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A Macabre Alliance
by
Gila Svirsky
It was a good week for the
extremists on both sides. As they perceived some hope rising last
Wednesday in the seaside resort of Aqaba, they got to work: The very day
after all those high falutin’ words, Sharon sent a hit team into the West
Bank and knocked off two senior Hamas figures. So Hamas and allied groups
made use of the weekend to kill 5 Israelis in Gaza and Hebron. Tuesday
was a big one: Sharon launched Apache gunships at Rantisi, senior
political leader of Hamas. Though Rantisi survived, the funerals of 2
more Hamas leaders and 6 collaterally damaged men, women, and children
helped balance things out. But Rantisi wasn’t down for long and on
Wednesday, a suicide bomber sneaked into downtown Jerusalem, adding 17
more bodies to the count. That evening did not find Sharon idle and,
together with Thursday, he sent the boys back for 9 more killings
(counting women and children) in various locations. Hamas got in one
more, too.
Is this too
confusing? Let’s simplify and say that 42 Israelis and Palestinians
were killed these past eight days. It was a good week for the
extremists and, as we speak, they are out there frothing at the
mouth and fomenting hatred for each other. (“Now it’s all-out war”,
says Sharon. “Now your women and babies are also targets”, says
Rantisi.)
But while the
extremists are having a heyday, the rest of us – you won’t be
surprised to hear – just want the flow of blood to stop:
On the Palestinian
side, there is broad support (63%) for the resumption of
negotiations with Israel according to a poll conducted a few weeks
ago by Bir Zeit University
.
While polls also show Palestinian support for armed conflict, this
is always in the context of liberating themselves from Israeli rule.
In fact, an April poll by the Palestinian Center for Policy and
Survey Research showed that 71% support the mutual cessation of
violence .
In parallel, most
Israelis are fed up with being occupiers. A poll in today’s
Yediot Aharonot, Israel’s most widely read newspaper (conducted
by Dr. Mina Zemach) reveals that 67% of Israelis feel “the
occupation is harmful to Israel”. The same large majority (67%)
wants to end the policy of assassinations. In fact, an astonishing
40% believe that the attempt on Rantisi’s life was made to
deliberately thwart implementation of the road map! Isn’t that an
amazing allegation of disingenuousness attributed to Israeli
leaders?
So we are left with
the lines drawn as follows: On the one side (roughly 30%) are the
Israeli and Palestinian extremists, all working hard at perpetuating
the misery of the other; and on the other side (roughly 70%) are the
Israeli and Palestinian victims of their fundamentalist ideologies.
These are the real lines of conflict in the Middle East: the
coalition of the willing – the extremists on both sides – against
the coalition of the unwilling – the moderates, which include those
who have to take buses (not cars) or are standing in the wrong place
as the helicopters pause overhead.
Today, the second
annual gay pride parade was supposed to have been held in
Jerusalem. It was postponed a week because it’s hard to be gay when
you are in mourning. Among the victims of the Jerusalem bus bombing
were Alan, who would have marched in today’s parade; Tamar, whose
grandmother and sister are Women in Black peace activists; Zippi,
whose sister is one of the human rights monitors in Machsom
[checkpoint] Watch; and 14 other good people, some of whom probably
even believed Sharon when he said he wants peace.
Ultimately, the 30%
crazies are going to lose out to the two-thirds of us who don’t want
to be going to the funerals of healthy, innocent friends. In time,
the moderates will eventually win out – the extremist Israelis will
inevitably give up the occupied territories and the extremist
Palestinians will inevitably give up their demand for driving us
into the sea. What makes me furious is that we are in the majority,
but our extremists, bound in a macabre alliance, are galloping
together in a race toward each other’s death, and we are getting
trampled in their madness. How much killing must there be before
the sane majority has had enough?
Notes:
http://home.birzeit.edu/dsp/DSPNEW/polls/poll_12/
http://www.pcpsr.org/survey/polls/2003/p7a.html
Source:
by courtesy & © 2003 Gila Svirsky
by the same
author:
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