Haaretz Editorial-Israel News | Haaretz.com

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  • Cerveaux non disponibles
    @CerveauxNon
    https://twitter.com/CerveauxNon/status/1767100096015974713

    "Nous refusons que notre judéité et l’Holocauste soient récupérés pour justifier une occupation qui a conduit à des conflits pour tant d’innocents… »

    Très fort discours du réalisateur Jonathan Glazer après son Oscar du meilleur film étranger pour "La Zone D’intérêt"

    https://video.twimg.com/ext_tw_video/1767100053812813824/pu/vid/avc1/320x568/xogGJE6lYpwcieWR.mp4?tag=12


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CsRm8tPROv8

    #Oscar

    • Et bien sûr l’incomparable malhonnêteté sioniste en roue libre

      Batya Ungar-Sargon sur X :
      https://twitter.com/bungarsargon/status/1767002321051955202

      I simply cannot fathom the moral rot in someone’s soul that leads them to win an award for a movie about the Holocaust and with the platform given to them, to accept that award by saying, “We stand here as men who refute their Jewishness.”

      Jusqu’à mettre un point après le dernier mot.

    • Pour rappel, et pour la bonne bouche, voici comment Le Monde avait évoqué le fait que des gens avaient osé dénoncer le génocide à Gaza lors du festival de Berlin, fin février 2024 :

      https://www.lemonde.fr/culture/article/2024/02/26/la-berlinale-dans-la-tourmente-apres-des-propos-sur-israel-lors-de-la-remise

      La controverse a été alimentée notamment par des déclarations de cinéastes samedi soir, lors de la cérémonie du palmarès, accusant Israël de génocide en raison des bombardements qui ont fait près de 30 000 morts à Gaza, en majorité des civils, selon le ministère de la santé du Hamas – un chiffre non vérifiable de source indépendante, qui inclurait civils comme combattants.

      Dans le même temps, ces metteurs en scène n’ont pas mentionné que l’offensive israélienne avait été déclenchée par une attaque sans précédent menée le 7 octobre par le Hamas contre Israël, causant la mort d’au moins 1 160 personnes, en majorité des civils.

      On avait un fil là-dessus ici :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/1043347

      Du coup, je suis curieux de savoir si Jonathan Glazer avait déjà fait connaître sa position sur Gaza auparavant, ou bien si c’est une « surprise » pour les Oscars.

    • Jonathan Glazer Was Right: Jewishness and the Holocaust Have Been Hijacked by the Occupation
      Haaretz Editorial | Mar 13, 2024
      https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2024-03-13/ty-article-opinion/jonathan-glazer-was-right-jewishness-and-the-holocaust-were-hijacked-by-the-occupation/0000018e-3477-d9f7-a5ee-f6ff5da40000

      Every few days the country is rocked by the remarks of some person or another condemning Israel’s actions. The latest storm was provoked by the British Jewish director Jonathan Glazer, whose film “The Zone of Interest” won the Oscar this week for best international film.

    • La remise des Oscars permet un sursaut d’humanité face au génocide à Gaza
      https://www.chroniquepalestine.com/remise-oscars-permet-sursaut-humanite-face-genocide-gaza
      13 mars 2024 | Par Jonathan Cook | 11 mars 2024 – Transmis par l’auteur – Traduction : Chronique de Palestine – Dominique Muselet

      C’est pourquoi les influenceurs juifs se sont empressés de salir Glazer en le qualifiant de juif qui se hait lui-même et en déformant ses propos – en supprimant notamment les éléments qui ne correspondaient pas à leur programme intéressé et anti-universel.

      Faisant référence aux victimes du 7 octobre et de l’attaque israélienne contre Gaza, Glazer a déclaré au public des Oscars : « En ce moment, nous sommes ici en tant qu’hommes et en tant que femmes : En ce moment même, nous sommes ici en tant qu’hommes qui s’opposent au détournement de leur judéité et de l’Holocauste par un régime d’occupation qui a provoqué la mort de tant d’innocents ».

      Il s’opposait expressément à ce que sa judéité soit utilisée pour soutenir un génocide.

      Il s’est démarqué de nombreux dirigeants et personnalités influentes de la communauté juive qui ont utilisé leur propre judéité pour justifier la violence contre les civils. Il nous rappelait que la leçon de l’Holocauste est que les idéologies ne doivent jamais l’emporter sur notre humanité, ne doivent jamais être utilisées pour rationaliser le mal.

      Tout cela représente une énorme menace pour les membres de la communauté juive qui, depuis des décennies, utilisent précisément leur judéité à des fins politiques, pour servir Israël et son projet d’expulser le peuple palestinien de sa patrie historique.
      La vraie dépravation morale

      Dans un élan de pure inversion accusatoire, par exemple, le rabbin Shmuley Boteach, surnommé par les médias « le rabbin le plus célèbre d’Amérique », a fustigé Glazer pour avoir soi-disant « exploité l’Holocauste » et pour avoir banalisé « la mémoire des 6 millions de victimes grâce auxquelles il a trouvé la gloire à Hollywood ».

      Boteach ne peut apparemment pas comprendre que c’est lui, et non Glazer, qui exploite l’Holocauste – dans son cas, depuis des décennies pour protéger Israël de toute critique, même maintenant qu’il commet un génocide.

      Batya Ungar-Sargon, journaliste d’opinion à Newsweek, a, quant à elle, rompu avec toutes les règles déontologiques du journalisme pour déformer complètement le discours de Glazer, l’accusant d’être une « pourriture morale » pour avoir soi-disant renié sa judéité.

      Alors qu’en fait, comme il l’a très bien expliqué, il rejetait, au contraire, la façon dont son appartenance à la communauté juive et l’Holocauste ont été détournés par des apologistes du génocide tels qu’Ungar-Sargon pour promouvoir un programme idéologique violent.

      La rédactrice en chef de Newsweek sait que le discours de Glazer a été le moment le plus écouté et le plus discuté de la cérémonie des Oscars. La plupart de ceux qui ont lu le commentaire de Ungar-Sargon sur Twitter avaient entendu ce que Glazer a dit dans son discours et savaient qu’elle mentait.

      De pareilles accusations mensongères auraient dû avoir des conséquences destructrices sur sa carrière professionnelles. Elles auraient dû être une tache sombre sur sa crédibilité journalistique. Et pourtant, Mme Ungar-Sargon a fièrement maintenu son tweet, alors même que X l’avait assorti d’une humiliante note de bas de page : « Les lecteurs ont ajouté… », qui mettait en lumière sa malhonnêteté.

  • Concernant le plan (-arnaque) de Biden (pour regagner les voix Arabes lors des prochaines élections) pour la création d’un état palestinien

    Israel Cannot Afford to Miss This Opportunity of a Lifetime - Haaretz Editorial - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2024-02-16/ty-article-opinion/israel-cannot-afford-to-miss-this-opportunity-of-a-lifetime/0000018d-ae78-de6d-a1fd-affc7fe20000

    Assuming this intention is in fact translated into action, this is likely to be the best possible news for Israel, if it can rise to the challenge. The ball is primarily in its court. This would be the opportunity of its lifetime, the greatest and perhaps even last opportunity for it to alter its direction and its chances of integration into the region. […]

    A clear, resounding Israeli “yes” to the plan’s principles is necessary if this country wants to survive and change. The idea that it can always live by the sword, however sophisticated and advanced that sword is, was demolished on October 7.

  • The Latest Scapegoat in Israel’s Witch-hunt Against Its Arab Citizens - Haaretz Editorial - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2024-01-29/ty-article-opinion/the-latest-scapegoat-in-israels-witch-hunt-against-its-arab-citizens/0000018d-51eb-d5c3-a9fd-75ff5d670000

    Singer and neuroscientist Dalal Abu Amneh was a victim of political persecution. Haaretz’s Hebrew edition published a chilling account that reveals this persecution, from the first informer through the incited masses and the neighbors to the police, the justice system and the Afula municipality.

    It all began with something she posted after Hamas’ attack on October 7 – “God is the only victor,” along with a Palestinian flag. That was enough to ignite the persecution reserved for Arabs labeled as supporters of terrorism, even though only anti-Arab prejudice could explain seeing this post as support for Hamas.

    The post was shared, and as it spread, so did the public onslaught and the threats. When Abu Amneh complained to the police, it turned out that they were already on her trail.

    In times of crisis, there is no freedom of expression in Israel, especially not for Arabs. At the start of the war, State Prosecutor Amit Aisman gave the police sweeping permission to open investigations into anyone suspected of supporting the October 7 massacre.

    The result was a wave of arrests, many of them unjustified, of Arabs who dared to criticize the war or express solidarity with the suffering of the Palestinian residents of the Gaza Strip.

    At the police station, the officers verbally abused Abu Amneh, subjected her to a body search, shackled her wrists and ankles and detained her for three days before releasing her to five days of house arrest. The case was referred to the prosecution, which viewed it as quite weak, and it is expected to be closed. But the damage has already been done.

    For more than two and a half months, Abu Amneh has suffered from daily demonstrations outside her home in Afula. Dozens of protesters, led by Mayor Avi Elkabetz, show up every evening and demand that she and her family be kicked out. The water supply to the house has been cut off and a dumpster has been placed outside the house. And when she turned to the police, she said, the officers ignored her complaints and sided with the demonstrators.

    “They chose me as a scapegoat precisely because I’m a normative person – educated, an academic,” she said. “They want to break my spirit in order to intimidate all of us – all the Arabs.”

    That’s the way things are when you’re an Arab citizen of Israel. It’s enough for one Facebook post to be misunderstood to have your life and that of your family turned upside down.
    Everything you were before that post, everything you did, all your achievements, your status, your relations with your neighbors, the life you thought you had – all of it vanishes. And the agencies that are supposed to protect you – the police, the justice system, the municipality – turn against you.

    Abu Amneh’s case reveals the rot in the police, the prosecution and the municipality. Everyone she encountered abused their positions, and all of them were party to this baseless political harassment.

    #vitrine_de_la_jungle #sionisme

  • Israël : le calvaire d’Esther, violée et mutilée par les terroristes du Hamas
    https://www.leparisien.fr/international/israel/israel-le-calvaire-desther-violee-et-mutilee-par-les-terroristes-du-hamas

    Les cas de viols et de mutilations sexuelles commis lors des massacres du 7 octobre sont en train de faire surface. Alors que les survivantes peinent encore à parler, l’une d’elles, qui participait au festival Tribe of Nova, a accepté de nous raconter ce qu’elle a subi.

    Dans les déliés de cette courte conversation, Esther (le prénom a été changé) n’est jamais vraiment là. Assise dans son lit, elle cherche du regard le moindre recoin de la pièce, pour fuir les yeux de son interlocuteur. Qui n’en est même pas vraiment un, pour elle : « À l’intérieur, je suis à moitié morte », dit la jeune femme de sa voix tremblante et mécanique.
    Elle a choisi « Esther » pour apparaître comme victime de sévices sexuels. En hébreu, l’une des significations métaphoriques de ce prénom désigne celle qui est « cachée ». La Bible raconte l’histoire de cette princesse juive qui se dissimulait pour ne pas être conduite au harem. « Prise de force par le roi, elle finit par utiliser sa position de nouvelle épouse pour éviter le massacre des #juifs », dit-elle en secouant la tête. « Moi, je ne vais sauver personne, je ne tiens même pas debout. »

    « Je serai toujours l’image vivante du pogrom »

    C’est en un rien de temps qu’Esther a été arrachée au monde des vivants. Le 7 octobre, lorsque la violence du #Hamas a déferlé sur le désert de Be’eri, son petit ami les a entraînées, elle et sa marraine, sous une bâche du bar de la rave party, pour passer inaperçus en faisant les morts. Elle tremblait trop de peur, les terroristes l’ont vue.
    Depuis, Esther n’a pas réussi à se lever. « Littéralement, puisque ma jambe ne répond plus à ma volonté », précise-t-elle. En langage médical, elle a subi une « lésion du pédicule nerveux innervant le membre inférieur. » Dans son souvenir, elle a été violée et en même temps tabassée devant son copain, forcé de regarder avec un couteau sous la gorge : « C’était si douloureux que j’ai perdu connaissance, ils ont arrêté lorsqu’ils m’ont crue morte. » Puis sont arrivées les #mutilations. L’un d’eux s’est mis à utiliser un couteau, ou un tesson de verre, comment savoir ? Elle en garde une paralysie, qui pourrait ne jamais disparaître. « Et même si je remarche, je boiterai. Je serai toujours l’image vivante du #pogrom. »

    Des cas similaires ont été relevés par les médecins légistes sur les cadavres — ou ce qu’il en reste. Nombre d’entre eux ont été tellement dégradés que le travail d’identification continue, six semaines après le massacre, sur la base militaire de Shura. Reconvertie en morgue, elle accueille des conteneurs réfrigérés qui y font office de chambres mortuaires. La plupart de ces #viols, particulièrement cruels, avec des objets, ont été faits post mortem.
    À l’image de la manière dont les terroristes se sont acharnés sur le corps encore chaud de la marraine d’Esther. « Ils ne l’ont pas violée de manière traditionnelle, on va dire, raconte encore la survivante. Peut-être parce qu’elle était beaucoup moins jeune que la moyenne de la rave. C’était une fêtarde, qui aimait sortir avec nous pour danser dans la nature. »

    Une stratégie pour jeter la honte sur la société ?

    Même lorsqu’elle évoque son deuil, sa voix est vierge de sanglots. Les mots s’abattent de façon clinique, froide, « comme s’il ne s’agissait pas de son histoire », observe un psychiatre hospitalier. « C’est typique du syndrome de stress post-traumatique, en particulier lors d’un viol », poursuit le médecin, expert de ces sujets. « Le cerveau de la victime met sa subjectivité et toutes ses émotions sur pause pendant l’agression, comme un animal qui se fige, pris dans le danger », poursuit-il. « Elles disent que c’est comme si elles s’étaient détachées de leur corps, laissé à l’agresseur, afin de protéger leur intégrité psychique. » Le problème survient lorsque certaines restent bloquées dans cette dissociation.

    Encore peu couverte, la question de #crimes_sexuels de masse commis ce jour-là plonge la nation israélienne dans la souffrance supplémentaire de l’incompréhension. Ces profanations des attributs sexuels féminins interpellent Noémie Issan, philosophe franco-israélienne. Selon elle, « alors que les informations sortent au compte-gouttes pour protéger les rares qui ont survécu et les familles des victimes, il est difficile de savoir si ce sadisme a découlé d’un ordre, comme un élément de stratégie » destiné à jeter la honte sur la société, à la déliter. « Je n’ai pas honte, glisse Esther. Pour ressentir ça, il faudrait que je sois plus que demi-vivante. »

    https://archive.is/LLQeY

    #7_oct #7_octobre_2023

    • #BigGrizzly n’a pas eu le clavier très léger sur cette remarque. J’ai fait l’effort de lire ce texte, avec ses détails horribles. Et j’espère - même si quelque part ce serait mieux pour elle - que ce n’est pas un mensonge de plus dans la longue liste au "crédit" des autorités israéliennes. Quand bien même tout y serait vrai (c’est bien peu sourcé, et l’anonymat n’arrange rien), la présentation (et la publication dans ce type de presse) est clairement manipulée. Quelques exemples :
      – "En hébreu, l’une des significations métaphoriques de ce prénom désigne celle qui est « cachée ». La Bible raconte l’histoire de cette princesse juive qui se dissimulait pour ne pas être conduite au harem" . Conduite au harem, voilà qui sent bon le sable chaud de l’islamophobie...
      – « Je serai toujours l’image vivante du pogrom » C’est en un rien de temps qu’Esther a été arrachée au monde des vivants. "Pogrom", comme "terroriste" n’est pas choisi au hasard. Et la phrase suivante !...
      – Des cas similaires ont été relevés par les médecins légistes sur les cadavres — ou ce qu’il en reste. Nombre d’entre eux ont été tellement dégradés qe le travail d’identification continue, six semaines après le massacre : : peut-être faudrait-il signaler que la presse israélienne elle-même reconnaît que les médecins légistes n’ont pas pu (voulu ?) faire le travail...
      – "crimes_sexuels de masse" (c’est toi le hashtag, Colporteur ?), espérons des faits, moins de manipulations, et si possible moins d’affects...

    • sur le terme pogrom, j’ai l’impression que cette remarque de l’historien Omer Bartov n’a pas été référencée sur @seenthis

      https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2023/10/27/omer-bartov-historien-israel-ne-semble-disposer-d-aucun-plan-politique-il-ne

      Au sujet de ces attaques, Israël et ses partisans ont parlé de « pogrom » et ont, de façon plus générale, fait référence à la Shoah. Que pensez-vous de cette comparaison ?
      Recourir au mot « pogrom » est faux et trompeur. Le terme est par ailleurs surdéterminé sur le plan idéologique. Le mot « pogrom » désignait des agressions commises contre les communautés juives, tout particulièrement dans le sud de la Russie et en Ukraine. Des foules étaient incitées à s’attaquer à ces communautés, parfois avec le soutien des autorités. Depuis, ce terme a aussi été utilisé pour désigner des actes perpétrés ailleurs par d’autres populations contre d’autres minorités.

      L’intention première du sionisme était de fonder un Etat majoritairement juif sur le sol duquel les pogroms ne seraient par définition plus possibles, puisque les autorités politiques, militaires et de maintien de l’ordre seraient toutes juives. Il est donc parfaitement anachronique de recourir à ce terme pour désigner l’attaque terroriste perpétrée par le Hamas. Mais la raison pour laquelle on utilise aujourd’hui ce mot a à voir avec la référence intentionnelle ou subconsciente à la violence antijuive et spécifiquement à la Shoah, cet événement historique qui est précisément à l’origine de la fondation de l’Etat d’Israël.

      En parlant de « pogrom », on attribue au Hamas, et par extension à toutes les autres organisations palestiniennes, ou même aux Palestiniens en général, un antisémitisme féroce caractérisé par une propension à la violence vicieuse, irrationnelle et meurtrière, dont l’unique objectif serait de tuer des juifs. En d’autres termes, conformément à cette logique, il n’y aurait pas lieu de négocier avec les Palestiniens. C’est la logique du « eux ou nous » : si nous ne les tuons pas, ce sont eux qui nous tueront. Dans une telle logique, il importe au moins de les enfermer derrière des murs et des clôtures barbelées.

    • dans Haaretz (au moins) le terme pogrom a été employé à de multiples reprises pour désigner les exactions commises par des soldats ou des colons israéliens contre des palestiniens en Cisjordanie, y compris en l’absence d’homicides, au moins depuis 2021 (sans doute avant)
      https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2021-09-30/ty-article-opinion/a-pogrom-and-silence/0000017f-e3d0-d7b2-a77f-e3d7bac80000
      https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/twilight-zone/2022-11-18/ty-article-magazine/.highlight/theres-only-one-way-to-describe-this-settler-attack-a-pogrom/00000184-89c7-d9ce-a1f6-9be796390000
      et ensuite
      https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/2023-03-19/ty-article-opinion/.premium/the-pogrom-against-palestinians-that-brought-the-occupation-home-to-jewish-israelis/00000186-f983-d711-a9de-fdebab2b0000
      https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2023-06-23/ty-article-opinion/.premium/standing-orders-for-a-pogrom-against-palestinians/00000188-e459-d5fc-ab9d-ff79bc690000
      https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-03-04/ty-article/.premium/israeli-settlers-threaten-another-hawara-pogrom-on-saturday-night/00000186-ad5d-de2a-a1ee-af5f092f0000
      etc.

      pour ma part, je trouvais ça un peu léger, non pas que les persécutions et les meurtres de palestiniens me paraissent anodins, mais parce que l’aspect quotidien ou presque, étalé dans le temps en "petites" quantités me semblait distinct de ce que furent les pogroms (y compris ceux contre des ouvriers italiens en France en 1893), avec leur aspect éruptif, ou la répétition ne venait qu’après des moments d’accalmie. de ce point de vue, ce qui a lieu en Cisjordanie ressemble aussi à ce que fut le traitement des esclaves dans les états du sud US, une terreur continue, le meurtre autorisé au premier prétexte.

      qu’aujourd’hui on puisse décrire les crimes du 7 octobre, dont on sait, sans détails suffisants, qu’ils ont aussi été le fait de civils palestiniens et pas seulement de soldats du Hamas ou du Djihad, sans compter les morts et blessés dus à l’armée israélienne, là aussi sans qu’on sache dans quelle proportion), ne devrait surprendre personne. de là à dire qu’ils faut tuer les palestiniens, il y a une marge, faite pour être franchie de part et d’autre, israéliens et pro-israéliens, palestiniens et pro-palestiniens. mais ce n’est pas obligatoire, y compris au sein des quatre catégories citées.

      sinon, cette survivante parle dans des termes qui sont les siens, visiblement religieux. je ne m’en étonne pas plus que lorsque je vois un gazaoui qui découvre son fils mort avoir pour premier réflexe de se prosterner pour prier. rien de mieux que la terreur et le désespoir pour renouer pour renouer avec sa religion (sens et consolation, aussi insuffisants soient-ils) lorsque l’on dispose de ce secours.

      Reddit quant à Omer Bartov il dit également dans ce même article

      De nombreux universitaires qui se disent de gauche et autres soutiens de la Palestine ont salué les massacres haineux perpétrés par le Hamas et se sont exprimés avec virulence contre le droit d’Israël à défendre ses citoyens en ripostant contre le mouvement islamiste, qui utilise les populations civiles comme boucliers humains dans la bande de Gaza, très densément peuplée. Même ceux qui ne saluent pas explicitement les massacres ont fait preuve d’un manque total d’empathie pour les centaines de victimes et les otages juifs. Et de fait, bien souvent, les déclarations condamnant les bombardements israéliens sur Gaza n’évoquent même pas l’attaque du 7 octobre.

      Omer Bartov, historien : « Israël ne semble disposer d’aucun plan politique, il ne dispose que d’un plan militaire très hasardeux »
      https://archive.is/Fcbjs

    • Habituellement, les récits de violences sexuelles font l’objet d’avertissement, de trigger warnings, de précautions.
      Habituellement, les témoignages de violences sexuelles font l’objet d’euphémisations, de conditionnels, de réécritures, voire de mise sous silence, en donnant carrément la parole à l’agresseur.
      Habituellement, le pathos dans les violences sexuelles est mal vu, parce qu’empêchant la bonne distance aux faits, à la froide compréhension que les journalistes souhaitent nous donner accès.

      Ces transgressions aux bonnes habitudes journalistiques doivent pouvoir s’expliquer.
      Par exemple, il se peut que le fait que nous soyons dans le contexte du viol parfait, le seul qui mérite d’être condamné sans jugement, sans présomption d’innocence. La victime bien blanche, l’agresseur bien « autre », étranger, et même arabislamiste, carrément.

      Un snuff movie, sous sa forme d’image ou sous sa forme textuelle, reste un snuff movie. Et en imposer le visionnage reste une violence.

      Et n’allez pas m’accuser de vouloir cacher quoi que ce soit. Je ne nie rien de tout ce qui est écrit, filmé, ni de l’horreur, ni des souffrances.

      A quel moment ceux qui relaient vont-ils cesser de nier le double standard que les transgressions que j’évoque représentent ? Hier, je lisais un texte tout en pudeur du récit d’une famille massacrée sous des tonnes de gravats, récit que l’on sait pouvoir multiplier par milliers. A quel moment est-ce que le Parisien et tous les autres vont-ils accepter de rendre la pareille à ces victimes là, moins blanches, moins conformes, moins susceptibles d’empathies de la part de leurs lecteurs ?

      Hier, colporteur, ton partage m’a mis mal à l’aise, oui, parce qu’une fois de plus, sans remords et sans vergogne, on me fout sous le nez ce qui ne ressort qu’avec difficultés quand le bourreau est du bon côté du manche, à savoir l’horreur crue que représente la barbarie débridée.

    • Même ceux qui ne saluent pas explicitement les massacres ont fait preuve d’un manque total d’empathie pour les centaines de victimes et les otages juifs.

      Concurrence victimaire.
      A chaque fois que tu réclames la prise en compte des victimes palestiniennes, n’oublie pas de rappeler que tu penses aussi aux victimes israéliennes, sinon, ton propos est disqualifié.

      Tiens, à chaque fois que tu parles des victimes d’Hiroshima, si tu veux être pris au sérieux, et ne pas être pris en flagrant délit de double standard, tu te dois de rappeler toutes les victimes de Pearl Harbour. Sinon, c’est la preuve que ton propos est malveillant.

      Procès d’intention crétin.

      Mais je comprends. L’ensemble de ces 75 années d’occupation sont une immense démonstration de la malveillance et de la crétinerie humaine.

    • Le titre du Parisien, calvaire, viol, mutilation, est explicite.
      L’entretien Bartov date du 27 octobre. Son refus de caractériser le 7 octobre comme un pogrom est discutable, comme le montre l’utilisation répétée du terme par des israéliens à propos d’actes antérieurs commis par des israéliens. Sa manière de parler du « droit d’Israël à défendre ses citoyens » est dans ce passage discutable (après 19 jours de bombardements massifs...) mais ses propos critiquer l’orientation exclusivement militaire le passage qui suit immédiatement critique aussi l’état d’esprit de nombreux israéliens et de leurs soutiens : 3A l’inverse, les soutiens d’Israël, pour l’essentiel des juifs, qui se sentent profondément trahis par leurs collègues de gauche et leur absence totale d’empathie pour les victimes du 7 octobre, et qui peuvent eux-mêmes se montrer ambivalents face aux destructions immenses actuellement infligées à Gaza par les forces israéliennes, refusent généralement de reconnaître les causes politiques plus profondes de cet état des choses". Le manque d’empathie pour les morts et blessés du 7 octobre ne peut être nié qu’en raison du déferlement compassionnel médiatique et gouvernemental qui l’accompagnait et de l’absence de toute empathie, pour les palestiniens, les tutsis et tant d’autres.

      je crois avoir été parmi les premiers ici à signaler le témoignage dune kibboutzim discrètement épargnée par un combattant du Hamas le 7/10, qui semble contredire la thèse qu’’instruction aurait été donnée de tuer le maximum de civils, comme celui d’une autre indiquant que ce sont des tirs de char des FDI qui ont tué une partie des habitants de son kibboutz, élément tout à fait contradictoire avec la propagande israélienne à l’époque et aujourd’hui.

      Merci d’éviter de me chercher systématiquement des poux dans la tête pour me couper la langue.

      edit selon Physicians for Human Rights, des viols ont bien eu lieu le 7 octobre confirme
      https://seenthis.net/messages/1029266#message1029298

    • De l’indifférenciation à l’indifférence. Sur les viols de masse le 7 octobre en Israël.
      https://k-larevue.com/de-lindifferenciation-a-lindifference-sur-les-viols-de-masse-le-7-octobre

      Que dire des crimes sexuels perpétrés par les hommes du Hamas le 7 octobre – documentés un peu plus chaque jour par le travail d’un groupe israélien de gynécologues, médecins légistes, psychologues et juristes du droit international ? Et comment comprendre l’occultation de la violence faite aux femmes ce jour-là par une partie de l’opinion mondiale – supposées « féministes » comprises ? Cette occultation ne revient-elle pas à faire une deuxième fois violence à ces femmes, comme si leur calvaire ne comptait pas et était dépourvu de signification ?

      Chaque viol est un acte. La « femme », s’il est possible de la définir, se caractérise par le fait de savoir que cet acte en quoi le viol consiste peut toujours lui arriver à elle. Elle est cet être humain qui vit, grandit, évolue et se transforme avec ce savoir intime qu’elle peut toujours se faire violer. « Sachante », cela la rend alors plus directement interrogative : comment un tel acte est-il réellement possible ? Comment fait-on pour violer une femme ? La question se pose, parce que le viol comme destruction du corps de l’autre a ceci de spécifique que l’agent destructeur use pour y parvenir de son propre corps : l’homme qui viole le plus souvent ne recourt pas à des outils, des prolongations techniques du corps humain, mais se sert de son corps propre comme d’une arme ; et plus précisément, non pas d’une partie corporelle que la fermeté constitutive rend toujours potentiellement disponible pour servir d’arme, tels le pied ou le poing, mais de son pénis, qui doit se durcir pour pouvoir devenir un moyen de destruction. Le viol à proprement parler, celui qui déchire les parties intimes de la femme par pénétration sauvage, ne peut effectivement s’accomplir que si l’homme est en érection. Qu’est-ce qui, face à une femme hurlant de terreur et de douleur, produit, puis soutient cette érection ? Quel est le processus psycho-physiologique qui rend possible cet acte ?
      Quiconque s’attèle à une enquête dans son entourage masculin se trouve peu renseigné. Interrogez les hommes autour de vous sur la question de savoir comment ces hommes-là font pour bander, et vous obtiendrez une fin de non-recevoir, dont le plus étrange est qu’elle n’est absolument pas soupçonnable d’insincérité : le viol, c’est le crime de l’autre par excellence, avec qui on n’a rien de commun. Comme si les hommes qui violent faisaient partie d’une autre espèce avec laquelle ils ne partagent rien et qu’ils ne comprennent pas.
      Les femmes, quant à elles, n’y comprennent rien non plus. Pour elles, en matière de sexualité, les hommes sont tout aussi compliqués qu’elles-mêmes. Rien de simple dans l’érection d’un homme. La sexualité leur est tout aussi désirable qu’à elles, tout aussi peu évidente également – et ce savoir partagé entre hommes et femmes se maintient contre une société qui ne cesse de colporter le fantasme d’une sexualité simple, directe et quasi-animale pour les hommes et fort compliquée pour les femmes.
      Aussi l’affirmation qui parfois est censée servir d’explication à la possibilité du viol, selon laquelle les hommes sont constitutivement et potentiellement tous des violeurs, en vérité tous excités devant n’importe quel corps de femme nue ou potentiellement dénudable et seulement tenus en respect par la crainte de sanction, n’éclaire-t-elle strictement rien. Pour quiconque d’un peu sincère, le mystère du « comment » reste entier. Peut-être même est-ce cette incompréhension absolue qui est à l’origine de la thèse étrangement rassurante de « tous des violeurs ». Comme un refus de se confronter au caractère abyssal de la question, qui ne vise pas seulement la possibilité de l’érection en vue de la destruction d’une femme, mais aussi le mystère qu’un homme puisse accepter de jouir en réalisant cette œuvre destructrice à laquelle, il faut le répéter, celui qui l’accomplit assiste à chaque seconde.
      On n’a donc aucune hypothèse à présenter pour expliquer comment ont fait les membres des commandos du Hamas pour user de leur intimité comme arme pendant leurs raids sur le festival de musique et les vingt villages israéliens à la frontière de la Bande de Gaza. On peut en revanche dire une petite partie de ce qui a été fait aux femmes, et émettre une interprétation qui éclaire non pas les faits, mais leur occultation par l’opinion mondiale. Comme cette occultation revient à faire une deuxième fois violence à ces femmes, comme si leur calvaire ne comptait pas, était dépourvu de sens et de signification, commençons par les faits.

      Le viol, l’un des objectifs – occulté – de l’attaque du 7 octobre…

      On sait désormais partiellement, grâce au travail courageux d’un groupe de professionnelles israéliennes – gynécologues, médecins légistes, juristes du droit international et psychologues[1] –, ce qu’ont fait les hommes du Hamas : ils ont violé de façon répétée, et l’ont fait en groupe. Ils ont tellement violé que l’on voit l’entrejambe des pantalons des femmes kidnappées rouges de sang, et des flaques de sang entre les jambes de femmes et de filles assassinées après les viols. Ils les ont tant violées que certaines, retrouvées mortes, ont eu les os pelviens brisés. Ils ont violé des adolescentes, des femmes et des femmes âgées. Ils ont coupé des seins. Ils ont mutilé les parties sexuelles de leurs victimes – en ce cas, y compris des hommes. Ils ont torturé les femmes après le viol. Ils se sont filmés le faisant. Ils ont envoyé les vidéos des viols et tortures aux proches, qui durent y assister à distance, là où ils n’étaient pas contraints d’assister en direct à ce qui était fait à leurs amies, compagnes, épouses, mères, sœurs et filles. Ces femmes, ils les ont presque toutes tuées après les viols, ou laissées pour mortes[2]. La plupart des victimes survivantes dont on a connaissance à l’heure actuelle, ou plutôt qu’on espère encore vivantes, sont les femmes qui ont été entraînées, déjà violées, à Gaza. On a trouvé un glossaire arabe – hébreu sur l’un des combattants morts du Hamas, indiquant, entre autres, des phrases utiles en hébreu pour faciliter l’acte de violer : « enlève ton pantalon », « retourne-toi » … Les terroristes ayant survécu et été faits prisonniers expliquent à ce propos que le viol était l’un des objectifs de l’attaque.

  • Le Hamas lance une attaque à grande échelle contre Israël
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2023/10/07/le-hamas-lance-une-attaque-a-grande-echelle-contre-israel_6192984_3210.html


    On peut s’interroger sur le pari du Hamas et les gains qu’il espère. Nul doute que la population de Gaza paiera le prix fort. Certes, les semaines précédentes ont montré l’ampleur du mouvement d’annexion et de la répression dans les territoires occupés, avec des réactions occidentales et internationales très timorées. Mais le bilan accablant de ces actions va disparaître dans les profits et pertes et le gouvernement Netanyahou va capitaliser sur sa réaction ultra-violente.
    @loutre serait il possible stp de nous rappeler le nombre de morts palestiniens depuis le début de l’année ? Merci d’avance. Évidemment l’article du Monde ne donne absolument ces éléments de contexte...

    Le Hamas lance une attaque à grande échelle contre Israël
    La tension montait depuis cet été. Elle a explosé d’un coup quand la branche armée du parti islamiste, les Brigades Al-Qassam, a lancé des roquettes et mené une incursion sans précédent en territoire israélien. Le ministre de la défense parle d’état de guerre.

    Par Samuel Forey(Jérusalem, correspondance)
    Publié aujourd’hui à 10h04, modifié à 11h48

    A Jérusalem règne le calme lumineux d’une matinée de shabbat, concluant la semaine de célébration de la fête juive de Soukkot. Rares sont les voitures qui roulent. Soudain, les sirènes retentissent, d’autant plus fort que toute la ville se tait. Des roquettes sont en route depuis la bande de Gaza. Et le choc attendu résonne : la défense antiaérienne tonne. Il est 8 heures. Ceux qui sont réveillés savent déjà qu’il ne s’agit pas de l’une de ces confrontations soigneusement calibrées entre Israël et le Hamas pour éviter une escalade meurtrière. Le parti islamiste se lance dans une guerre à grande échelle.

    Deux heures plus tôt, il a envoyé une première salve de centaines de projectiles depuis l’enclave. Mais la véritable attaque n’est pas dans le ciel. Elle se déroule à terre, quand des membres des Brigades Al-Qassam franchissent en pick-up la bordure de séparation pour mener une incursion sans précédent en territoire israélien. Richard Hecht, le porte-parole de l’armée israélienne, reconnaît une invasion par voies de terre, mer et… air, via des parapentes motorisés. Hormis un attentat mené par le Front populaire de libération de la Palestine par deltaplane, en 1986, depuis la Syrie, ce serait la première véritable opération aéroportée de l’histoire militaire palestinienne.

    Les militants foncent sur les routes bordant l’enclave, tirent sur une voiture de police israélienne qui fuit à toute vitesse. L’armée confirme des assauts sur les localités de Nahal Oz, Magen, Be’eri, Kfar Aza et surtout Sdérot – « un gros coup », pour Richard Hecht. Le commissariat de cette ville moyenne, tout contre la bordure, a été attaqué. Ainsi que les bases militaires de Raim, Zikim, et même le poste-frontière d’Erez. Les militants s’emparent de plusieurs véhicules, dont un blindé de l’armée israélienne, qui file bientôt dans Gaza, des militants à son bord. Les premières rumeurs de kidnappings circulent. Un cadavre ensanglanté, qui semble être celui d’un soldat israélien, est sorti d’une voiture, quelque part dans Gaza, pour être aussitôt tabassé par la petite foule qui s’est aventurée dehors. Selon des sources locales, quatre militaires ont été capturés vivants. L’armée israélienne n’a pas confirmé encore. Mais les vidéos se multiplient sur les réseaux sociaux.

    « Plus de 5 000 missiles »
    Mohammed Deif, le commandant des Brigades Al-Qassam, annonce le début de l’opération « Déluge d’Al-Aqsa », en référence à l’esplanade des Mosquées à Jérusalem, troisième lieu saint de l’islam, dont le Hamas se présente comme le protecteur. « La première frappe, qui a visé les positions, les aéroports et les fortifications militaires de l’ennemi, a dépassé les 5 000 missiles », affirme-t-il. Il appelle les Palestiniens d’Israël et de Cisjordanie à « mettre le feu sous les pieds des occupants ». Mais aussi le Liban, l’Irak, la Syrie à se joindre à l’assaut. Des roquettes ayant été tirées sur Israël depuis le territoire libanais en avril dernier, cette menace est à prendre au sérieux. A Gaza, les militants du Jihad islamique annoncent se joindre à l’opération lancée par le Hamas.

    « L’occupation israélienne n’a jamais répondu aux demandes du Hamas d’épargner Al-Aqsa et de prendre soin des prisonniers palestiniens. Les Brigades Al-Qassam ont déclenché une attaque totale, à une échelle jamais vue. Je crois qu’il s’agit de déclencher une guerre régionale », estime Akram Al-Sattari, un analyste politique palestinien proche du Hamas.

    A Jérusalem, les sirènes continuent de résonner. L’attaque dépasse déjà en intensité l’escalade de onze jours de mai 2021, où seule une salve avait été tirée contre la ville sainte. L’armée israélienne déclare alors un « état d’alerte pour la guerre ». Et une heure après, presque cinquante ans jour pour jour après la guerre du Kippour d’octobre 1973, le ministre de la défense, Yoav Galant, tranche : « Nous sommes en état de guerre. »

    « Epées d’acier »
    L’armée affirme que le parti islamiste paiera « un prix élevé pour ses actions ». Pour Jonathan Conricus, consultant pour Israeli Defence and Security Forum, un groupe de réflexion israélien, « c’est une attaque multidimensionnelle sans précédent contre Israël, visant à tuer et à enlever des civils et des soldats. Cela fait partie du réseau terroriste iranien. Alors que l’ampleur des pertes israéliennes est en cours d’être confirmée, je m’attends à une réponse israélienne jamais vue auparavant ».

    Une femme a été tuée et une centaine de personnes blessées dans la première phase de l’attaque. Le premier ministre israélien, Benyamin Netanyahou, a réuni le cabinet de sécurité, tandis que l’un des chefs de l’opposition, Yaïr Lapid, lui a offert son soutien politique. « Israël est en état d’urgence. Nous soutiendrons le gouvernement dans toute réponse militaire décisive », a-t-il déclaré. L’offensive surprise du Hamas survient alors que l’Etat juif est enlisé dans un conflit politique sans précédent depuis le début de l’année, à cause de la réforme judiciaire lancée par l’exécutif. Nombre de réservistes, notamment parmi les forces aériennes, ont refusé de suivre les entraînements indispensables pour maintenir leur niveau. A tel point que des officiers s’alarmaient récemment de l’état des forces armées israéliennes. Mais selon l’armée israélienne, ils répondent tous à l’appel « par milliers », y compris à la frontière libanaise et en Cisjordanie occupée – « Nous avons écouté attentivement le message de Mohammed Deif », dit Richard Hecht. Au « Déluge d’Al-Aqsa », l’armée répond par l’opération désormais baptisée « Epées d’acier ».

    Sur le plan international, le premier soutien à Israël est venu des États-Unis. « Je condamne les tirs aveugles de roquettes des terroristes du Hamas contre des civils israéliens. Je suis en contact avec des responsables israéliens et je soutiens pleinement le droit d’Israël à se défendre contre de tels actes terroristes », a écrit sur X (anciennement Twitter), Stephanie Hallett, chargée d’affaires à l’ambassade américaine à Jérusalem.

    Les médias israéliens confirment des incursions de combattants palestiniens dans les villes de Netivot et Ofakim, non loin de la bande de Gaza, ainsi que des enlèvements.

    Un civil capturé, deux soldats tués
    Des vidéos circulent sur les réseaux sociaux : un civil capturé, deux soldats tués, leurs corps eux aussi ramenés sur la plate-forme arrière d’un pick-up. Un tank brûle derrière la bordure de séparation.

    Vers 10 heures, alors que les salves de roquettes continuent sur tout le territoire israélien, l’incursion terrestre du Hamas est toujours en cours, selon Richard Hecht. Son leader, Ismaïl Haniyeh, se félicite de l’opération, rappelant qu’elle visait à protéger Al-Aqsa ainsi que les prisonniers palestiniens. Le parti islamiste était resté l’arme au pied ces deux dernières années, y compris lorsque Israël attaquait l’un de ses alliés à Gaza, le Jihad islamique, et tentait plutôt d’attiser la résistance en Cisjordanie.

    Mais en choisissant de mener des incursions hors de l’enclave, portant ainsi l’un des coups les plus durs à Israël depuis que le siège de la bande a commencé en 2007, le Hamas choisit l’option de la guerre totale. Et prend le risque d’une riposte de la même ampleur.

    Samuel Forey(Jérusalem, correspondance)

  • Israeli Weapons Industry’s Bottom Line: Ethnic Cleansing - Haaretz Editorial - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2023-10-01/ty-article-opinion/israeli-weapons-industrys-bottom-line-ethnic-cleansing/0000018a-e765-d12f-afbf-e775f7d20000

    Aliyev is not the first tyrant whose army relies on weapons from Israel. He was preceded by the heads of the apartheid regime in South Africa, the generals in Argentina, Pinochet in Chile, the regime in China and the Shah of Iran.

    Israeli Weapons Industry’s Bottom Line: Ethnic Cleansing - Haaretz Editorial - Haaretz.com
    https://archive.ph/2023.10.01-003645/https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2023-10-01/ty-article-opinion/israeli-weapons-industrys-bottom-line-ethnic-cleansing/0000018a-e765-d12f-afbf-e775f7d20000

    #vitrine_de_la_jungle #criminels

  • Israel’s ’most moral army in the world’ can’t keep running away from its past
    Haaretz Editorial | Dec. 12, 2021 |

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/israel-s-most-moral-army-in-the-world-can-t-keep-running-away-from-its-past

    Soldiers of the Israeli army committed war crimes during the War of Independence, chief among them were massacres in Palestinian villages that were captured in the decisive battles in the lowland plain between the coast and Jerusalem, in the Galilee and in the Negev.

    People who were alive then described mass murders of Palestinian civilians by the troops who conquered their villages; execution squads; dozens of people being herded into a building that was then blown up; children’s skulls smashed with sticks; brutal rapes and villagers who were ordered to dig pits in which they were then shot to death.

    The massacres – the best-known of them in Deir Yassin, near Jerusalem, and the lesser-known ones in Al-Dawayima, Hula, Reineh, Salha, Meron, Al-Burj, Majd al-Krum, and Safsaf – are part of the Israel Defense Forces’ combat heritage and part of Israel’s history, no less than the heroic battles at the Mitla Pass, Ammunition Hill and the Chinese Farm, which were fought by regular armies.

    But Al-Dawayima isn’t taught in the public schools, and the cadets at the army’s officers’ training schools don’t take field trips to see the remains of the village on which Moshav Amatzia was established. They don’t read testimonies from the survivors of the massacre and they and don’t discuss the moral dilemmas of combat in a civilian environment – even though today, as in 1948, much of the military’s operations are directed at unarmed Palestinians.

    This silence is not coincidental, and it is dictated from above. The massacres were known at the time, discussed by the political leadership and investigated to some extent. One officer was even tried for the murder of civilians, convicted, given a ludicrously light punishment and eventually received an important public appointment. But official Israel has been fleeing from the story ever since, making every effort to prevent the crimes’ disclosure and to purge the archives of all remaining evidence.

    The historian Adam Raz was the first to disclose (Haaretz, December 10) the content of discussions in cabinet meetings devoted to “the army’s behavior in the Galilee and the Negev” in its major operations in October 1948. A few cabinet members expressed genuine shock and demanded punishment of those responsible. Prime Minister and Defense Minister David Ben-Gurion described the actions as “shocking,” but in practice he covered for the army and prevented a genuine investigation. In so doing, he laid the foundations for the culture of support and cover-up still prevalent in the IDF (and the Israel Police) regarding brutality against Palestinian and Lebanese civilians.

    A 73-year-old state has no need to run away from its past or cover it in the false blanket of “purity of arms” and “the most moral army in the world.” It is time to acknowledge the truth, and first to publish the report by the first attorney general, Yaakov-Shimshon Shapira, on the massacres of the dark autumn of 1948; to restore the redacted text to the minutes of the cabinet meeting in which Shapira presented his findings and to hold a penetrating public discussion of their implications today.

    https://seenthis.net/messages/939425

    Classified docs reveal massacres of Palestinians in ’48 – and what Israeli leaders knew
    Adam Raz | Dec. 9, 2021 | Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.HIGHLIGHT.MAGAZINE-classified-docs-reveal-deir-yassin-massacre-was

    Testimonies continue to pile up, documents are revealed, and gradually a broader picture emerges of the acts of murder committed by Israeli troops during the War of Independence. Minutes recorded during cabinet meetings in 1948 leave no room for doubt: Israel’s leaders knew in real time about the blood-drenched events that accompanied the conquest of the Arab villages

    The discussions were fraught with emotion. Cabinet minister Haim-Moshe Shapira said that all of Israel’s moral foundations had been undermined. Minister David Remez remarked that the deeds that had been done remove us from the category of Jews and from the category of human beings altogether. Other ministers were also appalled: Mordechai Bentov wondered what kind of Jews would be left in the country after the war; Aharon Zisling related that he had had a sleepless night – the criminals, he said, were striking at the soul of the whole government. Some ministers demanded that the testimonies be investigated and that those responsible be held to account. David Ben-Gurion was evasive. In the end, the ministers decided on an investigation. The result was the establishment of the “committee to examine cases of murder in [by] the army.”

    It was November 1948. Testimonies of massacres perpetrated by Israel Defense Forces soldiers against Arabs – targeting unarmed men as well as elderly folk and women and children – were piling up on the cabinet table. For years these discussions were concealed from the public by the military censors. Now, an investigative report by Haaretz and the Akevot Institute for Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Research for the first time makes public the sharp exchanges between the ministers on this subject and reveals testimonies about three previously unknown massacres, as well as new details about the killing in Hula, Lebanon, one of the most flagrant crimes of the war.

    •••

    In October 1948, the IDF launched two large-scale operations: In the south, Operation Yoav, which opened a road to the Negev; and in the north, Operation Hiram. In the latter, within 30 hours, dozens of Arab villages in the north were overrun and tens of thousands of residents fled or were expelled from their homes. Within less than three days, the IDF had conquered the Galilee and also extended its reach into villages in southern Lebanon. The overwhelming majority of them took no part in the fighting. Most of the exchanges of fire were between the IDF and the Arab Salvation Army, consisting of volunteers from Arab countries.

    At the time of Israel’s campaign to conquer the Galilee, 120,000 Arabs remained in the area, half the number who had resided there on the eve of the United Nations’ adoption of the partition plan, in November 1947. The IDF’s rapid advance toward the northern border brought the soldiers into contact with the population that remained in the villages, among whom were elderly folk and women and children. The Palestinians’ fate was now in the hands of the Israeli forces. That was the background to the massacres that were perpetrated against civilians and against Arab soldiers who were taken captive. At the war’s end, some 30,000 Arabs remained in the north.

    The atrocities of the 1948 war are known from diverse historical documentation: soldiers’ letters, unpublished memoirs written in real time, minutes of meetings held by political parties, and from other sources. Reports about military and governmental investigations are for the most part classified, and the heavy hand of military censorship continues to obstruct academic research and investigative reporting. Still, the open sources provide a picture that is slowly becoming clearer. For example, testimonies about previously unknown massacres that took place in Reineh, at Meron and in Al-Burj, which are discussed below.

    Reineh killings

    The village of Reineh, near Nazareth, was conquered even before Operation Hiram, in July 1948. A few months later, Aharon Haim Cohen, from the department of the Histadrut labor federation that dealt with the Arab population, demanded that a representative of the parallel section in Mapam, a left-wing party that was part of the government, clarify the following: “Why were 14 Arabs murdered in the village of Reineh at the beginning of September, among them a Bedouin woman and also a member of the Land of Israel Workers Alliance, Yusuf al-Turki? They were seized next to the village, accused of smuggling, taken to the village and murdered.” Sheikh Taher al-Taveri, one of the leaders of the Palestinian community in the north, maintained that the Reineh massacre “is not the only one” and that these acts were “being carried out for the purpose of robbery.” The victim’s families claimed that those murdered had been carrying hundreds of liras, a very substantial amount.

    The village of Al-Burj (today Modi’in) was also conquered in July 1948, in Operation Dani. According to a document, whose author is unknown, that was found in the Yad Yaari Archive, four elderly men remained in the village after its capture: “Hajj Ibrahim, who helped out in the military kitchen, a sick elderly woman and another elderly man and [elderly] woman.” Eight days after the village was conquered, the soldiers sent Ibrahim off to pick vegetables in order to distance him from what was about to occur. “The three others were taken to an isolated house. Afterward an antitank shell (‘Fiat’) was fired. When the shell missed the target, six hand grenades were thrown into the house. They killed an elderly man and woman, and the elderly woman was put to death with a firearm. Afterward they torched the house and burned the three bodies. When Hajj Ibrahim returned with his guard, he was told that the three others had been sent to the hospital in Ramallah. Apparently he didn’t believe the story, and a few hours later he too was put to death, with four bullets.”

    According to the testimony of Shmuel Mikunis, a member of the Provisional State Council (predecessor to the Knesset) from the Communist Party, and reported here for the first time, atrocities were also perpetrated in the Meron region. Mikunis got around the censors in real time by asking the prime minister a parliamentary question, which ended up in the Knesset Archive. He demanded clarification from David Ben-Gurion about acts that Mikunis said had been done by members of the underground Irgun militia: “A. They annihilated with a machine gun 35 Arabs who had surrendered to that company with a white flag in their hands. B. They took as captives peaceful residents, among them women and children, ordered them to dig a pit, pushed them into it with long French bayonets and shot the unfortunates until they were all murdered. There was even a woman with an infant in her arms. C. Arab children of about 13-14 who were playing with grenades were all shot. D. A girl of about 19-20 was raped by men from Altalena [an Irgun unit]; afterward she was stabbed with a bayonet and a wooden stick was thrust into her body.”

    This is the place to emphasize that we have no additional testimony that reinforces the brutal descriptions of the events in Reineh, Al-Burj and Meron. This is not surprising, considering how much material remains locked away in the archives. With regard to Mikunis’ testimony, there are additional reasons to suspend healthy skepticism. In that same parliamentary question to Ben-Gurion, Mikunis provided a minutely detailed description of the massacre in the Lebanese village of Hula, and it turned out later, in court, that his sources were reliable. (There is no evidence of a response from the prime minister.)

    ‘Some still showed signs of life’

    The ministers appear to have been especially perturbed by the Hula massacre. The village was conquered by a company of the Carmeli Brigade, 22nd battalion, under the command of Shmuel Lahis. Hundreds of residents, a majority of Hula’s population, fled, but about 60 people remained in the village and surrendered without resistance. After the conquest, two massacres were perpetrated there, in two successive days. On the first day, October 31, 1948, 18 villagers were murdered, and on the following day the number of victims stood at 15.

    Lahis, the company commander, was the only combatant who was tried on murder charges in Operation Hiram. He was acquitted by reason of doubt in the first episode, but was convicted of the second day’s massacre, which he carried out himself. The Lahis verdict was later relegated to the law archive of Tel Aviv University, and a short excerpt from the ruling on his appeal is here published for the first time.

    Lahis ordered the removal “of those 15 Arabs from the house they were in and led them to an isolated house which was some distance from the village’s Muslim cemetery. When they got there, the appellant [Lahis] ordered the Arabs to be taken into one of the rooms and there he commanded them to stand in a line with their faces to the wall… The appellant then shot the Arabs with the Sten [gun] he held and emptied two clips on them. After the people fell, the appellant checked the bodies and observed whether there was life in them. Some of them still showed signs of life and the appellant then fired additional shots into them.”

    Lahis stated in his defense that he had operated in the spirit of the battalion commander, who told him that “there is no need to burden intelligence [personnel] with captives.” He explained that he felt a powerful need for revenge because of the death of his friends, even though his victims had not taken part in the fighting. He was sentenced to seven years in prison; on appeal the prison term was reduced to one year. He served it in quite comfortable conditions in a military base in the north.

    Over the years, the judges offered various explanations for the light sentence. Judge Gideon Eilat justified the sentence by noting that Lahis was the only person brought to trial, even though graver murders had been committed. Judge Chaim Dvorin said, “As a judge it was difficult for me to come to terms with a situation in which we are sitting behind a table and judging a person who behaved during battle as he behaved. Could he have known at the time who was innocent and who was an enemy?”

    Following his release, Lahis was pardoned by President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi. Three decades later he was appointed director general of the Jewish Agency. In that capacity he conceived the idea of Jerusalem Day, commemorating the re-unification of Jerusalem during the Six-Day War, which has since been marked annually.

    Deir Yassin

    Millions of documents from the state’s founding are stored in government archives, and banned from publication. On top of this there is active censorship. In recent years personnel of the Malmab unit (Hebrew acronym for “director of security of the defense establishment”) have been scouring archives around the country and removing evidence of war crimes, as an investigative report by Hagar Shezaf in Haaretz revealed in 2019. However, despite the efforts at concealment, the accounts of about massacres continue to accumulate.

    The groundwork was laid by the historian Benny Morris, who conducted comprehensive, pioneering research in archives, starting in the 1980s. To this was later added the work of another historian, Adel Manna, whose focus is oral history and who studied the history of the Arabs of Haifa and the Galilee. Manna described, among other events, the execution squad that massacred nine residents of Majd al-Krum (his own birthplace). Additional publications over the years, such as the testimonies reported here, are gradually filling in the missing pieces of the puzzle.

    Morris recorded 24 massacres during the 1948 war. Today it can be said that the number is higher, standing at several dozen cases. In some of them a few individuals were murdered, in others dozens, and there are also cases of more than a hundred victims. With the exception of the massacre in Deir Yassin, in April 1948, which has resonated widely over the years, this gloomy slice of history appears to have been repressed and pushed aside from the Israeli public discourse.

    Among the major massacres that took place during Operations Hiram and Yoav were the events in the villages of Saliha, Safsaf and Al-Dawayima. In Saliha (today Kibbutz Yiron), which lay close to the border with Lebanon, the 7th Brigade executed between 60 and 80 inhabitants using a method that was employed a number of times in the war: concentrating residents in a building in the village and then blowing up the structure with the people inside.

    In Safsaf (today Moshav Safsufa), near Safed, soldiers from the 7th Brigade massacred dozens of inhabitants. According to one testimony (subsequently reclassified by the Malmab unit), “Fifty-two men were caught, tied them to one another, dug a pit and shot them. Ten were still twitching. Women came, begged for mercy. Found bodies of 6 elderly men. There were 61 bodies. 3 cases of rape.”

    In the village of Al-Dawayima (today Moshav Amatzia), in the Lachish District, troops of the 8th Brigade massacred about 100 people. A soldier who witnessed the events described to Mapam officials what happened: “There was no battle and no resistance. The first conquerors killed 80 to 100 Arab men, women and children. The children were killed by smashing their skulls with sticks. There wasn’t a house without people killed in it.” According to an intelligence officer who was posted to the village two days later, the number of those killed stood at 120.

    An article published by an anonymous soldier in the journal Ner after the war indicates that the phenomenon of killing non-combatants was widespread in the IDF. The writer related how his comrades in the unit had murdered an elderly Arab woman who remained behind during the conquest of the village of Lubiya, in Lower Galilee: “This became a fashion. And when I complained to the battalion commander about what was going on, and asked him to put a stop to the rampage, which has no military justification, he shrugged his shoulders and said that ‘there is no order from above’ to prevent it. Since then the battalion just descended further down the slope. Its military achievements continued, but on the other hand the atrocities multiplied.”

    ‘This is a Jewish question’

    In November-December 1948, when the war pressure had abated somewhat, the government turned to discussing the reports of massacres, which reached ministers in different ways. A perusal of the minutes of these meetings leaves no room for doubt: The country’s top leaders knew in real time about the blood-drenched events that accompanied the conquest of the Arab villages.

    In fact, the minutes of cabinet meetings from this period were made available for public perusal as early as 1995. However, the sections of the discussions that were devoted to “the army’s behavior in the Galilee and the Negev” – the term on the cabinet’s agenda – remained redacted and censored until only a few days ago. The present report was made possible following a request to the state archivist made by the Akevot Institute.

    Even now, the transcripts are not available in full. It is evident that the direct mentions of war crimes remain redacted. However, the exchanges between the ministers about the question of whether to investigate the crimes or not – exchanges that were concealed for 73 years – are now available to researchers, journalists and curious citizens. Here, for example, is what the cabinet meeting of November 7, 1948, sounded like:

    Minister of Immigration and Health Haim-Moshe Shapira (Hapoel Hamizrahi): “To go that far is forbidden even in times of war. These matters have come up more than once in cabinet meetings, and the defense minister investigated and demanded, and orders were given. I believe that in order to create the impression that we take this matter very seriously, we must choose a committee of ministers who will travel to those places and see for themselves what happened. People who commit these acts must be punished. The matter was not a secret. My proposal is to choose a committee of three ministers who will address the gravity of the matter.”

    Interior Minister Yitzhak Gruenbaum (General Zionists): “I too intended to ask a question along these lines. I have learned that an order exists to cleanse the territory.” At this point Gruenbaum tells about an officer who transported residents in a bus to enemy lines, where they were expelled, and adds, “But apparently others lack the same intelligence and the same feeling. Apparently the order can be executed by other means.”

    At this point many lines are redacted.

    Labor Minister Mordechai Bentov (Mapam): “The people who did this claimed they had received orders in this spirit. It seems to me that we have not been as helpless about any issue as we are, apparently, about this issue. In my opinion this is not an Arab question, it is a Jewish question. The question is which Jews will remain in the country after the war. I see no way but to eradicate the evil with a strong hand. As we have not seen that strong hand in [army] headquarters or in the Defense Ministry, I support Mr. Shapira’s proposal for a committee to be chosen, which will be given the authority by the government to investigate every person it wishes. It’s necessary to investigate the chains of command, who received orders from whom, how things are being done without written orders. These things are done according to a particular method. It turns out that an order is one thing and procedure another.”

    Prime Minister and Defense Minister David Ben-Gurion (Mapai): “If they flee, there is no need to run after them. However, it is different with regard to residents who remain in their places and our armies chase them away. That can be prevented. There is no need to chase them away. In Lod and Ramle explicit orders were given not to chase away the inhabitants and it turned out that they were forced [to leave]. I wanted to go to Lod in the first days after the conquest, and I was given a few excuses as to why I shouldn’t go. The first time I accepted them naively. A more serious matter is that of the theft. The situation in that regard is horrible.”

    ‘Fools’ paradise’

    The November 7, 1948, meeting ended with a decision to appoint a committee of three ministers to examine the testimony about massacres. The committee consisted of Haim-Moshe Shapira, Bentov and Justice Minister Pinhas Rosenbluth (Rosen), from the Progressive Party. A week later they informed the cabinet that the meager powers they had been given did not enable them to get to the truth of the matter. Three more days passed, and the cabinet met again to discuss the investigation of the crimes.

    Bentov: “It is known to me that there are circles in the army who want to sabotage the government’s decisions.”

    Shapira: “We must find the best way to stop the plague. The situation in this matter is like a plague. Today the committee heard one witness, and I buried my face in my hands, in shame and disgrace. If this is the situation, I don’t know from which side a greater danger exists to the state – from the side of the Arabs or from our own side. In my opinion, all our moral foundations have been undermined and we need to look for ways to curb these instincts. We have reached this state of affairs because we did not know how to control things when this first started. My impression is that we are living in a fools’ paradise. If no shift occurs, then we are undermining the government’s moral basis with our own hands.”

    Agriculture Minister Aharon Zisling (Mapam): “I received a letter from a certain person about this matter. I have to tell you that I knew about the situation in this matter, and I placed the subject on this table more than once. After reading the letter I received, I couldn’t sleep the whole night. I felt that something was being done that was affecting my soul, the soul of my home and the soul of all of us here. I could not imagine where we had come from and where we are going. I know that this is not a chance thing but something that determines the nation’s standards of life. I know that this could have consequences in every area of our life. One transgression generates another, and this matter becomes people’s second nature.”

    Police Minister Bechor-Shalom Sheetrit (Sephardim and Oriental Communities): “Already in the first days of the People’s Administration [pre-May 1948 temporary legislative body], I demanded a stringent approach on this matter, and you didn’t listen to me. You are overwrought about their grave deeds. I put forward several proposals on this subject, and to this day not one of them has been accepted.”

    Transportation Minister David Remez (Mapai): “We have slid down a terrible slope – true, not the whole army, but if there are deeds like these and they are recurring in quite a few places, they are undoubtedly horrific to the point of despair.”

    Following the discussion, Ben-Gurion declared incisively: “Since the committee did not fulfill the role it was tasked with, it is hereby abolished.” To which Gruenbaum retorted, “We are burying the matter.” Minister Shapira, who had been the one to call for the committee in the first place, commented that he felt the earth give way beneath his feet.

    In fact, the ministers grasped very quickly that the prime minister had no interest in a through investigation of war crimes. He refused to grant the committee of three the authority to subpoena witnesses, and blamed its members’ laziness for its failure. Whereas some ministers demanded the establishment of a committee with teeth and urged that those responsible be brought to justice, Ben-Gurion pulled in a completely opposite direction. The meeting ended with the following decision: “The government assigns to the prime minister [responsibility for] investigating all of the claims made about the army’s behavior vis-a-vis Arabs in the Galilee and the south.”

    Two days after the meeting, on November 19, 1948, he appointed the attorney general, Yaakov-Shimshon Shapira, to investigate the events. The prime minister noted in the letter of appointment that the attorney general “is hereby requested to take it on himself to examine and investigate whether harm was inflicted by soldiers and the army on the life of Arab residents of the Galilee and the south, which was not in accordance with the accepted rules of war.”

    Two weeks later, the attorney general submitted his report to the prime minister. In the cabinet meeting of December 5, Ben-Gurion read out its main points, but this section of the minutes remains redacted. In the 1980s, historian Morris petitioned the High Court of Justice, requesting that the report be made available to him, but the petition was rejected. The Akevot Institute has been working for several years to have the report declassified.

    The report is mentioned only a few times in the academic literature – so few that some have questioned its very existence. The historian Yoav Gelber, the author of one of the most informative books about the War of Independence (“Independence Versus Nakbah: The Arab-Israeli War of 1948,” in Hebrew), wrote that he did not find “Shapira’s investigative report or any reference to it, or any other evidence to the effect that an investigation was conducted in the matter of the irregular actions that took place in the Galilee.” Nevertheless, the report does exist, and the minutes now made available show that the cabinet ministers were not at all pleased with its content or its recommendations.

    After reading out the main points of the report to the cabinet, Ben-Gurion said, “I do not accept everything he [Shapira] wrote, but I think he has done something important and has said things that others would not have dared say.” He then took the opportunity to criticize his fellow cabinet members. “Of course, it’s easy to sit here around this table and cast blame on a small number of people, on those who fought.”

    Haim-Moshe Shapira: “The attorney general has indeed presented a report from what he was told, but that is not his job. In my opinion, the only thing that it’s still possible to do, is to select on behalf of the government a public committee that will investigate the matter and go fully into its details. But if these deeds are covered up, the blame lies with the entire government if it does not being the offenders to justice.”

    Remez: “These deeds remove us from the category of Jews and from the category of human beings altogether. Precisely on these grave matters we have been silent to this day. We must find a way to put a stop to these deeds, but we must not silence our conscience by placing the whole gravity of the blame on boys who were dragged in the wake of deeds that were done earlier.”

    Bentov: “People get used to the fact of turning away and start to understand: there is no justice and no judge.”

    Code of silence

    Throughout the cabinet meetings, there were several mentions of a code of silence existing among soldiers about war crimes. Minister Shapira stated: “The fact is that the soldiers are afraid to testify. I asked one soldier whether he would be willing to appear before the committee. He asked me not to mention his name, to forget that he spoke with me and to consider him someone who doesn’t know a thing.”

    Ben-Gurion also addressed the difficulty of breaching the circle of silence: “In regard to the Galilee, a few things have been published. Not all the rumors fit the facts. Several things have been confirmed. What happened in Dawayima cannot be confirmed. There is a cover-up. The matter of the cover-up is extremely serious. I assigned someone to conduct a clarification about a certain matter, and an organized operation was mounted against him not to do the clarification. He was under great pressure.” Ben-Gurion asserted that it was impossible to ascertain the truth, not in the north and not in the south. He added that in the Negev, “deeds were done that are no less shocking than the deeds in the Galilee.”

    The code of silence helped those who wished to sweep the crimes under the carpet and avoid investigations and indictments. Indeed, Shmuel Lahis, the commander of the unit that perpetrated the Hula massacre, was among the few who were accused of murder in the War of Independence. Not even the Al-Dawayima massacre, which was investigated internally by the IDF, produced indictments.

    The intensity of the cover-up in the army comes through in a book by Yosef Shai-El, a soldier in Lahis’ company, who testified in the trial against his former commander. In his unpublished memoir from 2005, “The First Eighty Years of My Life,” Shai-El writes: ‘After the trial verdict was handed down, I went through hard times for a while. People would grab me in cafés and various places in the city and hit me. I made it a habit to go out with a pistol in my pocket. I’d found the pistol in an abandoned house in Acre long before. Everyone knew I was a sniper, and I enjoyed quiet for some time. The police informed my father that there was a plan to kidnap me from the house, and I hid in a friend’s home.”

    Even those who did not have the benefit of silence and a cover-up, and were tried for crimes committed in the war, were finally let off the hook. In February 1949 a retroactive general pardon was issued for any crimes committed during the war. The public at large appears not to have been disturbed by any of this. The events described above took place during the period when the military justice system was being created. This might explain why the military internalized an organizational culture that goes easy on the killing of Palestinians by soldiers during operations. The philosopher Martin Buber termed the frame of mind that dominated Jewish society at the time a “war psychosis.”

    Half a year later, the first Speaker of the Knesset, Joseph Sprinzak, appeared before the parliament’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. Mentioned in the meeting were two items that had appeared in the press that day, which epitomized the attitude toward the acts of murder during the war. One report referred to an officer who during the fighting had ordered the murder of four wounded individuals; the second report was about a person who sold stolen army equipment. The former was sentenced to six months in prison, the latter to three years. Sprinzak, in any event, was under no illusions. “We are far from humanism,” he told the committee. “We are like all the nations.”

    Adam Raz is a researcher at the Akevot Institute for Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Research .

    #nakba #Palestine #sionisme #1948 #archives_israéliennes

    • The ghosts haunting Israel’s wars, past and present
      Gideon Levy | Dec. 12, 2021 | Haaretz.com
      https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-the-ghosts-haunting-israel-s-wars-past-and-present-1.10458096

      The Haaretz editorial for Sunday calls for opening the archives to reveal the complete truth about what happened here in 1948, including all of the massacres and the war crimes committed by Israel Defense Forces soldiers in 1948-49. There is, of course, no demand for justice.

      After 73 years, the citizens of Israel are permitted to know what was done in their name during their country’s first war. The victims of that war are also permitted to know all about the travails of their families and the crimes perpetrated against them. A state that is proud of its past does not conceal it. Only a state that is ashamed of its deeds conceals them. An Israel that conceals its past is a state that knows, deep in its heart, that its righteous birth came about through a great and deep sin.

      In the wake of the shocking article by Adam Raz in Friday’s Haaretz, disclosing massacres that were reported to the cabinet and concealed ever since, without any of the criminals being punished appropriately, it is indeed time to face the truth, deal with its implications and learn its lessons. The editorial is convinced that when the truth comes to light, it will provoke penetrating public discussion throughout the country. The editorial is mistaken.

      That ship sailed a long time ago. Opening the archives and revealing the truth will neither help nor hinder. The process of repression and denial, of erasing reality and replacing it with an alternative reality, fabricating justifications for any iniquity and the spreading of lies and false propaganda, which began immediately after the war and has never stopped, has succeeded above and beyond all expectations.

      The door to the truth is closed to Israelis. Most do not see Palestinians as human beings like themselves, and therefore anything is permitted of the state. Tell them now about massacres, and most will shrug their shoulders. Only Haaretz will agree to publish the stories, and few readers will be shocked: They will be derided as “purists.”

      The vast majority will adhere to the “truth” that has been drilled into their heads: There was no choice, we don’t want to think about what would have happened had the situation been reversed, we were the few against the many, the Arabs started it, they rejected partition – and of course, the Holocaust. No massacre story, however barbaric, can change anything now. Israel has barricaded itself inside its narrative, and nothing can crack the wall. Penetrating public discussion? More like a penetrating public yawn.

      It is not by chance that Israel finds itself in this situation. It is not its past that haunts it. It is not the past it denies. Israel conceals its past in order to justify its present. The dark side of its past did not end in 1948 – it has never ended. Methods changed, as have the dimensions, but the policies, the moral standards and the attitude to Arabs haven’t changed an iota. If we admit to the 1948 Hula massacre, we would also have to admit to the criminal killing Friday of the ninth protester from the village of Beita. If we admit that we concealed and covered up the connection to the 1948 Al-Burj massacre, we would also have to admit to lying about the justification for executing the stabber at Jerusalem’s Damascus Gate on December 4th.

      Therefore, it’s best for Israel to keep on covering up the destruction and the killing by planting more and more Jewish National Fund groves, meant to ensure that the truth never peeks out through the pines. It would be hard to deal with, after so many years of being told that we are always right, that we are the victims, that we have the most moral army in the world, that we were the few against the many and that Arabs are natural-born killers.

      Had 1948 ended in 1948, had its crimes ceased then, there would have been no problem admitting the truth today, to regret, to apologize, even to pay restitution. But because 1948 never ends, and what we did then to the Palestinians we continue to do now, only more forcefully, we can’t get worked up over what happened then, lest it undermine the faith in what we are still doing. Therefore, dear editorial, the mechanisms of whitewash and justification will cover up any disclosure from 1948. No public discussion will be provoked. Please don’t disturb, we are carrying on – with the same crimes, or similar ones.

  • Israel must deal with settler violence sooner rather than later
    Haaretz Editorial | Nov. 15, 2021 |
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/.premium-israel-must-deal-with-settler-violence-sooner-rather-than-later-1.

    For decades, the pattern of Israeli violence toward Palestinians in the West Bank has been one of “private rampages,” the declared goal of which was to expel Palestinians from their public and private spaces, thereby gradually gaining control of yet another dunam, another spring or another cistern.

    A B’Tselem report calculates how much land was closed off to Palestinians through systematic violence just by residents of five illegal outposts and one settlement in five different parts of the West Bank that were surveyed. It amounted to 28,000 dunams (7,000 acres).

    Long-time settler leader Ze’ev Hever estimates that the approximately 150 outposts and individual farms have succeeded in gaining control of about 200,000 dunams across the West Bank – more than twice the built-up areas of all the settlements combined.

    The sanctity of this mission is evidenced by the fact that attacks on Palestinians justify violating the religious prohibitions of Jewish holidays and Shabbat. They include cutting down and burning olive trees, torching mosques, vandalizing cars, grazing sheep in Palestinian pastures and orchards, stealing harvests, using drones to spy on Palestinians and attacking farmers and shepherds with dogs, stones and even live fire.

    The helplessness of the forces of law and order in the face of this settler violence and the culture of the outposts proves that this is not just a case of bureaucratic failure. If the political and legal establishment wanted to, it could find ways to put an end to this Jewish terror. The reason for this official helplessness is simple. The B’Tselem report explains: The government and the settlers share a common goal of wresting control of as much Palestinian territory in the West Bank as possible and pushing the Palestinians into densely populated, non-contiguous enclaves.

    Israel does this by fictitiously declaring areas live-fire zones or nature reserves; prohibiting Palestinian building, urban development and connections to water and electricity in Area C; destroying buildings and cisterns; and cutting off water supplies.

    Many Palestinian communities continue to live on their land despite the difficult conditions that Israel has imposed on them. Armed attacks by settlers, protected by the army and granted immunity by the legal system, have succeeded where official actions have failed: Often Palestinians can no longer reach their land and even abandon their homes. The settlers are flexing their muscles more than ever.

    Greater determination and a greater sense of urgency are needed both by Israelis and the international community to curb the growing number of expropriations and deportations that the settlers are undertaking in cooperation with the Israeli establishment. The indifference of Israeli civil society is tantamount to consent, and it will pay for it dearly.

    The above article is Haaretz’s lead editorial, as published in the Hebrew and English newspapers in Israel.

    #colonialisme_de_peuplement

  • A #pogrom, and #silence - Haaretz Editorial - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/a-pogrom-and-silence-1.10252862

    [..] when the attackers invaded the built-up areas of the three communities, the soldiers gave them cover, throwing tear gas grenades and stun grenades – and even directing live fire and sponge-tipped bullets – at the Palestinians seeking to protect their homes. Families fled to the nearby wadis to avoid injury.

    #sionisme #criminel #complicité #vitrine_de_la_jungle

  • A message from a Jewish friend - Haaretz Editorial -

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/.premium-a-message-from-a-jewish-friend-1.8596122

    The leading Democratic presidential candidate sent an important message to Israel Wednesday. Israel would be wise to listen. During the 10th television debate among the party’s presidential candidates, Sen. Bernie Sanders called the Israeli prime minister a “reactionary racist.” His opponents did not respond to this characterization of Benjamin Netanyahu. Sanders also said he would consider returning the U.S. Embassy to Tel Aviv and promised to protect Israel’s security but also not to ignore the Palestinians’ suffering.

    Sanders’ statements accurately reflect the new winds blowing through his party, which has been the American Jewish community’s political home for decades, and ought to gladden every lover of peace and justice in Israel. After years in which the United States paid only lip service to opposing the settlements while providing practical support to the occupation and almost every Israeli military operation, Sanders’ words are sweet music to the ears of anyone who believes that without vigorous steps by Washington, including conditioning American aid on a change in Israeli policy, no such change will ever happen.

    Nevertheless, it’s hard to ignore the fact that a politician who may well reach the White House called Israel’s prime minister a “reactionary racist,” and nobody in the Democratic Party came to his defense. This is the rotten fruit not just of Israel’s policy of occupation, which Netanyahu did not begin, but also of his one-party policy in the United States. Netanyahu’s Israel has put all its hope and trust in the Republican Party in general and in President Donald Trump’s administration in particular, while riding roughshod over the tradition of maintaining good relations with both parties. And now, the check has come due. Netanyahu, who boasts of his close relationship with the U.S. administration, has opened a worrying gulf between Israel and the Democratic Party, Israel’s traditional friend in Washington.

    Sanders is a friend of Israel. He is proud of his Jewishness and says that he will see to the welfare of the state. His voice is the new voice of his party, and he may well reach the White House. In order to repair Israel’s relationship with the man who might become the most important leader in the world, which has sunk to a nadir, Benjamin Netanyahu must be replaced Monday, Election Day.

    Haaretz Editorial

  • Israel’s dirty arms deals with Myanmar - Haaretz Editorial - Israel News | Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/israel-s-dirty-arms-deals-with-myanmar-1.6429524

    Official Israel does not allow the publication of reports on the arming of Myanmar. In a hearing on petitions to the High Court of Justice filed in the last year and a half by human rights activists and attorney Eitay Mack against Israel’s weapons sales to Myanmar, the Defense Ministry argued that the court had no authority to rule on defense exports. Israeli spokesmen justified the supplying of weapons with the claim that “both sides committed war crimes,” claims that were rejected in the UN report. The court’s ruling on the petition is classified, but according to testimony from Myanmar the weapons sales are continuing, even in the midst of the crimes.

    Israel has a long history of arming dark regimes, from Latin America through the Balkans and Africa, to Asia. The findings of the UN panel’s report require an examination of this method, whose economic benefits cannot serve as a counterweight to the atrocities. Attorney General Avichai Mendelblit must order an investigation to determine whether the individuals who approved the arms sales to Myanmar were complicit in genocide in accordance with Israel’s 1950 Law for the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. In addition, he must see to it that the findings are made public.

  • Barak Ravid sur Twitter : “WATCH: U.S. ambassador to Israel David Friedman takes a 10 pounds hammer and breaks open a tunnel which runs under the Palestinian village of #Silwan to the old city of #Jerusalem. This happens at a settlers organisation event with Sara Netanyahu and Sheldon Adelson at his side” / Twitter
    https://twitter.com/BarakRavid/status/1145362268022067200

    https://video.twimg.com/ext_tw_video/1145362068507430912/pu/vid/640x360/A_akO0XpJxkZ-Rl-.mp4?tag=10

    Des officiels américains à un évènement lié aux colons israéliens à Jérusalem-Est - L’Orient-Le Jour
    https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1176973/des-officiels-americains-a-un-evenement-lie-aux-colons-israeliens-a-j

    Deux responsables américains ont assisté dimanche à l’inauguration à Jérusalem-Est d’un site archéologique organisée par une association ultranationaliste israélienne, une présence qui rompt une nouvelle fois avec la pratique diplomatique s’agissant de la colonisation et du secteur palestinien de la ville occupé par Israël.

    Jason Greenblatt, conseiller du président américain Donald Trump, et David Friedman, ambassadeur en Israël, ont assisté en compagnie de responsables israéliens à une cérémonie dévoilant le résultat de travaux archéologiques à Silwan, quartier palestinien de Jérusalem-Est. Silwan, situé en contrebas des murailles de la Vieille ville, est le théâtre de tensions permanentes entre les résidents palestiniens et des colons juifs de plus en plus nombreux.

    Les travaux archéologiques, portant sur une route souterraine utilisée il y a environ 2.000 ans pour le pèlerinage vers le Second Temple juif, ont été entrepris par l’association Elad, dont le but avoué est de renforcer la présence juive à Jérusalem-Est.

    [...]

    Les Palestiniens accusent Israël et la fondation Elad de chercher à les chasser de Jérusalem.

    [...]

    L’ONG israélienne Emek Shaveh, qui lutte contre l’usage de l’archéologie au service de la colonisation, a également critiqué la présence d’officiels américains à la cérémonie. Elle dénonce un « acte politique qui se rapproche le plus d’une reconnaissance américaine de la souveraineté israélienne » sur toute la Vieille ville de Jérusalem.

    Israël considère Jérusalem comme sa capitale « unifiée et indivisible ». Mais la communauté internationale ne reconnaît pas l’annexion en 1967 de la partie orientale occupée de la ville, dont les Palestiniens veulent faire la capitale de l’Etat auquel ils aspirent.

    Le président Donald Trump a rompu en décembre 2017 avec des décennies de consensus diplomatique en reconnaissant Jérusalem comme la capitale d’Israël, poussant les Palestiniens à couper tout contact formel avec Washington.

    L’ambassadeur américain en Israël David Friedman est un fervent soutien des colonies israéliennes dans les Territoires palestiniens, considérées comme illégales par la communauté internationale.

    #sionisme #etats-unis

    • Editorial Settlers From the White House
      Haaretz Editorial
      Jun 30, 2019 11:20 PM
      https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/settlers-from-the-white-house-1.7424748

      The event held Sunday in a tunnel under the main street of the Silwan neighborhood in East Jerusalem, just outside the Old City walls, would have been impossible only a few years ago. Two of the U.S. administration’s most senior diplomats, Special Envoy to the Middle East Jason Greenblatt and U.S. Ambassador David Friedman, were there alongside Israeli ministers at the inauguration of the Path of the Pilgrims – a tunnel excavated by the right-wing Elad organization with generous help from the state.

      The tunnel, which according to Elad exposed a street from the Second Temple period that brought pilgrims from the Shiloah pool to the Temple Mount, is a central project in the organization’s efforts to Judaize Silwan and its environs by way of archaeology and tourism. When the tunnel opens to the public, presumably in a few months, it will become a major tourist attraction.

      The participation of American diplomats at an event sponsored by a right-wing group in East Jerusalem constitutes de facto recognition of Israeli sovereignty in Jerusalem’s historic basin. If anyone had any doubts about that, Friedman made clear in an interview with the Jerusalem Post that, “The City of David is an essential component of the national heritage of the State of Israel.” Giving it up, even in the context of a peace agreement, he said, “would be akin to America returning the Statue of Liberty.”

      This recognition doesn’t just put the American administration on the extreme right of the Israeli political map – thus undercutting the claim that American can be an unbiased broker between Israel and the Palestinians – but it also ignores the complicated reality in Silwan, East Jerusalem and the entire region. The tunnel, which was excavated using controversial methods from a scientific standpoint, harnesses archaeology to politics while ignoring the nuances of Jerusalem’s ancient past.

      But the main problem is that excavating under the street blatantly ignores what’s happening at street level. In Silwan alone there are 20,000 Palestinians without citizenship or civil rights, who justifiably feel that this archaeological project is aimed at forcing them out of their neighborhood. Surrounding Silwan are another 300,000 Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, also without rights.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfbMcYhJY6Q


      Anyone having even a passing familiarity with the Palestinian people knows that there’s no chance of arriving at any kind of agreement that will end the occupation so long as Israel continues to control East Jerusalem and the Temple Mount. Thus, by mere words and an event dripping with sweetness and smiles, the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has sentenced Israelis to a life of constant conflict, or to an apartheid state in which there are two types of residents, those with rights and those without them.

  • The Golan Heights first

    Trump gave Syria and its allies a renewed pretext for possible military action
    Haaretz Editorial
    Mar 24, 2019

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/the-golan-heights-first-1.7046251

    U.S. President Donald Trump’s statement that “it is time for the United States to fully recognize Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights” received an enthusiastic welcome in Israel. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who got a shot in the arm from Trump at a low point in his election campaign, welcomed this “Purim miracle.” His rival Benny Gantz, whose party’s leading lights helped push for American recognition of the Golan’s annexation, said in a statement that Trump was cementing his place in history as a true friend of Israel.

    That Netanyahu and Gantz were both delighted is no surprise; the annexation of the Golan and the settlements established there enjoy widespread support in Israel. Since the Yom Kippur War of 1973, Syria has refrained from any attempt to recover the Golan by force, preferring to maintain the quiet and conduct peace talks that achieved nothing. The Druze residents of the northern Golan have also accepted Israeli rule without rebelling.

    The settlements on the Golan were established by the Labor Party, rather than the messianic Gush Emunim movement that settled the West Bank, and the Israelis who live there are termed “residents” rather than “settlers.” The beautiful vistas, the empty spaces and the snow on Mount Hermon are especially beloved by Israeli tourists.

    >> Read more: Trump’s Golan tweet brings U.S. to Syria through the back door | Analysis ■ Trump’s declaration: What does it mean and what happens now | Explained ■ How Secret Netanyahu-Assad backchannel gave way to Israeli demand for recognition of Golan sovereignty

    Nevertheless, despite the quiet and the internal consensus that sees the Golan as an inseparable part of Israel, this is occupied territory that Israel retains in violation of both international law and the principle at the basis of United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 — that the acquisition of territory by war is unacceptable. Israel accepted this principle, and six prime ministers, including Netanyahu, have held talks with the Syrians on returning the Golan in exchange for peace.

    The most recent talks were cut short by the outbreak of Syria’s civil war eight years ago, and the implosion on the other side of the border spurred appetites here for perpetuating the occupation with U.S. backing. During President Barack Obama’s tenure, that idea seemed hopeless. But Trump, no great fan of international laws and agreements, acceded happily to the Israeli request.

    Trump’s announcement and the applause that greeted it in Jerusalem send the troubling message that Israel is no longer interested in a peace agreement. It’s true that Syria, having fallen apart, is now weak and will settle for diplomatic censure, and in any case the chance of resuming negotiations in the north is near zero. But Trump gave Syria and its allies a renewed pretext for possible military action.
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    In the near term, the U.S. green light to annexing the Golan will deepen the Israeli delusion that U.S. approval is sufficient to revise the world map and contribute to erasing the 1967 lines as the relevant reference points for solving the Israeli-Arab conflict. The U.S. recognition will inevitably increase pressure from the right to annex Area C of the West Bank (which is under full Israeli control), intensifying the occupation and the bloody conflict with the Palestinians.

  • Kahane returns to the Knesset
    Feb 21, 2019 3:36 AM – Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/kahane-returns-to-the-knesset-1.6957376

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s lust for power knows no limits. The pressure he brought to bear on Habayit Hayehudi and National Union – including a promise of the housing and education ministries, two seats in the security cabinet and a reserved spot on the Likud list for one of their members – bore fruit. Rabbi Rafi Peretz responded to Netanyahu’s call to unite with the Otzma Yehudit party, comprised of followers of the late Rabbi Meir Kahane, which will receive slots No. 5 and No. 8 on the joint ticket.

    Thus, under the sponsorship of a prime minister who is prepared to sacrifice every principle and smash every institution in his battle to entrench his regime, the followers of Kahane will return to the Knesset riding like the Messiah on the donkey of religious Zionism.

    Kahane’s Kach party, which championed the deportation of the Arabs from all of “Eretz Israel,” was disqualified from contending for Knesset in 1988 because its platform contained racist incitement. It held a Knesset seat from 1984 until 1988. After the massacre by Baruch Goldstein, a Kach activist, at the Tomb of the Patriarchs in 1994, the government declared the Kach and Kahane Chai movements illegal terror organizations. Kach is also on the American and EU lists of terror groups. But none of this matters to Netanyahu, who is determined to win at any price.

    Otzma Yehudit is the political home of Kahane’s students and admirers, extreme Arab-haters who believe in Jewish supremacy, among them the founder of the Lehava movement, the radical-right group that opposes personal relationships between Jews and non-Jews. The Kahanists followed the “advice” of the party’s rabbis – Rabbi Dov Lior, Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu and Rabbi Yehuda Kroizer – who told them to accept the compromise because the fate of the Land of Israel is at stake. (...)

    #toujourspire

  • The Shin Bet’s disgrace veiled in secrecy - Haaretz Editorial

    An invasive search of a woman by the organization shows that the security services must tell their people there are orders they should refuse to obey

    Haaretz Editorial
    Nov 03, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/.premium-the-shin-bet-s-disgrace-veiled-in-secrecy-1.6616497

    The Shin Bet security service’s activities in the West Bank are generally carried out under a veil of secrecy. Only on rare occasions are they revealed to the public, and it’s very rare for the public to find out about crimes apparently committed by one of the secret services in the name of national security.
    The first criminal investigation ordered by the ombudsman for complaints by people interrogated by the Shin Bet – after more than 1,000 complaints had been closed – attests once again to the need for closer supervision of what Shin Bet agents and members of the other security services do to Palestinians living under the occupation.
    The details of the incident, as reported by Haaretz’s Josh Breiner and Yotam Berger on Friday, are shocking. While arresting a Palestinian woman in 2015, a Shin Bet agent ordered soldiers to conduct a vaginal and anal search of the woman, apparently without any justification. Two female soldiers were assigned to conduct this invasive search that no member of the task force appears to have been authorized to make. The search produced nothing but humiliation and offense for the woman arrested.

  • Official documents prove: Israel bans young Americans based on Canary Mission website - Israel News - Haaretz.com

    Some Americans detained upon arrival in Israel reported being questioned about their political activity based on ’profiles’ on the controversial website Canary Mission. Documents obtained by Haaretz now clearly show that is indeed a source of information for decisions to bar entry

    Noa Landau SendSend me email alerts
    Oct 04, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-official-documents-prove-israel-bans-young-americans-based-on-cana

    The Strategic Affairs and Public Diplomacy Ministry is using simple Google searches, mainly the controversial American right-wing website Canary Mission, to bar political activists from entering Israel, according to documents obtained by Haaretz.
    >>Israeli court rejects American visa-holding student’s appeal; to be deported for backing BDS
    The internal documents, some of which were submitted to the appeals tribunal in the appeal against the deportation of American student Lara Alqasem, show that officials briefly interviewed Alqasem, 22, at Ben-Gurion International Airport on her arrival Tuesday night, then passed her name on for “continued handling” by the ministry because of “suspicion of boycott activity.” Israel recently passed a law banning the entry of foreign nationals who engage in such activity.

    >> Are you next? Know your rights if detained at Israel’s border

    Links to Canary Mission and Facebook posts are seen on an official Ministry of Strategic Affairs document.
    The ministry then sent the officials at the airport an official report classified “sensitive” about Alqasem’s supposed political activities, which included information from five links – four from Facebook and one, the main source, from the Canary Mission site, which follows pro-Palestinian activists on U.S. campuses.
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    A decision on Alqasem’s appeal against her deportation was expected Thursday afternoon.
    Canary Mission, now the subject of major controversy in the American Jewish community, has been collecting information since 2015 about BDS activists at universities, and sends the information to potential employers. Pro-Israel students have also criticized their activities.

    Lara Alqasem.
    This week, the American Jewish news site The Forward reported that at least $100,000 of Canary Mission’s budget had been contributed through the San Francisco Jewish Federation and the Helen Diller Family Foundation, which donates to Jewish education. The donation was handed to a group registered in Beit Shemesh called Megamot Shalom, specifically stating that it was for Canary Mission. A few hours after the report was published, the federation announced that it would no longer fund the group.
    Over the past few months some of the Americans who have been detained for questioning upon arrival in Israel have reported that they were questioned about their political activity based on “profiles” about them published on Canary Mission. The documents obtained by Haaretz now show clearly that the site is indeed the No. 1 source of information for the decision to bar entry to Alqasem.
    According to the links that were the basis for the decision to suspend the student visa that Alqasem had been granted by the Israeli Consulate in Miami, she was president of the Florida chapter of a group called Students for Justice in Palestine, information quoted directly from the Canary Mission. The national arm of that organization, National Students for Justice in Palestine, is indeed on the list of 20 groups that the Strategic Affairs Ministry compiled as criteria to invoke the anti-boycott law. However, Alqasem was not a member at the national level, but rather a local activist. She told the appeals tribunal that the local chapter had only a few members.

    Canary Mission’s profile of Lara Alqasem.
    The ministry also cited as a reason for barring Alqasem’s entry to Israel a Facebook post showing that “In April 2016 [her] chapter conducted an ongoing campaign calling for the boycott of Sabra hummus, the American version of Hummus Tzabar, because Strauss, which owns Tzabar, funds the Golani Brigade.” Alqasem told the tribunal that she had not taken an active part in this campaign. Another link was about a writers’ petition calling on a cultural center to refuse sponsorship by Israel for its activities. Yet another post, by the local Students for Justice in Palestine, praised the fact that an international security company had stopped operations in Israel. None of these links quoted Alqasem.
    She told the tribunal that she is not currently a member of any pro-boycott group and would not come to study for her M.A. in Israel if she were.
    The Strategic Affairs Ministry report on Alqasem is so meager that its writers mentioned it themselves: “It should be noted that in this case we rely on a relatively small number of sources found on the Internet.” Over the past few months Haaretz has been following up reports of this nature that have been the basis for denying entry to activists, and found that in many other cases the material consisted of superficial Google searches and that the ministry, by admission of its own senior officials, does not collect information from non-public sources.
    skip - Facebook post calling for the boycott of Sabra hummus

    The ministry’s criteria for invoking the anti-boycott law state clearly that in order to bar entry to political activists, they must “hold senior or significant positions in the organizations,” including “official senior roles in prominent groups (such as board members).”
    But the report on Alqasem does not indicate that she met the criterion of “senior” official in the national movement, nor was this the case for other young people questioned recently at the airport. In some cases it was the Shin Bet security service that questioned people due to past participation in activities such as demonstrations in the territories, and not BDS activities.
    “Key activists,” according to the ministry’s criteria, also means people who “consistently take part in promoting BDS in the framework of prominent delegitimization groups or independently, and not, for example, an activist who comes as part of a delegation.” In Alqasem’s case, however, her visa was issued after she was accepted for study at Hebrew University.

  • The strong earn respect - Haaretz Editorial

    Palestinian diplomacy is perceived as weakness whereas violent struggle is treated with reverence

    Haaretz Editorial

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/the-strong-earn-respect-1.6466404

    The demonstrations along the Gaza border have resumed amid a lack of progress in negotiations on easing the Gaza blockade and achieving calm on the border for the long term. Along with the protests has come a resumption of the violence and killing that are only expected to intensify now that the United States is ceasing funding for the UN agency that aids Palestinian refugees, UNRWA.
    To really understand Israel and the Palestinians - subscribe to Haaretz
    The latest reports have all the ingredients of a recipe for escalation: the navy fired at a protest flotilla, thousands of Palestinians demonstrated along the coast with the army shooting at them, Palestinians tried to breach the border fence and were arrested by the military, an Israeli plane fired at a squad launching incendiary balloons and fires broke out on the Israeli side of the border, dozens have been wounded and three young people have been killed, including one shown on video waving his arms before being shot dead.

  • Eurovision’s demands should serve as wake-up call for Israel - Haaretz Editorial - Israel News | Haaretz.com

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/eurovision-s-demands-should-serve-as-wake-up-call-for-israel-1.6450815

    In a different time, the demands of the European Broadcasting Union, the organizer of the Eurovision Song Contest, would have been received in Israel with a shrug, as self-evident.
    To really understand Israel and the Palestinians - subscribe to Haaretz
    According to a report by the Israel Television News Corporation, the broadcasting union is asking for an Israeli authority, preferably the prime minister, to promise that Israel will grant entry visas for the event regardless of applicants’ political opinions; that visitors be able to tour the country regardless of their political opinions, religion or sexual orientation; that there be freedom of the press and complete freedom of expression for all participants; that there be no religious restrictions on rehearsals on Saturday; and that Israel’s public broadcasting company, Kan, be given complete independence in editing the broadcasts.

    • D’après cet article de Haaretz :
      https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-eurovision-organizers-set-conditions-for-contest-to-be-held-in-isr

      1) l’Eurovision demande qu’israel s’engage par écrit à laisser entrer tous les spectateurs, quelque soient leurs opinions (y compris s’ils soutiennent BDS), donc critique les nouvelles pratiques de sélection à l’entrée du pays sur des bases politiques

      2) l’Eurovision demande une complète liberté d’expression et de circulation pour les participants, les délégations et la presse

      3) l’Eurovision demande que les répétitions aient lieu le samedi (shabbat)

      4) plusieurs membres du gouvernement appellent Netanyahu à refuser ces conditions

      5) la télé israélienne demande une rallonge financière du ministère des finances qui pour l’instant refuse

      #Palestine #Eurovision #BDS #Boycott_culturel

    • BDS success stories
      More than the achievements of the economic, academic and cultural boycott, BDS has succeeded in undermining the greatest asset of Israeli public diplomacy: Israel’s liberal and democratic image in the world.
      Gideon Levy | Sep. 5, 2018 | 11:16 PM
      https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-bds-success-stories-1.6455621

      Gilad Erdan is a great success story of the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement, as is the Strategic Affairs Ministry that he heads. So is the anti-boycott law. Every human rights activist who is expelled from Israel or questioned at Ben-Gurion International Airport is a BDS success story. The European Broadcasting Union’s letter is another success of the global movement to boycott Israel.

      More than Lana Del Rey canceling her visit, more than SodaStream moving its factory from the West Bank to the Negev and more than the achievements of the economic, academic and cultural boycott, BDS has succeeded in a different area, effortlessly and perhaps unintentionally. It has undermined the greatest asset of Israeli public diplomacy: Israel’s liberal and democratic image in the world. It was the European Broadcasting Union, of all things, a nonpolitical organization, very far from BDS, that best described the extent of the damage to Israel: The organization compared Israel to Ukraine and Azerbaijan in the conditions it set for these countries to host the Eurovision Song Contest.

      Ukraine and Azerbaijan, which no one seriously considers to be democracies, in the same breath as Israel. This is how the Eurovision organizers see Israel.

      The song contest was held in Jerusalem twice before, and no one thought to set conditions to guarantee the civil liberties of participants. Now it is necessary to guarantee, in advance and in writing, what is self-evident in a democracy: freedom of entry and freedom of movement to everyone who comes for the competition.

      In Israel, as in Ukraine and Azerbaijan, this is no longer self-evident. In the 13 years since it was founded, the BDS movement couldn’t have dreamed of a greater triumph.

      The main credit, of course, goes to the Israeli government, which in declaring war on BDS and made a great contributions to the movement. With a commander like Erdan, who is outraged over the interference with the “laws of a democratic state” and doesn’t understand how grotesque his words are, and with a ministry that is nothing but an international thought police, the government is telling the world: Israel isn’t what you thought. Did you think for years that Israel was a liberal democracy? Did you close your eyes to the goings-on in its backyard? Did you think the occupation was separate from the state, that it could be maintained in a democracy, that it was surely temporary and would be over momentarily? That at least sovereign Israel is part of the West? Well, you were wrong.

      The government has torn off the mask. Not only BDS, but all supporters of human rights, should be grateful to it. The war on BDS, a legitimate, nonviolent protest movement, has dragged Israel into new territory. Omar Barghouti and his colleagues can rub their hands together in satisfaction and pride. They have begun to dismantle the regime inside Israel as well. No democracy has a strategic affairs ministry that spies on critics of the state and its government worldwide and draws up blacklists of people who are banned from entry on account of their worldview or political activities. No democracy asks its guests for their opinions at its borders, as a condition for entry. No democracy searches its visitors’ computers and their lifestyles when they enter and leave. Perhaps Ukraine and Azerbaijan do, Turkey and Russia too.

      It could have, and should have, been argued previously as well that Israel did not deserve to be seen as democracy, on account of the occupation. But now Israel has crossed the line. It hasn’t erased only the Green Line, it has begun to the task of annexation, including a gradual westward movement of the regime in the West Bank. The gap between the two regimes, in the occupied territories and in Israel, is still huge, but laws passed in recent years have narrowed it.

      The state’s fancy display window, with all the bright neon and rustling cellophane of freedom and equality; of Arab MKs and pharmacists; gay-friendly, with a vibrant night life and all the other shiny objects, is beginning to crack. The Eurovision organizers recognize this.

  • Demonstrate with the Arabs - Haaretz Editorial -
    The place of Livni and the other opposition leaders is in Rabin Square, alongside the Arab community. Their struggle is the struggle of all Israelis, Jews and Arabs alike

    Haaretz Editorial
    Aug 10, 2018 1:32 AM

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/demonstrate-with-the-arabs-1.6364336

    The demonstration called for Saturday night in Tel Aviv’s Rabin Square by the Higher Arab Monitoring Committee, which represents Israel’s Arab community, is the most important of all the protests that have taken place against the nation-state law. It’s also one of the most important demonstrations in Israel in the past several years.
    No minority in Israel suffers as much discrimination as the Arab minority, which is also Israel’s largest minority. It is frequently the target of normalized, institutionalized racism. 
    To really understand Israel and the Middle East - subscribe to Haaretz
    The nation-state law, which has sparked civic protests throughout Israeli society, was engineered precisely in order to strip the Arabs of their rights and subordinate them to rule by the Jews, the lords of the land, even at the price of sacrificing civic equality. This worldview has characterized despicable racist regimes throughout history, and its implementation in Israel is a black stain not only on the history of the state, but also on that of the Jewish people.
    The nation-state law is an especially ugly milestone in the right’s delegitimization campaign against the Arabs. It’s meant to mark them as enemies, as a fifth column; to cause strife between them and Jews; and to remove them from civil society. Given this, it’s regrettable that the leaders of the opposition, who warmly embraced the Druze community’s justified protest against the law, have decided not to attend this demonstration.
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    >> In Show of Renewed Activism, Arab Israelis to Protest Nation-state Law on Saturday
    Opposition leader Tzipi Livni, who came to the Druze demonstration last Saturday night, announced that she won’t attend the upcoming one because some Knesset members from the predominantly Arab Joint List “don’t share my view that Israel is the nation-state of the Jews.” In the same breath, she declared her belief in “equal rights for all.” She thereby proved that even the left has adopted the right’s propaganda. If, as she says, Livni believes in equality for all and opposes the nation-state law — the issues of the demonstration — why is it even relevant what Joint List MKs think Israel’s character should be?
    Livni must meet the challenge that was posed to Israeli society by President Reuven Rivlin in his “four tribes” speech, in which he argued that Israel’s future depends on abandoning a worldview based on majority and minority in favor of one that is based on a partnership with the ultra-Orthodox and the Arabs, who don’t define themselves as Zionist. The place of Livni and the other opposition leaders Saturday night is in Rabin Square, alongside the Arab community. Their struggle is the struggle of all Israelis, Jews and Arabs alike.