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New Delhi, 07
September 2003
Mohan
Guruswamy takes a look into the recent history of the Israeli state
in an effort to sift fact from fiction. His subtle suggestion seems
to be that we should not overlook the facts in our dealings with
Israel.
Fact
and Fiction in Israel
By
Mohan Guruswamy
The
author Leon Uris died last week on June 21. He was 78. Uris was the
author of internationally acclaimed best selling novels like Battle
Cry, Exodus, Mila-18 and Trinity. He also wrote the
screenplay of the Hollywood classic, Gunfight at O.K. Corral
starring Burt Lancaster as Marshal Wyatt Earp and Kirk Douglas as
Doc Holliday. But it
was the 600-page Exodus that created a sensation in 1957 and
propelled him to the highest literary fame. It was a detailed and
heroic chronicle of European Jewry from the turn of the last century
to the creation of the State of Israel in 1948. Interestingly India
was one of the first countries to recognize Israel, whose creation
had the support of both the USA and the then Soviet Union. His book Mila-18
was published just as Joseph Heller was completing Catch-22.
The original title of this best seller was Catch-18, and its
publisher had to quickly give it a new number. But for this what we
now commonly call a Catch-22 situation would have been a Catch-18
situation.
Exodus
while being the epic story of a nation seeking a state even as it
was emerging from the greatest nightmare of history, was also the
touching love story of Ari Ben Canaan, an Israeli freedom fighter
and Kitty Fremont, an American nurse who joins Canaan’s fight for
a Jewish state. In 1958, after it became one of the most popular
novels of the century, Exodus was made into a film by Otto Preminger
and featured Paul Newman as Ari Ben Canaan.
Paul Newman with his striking good looks, great acting
ability and cool style was then the reigning Hollywood god. It was
probably the first time that Hollywood had portrayed a Jewish man in
such heroic dimensions. The book and the movie contributed the most
to the mythologizing of the Israeli fighter as an indomitable and
idealistic hero.
But
it is not that Israel lacked such men those days. The founders of
the Palmach, the elite strike force of the Haganah that was the
forerunner of the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF), men like Moshe Dayan,
Haim Bar Lev, Ezer Weizmann, Yigael Yadin, Yitzhak Rabin and Yigal
Allon, were all men of heroic proportions and each one could have
been a prototype for Ari Ben Canaan. But it was Yigal Allon who came
closest of all to it. Allon who died in 1980 began life as a Haganah
field commander in 1936 when he was a mere 18 years old. In 1941 he
was one of the founders of the Palmach, a commando style strike unit
of the Haganah. In 1948 he was made a Lt. General and commanded
Israeli forces in the south that “liberated” the Negev in what
became to be known as the War of Independence. He retired from the
IDF in 1950, at the ripe old age of 32. In 1960 after a long career
in it, Allon went to Oxford University’s St.Anthony’s College to
study international relations! Allon later entered public life and
became Deputy Prime Minister of Israel in 1967. He died in 1980.
The
first Chief of the IDF was Yaakov Dori, who was one of the founding
Haganah commanders. The Haganah was founded in 1920 as the
underground military organization of the Jewish yishuv or
community and was then a loose organization of various local defense
groups. The Palmach, its first mobilized unit, gained battle
experience in the Second World War as the Jewish Brigade under
British command. The Palmach consisted of many first-generation Sabra’s
or Palestine born Israelis who were also fluent Arabic speakers,
which gave it the ability to remain concealed among the Arab
population and to wage a lethal unconventional war on them. The
military training and equipment that came as a consequence of
joining the British forces turned it into professional fighting
force.
The
British learned as much from this experience. Capt. Orde Wingate who
led the famous Chindits Brigade in Burma was originally from the
Palmach. Wingate was a charismatic dreamer, who though a Christian,
had joined the Jewish movement and led the Special Night Squad of
the Haganah, which carried out reprisals against the Arabs.
Wingate’s Palestine experience found expression in Burma and its
successes led all traditional armies to establish special warfare
forces to give them similar deep strike capabilities. The
combination of unconventional warfare by British SAS and US Special
Forces and deep and precision air strikes by modern fighter and
bomber aircraft in Afghanistan has now given modern warfare a new
dimension. Of the three battalions who formed the original Chindits
Brigade, the 2/4 Gurkha Rifles is still with the Indian Army and
carries the Chindits tag with great pride.
The
heroic sheen of the IDF has gone with its emergence as a mighty army
with the latest weapons and the unstinted support of the USA. It is
now no longer David with a slingshot facing a mighty Goliath. In the
four major wars it has fought, the IDF has worsted numerically
superior Arab armies with ease. It was only in the 1973 Yom Kippur
War that the Egyptian and Syrian forces managed to score some major
initial successes, making the crossing of the Suez Canal by Gen.
Saad Shazli’s Egyptian forces and the breaching of the Bar-Lev
line, and the subsequent defeat of the Israeli armored
counter-attack, the only military successes of the modern day Arab
armies. It’s difficult to remain heroic David against such
adversaries for long. The Palestinian intifada is now the
heroic struggle of a people seeking to find their identity and their
freedom. Just like Israel was before 1948.
The
reality of the nature of the Palmach may never have been very
different from that of the IDF now, but for the contribution of
people like Leon Uris who mythologized the Israeli cause. Even way
back in 1948, Yigal Allon had written: “We saw a need to clean
inner Galilee and to create a Jewish territory in the entire area of
Upper Galilee… We therefore looked for means, which did not force
us into employing force, in order to cause tens of thousands of
sulky Arabs who remained in Galilee to flee… I gathered all the
Jewish mukhtars, who have contacts with Arabs in different
villages and asked them to whisper in the ears of some Arabs, that a
great Jewish reinforcement had arrived in Galilee and that it was
going to burn all the villages of Huleh. They should suggest to
these Arabs, as their friends, to escape while there is still
time.” (Yigal Allon in the Book of the Palmach, vol.2, p286).
If
the Palmach fighters were driving the Arabs from their traditional
homes by psychological means, the terrorist end of the Haganah
spectrum like the Irgun of Menachem Begin and the Stern gang led by
Yitzhak Shamir were using more direct methods. Shamir, who was
extremely short and extremely good at assassination, later became a
senior Mossad operative. The notorious massacre at Deir Yasin, where
a whole Arab village was butchered, was the handiwork of these two,
both later to become Prime Ministers and one even a winner of the
Nobel Prize for Peace! But thanks to Leon Uris we saw the young
Israel as idealized by Ari Ben Canaan.
The
atrocities during the War of Independence can even be justified by
the fact that there was a war declared on the Jewish state by all
its Arab neighbors, Egypt, Jordan and Syria, supported by the entire
Arab world. The moth-eaten Israel mandated by the UN was not tenable
in terms of security, and addition of territory to gain security
could have even been justified. But the continued occupation of the
West Bank since 1967 and the continued building of settlements in
defiance of UN resolutions and in the face of world opinion are ugly
and contemptuous manifestations of a narrow nationalism.
Israel
is no longer the valiant and beleaguered underdog, but seen as an
arrogant oppressor seeking to crush a nation under its jackboots.
The determined visage and striding corpulence of Ariel Sharon tells
it all.
The
first generations of Israeli leadership were drawn from the European
Jewry known as the Ashkenazim. The Ashkenazim were
generally liberal and progressive, and this was seen in the early
Israel when most agriculture was under co-operative farming
organized around the Kibbutz, which also entailed a communal
(sharing) lifestyle. The Histadrut, the labor union, which
was the bedrock of the Labor political movement led by Israel’s
founding father, David Ben Gurion, is also Israel’s biggest
employer owning much of its transportation, dairy, construction and
services sectors. Israel was intended as a progressive, socialist
and democratic state. Most Jews who immigrated to Israel were
fleeing centuries of European oppression that culminated with
cataclysmic consequences for them in Hitler’s death camps.
Now
real power in Israel vests with Menachim Begin’s successors in the
Likud party which derives much support from the Sephardim, as
the Jewish people from Arab nations are known. The Likud leadership
is still Ashkenazim, but the animosity towards Arabs has a
sharper edge honed by the memory of the sufferings of the Sephardim
in Arab nations. Thus while leaders like the Labor party’s Shimon
Peres who are from the Ashkenazi elite are generally more
willing for a more equitable and just compromise with the
Palestinians, leaders like Ariel Sharon and Binyamin Netanyahu would
like nothing better than the expulsion of all Palestinians from
their remaining homeland in the West Bank.
Ariel
Sharon initiated the policy of settlement in the occupied
territories when he was the Minister for the West Bank in Yitzhak
Rabin’s first coalition government. The sad truth about Israel is
that Ariel Sharon is fact and Ari Ben Canaan is fiction.
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