-
Tilbage >
Uri Avnery: How Are You,
Non-Violence?
Thursday, September 09
2004 @ 12:03 PM EDT
"It is possible to put an end to violence in our
country – if we offer the Palestinian people an alternative, non-violent way
of achieving freedom and justice..".
By Uri Avnery
The Palestine Chronicle
At the mass meeting with Arun Gandhi, the grandson of the Mahatma, in Abu-Dis,
I observed the faces of the participants. While Gandhi was preaching
non-violence, I imagined a debate between two young Palestinians in the
audience.
Yussuf: “He is right. The armed intifada has failed.”
Hassan: “On the contrary. Without the actions of the martyrs, the world
would have forgotten us long ago.”
Yussuf: “For half a year there were no suicide attacks in Israel, and look
what we have achieved!”
Hassan: “We have achieved nothing. On the contrary, the Israeli generals
boast that they have defeated us with their targeted assassinations,
incursions into our territories and all the other acts of oppression. And all
this time they have been enlarging the settlements, putting up new
‘outposts’ and continuing to build the racist wall.”
Yussuf: “You forget that the International Court has declared the wall
illegal and the UN General Assembly has confirmed this with a huge majority.
All of Europe voted in our favor. We are winning in the arena of world public
opinion.”
Hassan: “What is that worth, if in the meantime Sharon does what he wants,
goes on keeping Arafat in a cage and spits in the face of Abu-Ala, while
Abu-Ala is advocating non-violence?”
Yussuf: “Even the senior jurists in Israel itself warn Sharon that if he
goes on like this, the United Nations will end up imposing sanctions on
Israel.”
Hassan: “But in the meantime, the opposite is happening. Because of the lull
in suicide attacks, the Israeli economy is reviving. Tourism to Israel, that
had stopped altogether because of our actions, is starting up again. If the
Israelis feel comfortable and are no longer afraid of suicide bombers, why
should they talk with us? Why should they give back any territories? Why
should they stop enlarging the settlements? They don’t give a damn.”
Yussuf: “We have to win international public opinion. We can do this only by
non-violence. I admire the martyrs who are ready to die for our people. I am
proud that we have such heroes. But they don’t get us anywhere. They only
provide Sharon with pretexts to oppress us even more.”
Hassan: “As if Sharon needs pretexts! He wants to break us, and world public
opinion will not lift a finger for us. The treacherous Arab leaders will not
do anything for us, either. Only our heroes will save us.”
Yussuf: “But Gandhi argues that non-violent methods will be more successful.
His grandfather proved this in India.”
Hassan: “He doesn’t know the Israelis. The Israeli army will open fire on
any non-violent Palestinian demonstration that reaches serious proportions.”
Yussuf: “Look at the brothers who scaled the wall. That is an example of
successful non-violent action, breaking the law of the occupier openly and
without fear! ”
Hassan: Don’t kid yourself. If Arun Gandhi and the Israelis hadn’t been
there, the soldiers would have shot and killed them. Later they would have
announced that they were wanted terrorists. You remember the beginning of the
al-Aksa intifada, when there were unarmed mass demonstrations? The Israeli
army brought in snipers and killed the leaders. Please, this is not India, and
the Israelis are not Englishmen. They understand only the language of
force.”
Yussuf: “But that is exactly what they say about us!”
This kind of debate is now going on everywhere in Palestinian society, perhaps
in every Palestinian family. The Yussufs have no success in convincing the
Hassans, and I am afraid that Gandhi will not succeed either, because they
lack the decisive argument. Abu-Mazen, who advocates non-violence, got nothing
from Sharon. Half a year without suicide attacks inside Israel have not
brought the Palestinians any achievements on the ground.
Therefore, the suicide attack in Beer Sheva, just a week after the Gandhi
rally, was to be expected.
As long as the Sharon government, with the active encouragement of President
Bush, goes on enlarging the settlements, building the Wall and all the other
actions of annexation, there is no way to convince Palestinian public opinion
to turn its back on violence. And only a decisive change in Palestinian public
opinion can put an end to suicide attacks. No wall will stop people who are
ready to die in order to carry out attacks, and the Palestinians have already
proved that they have any number of such people.
Ehud Barak, a very violent person, once said that if he had been a young
Palestinian, he would have joined a terrorist organization. Obviously, he
doesn’t believe that non-violence will succeed against the Israeli army. And
he should know.
I was impressed by the teachings of Mahatma Gandhi. He was the greatest
liberator of the 20th century, achieving freedom for the whole Indian
subcontinent, including present-day Pakistan and Bangladesh. (But Gandhi also
said that Hitler should be opposed only by non-violent means, and even his
most ardent admirers found it hard to accept that.)
In my youth I joined two very violent organizations (the Irgun and the Israeli
army), but after I was wounded near the end of the 1948 war there were several
months when the very thought of combat caused me physical nausea. I detest
violence in all its forms, but how can it be stopped?
There are people amongst us who are ready for a compromise peace but have been
led to believe that “there is no one we can talk with”, because “they”
don’t want peace but seek to annihilate us. But we must understand that
Palestinian violence, which causes so much bloodshed, is the predictable
result of our cutting off every other road in front of them.
I am convinced that it is possible to put an end to violence in our country
– if we offer the Palestinian people an alternative, non-violent way of
achieving freedom and justice.
Anyone who believes that a wall will succeed in stopping suicide attacks might
as well rely on the amulets of Kabbalist rabbis.