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Politics : War -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: William B. Kohn who wrote (11687)2/20/2002 3:43:59 PM
From: Elmer Flugum  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 23908
 
Your Arab neighbor?

I think you may be embellishing again William!

Your argument is the same argument used by the Whites in Apartheid South Africa, Israel's big trading partner and supplier of gold and diamonds for pro-Apartheid South African Jews.

"I feel for locusts, roaches, rats, and the plaugue"

Your words remind me of another period in time, in Europe.

Does your variety of Judaism teach you that?

An Old-New Israeli Voice: The Voice of Conscience

By Lev Grinberg - Jerusalem*

In recent weeks a new voice is rising, loud and clear. A voice
previously marginal and repressed, a voice that now threatens to
inundate the entire country with the hope of breaking out of the
crisis. It is the voice of conscience, which sees all human beings as
equal, having the right to shelter, health, freedom and dignity, and
above all, the right to life. The most salient statement of the new
voice are the soldiers that declared their objection to serve the
occupation, and the intensity of the reactions, be they negative or
positive, that they provoked. But this is only one statement of the
new voice's power. The new voice permeates reports from the
Occupied Territories, and it has begun to mobilize masses for
action, in previously inconceivable scales, such as the last two
Saturday's rallies.

The voice of conscience is both personal and collective, hence its
strength. It is personal because each individual must be accountable
for his actions. It is collective because it manifests social
responsibility and creates a common language through which we are
able to communicate, talk about the reality and connect with each
other. The voice's intensity and growth potential stem from its clarity
and unambiguousness. You cannot tell the voice of conscience that
"we" want peace but "they" don't, because the daily abuse of the
Palestinians and the provocative exterminations are clear for all to
see. You cannot distract the voice of conscience by claiming that
"Barak offered everything", because in terms of conscience, this
does not justify the war crimes committed by the Israeli occupation
forces. And of course you cannot recruit soldiers with the militaristic
argument that "we must win this war", because the occupation is not
a war forced upon us, and woe to us if we ever do win, and thus
succeed to maintain the occupation.

The new voice's greatest power is its ancientness. There is no need
to invent it; it already exists in the individual consciousness, in the
Jewish and humanistic tradition. This is the voice of "Thou shall love
thy neighbor as thyself" and "What is hateful to you do not do unto
your fellow man". These are the values on which most Israelis were
brought up, and this is the dormant voice now awakening. It is inside
us, only until now it has been silenced by other voices, which
mobilize a nation to war and raise primal fears that mute the voice of
conscience. This old-new voice is powerful enough to tear down the
protective wall of blind militarism, of racism - that make distinctions
between types of blood according to their origin, and of fascism -
that demands national unity.

The voice of conscience and the Jewish moral code are capable of
establishing in Israel a different culture, a culture of tolerance and
coexistence. The voice of conscience can link Jews, Christians and
Muslims brought up on the sacred principle that all human beings
are created in God's image. The voice of conscience can provide an
agreed-upon moral basis between Jews and Arabs according to the
biblical, pre-democratic rule that "One law shall be for you, and for
the stranger that sojourns among you". If this voice grows stronger, it
can also provide the ethical basis required for rapprochement and
resolution of the conflict with the Palestinians, which is now
conceived as intractable, breeding a sense of despair and thoughts
about leaving. The ancient Jewish voice of conscience is the voice
of the new hope.

--

Lev Grinberg is a peace activist and political sociologist, Director of
the Humphrey Institute for Social Research, Ben Gurion University.

Mr. Grinberg may be reached at: lev@bgumail.bgu.ac.il