Israel is the only state in the world that has a
population of 200%. And that’s a fact.
Public opinion polls show that it has two simultaneous
majorities. One is peace-loving, the other supports extreme nationalism.
At the present time, it looks like this: In every public
opinion poll there is a large majority that supports the Prime Minister,
Ariel Sharon. Sharon wants, of course, to enlarge the settlements,
intensify the war against the Palestinians, eliminate Yasser Arafat,
postpone a permanent solution and refuse any peace negotiations until
unattainable conditions are met. Anyone who supports him must be a radical
right-winger.
But the very same public opinion polls show also that a
majority agrees to withdraw from (almost) all the occupied territories,
dismantle (almost) all settlements and accept the establishment of a
Palestinian state in return for peace.
How is this possible? Can a state have a population of
more than 100%? If so, Israel is a very special country.
This curious situation did not come about yesterday. It
started long ago.
I remember public opinion polls of more than 20 tears ago,
which also revealed two majorities. The first majority supported the idea
of expelling all Arabs from the country west of the Jordan river. The
second one supported a withdrawal from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Together with those who were against both proposals, this totaled 200%.
Statisticians and sociologists examined, researched, shook
their collective heads, shrugged their shoulders, raised both hands and
thought: a crazy people. Doesn’t know what it wants. Mixed up.
Schizophrenic. Suffering from a split personality.
But the people were not mad at all. The professors just
did not know how to read the results of their polls.
What the public tried to say was: If it were possible to
drive out all the Arabs, that would be wonderful. If it’s impossible,
let’s get the hell out of there.
Why? For a simple reason: the one thing that unifies
almost all Jewish Israelis is the wish to live in a state where there are
only Jews. If we could achieve such a state in all the country between the
Mediterranean and the Jordan river, O.K. If not, let’s leave the occupied
territories. Not "land for peace", but "withdrawal for the sake of
safeguarding a homogeneous Jewish state". This is the majority opinion,
and there is, indeed, only one majority.
Some call this "racist". Some call it "nationalist". Some
say that this is "apartheid". But this attitude is rooted in the fact that
for thousands of years Jews have lived as a religious-ethnic community
dispersed throughout the world and often suffered cruel persecution
(especially in the Christian world). They have developed a ghetto
mentality. They want to live among themselves, separate from others,
surrounded by a high fence.
Zionism wanted to achieve this by establishing a state
where the Jews would live together, without Goyim (Gentiles). Even the
presence of a considerable minority (the Arab citizens) in Israel creates
severe mental stress. For most Israelis, the ideal situation would be a
state without a single non-Jewish citizen. (The presence of foreign
workers does not bother anybody; it is temporary, and they are devoid of
any rights.)
Lately this aspiration has found new expression in an idea
which is becoming quite popular: to transfer the Israeli Arab villages
adjoining the West Bank, together with their inhabitants, to the future
Palestinian state, which means giving up territory so that Israel will
have less non-Jewish citizens.
This is quite unusual. The French, for example, have shed
rivers of blood in order to keep Alsace, whose people are of German
descent. India is ready to wage a nuclear war in order to keep Kashmir,
which is populated by Muslims. For other nations, territory is more
important than a homogeneous population, geography precedes demography.
Israelis, too, like territory - but demography is by far more important to
them.
One example: after the 1956 war, during which Israel
conquered the Sinai and the Gaza Strip, David Ben-Gurion was compelled to
give up the Sinai. At the time there was a clamor from the right and the
left to annex the Gaza Strip. Ben-Gurion adamantly refused, because he did
not want to increase the number of Arab citizens by hundreds of thousands
at any price. (The brilliant idea of an eternal military occupation, which
allows the occupier to abstain from conferring citizenship on the occupied
population, was not yet invented.)
Today, too, there is only one majority in Israel. Most
Israelis are ready to pay the price demanded for peace. So why do they
support Sharon, who represents the opposite? For one simple reason: they
have been brought to believe that "we have no partner". There is a
complete unanimity, from Avigdor Liberman and Effy Eitam on the right to
Haim Ramon and Yossi Sarid on the "left", that "there is no partner". And
since there is no partner for peace, let’s support Sharon, who knows (or
so it seems) how to wage war. The aim of this brainwashing is precisely to
make it possible to keep the occupied territories and, God willing, to
drive the Palestinians out.
The real criminal in this story is Ehud Barak. In order to
hide his monumental failure as a peace-maker, he created the legend that
"we offered them everything and they rejected everything." This historic
lie is the connecting link between the two seemingly contradictory results
of the polls: the majority is ready to pay the price of peace but does not
believe that peace is possible. So let’s support Sharon.
There is no riddle here. Israel is not a mad cow. It is,
at most, a maddened cow.
[The author has closely followed the career of Sharon for four decades.
Over the years, he has written three extensive biographical essays about
him, two (1973, 1981) with his cooperation.]