the
Mavi Marmara, but in the larger questions raised about our common human
condition by Israel’s occupation policies and its devastation of Gaza’s
civilian population. If
a people who so recently experienced on its own flesh such unspeakable
inhumanities cannot muster the moral imagination to understand the
injustice and suffering its territorial ambitions—and even its
legitimate security concerns—are inflicting on another people, what
hope is there for the rest of us?
If
a people who so recently experienced such unspeakable inhumanities
cannot understand the injustice and suffering its territorial ambitions
are inflicting, what hope is there for the rest of us? Following
Israel’s bloody interdiction of the Gaza Flotilla, I called a life-long
friend in Israel to inquire about the mood of the country. My friend,
an intellectual and a kind and generous man, has nevertheless long
sided with Israeli hardliners. Still, I was entirely unprepared for his
response. He told me—in a voice trembling with emotion—that the world’s
outpouring of condemnation of Israel is reminiscent of the dark period
of the Hitler era. He
told me most everyone in Israel felt that way, with the exception of
Meretz, a small Israeli pro-peace party. “But for all practical
purposes,” he said, “they are Arabs.” Like
me,
my friend personally experienced those dark Hitler years, having
lived under Nazi occupation, as did so many of Israel’s Jewish
citizens. I was therefore stunned by the analogy. He went on to say
that the so-called human rights activists on the Turkish ship were in
fact terrorists and thugs paid to assault Israeli authorities to
provoke an incident that would discredit the Jewish state. The evidence
for this, he said, is that many of these activists were found by
Israeli authorities to have on them ten thousand dollars, “exactly the
same amount!” he exclaimed. When
I
managed to get over the shock of that exchange, it struck me that the
invocation of the Hitler era was actually a frighteningly apt and
searing analogy, although not the one my friend intended. A million and
a half civilians have been forced to live in an open-air prison in
inhuman conditions for over three years now, but unlike the Hitler
years, they are not Jews but Palestinians. Their jailers, incredibly,
are survivors of the Holocaust, or their descendants. Of course, the
inmates of Gaza are not destined for gas chambers, as the Jews were,
but they have been reduced to a debased and hopeless existence. Fully
80% of Gaza’s population lives on the edge of malnutrition, depending
on international charities for their daily nourishment. According to
the UN and World Health authorities, Gaza’s children suffer from
dramatically increased morbidity that will affect and shorten the lives
of many of them. This obscenity is a consequence of a deliberate and
carefully calculated Israeli policy aimed at de-developing Gaza by
destroying not only its economy but its physical and social
infrastructure while sealing it hermitically from the outside world. Particularly
appalling is that this policy has been the source of amusement for some
Israeli leaders, who according to Israeli press reports have jokingly
described it as “putting Palestinians on a diet.” That, too, is
reminiscent of the Hitler years, when Jewish suffering amused the Nazis. Another
feature of that dark era were absurd conspiracies attributed to the
Jews by otherwise intelligent and cultured Germans. Sadly, even smart
Jews are not immune to that disease. Is it really conceivable that
Turkish activists who were supposedly paid ten thousand dollars each
would bring that money with them on board the ship knowing they would
be taken into custody by Israeli authorities? That
intelligent and moral people, whether German or Israeli, can convince
themselves of such absurdities (a disease that also afflicts much of
the Arab world) is the enigma that goes to the heart of the mystery of
how even the most civilized societies can so quickly shed their most
cherished values and regress to the most primitive impulses toward the
Other, without even being aware they have done so. It must surely have
something to do with a deliberate repression of the moral imagination
that enables people to identify with the Other’s plight. Pirkey Avot, a
collection of ethical admonitions that is part of the Talmud, urges:
“Do not judge your fellow man until you are able to imagine standing in
his place.” Of
course, even the most objectionable Israeli policies do not begin to
compare with Hitler’s Germany. But the essential moral issues are the
same. How would Jews have reacted to their tormentors had they been
consigned to the kind of existence Israel has imposed on Gaza’s
population? Would they not have seen human rights activists prepared to
risk their lives to call their plight to the world’s attention as
heroic, even if they had beaten up commandos trying to prevent their
effort? Did Jews admire British commandos who boarded and diverted
ships carrying illegal Jewish immigrants to Palestine in the aftermath
of World War II, as most Israelis now admire Israel’s naval commandos? Who
would have believed that an Israeli government and its Jewish citizens
would seek to demonize and shut down Israeli human rights organizations
for their lack of “patriotism,” and dismiss fellow Jews who criticized
the assault on the Gaza Flotilla as “Arabs,” pregnant with all the
hateful connotations that word has acquired in Israel, not unlike
Germans who branded fellow citizens who spoke up for Jews as “Juden”?
The German White Rose activists, mostly students from the University of
Munich, who dared to condemn the German persecution of the Jews (well
before the concentration camp exterminations began) were also
considered “traitors” by their fellow Germans, who did not mourn the
beheading of these activists by the Gestapo. So,
yes, there is reason for Israelis, and for Jews generally, to think
long and hard about the dark Hitler era at this particular time. For
the significance of the Gaza Flotilla incident lies not in the
questions raised about violations of international law on the high
seas, or even about “who assaulted who” first on the Turkish ship, the
Mavi Marmara, but in the larger questions raised about our common human
condition by Israel’s occupation policies and its devastation of Gaza’s
civilian population. If
a people who so recently experienced on its own flesh such unspeakable
inhumanities cannot muster the moral imagination to understand the
injustice and suffering its territorial ambitions—and even its
legitimate security concerns—are inflicting on another people, what
hope is there for the rest of us? Henry
Siegman, director of the U.S./Middle East Project, is a visiting
research professor at the Sir Joseph Hotung Middle East Program, School
of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. He is a former
Senior Fellow on the Middle East at the Council on Foreign Relations
and, before that, was national director of the American Jewish Congress
from 1978 to 1994. |