Johann Hari: Israel is suppressing a secret it must face
How did a Jewish state founded 60 years ago end up throwing filth at cowering Palestinians?
Monday, 28 April 2008
When you hit your 60th birthday, most of you will guzzle down your hormone replacement therapy with a glass of champagne and wonder if you have become everything you dreamed of in your youth. In a few weeks, the state of Israel is going to have that hangover.
She will look in the mirror and think – I have a sore back, rickety knees and a gun at my waist, but I'm still standing. Yet somewhere, she will know she is suppressing an old secret she has to face. I would love to be able to crash the birthday party with words of reassurance. Israel has given us great novelists like Amos Oz and A.B. Yehoshua, great film-makers like Joseph Cedar, great scientific research into Alzheimer's, and great dissident journalists like Amira Hass, Tom Segev and Gideon Levy to expose her own crimes.
She has provided the one lonely spot in the Middle East where gay people are not hounded and hanged, and where women can approach equality.
But I can't do it. Whenever I try to mouth these words, a remembered smell fills my nostrils. It is the smell of shit. Across the occupied West Bank, raw untreated sewage is pumped every day out of the Jewish settlements, along large metal pipes, straight onto Palestinian land. From there, it can enter the groundwater and the reservoirs, and become a poison.
Standing near one of these long, stinking brown-and-yellow rivers of waste recently, the local chief medical officer, Dr Bassam Said Nadi, explained to me: "Recently there were very heavy rains, and the shit started to flow into the reservoir that provides water for this whole area. I knew that if we didn't act, people would die. We had to alert everyone not to drink the water for over a week, and distribute bottles. We were lucky it was spotted. Next time..." He shook his head in fear. This is no freak: a 2004 report by Friends of the Earth found that only six per cent of Israeli settlements adequately treat their sewage.
Meanwhile, in order to punish the population of Gaza for voting "the wrong way", the Israeli army are not allowing past the checkpoints any replacements for the pipes and cement needed to keep the sewage system working. The result? Vast stagnant pools of waste are being held within fragile dykes across the strip, and rotting. Last March, one of them burst, drowning a nine-month-old baby and his elderly grandmother in a tsunami of human waste. The Centre on Housing Rights warns that one heavy rainfall could send 1.5m cubic metres of faeces flowing all over Gaza, causing "a humanitarian and environmental disaster of epic proportions".
So how did it come to this? How did a Jewish state founded 60 years ago with a promise to be "a light unto the nations" end up flinging its filth at a cowering Palestinian population?
The beginnings of an answer lie in the secret Israel has known, and suppressed, all these years. Even now, can we describe what happened 60 years ago honestly and unhysterically? The Jews who arrived in Palestine throughout the twentieth century did not come because they were cruel people who wanted to snuffle out Arabs to persecute. No: they came because they were running for their lives from a genocidal European anti-Semitism that was soon to slaughter six million of their sisters and their sons.
They convinced themselves that Palestine was "a land without people for a people without land". I desperately wish this dream had been true. You can see traces of what might have been in Tel Aviv, a city that really was built on empty sand dunes. But most of Palestine was not empty. It was already inhabited by people who loved the land, and saw it as theirs. They were completely innocent of the long, hellish crimes against the Jews.
When it became clear these Palestinians would not welcome becoming a minority in somebody else's country, darker plans were drawn up. Israel's first Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion, wrote in 1937: "The Arabs will have to go, but one needs an opportune moment for making it happen, such as a war."
So, for when the moment arrived, he helped draw up Plan Dalit. It was – as Israeli historian Ilan Pappe puts it – "a detailed description of the methods to be used to forcibly evict the people: large-scale intimidation; and laying siege to and bombarding population centres". In 1948, before the Arab armies invaded, this began to be implemented: some 800,000 people were ethnically cleansed, and Israel was built on the ruins. The people who ask angrily why the Palestinians keep longing for their old land should imagine an English version of this story. How would we react if the 30m stateless, persecuted Kurds in the world sent armies and settlers into this country to seize everything in England below Leeds, and swiftly established a free Kurdistan from which we were expelled? Wouldn't we long forever for our children to return to Cornwall and Devon and London? Would it take us only 40 years to compromise and offer to settle for just 22 per cent of what we had?
If we are not going to be endlessly banging our heads against history, the Middle East needs to excavate 1948, and seek a solution. Any peace deal – even one where Israel dismantled the wall and agreed to return to the 1967 borders – tends to crumple on this issue. The Israelis say: if we let all three million come back, we will be outnumbered by Palestinians even within the 1967 borders, so Israel would be voted out of existence. But the Palestinians reply: if we don't have an acknowledgement of the Naqba (catastrophe), and our right under international law to the land our grandfathers fled, how can we move on?
It seemed like an intractable problem – until, two years ago, the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research conducted the first study of the Palestinian Diaspora's desires. They found that only 10 per cent – around 300,000 people – want to return to Israel proper. Israel can accept that many (and compensate the rest) without even enduring much pain. But there has always been a strain of Israeli society that preferred violently setting its own borders, on its own terms, to talk and compromise. This weekend, the elected Hamas government offered a six-month truce that could have led to talks. The Israeli government responded within hours by blowing up a senior Hamas leader and killing a 14-year-old girl.
Perhaps Hamas' proposals are a con; perhaps all the Arab states are lying too when they offer Israel full recognition in exchange for a roll-back to the 1967 borders; but isn't it a good idea to find out? Israel, as she gazes at her grey hairs and discreetly ignores the smell of her own stale shit pumped across Palestine, needs to ask what kind of country she wants to be in the next 60 years.




Comments
260 Comments
An excellent article - it deserves to be photocopied and flyposted in all public places! Let the truth get out!!
[For the record I am NOT a Muslim- I am an atheist].
Posted by Lalu | 01.05.08, 17:30 GMT
crude oil ,being the big draw to the middle east is on its way out.Once crude drops back to only a substance with at best lubercant potential it will loose all its value as will being near any source .I look forward to watching all those who war over it and profit off it to to fall .they will have accumulated great stores of it costing them millions to refine and store and all for not .It will be like owning trillions of useless shoes made of toilet paper.
In fact I shouldn't think living near an oil field or an oil refinery such a thrill.I cant wait till crude oil gets replaced by free for every one energy .
Posted by sandy | 01.05.08, 16:34 GMT
The definition of "the Jewish people" is still rabbinical, as a result of the conditions of Jewish existence in the Diaspora, where "the Jewish people" were not defined as a "nation" but as a religious body. Self-definition as a "nation" would have raised problems of loyalty to the states within which they lived, whereas self-definition as a religious community was a diplomatically sensible adaptation. However, zionism is quite precisely the reconstruction of "the Jewish people" as a "nation" - but, a compromise was made by zionist leaderships with the rabbinates, so that now one can only "become a Jew" by conversion. I myself would like to "become a Jew," but I am not prepared to surrender my freedom of thought to the rabbinate, any more that most Jews-by-birth in fact are. Perhaps if Shelhevet, who sounds awfully nice, were to marry me, we could blackmail the rabbis into "converting" me pro forma! Then I could come and live in Israel, and help humanise the place!
Posted by Rowan Berkeley | 01.05.08, 15:50 GMT
The truth must out. If this story is a tissue of malicious lies, as Dr Friedman says, than the world must be informed. An impartial Commission of Inquiry, under the joint authority of all parties to the Annapolis talks, or for example former US President Jimmy Carter, must be formed and empowered to clear up this disputed, but urgent, question without delay. If Dr Friedman is committed to Israeli-Arab mediation, as he claims (and I trust him on that) , than he ought to intervene with the appropriate Israeli, US and Palestinian authorities immediately to take the steps necessary to establish the veracity , or lack thereof, of Mr. Hari's accusations. Public health knows no boundaries.
Peter Watkins
College Park (by Washington), Maryland, USA
Posted by Peter Watkins | 01.05.08, 15:35 GMT
Among the many things Hari chooses to overlook in this slanderous piece is the failure of the Palestinian Authority, Hamas, the United Nations Relief Agency, or the Arab states who fund the Palestinian enterprise to build anything resembling a normal society of the kind that attends to the health, sanitation and local security needs of its citizenry. Instead, Palestinian leaders have devised a world of poverty and fear where murder and martyrdom are celebrated as the highest goods. Why build sewage systems when paradise can be gained by killing Jews?
Posted by Jonathan Cohen | 01.05.08, 15:21 GMT
That smell you smell is called "after-birth". Every new counry's birth has this smell for awhile!!! Even you'r country British Iles had this smell. There was no :sudden, spontaneous appearence of countrys EVER happened! Even you'r mentor Darwin wouild agree with this! So GET OVER IT!!
Posted by Dalit | 01.05.08, 15:10 GMT
Mr. Hari doesnt want you to notice that it is not Jews who are murdering British people and who are in the process of taking over the UK. Is the Orwell prize for the deception Orwell warned about?
Posted by Richard | 01.05.08, 15:09 GMT
I read the April 28 article by Johann Hari entitled "Israel is suppressing a secret it must face". May I state that I have rarely come across such a biased, bigoted and unfounded op-ed. May I suggest that you
watch both the compilation of facts and simple usage of language of op-eds that you publish. Hari's article fell far short on both scores of what I as a professional mediator would consider acceptable and fair
analyses of the situation. The language itself was full of what I consider extremist language. It was as if an 8 year old was allowed to have a temper tantrum in writing and then publish it. It almost was laughable.
May I point out that Mr Hari even uses the historical, medieval anti-semitic charge of 'well-poisioning"! If his writing had any veracity to it, that false allegation showed me what his true intentions were--to hold an
anti-Israel diatribe and use whatever he can muster as cannon fodder to that end.
As someone who works in Israeli-Arab mediation, this is not the type of work needed to bring peace to the Middle East. Trust me on that.
Dr D.N. Friedman
Jerusalem, Israel
Posted by Dr D N Friedman | 01.05.08, 14:43 GMT
Shelhevet,
Thank you!
I have searched in vain for someone like you. You must be the first pro Israeli poster to actually admit mistakes have been made, and are willing and hoping for a resolution. While the majority of Israelis live in denial, there can never be peace as they seem to be blinded with their arrogance.
You my dear, are a breath of fresh air in a very polluted country. I hope others will follow your lead, so we can all hope that there will be peace for the Palestinians and Israelis alike.
Shalom
Posted by Leah | 01.05.08, 14:33 GMT
I beseech my fellow Israelis and Jews to read their history in books other than those published by the the Jewish Agency. Jonathan Kozol, is a good place to start.
The Naqba was a very real occurrence--one that our government was responsible for--there can be no denying it.
Jewish *hit IS flowing down into the drinking water and fields of Palestinians.
An entire population has been forced to live like animals (and yes, I blame Hamas too) for so long that martyrdom is more desirable than life--you must question the actions of your government; you must examine the national agenda, both of the past and in the present; you must listen to your young men and women (Breaking the Silence) who have come back from the Occupied Palestinian Territories scared with the horrors of their missions there.
It is necessary, albeit terrifying, to admit terrible, horrific, mistakes have been made. But we must do this NOW, while there is still a chance.....
Posted by shelhevet | 01.05.08, 14:10 GMT
260 Comments