Uri Avnery
June 2, 2018
OH, GAZA. Strong as death is love.
I
loved Gaza. That is a play on words. The Biblical Song of Songs says
that love is strong as death. Strong in Hebrew is Aza. Aza is also the
Hebrew name of Gaza.
I
have spent many happy hours in Gaza. I had many friends there. From the
leftist Dr. Haidar Abd al-Shafi to the Islamist Mahmoud al-Zahar, who is
now the foreign minister of Hamas.
I
was there when Yasser Arafat, the son of a Gazan family, came home. They
put me in the first row of the reception at the Rafah border, and that
evening he received me at the hotel on the Gaza sea shore, seating me
next to him on the stage during a press conference.
I
met with a friendly attitude everywhere in the Gaza Strip, in the
refugee camps and in the streets of Gaza City. Everywhere we talked
about peace and about the place of Gaza in the future State of
Palestine.
GOOD, BUT what about Hamas, the terrible arch-terrorist organization?
In
the early 1990s, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin exiled 415 prominent
Islamists from Gaza to Lebanon. The Lebanese did not let them in, so the
exiles vegetated for a year in the open air on the border.
We
protested against the expulsion and put up a tent camp opposite the
Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem. We stayed there for 45 days and
nights, including some days in snow. In the camp were Jews and Arabs,
including Israeli Arab Islamists. We spent the long days and nights in
political discussions. What about? About peace, of course.
The Islamists were nice people, and treated my wife, Rachel, with utmost civility.
When
the exiles were finally allowed home, a reception was held for them in
the largest hall in Gaza. I was invited, together with a group of
companions. I was asked to speak (in Hebrew, of course) and after that I
was invited to a banquet.
I
am recounting all this in order to describe the atmosphere at that time.
In everything I said, I stressed that I was an Israeli patriot. I
advocated peace between two states. Before the first Intifada (which
started on December 9, 1987) Gaza was not a place of dark hatred. Far
from it.
Masses
of laborers crossed the checkpoints every morning in order to work in
Israel, and so did the merchants who sold their wares in Israel, or
crossed Israel on the way to Jordan, or got their merchandise through
Israeli harbors.
SO HOW did we succeed – we, the State of Israel – in turning Gaza into what it is today?
In
the summer of 2005 the then Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, decided to
cut all ties with the Gaza Strip. "Arik", a soldier in his heart,
decided that the costs of occupying the strip were higher than the
benefits. He pulled the army and the settlers out and turned the strip
over – to whom? To nobody.
Why
to nobody? Why not to the PLO, which was already the recognized
Palestinian authority? Why not within the framework of an agreement?
Because Arik hated the Palestinians, the PLO and Arafat. He did not want
to have anything to do with them. So he just left the strip.
But
nature abhors a vacuum. A Palestinian authority came into being in
Gaza. Democratic elections were held, and Hamas won in all of Palestine.
Hamas is a religious-nationalist party which originally was furthered
by the Israeli secret service (Shin Bet) in order to undermine the PLO.
When the PLO did not accept the election results, Hamas in Gaza took
power by force. Thus the present situation came into being.
DURING ALL this time we still had a positive option.
The
Gaza Strip could have turned into a blooming island. Optimists spoke
about a "Second Singapore". They spoke about a Gaza harbor, with due
inspection of incoming goods either in Gaza or in a neutral port abroad.
A Gaza airport, with appropriate security inspection, was built and
used and then destroyed by Israel.
And what did the Israeli government do? The very opposite, of course.
The
government subjected the Gaza Strip to a stringent blockade. All
connections between the strip and the outside world were cut.
Provisions could come only through Israel. Israel increased or
decreased the import of essential necessities at its whim. The affair of
the Turkish ship Mavi Marmara, which was bloodily stormed near the Gaza
shore, emphasized the total isolation.
The
Gaza population has now reached about two million. Most of them are
refugees from Israel, who were driven out during the 1948 war. I cannot
say that I am innocent – my army unit fought in the south of Palestine. I
saw what was happening. I wrote about it.
The
blockade created a magic circle. Hamas and the smaller (and more
extreme) organizations carried out acts of resistance (or "terror"). As a
reaction, the Israeli government intensified the blockade. The Gazans
answered with more violence. The blockade became worse. And so on, up to
and including this week.
What
about the southern border of the strip? Rather bizarrely, Egypt
cooperates with the Israeli blockade. And not only because of the mutual
sympathy between the Egyptian military dictator, Abd al-Fatah al-Sisi,
and the Israeli rulers. There is also a political reason: The Sisi
regime hates the Muslim Brothers, Its banned internal opposition, which
is considered the parent organization of Hamas.
The
PLO regime in the West Bank also cooperates with the Israeli blockade
against Hamas, which is its main competitor within the Palestinian
political framework.
Thus
the Gaza Strip remains almost completely isolated, without friends.
Except some idealists around the world, who are much too weak to make a
difference. And, of course, Hezbollah and Iran.
NOW
THERE prevails a kind of balance. The Gazan organizations carry out
violent acts, which do no real damage to the State of Israel. The
Israeli army does not have the appetite to occupy the strip again. And
then the Palestinians discovered a new weapon: non-violent resistance.
Many
years ago an Arab-American activist, a pupil of Martin Luther King,
came to Palestine to preach this method. He found no takers and returned
to the US. Then, at the beginning of the second Intifada, the
Palestinians tried this method. The Israeli army reacted with live fire.
The world saw a picture of a little boy shot while in the arms of his
father. The army denied responsibility, as it always does. Non-violent
resistance died with the boy. The Intifada demanded many victims.
Truth
is that the Israeli army has no answer to non-violent resistance. In
such a campaign, all the cards are in the hands of the Palestinians.
World public opinion condemns Israel and praises the Palestinians.
Therefore, the army's reaction is to open fire, in order to induce the
Palestinians to start violent actions. With these the army knows how to
deal.
Non-violent
resistance is a very difficult method. It demands enormous willpower,
strict self-control and moral superiority. Such qualities are to be
found in Indian culture, which gave birth to a Gandhi, and within the
black American community of Martin Luther King. There is no such
tradition in the Muslim world.
Therefore
it is doubly astonishing that the demonstrators on the Gaza border are
now finding this power in their hearts. The events of Black Monday, May
14, surprised the world. Masses of unarmed human beings, men, women and
children, braved the Israeli sharpshooters. They did not draw weapons.
They did not "storm the fence", a lie spread by the huge Israeli
propaganda apparatus. They stood exposed to the sharpshooters and were
killed.
The
Israeli army is convinced that the inhabitants of Gaza will not stand
the test, that they will return to useless violence. Last Tuesday it
seemed as if this assessment was right. One of the Gaza organizations
carried out a "revenge action", launching more then a hundred mortar
shells into Israel without causing any real damage. That was a useless
gesture. Violent action has no chance whatsoever to hurt Israel. It only
supplies ammunition to Israeli propaganda.
When
one thinks about non-violent struggle, one should remember Amritsar.
That is the name of an Indian town where in April 1919 soldiers under
British command opened murderous fire for 10 consecutive minutes on
Indian non-violent protesters, killing at least 379 and wounding about
1200. The name of the commander, Colonel Reginald Dyer, entered history,
for eternal shame. British public opinion was shocked. Many historians
believe that this was the beginning of the end of British rule in India.
"Black Monday" on the Gaza border reminds one of this episode.
HOW WILL this end?
Hamas has offered a Hudna for 40 years. A Hudna is a sacred armistice, which no Muslim is allowed to break.
I
have already mentioned the Crusaders, who stayed in Palestine for almost
200 years (more then us, at this moment). They agreed to or entered
into several Hudnas with the hostile Muslim states around them. The
Arabs kept them strictly.
The
question is: Is the Israeli government able to accept a Hudna? After
inciting the masses of their followers and filling them with mortal
hatred against the people of Gaza in general and Hamas in particular,
would it dare to agree?
When
the inhabitants of the Gaza Strip are choked, lacking medicines,
lacking enough food, lacking pure water, lacking electricity, will our
government not fall into the trap of illusion and believe that now Hamas
will collapse?
That will not happen, of course. As we sang in our youth: "No people withdraws from the trenches of their life!"
As the Jews themselves proved for centuries, there is no limit to what a people can endure when its very existence is at stake.
That's what history tells us.
MY HEART is with the people of Gaza.
I desire to ask their forgiveness, in my name and in the name of Israel, my country.
I
am longing for the day when everything will change, the day when a wiser
government will agree to a Hudna, open the border and let the people of
Gaza return to the world.
Now, too, I love Gaza, with the love that the Bible says is as strong as death.
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