Israel: Prussia on the Mediterranean?
by Roane Carey
www.commondreams.org/, May 28,
2009
It is an assumption almost universally
acknowledged among the liberal American intelligentsia that while
the Israeli occupation is repressive and abhorrent, Israel itself
is an open, fully democratic state with a lively, argumentative
and very free press.
Perish the thought. After spending three
months in Israel on a fellowship, I can say that nearly every
member of the liberal Israeli intelligentsia I've talked to says
something quite different: that their country's media are seriously
diseased, failing to provide the minimal level of fair reporting
and serious critical inquiry that are crucial pillars of an open
society.
Americans who don't read Hebrew or watch
Israeli television news may get a skewed view of the spectrum,
assuming that Ha'aretz, the smaller-circulation daily read mostly
by intellectuals and the political classes--and foreigners, who
devour its English-language edition online--is representative,
and that critical columnists and reporters like Gideon Levy, Akiva
Eldar and Amira Hass are sprinkled throughout the Israeli media.
It isn't, and they aren't. The larger-circulation dailies Yediot
and Ma'ariv, as well as the Jerusalem Post and television news,
are tilted much more to the right--just like the mainstream US
media, which certainly have nothing to teach Israel in this regard.
And as for being an open, fully democratic
state, most people I talk to speak of a chilling of dissent in
recent years, running in parallel with the election of increasingly
right-wing governments. The nadir came during the recent Gaza
"war." I've seen a microcosm of this myself here in
Beer-Sheva, at Ben-Gurion University. A few days ago, Noah Slor,
who is in the graduate program in BGU's department of Middle Eastern
studies, was arrested by police at the request of campus security
and detained for several hours for quietly handing out leaflets
opposing a bill now before the Knesset that would make it a criminal
offense to commemorate Nakba Day (the day in May when Palestinians
mourn the catastrophe of their dispossession and expulsion, which
for Jews is a celebration of independence). She was doing this
in a spot right outside the main campus gate, where students traditionally
hand out everything from party announcements to information about
political rallies, with never a bother from security.
Student activists and professors attest
to a pattern of politically motivated harassment by campus security.
Indeed, Slor, an activist with Darom le Shalom (the South for
Peace), a recently formed group of Arabs and Jews in the Beer-Sheva
area who "struggle against racism and for equality and coexistence
between Arabs and Jews," told me that at the time of her
arrest, a security officer told her, "Listen, don't pretend
you're so naïve--I've seen you in past demonstrations. Everything
is recorded and written, everything is documented." She can't
prove it, but she's convinced security went after her because
she was protesting the Nakba Day legislation; "that was the
subtext," she told me.
The students were not going to take this
sitting down. That same night, about sixty or so held a demonstration
protesting the arrest, gathering at a university ceremony attended
by the board of governors and other dignitaries. The students
put masking tape over their mouths and held up signs saying "The
Security Department Runs the University" and "Security
Department = Secret Police." (In a response to questions
about the incident, university spokesperson Amir Rozenblit said
students are not allowed to distribute fliers on campus--why in
the world not?--and that Noah was handing them out "in an
area considered part of the campus"--even though it was outside
the main gate. He also claimed one security guard was detained
as well as Noah.)
The stifling of dissent was pervasive
during the Gaza campaign. Nitza Berkovitch, a BGU sociologist,
said, "I think the media was completely and truly mobilized.
There was complete support of the war." A few days after
the start of the war, in late December, a group of Arab and Jewish
students held a peaceful demo against it. The police soon arrived
and demanded that they disperse. They agreed, but as they were
folding their signs, several were tackled by police, dragged to
cars and held for hours, accused of "rioting." There
was another demonstration in mid-January, this one even more moderate,
with people holding signs calling for peace and an end to violence
on both sides. Again, the same thing happened: dozens of police
arrived and roughed up the crowd, arresting several. One BGU student,
Ran Tzoref, was put under house arrest for a month.
Harsh repression of Palestinian citizens
is a deeply engrained practice in Israel. Recent incidents indicate
there may be a loosening of constraint on repression of Jewish
dissent as well. Hundreds of Israelis were arrested for protesting
the Gaza campaign, probably most of them Palestinian but many
Jewish as well. Tzoref told me, "I was in protests in the
occupied territories, and they acted the same here. For me it
was shocking that riot police came to the university and attacked
us. This was never done before, not on this scale." Berkovitch
said, "It was like I was in a South American dictatorship.
It was as if an arbitrary order had been given nationwide that
a certain number of people needed to be arrested--it was a simple
matter of intimidation."
Certainly the Gaza campaign brought out
the worst in the apparatus of repression, which was fueled by
a public mood of vengeance and hatred of Palestinians, which was
itself heightened by the Hamas rocket barrages. (Berkovitch told
me that many passers-by at the January demonstration shouted abuses
at the protesters, calling them traitors and saying things like
"Jews should kill more Arabs." "So much hatred
I've never encountered in my life," she said.) The trend
is worrying, but it should be emphasized that in general, Israeli
Jews, unlike Palestinians, still enjoy a remarkable degree of
freedom to speak out on almost any issue.
With a far-right government that is not
only determined to avoid serious negotiations with the Palestinians
but is actively promoting settlement growth; that shows all the
signs of preparing for war against Iran and is actively stoking
public paranoia on that front; that increasingly sees Palestinian
citizens as a menace, as the enemy within, the contradictions
of a nation that claims to be both Jewish and democratic are fraying.
How can a state that imprisons 4 million Palestinians behind ghetto
walls, bypass roads and a blockade, and treats another 1.5 million
as second-class citizens, be democratic? BGU geography professor
Oren Yiftachel calls Israel an ethnocracy (the title of a recent
book of his); the late Hebrew University sociologist Baruch Kimmerling
called it a "Herrenvolk democracy." Whatever you call
it, if Israel continues along its current path, the repression
will necessarily intensify, and the avenues for free expression
will become ever more constricted. The old joke about Prussia
was that it was an army masquerading as a state. Is Israel destined
to become Prussia on the Mediterranean?
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