| The conscience of honest Israelis |
“The question we have to ask ourselves is this: If anybody treated us like we’re treating the people in Gaza, what would we do? We don’t want to go there, do we? And because we don’t, we make it our business not to see, hear or think about how, indeed, we are treating the people in Gaza. All these shocked dignitaries, all these reports, these details, these numbers—thousands of destroyed this and tens of thousands of destroyed that, rubble, sewage, malnutrition, crying babies, humanitarian crises—who can keep up? Who cares? They did it to themselves. Where to for lunch? |
It was a decade framed by a fundamentalist Palestinian belief in salvation through suicide and a fundamentalist Israeli belief in salvation through brutality. The decade ends as it began, clueless, hopeless, exhausted. For having lived through this, we are, all of us, somehow much more than ten years older, yet none the wiser…The effect of this siege has been to focus and intensify Palestinian anger against Israel…In the eyes of the world community, the overwhelming collective punishment—and the relative silence of Israelis in response—has gutted Israel’s claim to the moral high ground…The fact that the siege has failed so completely in achieving its stated aims reinforces the impression that its real purpose is punitive…The siege corrupts the moral values of all Israelis, who, whether or not they are aware of what is being done to the people of Gaza, bear ultimate responsibility for all acts being carried out in their name.” (Israel’s 10 Worst Errors of the Decade, Jan. 6, 2010) |
Israeli Jews’ consciousness is characterized by a sense of victimization, a siege mentality, blind patriotism, belligerence, self-righteousness, dehumanization of the Palestinians and insensitivity to their sufferings…the public practices self-censorship and accepts the establishment version, out of an unwillingness to open up to all alternative information—they don’t want to be confused with the facts. We are a nation that lives in the past, suffused with anxiety and suffering from chronic closed-mindedness. (Is an Israeli Jewish sense of victimization perpetuating the conflict with Palestinians?, Jan. 30, 2009) |
Wednesday was international Holocaust Remembrance Day, and an Israeli public relations drive like this hasn’t been seen for ages…It won’t help much. International Holocaust Remembrance Day has passed, the speeches will soon be forgotten and the depressing everyday reality will remain. Israel will not come out looking good, even after the PR campaign….Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke at Yad Vashem. ‘There is evil in the world,’ he said. ‘Evil must be stamped out at the beginning.’” |
The decades-old ability of Zionist groups to manage the public narrative of Israeli victimhood is breaking down. Damning [Israel's] critics has therefore become a key method of control. |