News at
Tuesday's Child
Nurit Peled Elhanan
A year after the Gaza War -
Speech at the protest rally
Tel Aviv, January 2, 2010
(translated by Adam Keller)
Good evening to all who came
to mark the first anniversary of the Gaza carnage, and to protest on the
comfortable complacence which inhabitants of this city and this country
exhibit in face of the slow annihilation which goes on and on in Gaza and
throughout Palestine.
Had Israeli preschoolers been
asked "What did you learn at school this year, dear little boy of mine?"
there are all kinds of answers which we might have gotten. An enlightened
and critical child might have answered: I learned that the sun is still
shining, and the almond tree is blooming, and the butcher butchers, and there
is nobody to judge him.{1}
And the child who is less used
to theorizing might rejoice and say: I learned how to cheat Americans, deceive
Palestinians, to kill Arabs, to expel families from their homes, and to curse
whoever tells me that I am a nasty brat when I have been a nasty brat. And I
learned that the Jewish People lives and that Gilad Shalit also lives. Still.
{2}
And the new immigrant boy, who
terribly longs to integrate and belong, might say: I learned whom to hate, I
learned who needs to be killed and who should be spat upon, and I am ever ready
for the task, whenever you call upon me.
Smadar Elhanan
The Religious-Zionist child,
who attends the fenced and well-guarded kindergarten in the settlement, might
say: I learned to be a good Zionist, to love the Land, to die and kill for its
sake, to expel from it the invaders, to kill their children, to destroy their
homes, and never to forget that in each and every generation the persecutors
arise to annihilate us and that all gentiles are the same and that they are all
antisemites who must be annihilated. And the most important is that the sun is
still shining, and the almond tree is still blooming, and soon we will go
planting all over the mountains Samaria and Judea and guard well the saplings
against the herd of sheep which invaded our country in the two thousand years
that we have not been here to guard it.
In the past year our children
have learned that to kill a non-Jew, of whatever age, is a great commandment.
This they learned not only from the rabbis, but also from the soldiers who
ceaselessly boast of what they have done. This was expressed well by Damian
Kirilik, when the police arrested him and charged him with murdering the entire
Oshrenko Family. {3} Quite coolly he asked the police investigators: why
are you making such a fuss over the killing of children? Damian Kirilik is a
new immigrant who does not understand the nuances and sophistry of the rabbis'
command to kill gentile children. But this assassin from the outside quickly
got the general idea - that he had arrived at a place where the murder of
children is taken very lightly.
Our children have learned this
year that all the disgusting qualities which antisemites attribute to Jews are
actually manifested among our leaders: deceit and deception, greed and the
murder of children. While accused of trading in transplanted organs, the
unperturbed Government of Israel is engaged in trading in whole humans –
for the time being. It can be conjectured that for many years to come, when
many cars would bear the bumper sticker "Gil'ad - born to be free"
{4}, the captains of the pirate ship known as Israel will continue their
scheming and still haggle over how many kilograms of Jewish flesh, which is
probably shrinking, could be traded for how much Palestinian flesh which is also
not all that it used to be, as we learned from the news item about theft of
skin and corneas at the Abu Kabir Forensic Center {5}. And they will continue
to kill in Gil'ad's name and starve and suffocate in Gil'ad's name and to
annihilate the Palestinian people slowly but surely, and on the way encourage
the flourishing of the Palestinian bad "weeds"{6} that always
legitimize the ongoing killing .
Nurit and Smadar
As in every rotten and corrupt
society, the word "values" recurs again and again in every speech of
every politician, especially the wanted ones. The values of Zionism and the
values of Judaism and the values of the IDF. The values of Zionism we have seen
this year in their full glory at the expulsion of families out of their homes
in Sheikh Jarrah. The values of Democracy and the Rule of Law are expressed in
Palestinians who are suspected of a violent act being extrajudicially
assassinated in their homes, in front of their children, while Jewish
terrorists enjoy to the full the amenities of the judicial system.
That is what our children
learn in the Jewish democratic state. Therefore, one can wonder at the supposed
shock expressed in face of violence in schools and nightclubs, in streets and
on the roads. After all, this violence is nothing but practicing the values of
the IDF, a course of basic training towards the activities and operations
waiting for these youths on their horizon. This is these youths' way of showing
that they have learned something from their parents and elder brothers, from
their teachers and guides. The only problem which apparently disturbs the
educational and law enforcement authorities is that there are no Palestinians
in the Jewish schools and the Jewish night clubs and the Jewish streets. For
lack of them, the young Jews direct their violence at each other – and
that should not happen, a Jew should not harm another Jew. Violence should be
disciplined and regulated, guided by blind obedience to the racial laws,
directed only and solely at those who are not Jewish.
And we who demonstrate every
week, every month, at every carnage, at every anniversary of a carnage –
what is our power? Nothing. Bereavement and failure is our lot in this country.
Last Thursday we all stood at the gates of Gaza, disciplined and obedient to
the conditions of the police permit, happy to see each other and find out that
we are still alive and chanted slogans loudly at an audience of robot-like
police and soldiers, totally incapable of comprehending what we had to say. But
we did not pull down the wall. We did not succeed in saving even one child from
the plague of meningitis which infests Gaza for several months already.
What shall we do with our
impotence and failure? What is left to be done about an educational system
which demands of its graduates a total identification with Jewish guerilla fighters who were before 1948 executed
by the British on charges of terrorism – and at the very same time a
total identification with their executioners? To identify with the victims of
Auschwitz, and at the same to behave with cruel indifference to the suffering
of anyone who is not a member of our race? What can peace seekers do in a
country which is run by the army, whose schools are infested with war criminals
coming to instill their teachings, where pupils are obliged to experience a
week in the pre-military Gadna (Youth Squads) and listen to heroic tales by the
criminals of the Gaza carnage, on whom all possible psychological and social
and educational means are applied to make them part of the killing
machine?
These are our sons and daughters
– and we have no access to the system which guides their lives. Where is
there space left for us to instill in them one or two of our own values? What
values of beauty and goodness can we squeeze into such a sophisticated apparatus
of brainwashing and reality distortion?
It seems that the only value
which we still have the power and means to instill is the value of refusal. To
learn to say no. To teach our children who have not been poisoned yet to resist
the brainwashing, to reject the viruses with which their brains are being
injected. It is a hard and sysiphic task, but it is the only way of reasserting
our humanity. To say no to evil, no to deceit and deception, no to trade in
human beings, no the racism which is spreading over here like wildfire, a
racism which does not stop at the Kalandia Checkpoint nor at the Erez
Checkpoint but spreads like cancer to the shameful immigrant absorption
centers, to the schools which proclaim integration and practice segregation, to
all cultures and all beliefs in this country. If we don’t learn to refuse and
reject evil, to refuse the evil laws and regulations, we will find ourselves
refusing and rejecting ourselves, our inmost truth. We must refuse to feel
ourselves an extinct minority, refuse the fear and apprehension – and the
alienation - which are imposed on us, refuse to be accomplices. Only refusal
can save us from surrender, from bankruptcy, from despair. We stand here today
as an alien and alienated minority, hated and persecuted. But together with our
peace-seeking friends beyond the Wall, beyond the barbed wires, we might become
a majority. Only the refusal to surrender to walls and checkpoints can open the
gates of our ghetto so that we could pull down the walls of their ghetto. To
see at last that there is an outside world, that there are regions around which
the Jewish National Fund had not destroyed. That there is a culture and there
are people whom it is worth living to meet, to know and make friends with, to
learn from them about this place where we live as resident aliens and remember
that this place can be a place of surpassing beauty. {7}
Notes of the translator
{1} A reference to Bialik's famous poem on the 1903
Kishinev Pogrom.
{2} "Am Yisrael Hai" ("the Jewish People
lives") – a traditional saying, often invoked in a nationalist
context.
{3)
www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1256799068438&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull (link broken)
{4} The slogan "Ron Arad - born to be free" refers
to captured Israeli pilot Ron Arad, for whose release the government in the
1990's refused to release Palestinian and Lebanese prisoners, and who is widely
considered to be irretrievably lost.
{5} See www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/dec/21/israeli-pathologists-harvested-organs
{6}Settler leaders dissociate themselves from extreme acts of
violence against Palestinians, defining the perpetrators as "the weeds in
our garden".
{7} The Hebrew term used, "Yefe Nof", is
taken from the poem of longing for Jerusalem written by the Medieval Spanish
Jewish poet Yehuda HaLevi: "O Abode of Surpassing Beauty/Joy of the Entire
Earth…"
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