• Les élections - Proudhon et le parlementarisme
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/les-elections-proudhon-et-le-parlementarisme

    Le peuple, dans le vague de sa pensée, se contemple comme une gigantesque et mystérieuse existence et tout dans son langage semble fait pour l’entretenir dans l’opinion de son indivisible unité. Il s’appelle le Peuple, la Nation, c’est-à-dire la Multitude, la Masse ; il est le vrai souverain, le Législateur, la Puissance, la Domination, la Patrie, l’Etat. Il a ses Convocations, ses Scrutins, ses Assises, ses Manifestations, ses Prononcements, ses Plébiscites, sa Législation directe, (...) #03_-_Les_Anarchistes_et_les_élections

    / #Proudhon, #Volonté_Anarchiste, Archives Autonomies

    #Archives_Autonomies_
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/nr-n29.pdf

  • Les élections - La C.N.T. et les élections
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/les-elections-la-c-n-t-et-les-elections

    Depuis sa création (novembre 1910) jusqu’à son interdiction en 1923 lors de l’instauration de la dictature de Primo de Rivera, la Confédération nationale du Travail n’eut guère à se poser le problème des élections. Celles-ci n’intéressaient que la droite, qui truquait ouvertement le scrutin grâce à ses hommes de main locaux (caciquismo) ou grâce à des fonctionnaires subornés (pucherazo). La gauche, soit dit en passant, faisait de même mais à une échelle inférieure. La chute de Primo de (...) #03_-_Les_Anarchistes_et_les_élections

    / #Volonté_Anarchiste, Archives Autonomies

    #Archives_Autonomies_
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/nr-n29.pdf

  • Les élections - La Franc-maçonnerie et les élections
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/les-elections-la-franc-maconnerie-et-les-elections

    L’organisation chargée par les forces bourgeoises au pouvoir de surveiller, de s’infiltrer dans les mouvements d’opposition, à part les éternels mouchards et flics, est la franc-maçonnerie. La franc-maçonnerie est la bourgeoisie parlementaire, c’est son parti, son idéologie (d’où son libéralisme : une bonne organisation de classe se doit d’écouter tous les courants pour mieux diriger et harmoniser sa politique avec les intérêts de ses membres). Dernièrement, à chaque fois que la (...) #03_-_Les_Anarchistes_et_les_élections

    / #Volonté_Anarchiste, Archives Autonomies , #Aurelio_Chessa

    #Archives_Autonomies_
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/nr-n29.pdf

  • Les élections - Lénine et les elections
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/les-elections-lenine-et-les-elections

    Pour les partis politiques, l’exemple le plus intéressant nous semble celui du parti communiste, puisqu’il se déclare révolutionnaire et en même temps accepte de participer aux élections dans le système bourgeois. Pour comprendre cette position, il faut étudier la position de Lénine. Elle est surtout exprimée dans La maladie infantile du communisme. Or, cet ouvrage est un texte de circonstance, écrit en avril-mai 1920 et publié en juillet pour le IIe Congrès de la IIIe Internationale (du (...) #03_-_Les_Anarchistes_et_les_élections

    / #Volonté_Anarchiste, Archives Autonomies

    #Archives_Autonomies_
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/nr-n29.pdf

  • Les élections - Manifestation de la souveraineté populaire ?
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/les-elections-manifestation-de-la-souverainete-populaire

    On nous demande de voter ?... C’est oublier que le Parlement est un masque, et que le pouvoir réel, dans la société actuelle, réside on ne sait où, incroyablement incontrôlable et secret.

    (C. Radcliffe : « Anarchy », n° 37, 1964.) Les anarchistes ne voteront pas, une fois de plus, aux prochaines élections. Ils feront un effort de propagande pour expliquer qu’il ne sert à rien de voter. C’est là, quoi qu’il paraisse, non une réaction sentimentale (« la société n’est pas pure, les (...) #Anarchistes

    / #Volonté_Anarchiste, Archives Autonomies

    #Archives_Autonomies
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/nr-n29.pdf

  • Une gravure d’Alexandre Mairet
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/le-reveil-communiste-anarchiste-un-dessin-d-alexandre-mairet

    Né le 23 avril 1880 à La Tour-de-Peilz (canton de Vaud, Suisse), mort le 9 février 1947 à Genève. Peintre, graveur, illustrateur de périodiques anarchistes et communistes. Partages

    / Alexandre Mairet , Le Réveil/Il Risveglio , Archives Autonomies

    #Alexandre_Mairet_ #Le_Réveil #Archives_Autonomies
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/lra_1918_05_01.pdf

  • #Marie-Louise_Berneri
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/marie-louise-berneri-1484

    Fille aînée de Camillo et #Giovanna_Berneri, Marie-Louise Berneri est née le 1er mars 1918 à Arezzo, près de Florence. Son père, d’abord socialiste, puis devenu anar­chiste au début des années 20, avait quitté l’Italie avec sa famille en 1926 pour Paris. La maison familiale devint vite un centre d’acti­vité antifasciste et cette ambiance eut une pro­fonde influence sur Marie-Louise (et sur sa sœur Giliane). C’est là aussi qu’elle rencontre à l’âge de 13 ans le fils d’un autre anarchiste et (...) #Itinéraire_-_Agenda_2001

    / #Camillo_Berneri, Giovanna Berneri, Marie-Louise Berneri, #Vernon_Richards, #Freedom, #Grande-Bretagne, #@narlivres, Archives Autonomies , Itinéraire - Une vie, une (...)

    #Archives_Autonomies #Itinéraire
    https://archivesautonomies.org/spip.php?rubrique324
    https://freedomnews.org.uk/archive/#archive1930s
    https://www.deviantart.com/xit666/gallery

  • La naissance d’un journal : « Le Libertaire » américain (1858-1861)
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/la-naissance-d-un-journal-le-libertaire-americain-1858-1861

    Sous une forme qui a souvent varié, Le Libertaire est un des plus vieux titres de la presse de langue française. Au cours de ces cent cinquante dernières années, chacune des nuances de la pensée socialiste révolutionnaire a été représentée en son temps par un journal dont le titre, dans sa continuité, a subi les aléas que lui imposèrent ses démêlés avec la justice, ses difficultés économiques, ou simplement les influences internes qui se disputaient sa direction. Le Libertaire, pas plus que d’autres titres, n’échappera à ces vicissitudes qui furent le lot de la presse depuis que Théophraste Renaudot lança, en 1631, la première feuille politique qu’il appela La Gazette. Ainsi, Le Peuple de Proudhon sera, au hasard des événements politiques, Le Représentant du Peuple ou La Voix du Peuple comme Le Libertaire (...)

    #Maurice_Joyeux #Etats-Unis #Joseph_Déjaque #Archives_du_Monde_libertaire #Volonté_Anarchiste
    https://fr.theanarchistlibrary.org/library/joseph-dejacques-a-bas-les-chefs-fr

  • #Anatole_Gorelik
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/anatole-gorelik

    Ne le 28 Février 1890 à Guenitchesk, petit port dans le sud de l’Ukraine. Ses parents étaient les juifs les plus pauvres de cette région et sa famille était nombreuse. A dix ans Anatole commence à travailler comme vendeur dans une épicerie. Il se forme intellectuellement seul. Il devient anarchiste en 1904 et il est arrêté à plusieurs reprises. En 1909 il émigre en France et en 1911 il revient illégalement en Russie, mais revient en France la même année. En 1913, il part aux Etats-Unis (...) #CPCA

    / Anatole Gorelik, Archives Autonomies , Révolution russe (...)

    #Archives_Autonomies #Révolution_russe
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/cpca-n20.pdf

  • Shusui Kotoku (1871-1911)
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/shusui-kotoku-1871-1911

    Kotoku dont le prénom était Dendziro, mais qui prit par la suite celui de Shusui, naquit dans le village de Nakamura, dans la province de Kotu, et fut élevé par sa mère très let­trée, car son père mourut très jeune. Kotoku fréquenta les milieux de l’opposition libérale bourgeoise de sa province et dès l’ âge de dix-sept ans, en 1887-1888, il connut la répression. Il devint journaliste dans la presse socialiste et était farouchement antimilitariste. Il traduisit avec Sakan le Ma­nifeste (...) #CPCA

    / #KotokuShusui , #Japon, Archives Autonomies , #Kanno_Suga, Sakae (...)

    #Kotoku_Shusui #Archives_Autonomies_ #Sakae_Ôsugi
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/cpca-n19.pdf

  • #Willy_Muth, militant anarchiste allemand assassiné par les nazis
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/willy-muth-militant-anarchiste-allemand-assassine-par-les-nazis

    Willy Muth est mort. Willy, un des meilleurs camarades allemands, vient d’être sauvagement assassiné par les nazis. Qui ne se rappelle pas de ce camarade dévoué, sincère, avec des idées profondes et humaines ? N’était-il pas un pilier du mouvement anarchiste en Rhénanie. Il a vu les jours héroïques du prolétariat uni, armé, qui voulait, détruire le Capitalisme. Il a aussi connu des temps sombres, lutté comme peu l’ont fait. Peu connu dans l’ensemble du mouvement anarchiste, mais un (...) Partages

    / #Allemagne, #Willy_Muth

    #Archives_Autonomies_
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/lavoixlibertaire-n306.pdf

  • #Charles_Benoit
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/charles-benoit

    Suivant à quelques semaines son ami le docteur Pierrot, Charles Benoit est mort à Paris le dimanche 19 mars 1950. Il s’est éteint paisiblement après huit jours d’une résistance étonnante. Il avait soixante-douze ans. On disait : Charles Benoit, des « Temps Nouveaux ». Il avait appartenu à l’équipe de l’« organe communiste anarchiste » qui, sous la direction de Jean Grave et sous l’égide de Kropotkine, fut publié avant 1914 pendant quelque vingt années. Il s’y occupait surtout des tâches administratives, bénévolement, à la manière d’autrefois. Il y consacrait ses dimanches, accomplissant les besognes les plus ingrates avec le sérieux qu’il apportait à toutes choses. Partages

    / Charles Benoit, #Les_Temps_nouveaux, La Révolution prolétarienne , Archives (...)

    #La_Révolution_prolétarienne_ #Archives_Autonomies_
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/larevolutionproletarienne-n037.pdf

  • Alexandre Mairet (1880-1947)
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/alexandre-mairet-1880-1947


    ❝Né le 23 avril 1880 à La Tour-de-Peilz (canton de Vaud, Suisse), mort le 9 février 1947 à Genève. Peintre, graveur, illustrateur de périodiques anarchistes et communistes. #Alexandre_Mairet , #Louis_Bertoni
    #Archives_Autonomies #Le_Maitron_des_anarchistes #Alexandre_Mairet_
    https://maitron.fr/spip.php?article154186

  • En souvenir de l’anarchiste polonaise #Aniela_Wolberg
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/en-souvenir-de-l-anarchiste-polonaise-aniela-wolberg

    Article paru dans #Le_Combat_Syndicaliste n°236 daté du 26 novembre 1937. Le mouvement anarchiste en #Pologne a subi en ces jours une grande perte. Il a perdu une des camarades d’avant-garde. La camarade Aniela Wolberg n’est plus. Le nom d’Aniela fut, pour tous, synonyme de riche et charmante individualité, de camarade sincère et dévouée. Elle nacquit le 14 octobre 1907 de parents aisés ; dès sa première jeunesse, elle démontra une grande passion pour la vérité, la justice et une (...) Partages

    / Aniela Wolberg, Pologne, Le Combat Syndicaliste, Archives Autonomies

    #Partages_ #Archives_Autonomies_
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/le-combat-syndicaliste-ns-236.pdf

  • #Marie_Goldsmith
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/marie-goldsmith

    En novembre 1891, un étudiant, blanquiste et très révolutionnaire, Jules-Louis Breton, qui plus tard entra au Parlement, fit distribuer un manifeste pour appeler la jeunesse des écoles à fonder un groupe socialiste. On se réunit d’abord chez Breton, puis dans une bibliothèque fouriériste de la rue Mouffetard. Grâce à l’énergie du roumain, Georges Diamandy, le groupe se déclara internationaliste, ce qui écarta de lui un tas de jeunes radicaillons, vaguement socialisants et trop férus de politicaillerie. Grâce à la ténacité de Breton on ajouta au titre l’étiquette révolutionnaire. Et ainsi fut créé, en décembre 1891, le premier groupe socialiste d’étudiants, celui des étudiants socialistes révolutionnaires internationalistes de Paris (ESRI). #Plus_Loin_n°95_-_Mars_1933

    / Marie Goldsmith, Archives Autonomies , (...)

    #Archives_Autonomies_ #Plus_loin #ESRI #Pierre_Kropotkine #Jean_Grave #Les_Temps_nouveaux #Paul_Delesalle
    https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k817808
    https://archive.org/details/lindividuetlecom00grou/page/n1/mode/2up


    https://mariegoldsmith.uk
    https://www.partage-noir.fr/IMG/pdf/plusloin-n095.pdf

  • Une plongée dans les archives de l’architecte et militant Patrick Bouchain
    https://metropolitiques.eu/Une-plongee-dans-les-archives-de-l-architecte-et-militant-Patrick-Bo

    Que racontent les archives d’un #architecte ? À propos de la publication des archives de Patrick Bouchain, rassemblées et éditées par Abdelkader Damani, Victor Leroy s’interroge sur la portée de tels documents pour le public, les professionnels et pour l’histoire de l’architecture. L’ouvrage s’inscrit dans une petite histoire d’archiviste. L’histoire d’une rencontre entre un conservateur et un architecte, dont naît la donation des documents personnels de Patrick Bouchain et de son agence Construire au #Commentaires

    / architecte, #architecture, #archives_de_projet

    https://metropolitiques.eu/IMG/pdf/met-leroy.pdf

  • Lutte des berges de la Garonne et Union des Comités de Quartier | Collectif de Radiographie Urbaine
    https://toulouse.espacesensible.net/lutte-des-berges-de-la-garonne-et-union-des-comites-de-quar

    En juin 1974, Capitole information, annonce un projet de voies sur berges devant traverser le centre-ville entre Empalot et le port de l’embouchure en longeant par les quais de la Daurade et St pierre. Un comité de défense se constitue pour lutter contre ce projet et bien plus encore. Ce documentaire en deux parties raconte cette histoire avec les voix de personnes qui y ont participé. De la lutte contre une autoroute au centre-ville à la formation de l’Union des Comités de Quartier, c’est aussi la question du pouvoir urbain qui est traité en toile de fond. Durée : deux parties de 49 min. chacune. Source : Toulouse Espace (...)

  • La critique des espaces publics : quels projets de #paysage ?
    https://metropolitiques.eu/La-critique-des-espaces-publics-quels-projets-de-paysage.html

    Comment se transforme un #espace_public, au-delà des intentions de ses concepteurs ? Un ouvrage du paysagiste Denis Delbaere propose des outils critiques afin d’interroger, de manière concrète et située, la fabrique des espaces publics. Dans Altérations paysagères, Denis Delbaere élabore un cadre critique propre aux projets d’espaces publics qui repose sur la mécanique altérative (l’évolution d’un projet dans le temps). À ce titre, il puise dans ses 20 années d’expérience de paysagiste maître d’œuvre et #Commentaires

    / espace public, paysage, #projet_de_paysage, #altération, #démarche_réflexive, #processus_circulaire, archives de (...)

    #archives_de_projet

  • The Uganda files: How Israel arms brutal dictators who recruit child soldiers
    Eitay Mack | Dec. 24, 2021 | Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.HIGHLIGHT.MAGAZINE-uganda-docs-how-israel-arms-brutal-dictators-wh

    G en. Tito Okello, left, commander of Uganda’s army, in 1979. Went on to rule the country with an iron fist, and Israel’s help. Credit: AFP

    Newly declassified Israeli Foreign Ministry documents show that Jerusalem has aided and abetted brutal leaders and military forces in Uganda for years

    It was a startling declaration. After all, it’s not every day that the U.S. Treasury Department announces that two Israeli companies – in this case, NSO and Candiru – are to be placed on the list of entities operating contrary to America’s national interest. That exceptional decision, about a month ago, did not come about in a vacuum. Washington discovered that the two offensive-cyber firms sold foreign governments means of surveillance that were used against government officials as well as political activists, journalists and business people in those countries.

    Shedding some light on the details, the Reuters news agency reported that NSO’s Pegasus software had been used to hack into the phones of nine American diplomats who deal with matters related to Uganda. The report did not say who purchased the spyware from NSO, but everything points to the Ugandan dictator Yoweri Museveni. It’s doubtful that there are many other leaders who might be desperate enough to risk breaching the phones of American officials. Museveni, who believed that Washington was fed up with him and acted to overcome vote-rigging efforts prior to last January’s presidential election and to assist the opposition movement to topple him – apparently saw no other way out.

    Added to the information involving that episode are recently declassified documents from Israel’s State Archives, which illuminate the aid that Israel gave Ugandan dictators over the years. There’s a fixed pattern behind this support: First, Israel’s government helps the ruler in his effort to crush whatever forces are revolting against him, but then if the attempt to topple the government succeeds, Israel immediately changes sides and supports the new regime, with no regrets for the government with which it had cooperated earlier. Moreover, Israel typically extends such aid, in the form of diplomacy and arms, even when the regime’s brutal acts, the iron fist it wields against opponents and even its use of children in battle are well known.

    The pattern repeated itself with Museveni. The archival documents reveal that in July 1985, the commander of the Ugandan army, Gen. Tito Okello, who was then also ruling the country with a brutal hand, requested military aid from Israel to quell the rebel forces opposing him. The strongest and best organized of the rebel groups was the National Resistance Army, the NRA, which was led by Museveni. According to reports filed by Foreign Ministry officials, Israel decided to assist Okello to stamp out Museveni’s uprising, in exchange for formal renewal of diplomatic relations between the two countries, which had been severed by President Idi Amin in 1972.

    To conceal the quid pro quo behind the thaw in relations, the Foreign Ministry and the Defense Ministry used the services of former diplomat and ex-coordinator of government activities in Lebanon, Uri Lubrani, who was a private businessman at the time. Companies he had ties with carried out the transactions on behalf of the Defense Ministry, and Lubrani himself visited Uganda on several occasions in order to coordinate weapons shipments from Israel. The connection between Israel and Okello is reflected in cables and minutes from a number of meetings held around that time. In November 1985, for example, Gen. Okello’s son visited Israel; the following month, Lubrani, a representative of the Mossad and the commander of the Border Police visited Uganda; on January 10, 1986, Okello’s defense minister arrived in Israel for a visit.

    Lubrani explained the importance of the arms deliveries in a now-declassified report he drew up on January 19, 1986: “Indeed, we carried out (fortunately without these facts having been leaked to date) three special flights of chartered planes to send to Entebbe three shipments of combat material, which were apparently important to the regime both substantively and in terms of the timing, and this helped us pave the way toward advancing the effort to renew relations.”

    ‘No great bargain’

    Officials at the two Israeli ministries knew that Okello’s government was tottering and that Museveni stood a good chance of toppling it with support he was receiving from Libya. However, they believed that in any case, Museveni would not easily be able to reverse the diplomatic progress achieved between the two countries. In a cable dated November 22, 1985, the director of the Africa Desk in the Foreign Ministry wrote: “There is no stability since the coup, and the government is not in control of the whole country. The rest is controlled by the rebels, and their forces are more united… We are being guided by the view that the establishment of relations will also be binding on the future governments of Uganda, and therefore we have an interest in diplomatic ties despite the instability of the present government.”

    Additional cables show that from December 1985 until early January 1986, Israel sent three planes full of weapons and that in exchange Gen. Okello agreed that the two countries would appoint nonresident diplomatic representatives.

    On December 19, Museveni agreed to sign a cease-fire agreement – which in Okello’s assessment was due to the deterrence provided by the Israeli arms. However, the agreement soon collapsed and the fighting resumed. Israel, too, continued to be involved in the goings-on in the African country. On January 19, 1986, Arye Oded, Israel’s representative to Uganda, visited the capital, Kampala, and on January 22, Okello’s helicopters fired Israeli-supplied rockets at Museveni’s rebels, forcing them to withdraw from several positions they had captured.

    But the Israeli assistance was of no avail. On January 26, Museveni’s forces took Kampala, and Gen. Okello’s junta fled to the north of the country to continue the fight from there.

    From January 24, when the foreign and defense ministries realized that Museveni stood a good chance of victory, they decided to halt the arms shipments and rejected every subsequent request for aid from Okello – who had now morphed from ruler to rebel. According to a cable sent by Arye Oded on January 26, a shipment of 2,000 rockets, payment for which had apparently already been transferred to Israel, was halted. In a cable he had sent two days earlier, Oded had noted that these were rockets “of the type they purchased in the third shipment, and which have proved their effectiveness.” The cessation of arms deliveries at this critical moment not only diminished the military capability of Okello’s forces, it was also a severe blow to their morale.

    According to a cable sent by Avi Primor, director of the Foreign Ministry’s Africa Desk, four days after the conquest of Kampala and the consequent takeover by the new regime, a representative from Museveni was already in contact with the Israeli Embassy in Washington. The next day, Israeli representatives met with his envoys in Nairobi, and contacts between the sides began. Museveni’s representatives complained that Israel had armed Okello’s faction and had ignored their requests for aid – to which the Israelis replied that Israel supports governments, not rebels. Henceforth the Israeli Defense Ministry would back Museveni’s regime, and train and arm his military forces.

    As the cables in the state archives show, the foreign and defense ministries were well aware that Libya, under Muammar Gadhafi, was supporting the new regime of Museveni and that the latter was using child soldiers in battles his forces were fighting. For example, in late August 1986 the Israeli ambassador to Swaziland, Shlomo Dayan, alerted his colleagues to the fact that Uganda was mobilizing children for the military. He also sent the director of the Foreign Ministry’s Africa Desk an article about children who had been deployed as combat personnel in the NRA, “which you may find of interest.” Apparently the director didn’t agree.

    Israel also knew that forces under the new government had killed thousands and that Museveni had arrested government ministers and political rivals, executed dozens of jailed detainees and was working to establish a one-party regime. None of this brought a halt to bilateral contacts, nor did Museveni’s decision to approve the opening of a Palestine Liberation Organization office in Kampala, or the visit by Libyan ruler Gadhafi to Uganda in September 1986.

    In early September 1987, senior Foreign Ministry figures met with representatives of the U.S. State Department. In the meeting, the head of the department’s Bureau of African Affairs noted that though Museveni “is no great bargain, he is Uganda’s last chance to stand on its feet.”

    Museveni was definitely not a “great bargain,” but he quickly became a useful dictator in the eyes of Israel and the United States. If there’s anyone in the world who’s entitled to a pension from Israel’s Defense Ministry, it’s Museveni. Not least, because he helped Israel and the United States in their struggle against the Sudanese dictator Omar al-Bashir. Museveni also tried to promote Israeli and American interests in Rwanda, and in the Democratic Republic of the Congo he was instrumental in the rise to power of the Kabila family, which had extensive security and economic ties with the Jewish state and many of its businesspeople.

    When an independent state was established in South Sudan under Salva Kiir in 2011, sparking a civil war two years later, Israel sought a way to continue supporting the new regime, even though it had perpetrated crimes against humanity and was using child soldiers. Again Museveni came to the rescue and sent Kiir shipments of Israeli arms, in 2014. Israeli officials later told an investigative team from the United Nations Security Council that they had not known about this shipment, but made no effort to look into the matter and did not halt the deliveries to Museveni, despite the suspicion that he was sending them on.

    Two birds with one stone

    In the past year, Museveni has realized that his role as a useful dictator has ended. Despite the violence and rampant corruption characterizing his regime, Uganda has seen the rise of one of the most impressive and vibrant opposition movements in Africa, one that is sweeping many young Ugandans in its wake. It’s difficult today to support suppression of this opposition movement without incurring international wrath. In addition, geopolitical shifts have made Museveni less relevant from the perspective of the United States. Omar al-Bashir is gone, South Sudan is under a Security Council embargo and President Kiir has become a pariah.

    But the Israeli Defense Ministry never misses an opportunity: If indeed Israeli-developed offensive cyber technology was sold to Uganda, the export can be assumed to have had ministry authorization. That green light would have been given even though ministry officials knew that Museveni was fighting for his political life and had become embroiled in disputes with the United States. The government in Kampala even dared on January 16 of this year to prevent the U.S. ambassador to the country from visiting the leader of the opposition, Bobi Wine, while he was being held under house arrest. Last February, The New York Times reported that President Joe Biden had lost patience with Museveni and was considering imposing sanctions on him and others responsible in Uganda for election-related violence and infringement of democracy, in January.

    As has been reported in the past, Israel’s NSO company apparently does not balk at selling surveillance systems to regimes that have no red lines with regard to their citizenry. As long as those affected by Pegasus are civilians, the company seems not to be concerned – although now even it is appalled that its technology was used against U.S. diplomats.

    This is an excellent opportunity for the United States to kill two birds with one stone – without sentiment: NSO and Museveni. But in contrast to the legal entanglements plaguing the company and the dictator, justice will likely skip over the Israeli Defense Ministry once more. Undoubtedly at some point in the future the ministry will authorize the sale of yet another company’s malware to the next dictator who will follow Museveni.

    #archives_israéliennes #Ouganda #IsraelOuganda

  • 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.

  • La collection d’#affiches des #Archives_contestataires

    Nous présentons ici un choix d’affiches issues de la collection des Archives contestataires. Elle a été constituée au gré des versements d’archives reçus par notre association et compte aujourd’hui plus d’un millier de pièces. Une partie importante d’entre elle a été numérisée en 2020, avec le soutien financier de la Loterie romande.

    La description de ces affiches est en cours dans les #inventaires des fonds auxquels elles sont liées. Ces descriptions s’accompagnent de vignettes permettant de visualiser les affiches en petit format.

    six salles

    Après une introduction (https://expo.archivescontestataires.ch/affiches-contestataires-et-quotidien-militant), cette #exposition_virtuelle se déploie autour de six « salles » :

    La salle 1 – #Sérigraphie contre l’#impérialisme (https://expo.archivescontestataires.ch/affiches-contestataires-et-quotidien-militant/serigraphie-imperialisme) accorde une large place aux créations graphiques du #Collectif_du_Chant_continu, un groupe de graphistes proche du #Centre_de_liaison_politique.

    La salle 2 – Populariser la #grève (https://expo.archivescontestataires.ch/affiches-contestataires-et-quotidien-militant/populariser-la-greve) rassemble les affiches de soutien aux #grèves de la décennie 1970-1980.

    La salle 3 – Contester la course accélérée vers l’avenir (https://expo.archivescontestataires.ch/affiches-contestataires-et-quotidien-militant/progres-technique) présente les créations graphiques des groupes de quartier et des organisations #antinucléaires autour de la #contestation du #progrès technique et infrastructurel.

    La salle 4 – Des affiches pour une #Suisse_sans_armée (https://expo.archivescontestataires.ch/affiches-contestataires-et-quotidien-militant/affiches-sans-armee) nous plonge dans la campagne romande pour l’#Initiative_pour_une_Suisse_sans_armées (1989) et l’affaire des #fiches.

    La salle 5 – L’affiche en État d’urgences (https://expo.archivescontestataires.ch/affiches-contestataires-et-quotidien-militant/des-affiches-en-etat-durgence) réunit, des affiches contre-culturelles issues du fonds éponyme.

    Enfin, une « salle » est consacrée aux #curiosa (https://expo.archivescontestataires.ch/affiches-contestataires-et-quotidien-militant/curiosa), ces documents inclassables, aux formes étranges ou aux fonctions incertaines.

    https://expo.archivescontestataires.ch/accueil

    #exposition_virtuelle #expo #numérisation #archive #histoire #fichage #contre-culture #Etat_d'urgences #posters #poster

    via @wizo

    ping @reka

  • Radio JAL, les échos d’une lutte en milieu rural
    https://www.franceculture.fr/emissions/lexperience/radio-jal-les-echos-dune-lutte-en-milieu-rural


    Dans les années 1970, une caravane et un émetteur au bord d’un champ ont diffusé les paroles d’habitant.e.s de trois villages de l’Est du Québec menacés de fermeture par le gouvernement. C’est toute l’histoire d’un mouvement social qui résonne dans Radio JAL. Mathilde Simon retrouve les bobines.

    Lors d’un voyage au Québec en 2019, Mathilde Simon apprend l’existence de cette #radio-mobile. Elle aurait émis de 1977 à 1980 depuis le rang Saint-Grégoire, chemin rural, situé à Auclair. Le but de ce séjour devient évident : retrouver les bobines ! Elle finira par les récupérer fraîchement numérisées au sous-sol du Centre d’archives du Témiscouata. La totalité des enregistrements restaurés représente plus de 73 heures d’archives. Il va s’en dire que le montage réalisé ne constitue qu’un fragment de ce qu’a été cette aventure radiophonique.

    https://histoiresdujal.com/projet-jal
    Mixage : Bruno Mourlan
    Réalisation : Gilles Mardirossian
    Une création sonore de Mathilde Simon

    diffusée ce soir à 22h sur francecul
    #archives_radiophoniques #territoires #émancipation

  • Le terrible bilan de deux mois de violences policières
    19 janvier 2019 / Émilie Massemin (Reporterre)
    https://reporterre.net/Le-terrible-bilan-de-deux-mois-de-violences-policieres

    Depuis le début de la mobilisation Gilets jaunes, plusieurs recensements font état d’au moins 97 blessés graves par les armes de la police, dont quatre ont eu la main arrachée et au moins quatorze ont perdu un oeil. La faute aux lanceurs de balle de défense, aux grenades GLI-F4 et à une doctrine de maintien de l’ordre ultraviolente.

    #maintien_de_l'ordre #violencespolicières

  • L’#histoire à l’heure du #Big_Data - Sciences | ARTE
    https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/RC-015617/l-histoire-a-l-heure-du-big-data

    Au croisement de l’histoire et des nouvelles technologies, la #Venice_Time_Machine est un projet ambitieux de numérisation des 10 siècles d’archives accumulées par le puissant Etat Vénitien. Des scientifiques de l’#EPFL à Lausanne et de l’#université_Ca’Foscari de #Venise travaillent ensemble à l’élaboration d’un outil numérique inédit qui fera renaître sous nos yeux la Venise du passé.

    #archives #tomographie #systèmes_d'information_géographique #mégadonnées