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<text id=93TT0819>
<title>
Sep. 20, 1993: To Prevail Over The Past
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Sep. 20, 1993 Clinton's Health Plan
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MIDDLE EAST, Page 42
To Prevail Over The Past
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The real rift is no longer between Jew and Arab but betweeen
backward-looking and forward-looking people on both sides
</p>
<p>By AMOS OZ/ARAD
</p>
<p> Amos Oz is an Israeli novelist, essayist and peace activist.
(c) 1993 Amos Oz
</p>
<p> With the editorial assistance of Maggie Bar-Tura
</p>
<p> A few nights ago, when Israel and the Palestine Liberation
Organization recognized each other, I had a vivid recollection
of the night of May 14 and May 15, 1948, when Israel declared
its independence. I was nine years old. I remember my father
coming to my bed and lying beside me in the dark. "When I was
a boy, I was beaten in school in Russia and then in Poland for
being a little Jew," he said. "You may still get beaten in school,
but not for being a Jew. This is what the State of Israel is
all about." In the darkness I could suddenly feel his tears.
It was the only time in my life that my father cried in my presence.
</p>
<p> The next morning, within hours of Israel's declaration of independence,
five Arab armies invaded the country from all directions. The
Jewish section of Jerusalem was besieged for several months,
bombarded by Jordanian artillery from the east and by Egyptian
forces from the south. What had been, since the beginning of
the century, a neighborly feud between Arabs and Jews turned
that night into a major international war.
</p>
<p> Twice in my life, in 1967 and again in 1973, I saw the face
of war as a reservist soldier, first in Sinai and then in the
Golan Heights. That experience turned me into a peace activist,
but not into a pacifist ready to turn the other cheek to an
enemy. If anyone tries to take my life or the life of my people,
I will fight. I will fight if anyone tries to enslave us, but
nothing short of the defense of life and freedom could make
me take up arms. "National interest," "ancestral rights" and
an extra bedroom for the nation are not reasons to go out to
the battlefield.
</p>
<p> As a teenager addicted to politics, I would do my shift as night
watchman along the perimeter fence of Kibbutz Hulda, secretly
listening to the news on a portable radio. Through the night,
I would wander between the transmissions of Jordan, Syria and
Egypt. Whenever they referred to Israel, they used the term
the Zionist entity. The announcer would say "the so-called government
of the so-called state" but would stop short of pronouncing
the word Israel, as if it were a four-letter word. The Arab
world, primarily the Palestinians, dealt with us as if we were
nothing more than a passing infection.
</p>
<p> I remember how those nights in Kibbutz Hulda, about three miles
from the pre-1967 armistice lines, were punctuated by fires
and explosions on the eastern horizon as we guarded against
the fedayeen, which is what the Palestinian infiltrators were
called. On the Israeli radio station, you could hear the rhetoric
of a society of armed settlers: "Our generation, and perhaps
generations to come, are destined to plow the fields while carrying
a gun." At that time I didn't think I would see an Israel-Arab
peace in my lifetime. The term Palestinians was hardly used
in those days. It was almost as unpronounceable for Israelis
as "Israel" was for the Arabs. We used to talk about "refugees,"
"terrorists" or simply "the enemy." Since the Israeli occupation
of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, most of us simply refer to
them as locals. One winter night I shared my guard duty in Kibbutz
Hulda with an elderly ideologue (without the illicit radio).
With a strangely ironic expression on his face, he suddenly
whispered to me, "What do you expect from those Palestinians?
From their point of view, aliens have landed in their country
and gradually taken some of it away, claiming that in return
they will shower the natives with loving-kindness, and Palestinians
simply said no thanks, and took to arms in order to repel the
Zionist invaders?" Being the teenage product of a conventional
Zionist upbringing, I was shocked by his use of the word Palestinians,
as well as by the treacherous revelation that the enemy not
only had a point of view, but a fairly convincing one at that.
</p>
<p> His words eventually turned me into a relativist about the ethical
dimension of the Israeli-Palestinian tragedy. There is nothing
tragic about the conflict between Israel and Syria or Israel
and Iran. They have been the aggressors, and we have defended
ourselves as best we could. The case between Israelis and Palestinians
is a tragedy precisely because it is a clash between one very
powerful claim and another. Israelis are in the land of Israel
because there is not and cannot be a national homeland for the
Jews anywhere else. The Palestinians are in Palestine because
their ancestors have been here for more than a thousand years.
Where one powerful claim clashes with another, there can be
either an endless cycle of bloodshed or a somewhat inconsistent
compromise. Since 1967, the Israeli peace movement has advocated
a compromise based on mutual recognition of the simple fact
that one small country, about the size of the state of New Jersey,
is the only homeland for two peoples. Wherever there is a clash
between right and right, a value higher than right ought to
prevail, and this value is life itself. I believe a similar
premise underlies the changing attitudes toward peace among
Palestinians.
</p>
<p> For many years, fanatics on all sides have tried to turn this
conflict into a holy war or a racial clash. Do-gooders outside
the region tended to present it as a civil rights issue or simply
as a sad misunderstanding. Fortunately, this conflict is essentially
nothing but a dispute over real estate: Whose house? Who is
going to get how much of it? Such conflicts can be resolved
through a compromise. I believe in a two-state solution that
can be achieved only step by step: Israeli recognition of the
Palestinian right of self-determination in part of the land,
in return for Arab readiness to meet Israel's legitimate security
provisions. The two parties are not about to fall in love with
each other once the agreement is signed. Yet the parties do
not need to see eye to eye regarding who was David and who was
Goliath in this conflict. (Obviously if one focuses on the West
Bank and Gaza Strip, then the Israelis are a clumsy Goliath,
whereas the stone-throwing Palestinians are brave little David.
Yet by changing the zoom and putting the frame around the conflict
between almost 5 million Israelis and more than 100 million
Arabs, and perhaps several hundreds of millions of Muslims,
the question of David and Goliath looks very different.) Luckily,
Israelis and Palestinians and other Arabs can conclude their
conflict even without agreeing about the narrative.
</p>
<p> Many Israelis and certain past Israeli governments are guilty
of blindness to the gradual emergence, perhaps as a by-product
of modern Zionism, of a Palestinian national persona. The Palestinian
national movement, for its part, has brought disaster upon the
two peoples by taking an uncompromising stance toward the Israeli
national persona. It may have blinded itself by perceiving Zionism
as a colonial phenomenon. Actually, the early Zionists had absolutely
nothing to colonize in this country when they began to return
to it nearly 100 years ago: it has no resources. In terms of
colonial exploitation, the Zionists have involved themselves
in the worst bargain of all times, as they have brought into
the country thousands of times more wealth than they could ever
hope to get out of it.
</p>
<p> Both parties, in two different ways, are victims of Christian
Europe: the Arabs through colonialism, imperialism, oppression
and exploitation, while the Jews have been the victims of discrimination,
pogroms, expulsions and, ultimately, mass murder. According
to the mythology of Bertolt Brecht, victims always develop a
sense of mutual solidarity, marching together to the barricades
as they chant Brecht's verses. In real life some of the worst
conflicts develop precisely between victims of the same oppressors:
two children of the same cruel parent do not necessarily love
each other. They often see in each other the image of their
past oppressor. So it is, to some extent, between Israelis and
Arabs: the Arabs fail to see us as a bunch of survivors. They
see in us a nightmarish extension of the oppressing colonizing
Europeans. We Israelis often look at Arabs not as fellow victims
but as an incarnation of our past oppressors: cossacks, pogrom
makers, Nazis who have grown mustaches and wrapped themselves
in kaffiyehs, but who are still in the usual business of cutting
Jewish throats.
</p>
<p> Naturally, all sides are uneasy, even worried, about the present
breakthrough. Many Palestinians fear that "Gaza and Jericho
first" is nothing but a disguise for an Israeli plot to get
away with "Gaza and Jericho only." Many Israelis, for their
part, fear that Israel is about to give away land and forfeit
strategic assets in return for nothing more than a piece of
paper, a sweet document that may easily be torn to shreds the
following day. Some of those apprehensions can be alleviated
when people on both sides realize that the present contract
contains an element of time as well as one of space: the fulfillment
of Palestinian national rights in the occupied territories is
going to be implemented over a period of several years, delivered
not mile by mile, but one attribute of sovereignty after another
so that Israel will have the time to find out if the Arab and
Palestinian peace check does not bounce.
</p>
<p> The present agreement is not accompanied by a burst of brotherly
emotion on both sides. If anything, Israelis and Palestinians
may be feeling like patients awakening from an anesthetized
slumber after amputation surgery, discovering with pain and
frustration that things are never going to be the same again.
This is the time for well-meaning governments and individuals
outside the region to stop wagging their fingers in disapproval
and instead to consider the prompt incorporation of a peaceful
Middle East into larger security and economic systems, thus
helping both sides to overcome some of their fears. This is
the time to develop a Marshall Plan for the Middle East, in
order to help resettle almost a million Palestinian refugees
as well as a similar number of Jewish refugees from the former
Soviet Union and elsewhere. I believe within 15 years a peaceful,
prosperous Middle East will be able not only to repay the sponsors
of such a Marshall Plan but even to extend material aid to other,
less privileged parts of the world.
</p>
<p> The labors of peacemaking are not concluded once the treaty
is signed. Courageous sappers on both sides must start clearing
the emotional minefields, the aftermath of war, removing mutual
stereotypes created by many years of fear and hatred. Describing
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as a tragic clash between right
and right, I maintain that we do not want a Shakespearean conclusion,
with poetic justice hovering over a stage littered with dead
bodies. We may now be nearing a typical Chekhovian conclusion
for the tragedy: the players disillusioned and worried, but
alive.
</p>
<p> Let us not forget that even now there are still different sets
of clocks at work in the Middle East. The real rift is no longer
between Jew and Arab but rather between past-oriented and future-oriented
people on both sides. I believe there is a good chance that
the future will prevail over the past. Together the Israelis
and the Palestinians are today sending a resounding message
to every agonized corner of the earth: If we can compromise
with each other and turn our backs to violence despite 100 years
of sound and fury, is peace not possible between all deadly
enemies in the world?
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>