Showing posts with label Yom Ha'atzma'ut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yom Ha'atzma'ut. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

17-Apr-18: Remembering and redeeming [VIDEO]

Exactly three years ago, Arnold Roth was a keynote speaker at the Toronto Jewish community's commemoration of Israel's 67th Independence Day (Yom Ha'atzmaut) and the day that precedes it each year - Yom Hazikaron, Israel's national Memorial Day.

In that April 2015 speech, Arnold reflected on what some consider the strangeness of a day of deep sadness being bracketed closely with national jubilation.

His speech, under the title Remembrance and Redemption, is the subject of the video embedded below.


In it, he touches on the song that Malki, our murdered daughter, composed in the last year of her life: several versions of it, all freely downloadable, are here, along with some of the background to its creation and aftermath.

He also shared aspects of a not-so-pleasant experience - as Israel's representative - addressing an international conference on terror and its victims, convened in New York City by the Secretary General of the United Nations in 2008. (A Haaretz report of that conference and of Arnold's speech is here.) That speech is the source of the audio track accompanying a short introductory film clip that was shown to the audience in Toronto and which takes up the first 4m 20s of the YouTube video clip.

[Sincere thanks to Mizrachi Canada for their permission to show this selection from their longer video recording (online here) of a memorable night of communal introspection and celebration.]

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

10-May-16: Stopping to remember

A country stops to remember [Image Source]
Tonight (Tuesday) here in Israel, sunset marks the start of an extraordinary period of 48 hours.

An entire country first stops, remembers and mourns collectively and individually the thousands of lives taken from us in the several wars and many terror attacks that have for generations – starting long before Israel came into existence as a separate country - characterized the extreme animosity expressed towards us by the surrounding Arab states.

That’s Yom Hazikaron, Israel's national Memorial Day.

Then, barely pausing for breath, the mood changes dramatically as the sun sets Wednesday evening and we go straight into a day of national joy” Israel's 68th Independence Day, starting Wednesday night.

Last year at exactly this time, Arnold Roth was an invited keynote speaker at Toronto's community-wide commemoration of Israel’s national days. After participating, we can say that Toronto does a really fine job: a formal occasion, very well attended, and marked by full-hearted solemnity and celebration. It felt a tremendous privilege to take a role.

In his speech, Arnold reflected on what some consider the strangeness of a day of deep sadness being bracketed closely with national jubilation. His speech, under the title Remembrance and Redemption, is the subject of the video embedded below. In it, he touches on the song that Malki, our murdered daughter, composed in the last year of her life: several versions of it, all freely downloadable, are here, along with some of the background to its creation and aftermath.

He also shared aspects of a not-so-pleasant experience - as Israel's representative - addressing an international conference on terror and its victims, convened in New York City by the Secretary General of the United Nations in 2008. (A Haaretz report of that conference and of Arnold Roth's speech is here.) That speech is the source of the audio track accompanying a short introductory film clip that was shown to the audience in Toronto and which takes up the first 4m 20s of the YouTube video below.


This video was first published a year ago on the blog of the Malki Foundation, a really fine charity worthy of your attention and support. (Full disclosure: we are among its founders. Our roles - Frimet's and Arnold's - are honorary. From its inception, the foundation has always had a top-notch, but tiny, professional management team which does a great job.)

To put some concrete data around the pain that Israelis will be remembering tonight and tomorrow, the official military data (via Ministry of Defenserefer to 16,307 bereaved families: 9,442 bereaved parents, 4,917 widows and 1,948 orphans (below the age of 30). Soldiers who fell from 1860 to May 6, 2016 number 23,447. More than one-and-a-half million people will be visiting some 52 military cemeteries across Israel tomorrow.

The first official memorial events will begin shortly after the first siren blast this evening (Tuesday, May 10 at 8:00 pm. There will be a two-minute-long siren tomorrow (Wednesday, May 11) at 11:00 am, when anyone who cares to look will be able to observe that remarkable sight of highways throughout the entire country stopping to flow, pedestrians standing with heads bowed, a nationwide hush in the midst of a bright, sunny, warm and busy day in a Middle Eastern country that has not forgotten to honor those who have paid the ultimate sacrifice.

Friday, May 02, 2014

02-May-14: A special place

The next few days are an especially tumultuous time in Israel.

Life throughout the country will come to a solemn halt as we usher in Yom Hazikaron, Memorial Day, on Sunday night. The day that follows will be marked by intense remembrances at ceremonies throughout the country and via radio and television, recalling thousands of lives of service personnel and ordinary citizens lost in the almost seven decades of Israel's revival as a free nation and its ongoing struggle to defend itself against determined enemies.

And then Monday night - a complete change of mood as the sadness of retrospection gives way to the joy of celebrating Israel's 66th birthday, Yom Ha'atzma'ut, Independence Day.

The Australian Jewish News invited Arnold Roth to write a contribution to its Independence Day supplement. They asked to know about our hopes and expectations in making aliyah. How has the
reality of Israeli life been for us in light of the events and changes of the past 25+ years. Here's one not-so-small measure of how great those changes have been: Israel's population in 1989 when we celebrated our first Independence Day was 4.6 million. It stands this year at 8.2 million.

Here's a version of what the AJN published in this week's edition.

Dependence and independence
Arnold Roth

This month, my family and I celebrate the 25th anniversary of our first Israel Independence Day as olim, immigrants who went up to the Land.

Most of us tend to think of ourselves as unchanging over time, the same old me inside, while the world around us evolves. The reality of course is that with the passage of years, the person we are, the life we live, changes. Beyond the physical aspects, we adapt to the circumstances of our lives.

In preparing to respond to the AJN’s invitation to write for the Yom Ha’atzma’ut supplement, I looked back at letters to and from Australia during our first year in Jerusalem. Some of the issues I encountered in that 1989 correspondence surprised the 2014 edition of who I am.
Independence Day 1989 on our terrace

Many Australian olim will know that when Israeli-born Israelis hear where we came from, much of the time this elicits a clichéd response: why did you leave there? Why would anyone leave?

But we, as a young family, four children under the age of 10 when we moved from Caulfield to Jerusalem, knew why we were leaving and where we were going. We had only the vaguest of senses about what to actually expect, but life can be like that even when you remain rooted in the town of your birth.

Frimet, my wife, no longer remembers this (she says) but on the very first date we had in New York City where I pursued post-graduate studies, she asked me how I felt about making aliyah. Turns out it was a powerful issue in her life as well as in mine. Our outlooks were closely aligned on this and on many of the other key issues we have faced. Each of us felt, and still feels, that living a life illuminated by the peoplehood, the religion, the ethical values, the collective history of being Jewish was best done in the Jewish people’s historical home. Being able to make the decision to do this was a privilege available to us. Not to take the opportunity when it was offered and accessible was unthinkable.

With all the momentous changes we experienced and saw, it bears mentioning that in 1988 when we arrived, the swamps had been drained. Tel Aviv had a working airport with incoming and outgoing flights to almost everywhere. Electricity and phone services were obtainable for the asking. Toilet paper and baby nappies were nearly as good as in other countries, and you could read the daily news in English if you wanted.

None of this means the process of adjusting to a very different environment was simple. But the challenges came with major compensations.

My letters to family remind me of how pleased we were with the adjustments our children made to the school system and to the language. Getting them a good Jewish education where both Torah and Jewishness received solid attention was at the top of our wish list. Once we completed the not-so-smooth process of finding schools and enrolling them, the initial indicators were promising, and in the course of the next two decades the promise was by and large fulfilled.

The children found friends quickly, and so did we. They of course became completely and quickly fluent in the language that surrounded them at school, in the streets and on the buses. Less predictable was their connection with their native language and their ability and desire to keep reading and writing in it. Here, we made a principled decision right at the beginning that paid real dividends: the children had to speak English at home, with us and with each other. And we would keep them supplied with English-language books and magazines. In the Israel of 2014, as much as if not more than twenty-five years ago, a mastery of English is a key component to succeeding in the workplace and in academia.

Our oldest son, a primary school student at Melbourne’s Yavneh College before we brought him to Israel, and blessed with curiosity and a nimble mind, went directly into grade 6 in a notoriously demanding Religious Zionist school in Jerusalem. Barely three months into the experience, his class teacher phoned and asked to meet with us. It’s a discussion that remains vivid for me: your son, a lovely boy, needs to find a different school and we want to help you in that search, nothing personal. The teacher himself, it turned out, was in his first year – both at the school and in teaching and our son was evidently the first student he had encountered who was new to the Hebrew language. We were alarmed by the paternalizing tone and the presumption that a child barely into his first semester in a system very different from the one in which he had been raised ought to be shown the door if, as it seemed to the educator, his language skills were not up to scratch.

Thinking back on it now, I realize this was a learning moment for us. We knew the teacher was right about our son’s language gaps, and totally wrong about the chances of him overcoming the hurdles and adjusting. We pushed back, insisting that we and he would do what it took to improve his Hebrew skills, and while it was good to know help was available if we wanted to find him a new school, we were perfectly happy to leave him where he was. That son has gone on to develop a fine academic career in medieval Jewish history and Halachic thought. The teacher remained at the elementary school, and my wife and I have continued to hone our push-back skills.

Still in our first year but a few months later, we piled everyone into the family car and visited a museum located on the campus of Tel Aviv University. Engrossed in what we saw, neither my wife nor I noticed when the older of our two daughters, then just 4, slipped away. Our search was anxious and worrying, then urgent, and then seriously, traumatically stressful: she was nowhere to be found and the campus seemed huge. Then someone told us she had been spotted by a guard at one of the gates who was looking after her and waiting for us to walk over. The relief we both felt as we hugged and kissed her was enormous. Recalling it now is unspeakably painful because just a few years later, by then an accomplished and delightful fifteen year-old, she was murdered in a Hamas terror attack on a pizza shop in the centre of Jerusalem.

Anyone who knows anything about life in Israel is aware of how two of the most intense days in the public calendar follow one after the other, stitching together two utterly different experiences that drag an entire population from one end of the emotional spectrum to the other with barely a moment in between. If there is another place on earth apart from Israel that tries to do this, I don’t know of it.

For two minutes, the life of an entire busy country comes
to a standstill: Israel's Memorial Day [Image Source: Haaretz]
Unless you have spent those two days, Memorial Day and Independence Day (Yom Hazikaron, Yom Ha’atzma’ut), in Israel, you might not be aware of the central role television plays in both.

While many Israelis – many more than you might think – visit cemeteries and memorials, and attend local and central memorial services, even more of them allow television to bring the message of the day into their homes. Throughout the somber day of remembering lives lost in the struggle to establish and then preserve a Jewish state, some of the most moving video programmes of the entire year are shown, round the clock. Even the programming broadcast by the made-in-Israel cable stations reflects that thoughtful, heavy mood.

Then the sun sets, marking the end of that day’s remembrances, and it all changes completely, giving way to fireworks, lively music, campfires and parties; boisterous, noisy celebration. Then the following day – the smell of burnt meat as an entire country, gathered in family groups and broader social settings, embraces the tradition of the mangal, known outside Israel as barbecue.

Before lunch, during those Yom Ha’atzma’ut morning hours, a vast part of the Israeli population tunes their televisions to the Independence Day final round of the International Bible Quiz. It’s astonishing really: a modern, technology-obsessed country, living with day-to-day threats to its borders and its buses, taking time out to watch questions about Biblical verses and personalities being fielded by eager competitors from all over the world.

For years, it was incomprehensible to me that a community of millions of people could shift gear in this way: engrossed in tragedy on a human scale, family by family, victim by victim, and then – in a heartbeat – embracing collective happiness and achievement, sharing joy, celebrating life and survival and attainment.

A year ago, my family and I found ourselves at the focus of this national schizophrenia. The central ceremony that sets the tone for Memorial Day begins simultaneously in two places: the Kotel, and the plaza of the Knesset, the parliament building in Jerusalem. Both events go to air on virtually all the television and radio channels. So the audience is huge, an entire nation watching and listening.

Roth family members at Yom Hazikaron memorial event in the Knesset plaza,
a year ago - April 2013
In April 2013, we were seated in the front row of the ceremony site at the Knesset as a handful of extremely moving video clips and performances honored the lives of a selection of young Israelis who died Al Kiddush Hashem, in Sanctification of the Name.

The video that told, briefly, the story of our daughter Malki’s beautiful life and of the good workdone in her name on behalf of children with special needs was seen by millions. [It’s online here.]

By now, we have come to learn how well that sharp cross-over from mourning to celebrating reflects the essence of Jewish history and Jewish life. It’s a lesson I wish we had never had to learn. But having come to understand that process – and what it says about our people – a little better now, I am proud that we possess a response that is relevant to both the tragic and the transcendent.

As a people, we know there are moments when our thoughts are sharply focused on the individual, and others when we celebrate being together. Israel, not a paradise but certainly a special place, embodies this. 

Monday, April 29, 2013

29-April-13: Connecting a stolen life to constructive and meaningful actions (VIDEO)

Two weeks ago, Israel passed through two of the most intense and momentous days in its national calendar.  Yom Hazikaron (in English: Remembrance Day, or more formally "Day of Remembrance for the Fallen Soldiers of Israel and Victims of Terrorism") is Israel's official Memorial Day, followed immediately afterwards by Israel's Independence Day, Yom Ha'atzma'ut. This year, Israel celebrated the 65th anniversary of its hard-won independence.

We wrote (see "14-Apr-13: In tonight's official commemoration of Memorial Day, a focus on the life of one girl and what is being done in her name") on the eve of Yom Hazikaron that
An evening of song in memory of Israel's Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terror will be broadcast live from the Knesset on Israel television's Channel 1. The event is produced jointly by the Knesset, the Department of Families and Memorial at the Ministry of Defense, and the Department of Terror Victims at the National Insurance Institute (Bituach Leumi), entities operating throughout the year for the deceased and their families. An annual event, the theme of this year's ceremony is "In their Deaths, they Bequeathed Us", focusing on unique individuals and the organizations set up in their memory. Keren Malki, and the special life of Malki z"l, are amongst a select few to be featured this evening. 
We  now have a video clip that shows what the large by-invitation-only crowd, assembled in the forecourt of the Knesset, Israel's parliament, saw that night, and that was broadcast at the same time on Israel TV's Channel One.


The video (hosted on Vimeo) starts with the last minute of a musical performance; the video tribute to the Malki Foundation and to Malki begins at about 1m 05s into the clip. The people you see speaking here are the authors of This Ongoing War.

There's more background about the work of Keren Malki at www.malkifoundation.org; we hope you will take a moment to visit the site.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

14-Apr-13: In tonight's official commemoration of Memorial Day, a focus on the life of one girl and what is being done in her name

Makor Rishon [Click to view]
The executive team at the Malki Foundation, an organization with whose founding we were involved, sent the message below out to its supporters this afternoon. We felt some of our blog readers might want to know about it.
Keren Malki to be featured this evening as part of the official Yom Hazikaron (Remembrance Day) ceremonies 
An evening of song in memory of Israel's Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terror will be broadcast live from the Knesset on Israel television's Channel 1. The event is produced jointly by the Knesset, the Department of Families and Memorial at the Ministry of Defense, and the Department of Terror Victims at the National Insurance Institute (Bituach Leumi), entities operating throughout the year for the deceased and their families.

An annual event, the theme of this year's ceremony is "In their death, they bequeathed us", focusing on unique individuals and the organizations set up in their memory. Keren Malki, and the special life of Malki z"l, are amongst a select few to be featured this evening.

The ceremony will take place in the presence of Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein, Minister of Defense Lt. Gen. (ret.) Moshe Ya'alon, Minister of Welfare and Social Services Meir Cohen, Deputy Chief of Staff Maj. Gen. Gadi Eisencott, Police Commissioner Lt. General Yohanan Danino, and other representatives.

The ceremony is scheduled to start at 8:40 pm, straight after the traditional lighting of the memorial candle at the Kotel (Western Wall). Keren Malki's segment will be at approximately 9:15pm. Watch either on television or on the internet here.

As a lead up to Yom Hazikaron, an article about Keren Malki was published in this weekend's Hebrew language newspaper "Makor Rishon". Read the article (in Hebrew) here.  

14-Apr-13: Thinking about the silence on Israel's Memorial Day

On Sunday night April 14, Israel will mark Yom Hazikaron, its annual Memorial Day, known officially as the Day of Remembrance for Israeli Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terrorism. 

Arnold Roth delivered the following (in Hebrew) as a speech at a public Yom Hazikaron commemoration in the Jerusalem community where he and his wife and children live. (It is cross published this weekend in the pages of the Australian Jewish News.)

My daughter Malki z”l was murdered in August 2001.

In the years since then, I have met and spoken with politicians, journalists, diplomats and public figures from many countries. It has been a privilege to engage with them, to address their questions of how it is to live in a society where so many people have experienced personal loss from war.

It is much rarer to express those feelings to one’s own neighbours. What can be said to them that they do not know already?

Perhaps nothing, because we live our lives so close to each other and therefore we share many experiences.  We see each other on the bus and at the kanyon (shopping mall). Walking along the street, going to the youth center or the synagogue, waiting at the same traffic lights for the red light to become green.

With all that we share, it is inescapable that our stories are individual, personal, unique and non-standard. Our experiences in life are like that too: different from one another’s. The music that some of us enjoy is not so enjoyable to others. The same with food, with politics, with the color and style of our clothes, with the books we like to read.

I know very little about what is going on inside the heads of the people who stand on line with me at the supermarket. I expect that what they know about me is very little, too.

Each year, I ask myself: What are they thinking when all of us stand in silence as the siren to mark the minute of silence is sounding?

I know what I am thinking about. And I know we are probably not thinking the same things.

There are some who will surely say that what we need to think about is the soldiers who paid the highest price in order to defend our land. Or about the heroes of Israel whose blood was shed so that we might gain our national independence.

How unusual is it to find an entire country standing absolutely still, not speaking, not driving, while an unnatural sound fills the air? And not just any unnatural sound, but the sound of the tzefira, the siren? A sound that, if we hear it on a different day, would cause our hearts to beat rapidly and our hands to become sweaty. A frightening sound.

And as we stand there, no trucks, no buses, no cars are moving.

Several million people, who cannot be persuaded to do something together at any other time, suddenly co-operate in doing something at precisely the same moment that brings no personal benefit to any of us. Why?

I feel deep gratitude to the men and women who fought to defend our country. But it is terribly difficult for me to think about 25,578 korbanot (victims, deceased). I want to feel the pain of their lost futures. Their goodwill and their dedication to our land, our people and our history and the terrible result demand that I should try.

But in the end, it is a number that my mind simply cannot hold.

I have visited many countries. I have never seen anything like an entire nation of people come to a standstill, leaving their cars in the middle of the highway, standing there on the pavement with their heads bowed. I think it is one of the most powerful and moving sights imaginable.

Even as I struggle to think about the vast pain of an entire nation honoring the memory of thousands of its dead soldiers and police and terror victims, I ask myself: But what does it mean? What good does it do to remember?

There are, as I said, large differences between us. All of us can see that while some of us have paid a terrible personal price for the blessings in our lives, others appear to have been completely excused.

There are people who can explain this. Their explanations do not speak to me.

Even as we stand here in silence, our minds filled with the songs and prayers of Yom Hazikaron night, we know that in a matter of hours the sadness is certainly going to turn to celebration and Yom Hazikaron (Remembrance Day) will abruptly turn into Yom Ha’atzma’ut (Independence Day).

The pain of Yom Hazikaron, as a shared community event, has a beginning and an end. This is how it should be. We confront our collective pain. Then we get back to the challenges in front of us.

When I stand silently with my neighbours while the tzefira, the siren, is sounding its awful wail, I am thinking of my daughter.

This does not make me a bad Israeli, or even a bad neighbor. If anyone asks me what he or she should be thinking at that moment, I will say: If you are asking me, then think about one person.

But I prefer that no one will ask me. There is no right way and certainly no wrong way to remember. No person should feel that there is a standardized and approved way to remember on Yom Hazikaron.

I have learned that the distribution of good and bad does not fall equally among the members of our community. I don’t know why. I don’t know how to change it. I only know that when we are standing together, with each of us thinking our own intimate, private and unknowable thoughts but doing it together, that we are expressing a special kind of unity.

A people that knows to share pain will surely know to share simcha.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

15-May-12: Their history, our history

64 years ago [Image Source]
It's May 15. On this day in 1948, the leadership of the Yishuv, the Jewish presence in Palestine, declared itself independent and announced the establishment of the State of Israel.

This year's anniversary celebrations in Israel have already been completed. Jews throughout the world, including here in Israel, mark the day according to the Hebrew lunar calendar: the 5th day of the month of Iyar which this year was April 26 and which was marked with great joy.

The Arab residents in the new state, as well as the Arab armies of all the surrounding countries (and some that were further away than that) had already begun waging a cruel and disproportionate war against the 600,000 Jews of Palestine during the months before the proclamation of Israel's independence.

A blog posting by Robert Werdine, "The Forgotten War" published a few days ago in the Times of Israel, will provide some surprises for people misled by the refashioned history of that period that has become the standard - but wrong - narrative. He reminds us of how bad things were for Palestine's Jews from November 29, 1947 when the United Nations voted to partition British Mandatory Palestine into a state for the Jews and yet another Arab state - to add to the two dozen already created during the twentieth century - for the Arabs.

From then until the official start of the War of Israel's Independence in May 1948, Yassir Arafat's kinsman Haj Amin Al Husseini, the Mufti of Jerusalem, along with the Arab High Committee that he controlled, and together with all the nations of the Arab League, waged full-scale war against Jewish Palestine. For this purpose, they had the armies they had set up inside Palestine. Werdine enumerates them as
"the Arab Liberation Army for the League, the Arab Legion from Jordan, the Muslim Brothers from Egypt, and the Jaysh al-Jihad al-Muqaddas (“Army of the Holy War”) for the Mufti and the Palestinian AHC". 
They were engaged in a deliberate, well-publicized ideological and thoroughly military battle to destroy the Jewish settlements, to choke the highways and cut them off, and to hold the capital city Jerusalem hostage and besiege it and its thousands of Jewish residents. This they did for months.

There was no Arab plan to create an Arab state in the wake of the British Mandate of Palestine - none.

The goal that unified the Arab world was to destroy what the Jews had built and were building, and to do it not by blogging or petitions but by killing as many people as possible and expelling the rest (whatever that means). This is something the uninformed of 2012 need to know but do not.

That brings us to today, literally. This morning, our neighbours the Arab Palestinians of Gaza, have already managed to set the tone for the anniversary of the day they call Nakba (as in "Nakba Never Ceased", a short op ed that captures the spirit of the Arab version of events.)
Families in Israeli communities right across southern Israel were wakened around 6:30 am today to the frightening wail of the Color Red (Hebrew: Tzeva Adom) incoming rocket warning. The rocket, yet another in the growing Gazan arsenal of many thousands, was fired from the northern part of the Gaza Strip and exploded in an open area of the Shaar Hanegev region close to the southern Israeli city of Sderot (population: 24,000). Fortunately no injuries or serious damage are reported but that was not, never was, the intention of the men who daily place their lives at risk by firing them. They seek to create dead Jews as has been the custom of their communities for several generations.
It's a tense day here

In the words of an Israel National News report, "Israel's security services are expecting the worst and hoping for the best on Tuesday. Along the northern border, the military said it will not allow a repeat of last year’s Syrian infiltration into the Golan Heights. Soldiers also have been deployed along the Egyptian and Lebanese borders to prevent disturbances."

They have their history, and it brings them to massive deployment of missiles inside villages and mosques, and a culture that glorifies death, martyrdom, hatred of the Jew and of Jewish achievement, along with a deep and historically unprecedented collective memory of an event they call The Disaster. But while the State of Israel grows, develops and seeks its place in the world, the disaster that resonates in their schools and books is self-inflicted, self-perpetuating and completely self-limiting. They have wasted their future in order to endlessly relive their past.


Daniel Mandel in an oped in the Washington Times entitled Perverse Palestinian Pride captures the uselessness of it:
The very fact that naqba commemorations are held today is therefore instructive in a way few realize: It informs us that Palestinians have not admitted or assimilated the fact - as the Germans and Japanese have done - that they became victims as a direct result of their efforts to be perpetrators...
Finally, Robert Werbine's final paragraph puts it eloquently:
I am an American, am not Jewish, and have no religious or ancestral connection to the state of Israel... I am drawn to this period of the war, in particular, not only because it was a momentous event, but because it is a great epic story... There would have been no refugee crisis if there had been no war, and there would have been no war if the surrounding Arab states had not rejected the partition. From the moment it passed the General Assembly the Arab states have literally organized their whole polity around denying any Jewish sovereign state whatever its size, and to delegitimizing and destroying it when it was established. The free, vibrant, sixty-four-year-old state that exists today is an eloquent testimonial to the failure of these efforts.

Monday, May 16, 2011

16-May-11: 63 years on, they have their celebrations, we have ours

Israeli children celebrate the 63rd anniversary of the events of 15th May 1948 in the manner taught to them by their families and their society

Palestinian Arab children celebrate the 63rd anniversary of the events of 15th May 1948 in the manner taught to them by their families and their society

The diametrically opposed ways in which we and our neighbours mark 63 years of the events of 15th May 1948 are illuminating, especially in light of the violent events of yesterday. An editorial in the Jerusalem Post ("Repeating the Nakba mistake") from last week when Israelis joyfully celebrated Yom Ha'atzma'ut or Independence Day hits the right note:
For Arab Israelis and Palestinians, the creation of Israel was a “nakba,” a catastrophe. On Friday, Arab towns across the nation will kick off three days of Nakba commemorations with marches, conferences and rallies. Though these ceremonies take place every year, this year is different in a significant and positive way. The absurd practice by which organizations and municipalities were allowed to use state funds to pay for Nakba events has been stopped. Legislation approved by the Knesset in March, known as the “Nakba law,” empowers the state to fine those who finance their commemoration ceremonies with public money. 
The Nakba law will not, and was not intended to, prevent Arab Israelis or anyone else from commemorating Israel’s Independence Day in any way they wish to, as long as they do so peacefully. Rather, the legislation has put an end to the folly in which Israel underwrites activities that undermine the very foundations of Zionism by falsely presenting it as an imperialist movement that engaged during the War of Independence in ethnic cleansing and the intentional, wholesale transfer of the Arab population outside the borders of Israel.  
However, while it is Arab Israelis’ and Palestinians’ right to commemorate the Nakba in a way that not only incriminates Israelis for crimes they never committed but also places all the blame for failure on the Zionist movement, it is self-defeating and a major obstacle to peace for them to do so. 
If Palestinians were to look clearly and objectively at their behavior around the time of Israel’s founding, they would realize that today they are repeating many of the same mistakes. “Jihadism” – or the hatred of the infidel and a desire to kill him – to a great degree underlay the Palestinian assault on Zionism through the 1920s-1940s period. The leader of the Palestinian national movement during these years, Haj Amin al-Husseini, was a rabidly anti- Semitic Muslim cleric with close ties to the Nazis. 
Similarly, today, many Palestinians have chosen to embrace the most extreme form of Islamist leadership. In the West Bank-Gaza elections of 2006, Hamas trounced the ostensibly secular Fatah. And the national unity deal signed on May 7 in Cairo, which enjoys broad Palestinian support, has brought Hamas – a rabidly anti-Semitic Islamist terrorist organization that has launched dozens of suicide bombings and thousands of mortar shells and rockets against the Israeli civilian population – back to the heart of the Palestinian leadership in all its rejectionist, reactionary glory. 
It was this sort of religious extremism and intransigence that exacerbated the plight of the Palestinians back in 1948. In the first weeks of the War of Independence, for instance, Jaffa mayor Yousef Heikal tried to reach a non-belligerency agreement with neighboring Jewish Tel Aviv, to allow the citrus crop to be harvested and exported. But Husseini vetoed this and called for “jihad against the Jews.” As a result, many of Jaffa’s Arabs were expelled during the ensuing war. 
Another repeated Palestinian blunder over the past century has been the rejection of a two-state solution. 
Offered successive compromises – in 1937, the Peel Commission partition of Palestine with a Jewish state on only 17 percent of the land; in 1947, the UN partition with the Arabs getting 45% of the land; and in 2000, Prime Minister Ehud Barak and US president Bill Clinton’s partition with Arabs getting 20%) – the Palestinians consistently said no. And each uncompromising refusal was accompanied by violence and terrorism. 
IN THE 1948 War of Independence, after they had rejected the UN partition plan that would have given them a state, Palestinians launched a bloody offensive to prevent the emergence of a Jewish state. If they had won the war, the result would have been a massive slaughter of Jews just a few years after six million Jews had been massacred in the Holocaust. 
The violent, unsympathetic and ungenerous Arab population of Palestine repeatedly attempted to destroy any hopes that the Jewish people would return to their homeland after nearly two millennia of exile and after suffering the worst genocide ever known to mankind. 
Thankfully, they failed. 
The world’s only Jewish state is now surrounded by 21 Arab nations and has shown a willingness to help establish a 22rd state, for Palestinians. Yet in large part due to their distorted view of history – the Nakba being just one example – Palestinians continue to focus on their victimization and suffering while ignoring personal responsibility for their predicament. One of the crucial psychological barriers to peace today is Arab Israelis’ and Palestinians’ stubborn insistence on ignoring their own role in creating the refugee problem and in the failure to obtain Palestinian political autonomy. 
Instead of devoting so much energy to emphasizing their victimization, Arab Israelis and Palestinians would do well to learn from their mistakes. At present, they seem bent on repeating them.

16-May-11: Behind the Syrian scenes

"I will remain dutiful and faithful to my people and will walk along them
to build Syria, which we love and feel proud of." [www.presidentassad.net]
Yesterday, Catastrophe ("Nakba") Day according to Arab mythology, the world was focused on a thousand-plus Syrians bused by the Assad regime down to his country's border with Israel. Lenny Ben David writes in a JPost article today (see below) that "No gathering of more than five people is tolerated in Syria, not to mention the busing of hundreds across a country under martial law."

And Ron Ben-Yishai writing on the Ynet site says that in his experience "You cannot go near the Syrian side of the border without Damascus' written permission. The presence of dozens of buses, shuttling Palestinians... suggests that Sunday's infiltration incident was premeditated."

At the border, the rent-a-crowd were "encouraged" to push forward and destroy the fence [see this amateur video]. Around noon (according to the Jerusalem Post's account), about 1,000 people on the Syrian side were right on the border fence and a few hundred then rammed it. There followed a flood into the nearby Israeli town of Majd al Shams where they taunted the handful of armed Israeli service personnel stationed there. Think of the rioters as human shields since that's evidently the role in which they were placed. Certainly the government officials (and buses they laid on since practically nothing moves in Assad's Syria without his approval) that brought them there cared not one jot for whether this was smart or safe or a life-threatening thing to do.

We know all of this because it was so relatively widely reported.  But meanwhile far from the attention of the reporters...
Army shelling kills 7 in Syrian protest town: group    At least seven Syrian civilians were killed Sunday when Syrian troops shelled the town of Tel Kelakh near the border with Lebanon to quell a pro-democracy uprising, an activists' protest group said. The town, just a few miles (km) from Lebanon's northern border, is the latest focus of an intensified crackdown by Syrian troops and tanks, sent to quell demonstrations against the rule of President Bashar al-Assad. The shelling on Tel Telakh concentrated on al-Burj, Ghalioun, Souk and Mahata neighborhood, the Local Coordination Committees said in a statement, adding wounded people had little access to care because the main hospital in the town was sealed by security forces and the main road to Lebanon blocked. 
Reuters published this picture of a mob crashing through the
Israel-Syria border yesterday [Source] - click to enlarge
This happened at about the same time. But for some mysterious reason, the photographers and reporters of the great metropolitan newspapers were - how to say this? - somewhere else. So there are no newsagency pictures, and no direct reportage. 

Assad's impact on his country has been considerable. AFP, quoting human rights activists in Syria, says that "up to 850 people have been killed and at least 8,000 arrested since the protests started in mid-March". They're all Syrian, by the way. As are the gunmen who fired at them. And the politicians who gave the shooting orders for the ongoing bloodbath.

Lenny Ben David, as we mentioned above, has some insights in today's Jerusalem Post about the Syrian ruler and his inner thug: "Bashar Soprano of Syria". Among other little-known or unknown aspects of the Assad-inflicted Syrian catastrophe: 38,000 Syrians killed by Assad the Father's men in Hama in 1982. Children raped and tortured in Daraa by Assad the Son's thugs in the past few weeks. And Assad Enterprises up to its eyebrows in arms trafficking, drug trafficking and of course terrorism.
"Besides running Syria’s government with an iron fist, the Assad clan and its associates control Syria’s media, army, phone companies, intelligence service, tourism services and banks. They’re also involved in smuggling, the drug trade and arms dealing in and out of the region. Lebanon, a regional financial center and smuggling hub, is important for Syria’s kleptocrats, and Syrian hegemony in Lebanon is critical for the clan’s financial success. If the Assad associates are not blood relatives or from the Alawite sect, then they’re likely connected through marriage."
It's here and worth a few minutes of your reading time.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

15-May-11: More celebrating

Hat-tip to Jameel from muqata.blogspot.com for alerting us to a four-minute-long video of yesterday's Nakba-ready rock-throwing party in Silwan, a neighbourhood a few minutes' drive from where we live in Jerusalem.

In the background, you hear local children shouting throughout the video "Allahu Akbar", an expression of their aspiration for peaceful relations along secular, democratic, live-and-let-live lines, as received from their parents, teachers and religious leaders.


Source: YouTube

15-May-11: Just celebrating

For us Israelis, the 63rd anniversary of the nation's independence was honoured by country-wide celebrations this past Tuesday (the anniversary according to Hebrew lunar calendar). Many of us enjoyed the day in the company of our extended families, with a traditional outdoor grill as the centerpiece. Speaking personally, it was a great day.

The Palestinian Arabs observe the same event today, Sunday 15th May. But for them, it's termed Catastrophe Day, or Nakba. And their approach to history and current affairs reflects some fundamental differences about how they see themselves, us and the relations between us.

In an unusually frank disclosure, the Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram reported Friday on some preparations:
In preparation for a third intifada, which it is hoped will be ignited on Friday, 13 May tens of thousands of short messages (sms) flooded the mobile phones of Palestinians in the West Bank, urging them to take part. The messages also urged participation in similar events on Sunday, a Christian holiday. The messages were signed “Muslim Youth Association,” and the group has announced a whole program of events organized in coordination with other groups reflecting a range of views along the Palestinian political spectrum. The association listed the mosques where mass rallies are to begin, while some planned activities will remain secret until they are launched to prevent their frustration by occupation forces. The announcement suggests that most of the activity will be centered in the Al Aqsa mosque in East Jerusalem, where activists can take advantage of the large number of worshippers who attend Friday prayers there. A large showing would encourage the viability of the protest movement.
Sad to say, Al-Ahram's wishes seem to have materialized and the 'celebrations' have started.

Haaretz is reporting that a truck, driven by a 22 year-old resident of the Israeli-Arab town of Kafr Kassem, plowed at high speed into a bus, several private vehicles, a motorcycle and some pedestrians at Bar Lev Street near the busy Mesubim Junction at Tel Aviv's southern entrance in the past hour. The editors at Haaretz are speculating that this is a terrorist attack which in the circumstances is not such a stretch. Ynet says the driver has been caught and arrested. One person is dead, at least four people are seriously injured.

Reuters ["Truck rampage kills one person in Tel Aviv"] carries this brief report from an eye witness as heard on Israeli radio:
"We heard terrible slamming behind us in the car -- boom, and another boom and another boom -- until it reached us, and we simply flew up in the air," a witness, identified only as Yossi, said on Army Radio. He went on and crashed into a bus. He got out and began to go crazy, throwing things at people. There was this poor innocent girl -- he struck her on the head. She just fell down, and now people are treating her. What can I tell you? A terrorist attack."
Updates as we get them.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

10-May-11: Much to celebrate

We're just back home from taking part in thanksgiving prayers and preparing to do the traditional Independence Day family grill this afternoon. 

Let's take a moment to skim some of the achievements of this country and its astonishing society.

Start with the numbers. On its 63rd birthday, Israel's population is 7,746,000. We grew by 2% this year: 150,000 new residents joined the team. 5,837,000 of us, or 75%, are Jewish. 178,000 babies were born into Israeli families this past year, and 43,000 people passed on. New immigrants totaled 24,5000, while some 12,000 chose to leave. More than 70% of Israel's Jews were born here and more than half of native-born Israelis are themselves the children of native-born Israelis. 14 Israeli cities have more than 100,000 residents and six (Jerusalem, Tel Aviv-Yafo, Haifa, Rishon Lezion, Ashdod and Petah Tikva) now have more than 200,000. 

A few additional thoughts inspired by the Janglo website: In the last few months, Israel has been called the seventh most thriving society in the world, the world's hottest real estate market, the 15th best in terms of quality of life, the world's 24th strongest economy. Our two major cities Jerusalem andTel Aviv are each recognized as major tourism capitals. Though Jews may not have seen themselves as athletes during these last 2000 years, Israel's men's and women's basketball teams each reached the EuroLeague championships this year. The women won in March, the men lost earlier this week. Immigrants are arriving here to settle (making aliyah) from some of the world's most comfortable countries.

The energy you find here is remarkable. Our country has less than one-thousandth of the world's population, and is not even in the top one hundred by size. And yet Israel's $100 billion economy is larger than those of all our neighbors combined. In absolute terms, Israel has more startup companies than any other country in the world after the United States: 3,500 of them, most in various technology fields. There's a show-stopping list of technologies here that originated in Israel and that have impacted the world. 

These are achievements that any self-respecting person would find uplifting. But the concerns that come with them are weighty too. Daniel Gordis captured some of these very eloquently in this Jerusalem Post column when describing how our celebration...
"takes place this year under the cloud of an awareness that the Jewish state’s future is tenuous and fragile. Consider this: There is no other country about which the following two predictions can be made with equal plausibility. The first prediction: In 50 years, Israel will be a thriving democracy, at the cutting edge of technology, medicine and education, a First World country in every way. The second prediction: In 50 years, Israel will not exist.There is good reason to put stock in the first. Israelis receive far more Nobel Prizes per capita than any other country, boast a hitech industry second only to the United States, have cutting-edge military power, medical care and research, and universities that are impressive by any international standard. Israel today exceeds by far what anyone in 1948 could have dared imagine. This could be but the beginning of our greatness. But the second possibility is equally plausible. Increasing numbers of academics and diplomats, as well as rank-and-file Europeans, now assert that the creation of the Jewish state was a mistake. Polls show that Europeans rank Israel close to North Korea as a threat to international peace. Israel is the only country that British academics are eager to boycott. No other country’s “right to exist” is openly debated in the pages of the New York Review of Books. It is not out of the question that the world could end Israel’s Jewish character or bring it to its knees altogether."
So we will continue to give thanks for our many, many blessings. And we will continue to ask the Master of the Universe to keep us under His watchful care as, thank Heavens, he does and has done. 

Hag same'ach. Happy birthday, Israel.