The HyperTexts
Miko Peled Quotes, Articles and Essays
Miko Peled is an Israeli peace activist, author, and karate instructor. He
has also written an autobiographical book, The General’s Son: Journey of an
Israeli in Palestine, which he has described as an account of how "the son of an
Israeli General and a staunch Zionist” came to realize that "the story upon
which I was raised ... was a lie." The book is based largely on long
conversations with his mother, on a thorough reading of "everything my dad had
ever written," and on material about his father's career in the Israeli army
archives. (In 1948 Peled’s mother refused the offer of an Arab home in West
Jerusalem because the former owners had become refugees: she said “No!” to free
land and a free home at the expense of Palestinian suffering.
I lived as best I could, and then I died.
Be careful where you step: the grave is wide.
—Michael R. Burch, "Epitaph for a Palestinian
Child"
Born in Jerusalem in 1961, Miko Peled grew up in a prominent Zionist family.
His grandfather, Avraham Katsnelson, signed Israel’s Declaration of
Independence. His father, Mattityahu Peled, was a major general in the 1967 war,
but he later became a peace activist and called the war a "cynical campaign of
territorial expansion." General Peled was nicknamed "Abu Salam" (Father of
Peace) by Palestinians who knew and admired him.
Miko Peled followed in his father’s footsteps at first, joining Israel’s
Special Forces after high school. But in a move reminiscent of Muhammad Ali
throwing his Olympic gold medal in to the Ohio River in disgust, after the 1982
Lebanon invasion, Peled buried his service pin in the dirt.
According to Peled, Israeli apartheid is so ubiquitous and entrenched that he
didn’t befriend a Palestinian until he was 39 years old ... and that was in a
dialogue group in California!
His blog is “dedicated to tearing down the separation wall and transforming
the Israeli apartheid system into a secular democracy, where Israelis and
Palestinians will live as equal citizens.”
And now, here without further ado, is Miko Peled, the General’s son, in his
own words ...
In 1997, after Peled’s 13-year-old niece Smadar was killed in a suicide
attack in Jerusalem:
“Why not tell the truth ... That this and similar tragedies are taking place
because we are occupying another nation and that in order to save lives the
right thing to do is to end the occupation and negotiate a just peace with our
Palestinian partners?"
On terrorism:
My father, who was a military giant but had also spent years fighting for
justice for the Palestinian cause, was often asked about the question of
Palestinian terrorism. I mention his reply in my book because it is classic:
“Terrorism,” I recall him saying in an interview on Israeli television, “is a
terrible thing. But the fact remains that when a small nation is ruled by a
larger power, terror is the only means at their disposal. This has always been
true, and I fear this will always be the case.”
On Israeli apartheid and its increasing brutality:
Israel’s so-called “peace process” is in reality “a process of apartheid &
colonization.”
Israeli officials are guilty of “ethnic cleansing.”
“Israel has been on a mission to destroy the Palestinian people for over six
decades.”
The Israeli government is “a radical Zionist regime.”
“The IDF lusts for blood,” being a “terrorist organization” and “well-oiled
ethnic cleansing machine.”
Israel is a country where “half of the population lives in what it thinks is a
Western democracy while keeping the other half imprisoned by a ruthless defense
apparatus that is becoming more violent by the day.”
Israel's educational system is designed to turned Israeli children into racists
who view Palestinians “as culturally inferior, violent and bent on the
annihilation of the Jews” and “as a problem that must be solved and a threat
that must be eliminated.”
“Since its establishment, Israel has engaged in brutal oppression of the rights
of Palestinians. Thousands of Palestinians are imprisoned, beaten and tortured;
children are taken from their beds and beaten by soldiers who are armed to the
teeth.”
Echoing Albert Einstein, who opposed political Zionism and a Jewish state,
preferring reconciliation and friendship with Palestinian Arabs:
“Expressing solidarity with Palestinians is the most important thing [the
Jewish] people can do.”
A single state solution:
“Israel is faced with two options: Continue to exist as a Jewish state while
controlling the Palestinians through military force and racist laws, or
undertake a deep transformation into a real democracy where Israelis and
Palestinians live as equals in a shared state, their shared homeland. For
Israelis and Palestinians alike, the latter path promises a bright future.”
THE VIOLENCE IN GAZA IS CAUSED BY ISRAEL’S ETHNIC CLEANSING, NOT HAMAS’S
RESISTANCE
Today people lay the blame for the violence in Gaza on Hamas, but Israel did
not start its assaults on the Gaza Strip when Hamas was established in the late
1980’s. Israel began attacking Gaza when the Gaza Strip was established and
populated with refugees in the early 1950’s. Palestinians, particularly in Gaza,
are not faced with an option to resist and be killed or live in peace. They are
presented with the options of being killed standing up and fighting or being
killed sleeping in their beds.
Gaza is being punished because Gaza is a constant reminder to Israel and the
world of the original sin of the ethnic cleansing of Palestine and the creation
of a so-called Jewish state. Even though Palestinian resistance has never
presented a military threat to Israel, it has always been portrayed as an
existential threat to Israel. Moshe Dayan, the famed Israeli general with the
eyepatch described this in a speech in April 1956. He spoke in Kibbutz Nahal Oz,
an Israeli settlement on the border of the Gaza strip where Israeli tanks park
each time there is a ground invasion of Gaza.
“Beyond this border exists an ocean of hatred and a deep desire for
vengeance,” Dayan said then. Ironically, when six months later Israel had
occupied Gaza and my father was appointed its military governor he said he saw
“no hatred or desire for vengeance but a people eager to live and work together
for a better future.”
Still, today, Israeli commanders and politicians say pretty much the same:
Israel is destined to live by the sword and must strike Gaza whenever possible.
Never mind the fact that Palestinians have never posed a military challenge,
much less a threat to Israel. After all, Palestinians have never possessed as
much as a tank, a war ship or a fighter jet, not to say a regular army.
A THREAT TO ISRAEL’S LEGITIMACY
So why the fear? Why the constant, six-decade-long campaign against Gaza?
Because Palestinians in Gaza, more so than anywhere else, pose a threat to
Israel’s legitimacy.
Israel is an illegitimate creation, born of the unholy union between racism
and colonialism, and the refugees who make up the majority of the population in
the Gaza Strip are a constant reminder of this. They are a reminder of the crime
of ethnic cleansing upon which Israel was established. The poverty, lack of
resources and lack of freedom stand in stark contrast to the abundance, freedom
and power that exist in Israel and that rightfully belongs to Palestinians.
“NEVER AGAIN?”
As I write these words, the number of innocents murdered by Israel in Gaza
has risen beyond two thousand. Ending the insufferable, brutal and racist regime
that was created by the Zionists in Palestine is the call of our time.
Criticizing Palestinian resistance is unconscionable. Israel must be subjected
to boycott, divestment and sanctions [BDS]. Israeli diplomats must be sent home
in shame. Israeli leaders, and Israeli commanders traveling abroad must fear
prosecution. And these measures are to be combined with disobedience,
non-cooperation and uncompromising resistance. This and only this will show
mothers, fathers and children in Gaza that the world cares and that “Never
Again” is more than an empty promise.
WAR CRIMES
Israel Is No “Island of Stability”
by Miko Peled
As the battle over the future of the entire Middle East rages on with popular
protests demanding change on the one hand and reactionary forces fighting to
suppress them on the other, we hear that Israel is being called an island of
stability. Being an established democracy for over six decades the Jewish State
is heralded as a shinning example of a stable, free country the likes of which
everyone would like to see all over the Middle East. However, this is merely a
smoke screen and there can be nothing farther from the truth. Israel is no
“Island of Stability.” The struggle for democracy and human rights rages on in
Israel just as it is all over the Middle East, and Israel is waging a brutal and
bloody war against the forces of change and democracy not unlike its tyrannical
neighbors. There is however one difference: Even though the non-violent
Palestinian popular resistance movement that is demanding human rights, equality
and protection under the law, all of which Israel denies the Palestinian people,
has been going on far longer than the other than its counterparts in the region,
it receives little attention.
Israeli governments have consistently been reactionary, conservative and
highly reprehensible on the issue of civil rights and human rights of the
non-Jewish population that they govern. Now that there is no longer a real
option to partition historical Israel/Palestine into two states, a clear choice
needs to be made: will Israel remain an ethnically racist state where only Jews
have rights and non-Jews, who make up half of the population, remain without
rights or meaningful representation? Or will a democracy emerge that espouses
human and civil rights for all who live within it, without regard for race or
religion? Just as tyrannical regimes in other parts of the Middle East need to
make way for democracy, the same goes for Zionist Israel.
Not unlike its Western allies, Israel is happy to have corruptible tyrants at
its service and to offer them favors and protection in return. In order to
maintain its ruthless hold over all of historic Palestine and fight off the
Palestinians resistance, Israel needs corrupt, unprincipled tyrants who are
bribable and who will be at Israel’s disposal. Hosni Mubarak and the Hashemite
family are two examples, as was the Shah of Iran in his day, and these are the
ones that are well-known. Who knows how many other Arab tyrants are covertly
bank rolled by the Zionist state?
There was no surprise that during the uprising in Egypt, Israel supported
Hosni Mubarak and lobbied heavily on his behalf in Washington and other
capitals, going against the pro-democracy resistance in Egypt; contrary to the
claims made by some that the popular resistance in the Arab world is a Zionist
conspiracy, Israel will do all within its power to keep the ruthless
dictatorships in the Arab world in place so that it can control the Arab world
by terrorizing and bribing them. If and when democratic regimes are finally
established in Egypt, North Africa, Jordan and Syria it is likely that Israel
will not receive the tacit support it currently has on the issue of Palestine.
Since its establishment, Israel has engaged in brutal oppression of the rights
of Palestinians. Thousands of Palestinians are imprisoned, beaten and tortured;
children are taken from their beds and beaten by soldiers who are armed to the
teeth. Now Israel is clearly frustrated by its inability to crush the new waves
of popular resistance and as the resistance movement grows and gains more ground
and support, the Israeli brutality increases as well. One challenge that still
plagues the Palestinians is severe fragmentation.
In an interview on CNN, Benjamin Netanyahu claimed that reconciliation
efforts between the Fatah and Hamas, something for which Palestinian people have
been yearning for a long time, is dangerous and must be jeopardized. Again,
considering that consecutive Israeli governments have worked tirelessly to bring
about the fragmentation of Palestinian society and politics and that they have
been very successful, Netanyahu’s statement is not surprising.
Having destroyed Palestine in 1948, Israel successfully created a split
between Palestinians who remained within Palestine and those who ended up in the
Diaspora. This it did by establishing a series of laws that prohibit Palestinian
refugees from visiting their homeland and making it intolerably difficult for
those who carry citizenships from countries that are friendly to Israel to enter
when they come to visit their homeland. Then, Israel managed to create a
separation between Palestinians who live within Israel proper and those in the
territories occupied in 1967, the former being considered Israeli citizens, and
to deepen the separation through laws that limit marriage between Palestinians
in the two areas; then a rift between Palestinians who live in the West Bank and
Palestinians in Gaza was deepened by forbidding travel between the two regions.
Finally, Israel supported the creation of Hamas to counter Fatah and then began
fueling a bloody feud between the two. So there is no wonder that Netanyahu
wants to maintain this fragmentation that has allowed Zionist state to further
its iron grip on Palestine and its people.
The times are changing all around the Middle East, including Israel. Like other
tyrants in the region, Israel cannot maintain the current level of violence
against the Palestinian resistance without the support of its Western allies.
Without the massive cooperation Israel receives from the West, Israel will not
be able to maintain its exclusive hold on the land and the oppression of the
people and will have to give up its control so as to allow an inclusive
democracy to emerge in its place. Rather then letting things escalate and
allowing far more innocents to die, progressive forces around the world need to
join hands in condemning Israel and supporting the forces that fight for change.
What is called for now is a clear demand that all political prisoners held by
Israel be released, that the separation wall be torn down, that Palestinians be
given full equal rights and freedom under the law, and that Palestinians be
allowed live and travel anywhere within Israel/Palestine.
Just as people of conscience around the world hope to see the old tyrants
like Mubarak and Qaddafi toppled, so must they act so that Zionist Israel will
be transformed into a secular, tolerant, pluralistic democracy. A democracy in
which all citizens enjoy equal rights and have a say in their future. As the
drastic changes in the Middle East took place with little warning, one may
expect that little warning will be given and that change will happen within
Israel/Palestine sooner rather than later. Those who stand beside Zionist Israel
now will later come to regret it and the stain of shame will be hard to erase.
As it is the Zionist state will go down in history as the lowest and most
shameful chapter in the long history of the Jewish people.
My Speech for Palestine Awareness Week at SDSU
by Miko Peled
I want to begin by thanking the members of AIPAC the Jewish Zionist community
who are here tonight. I am glad that they decided to set aside time to express
solidarity with the people of Palestine. I know that you will listen to the
tapes and view the recordings of my remarks tonight and you will study them well
and hopefully you will realize that you are supporting evil. You see, I too came
from a deeply Zionist background, far more Zionist and Jewish than most of you
here tonight. My grandfather was a signer on the Israeli declaration of
independence, and my father, a general, one of the giants who planned and
executed Israel’s most definitive military victories, namely 1948 and 1967. So I
know what you were taught and I know what you think. But it’s time to sweep away
the Zionist myths and uncover the truth so that we may all finally live in
peace. The myths I will address tonight are the three most common myths:
1. The myth of 1948.
2. The myth of the existential threat of 1967.
3. The myth of the Jewish democracy.
I want to read to you a passage from my upcoming book The General’s Son, and
I quote: “Growing up we were taught to believe that the Arabs had left Eretz
Israel partly on their own and partially at the directive of their so-called
leaders, and that therefore taking their land and homes was morally OK. It never
occurred to us that even if they did leave willingly, we had no right to
prohibit their return. But then Israeli historians had found that what
Palestinians have been saying for decades was true.” In other words when
Palestinians claim something is true we doubt it, but when Israelis claim it
themselves, well now that is a different story. So Israeli historians found that
Israel and Palestine were the exact same place. But when Israel was created it
was created on the ruins of Palestine.
Now, although Palestine was not a state yet, it would have become one had it
not been so thoroughly destroyed. Palestine had bustling cities where commerce
and trade were taking place, they had a middle class, they had judges and
scholars and a rich political life and indeed they had culture and a unique
identity that set them apart from the rest of the Arab world. What the
Palestinians did not have, the one thing in which they did not invest was a
military. And while they constituted the vast majority of the population, when
the Jewish militias attacked, they were helpless.
The Jewish community in Palestine at the time was small, numbering less than
half a million people, but it had developed its own state-like institutions
separate from those of the Palestinians. Based on the principle of Hafrada, or
segregation, they had developed their own schools, a nationalized health care
system, a quasi-government and a strong, well-trained militia with young men
like my father who were dedicated to creating a Jewish state in Palestine,
disregarding the existence of the vast majority of the population who were
Palestinians.
In 1948 the Jewish militia became the Israeli army, but between the end of
1947 and the beginning of 1949 they destroyed close to 500 towns and villages
and exiled close to 800,000 Palestinians who to this day are not permitted to
return. So, it turns out that the creation of Israel had not, after all, been a
haphazard fight in which the Arabs fled their homes due to the directives of
their own leaders. It had been a systematic campaign of ethnic cleansing by the
Jewish militia involving massacres, terrorism, and the wholesale looting of an
entire nation.
My mother remembers the homes of the Palestinians who were forced to leave
West Jerusalem. She herself was offered one of those beautiful spacious homes
but refused. She could not bear the thought of living in the home of a family
that was forced out and now lives in a refugee camp. She said the coffee was
still warm on the tables as the soldiers came in and began the looting. She
remembers the truckloads of loot, taken by the Israeli soldiers from these
homes.
Once the state was established, Israel worked tirelessly to efface the
remnants of prior Palestinian existence by demolishing towns and villages and
historic sites including an estimated two thousand mosques. I recall the Israeli
TV series Tkuma or “Rebirth” (an outstanding series that describes the rebirth
of the Jewish people and the establishment of the Jewish state. In one interview
a veteran brigade commander of 1948 was asked if it was true that the Jewish
forces burned down Arab villages. He looked up slowly into the camera and said:
“Like bonfires,” he replied, they burnt like bonfires.)
After the war was over, the Palestinians who remained within the newly-
created Jewish state were forced to become citizens of a state that forced
itself upon them and they were designated as “The Arabs of Israel” a designation
that denies them a national identity and rights. They are Arabs in a Jewish
state and they are citizens of a state that is despised by all its neighbors.
Another widely accepted Zionist myth is that in 1967 Israel had to defend
itself against an existential threat, as invading Arab armies were about to wipe
it off the face of the earth. And it just so happened that miraculously the
Israelis won and conquered lands to the north, east and south, defeating three
massive armies. Well, setting aside the countless books that have been written
in Hebrew, English and Arabic and documentaries that were filmed and disprove
this myth, and clearly show that Israel attacked in order to conquer, as part of
the research for my book, I sat for days at the Israeli army archives reading
through the minutes of the meetings of the Israel army general staff. Here is
another quote from my book: “In a stormy meeting of the IDF top brass and the
Israeli cabinet that took place on the 2nd of June, 1967, my father General
Matti Peled told the cabinet in no uncertain terms that the Egyptians needed at
least a year and a half in order to be ready for a full-scale war. His point was
that the time to strike a devastating blow against the Egyptian army was now,
not because of an existential threat but because the Egyptian army is NOT
prepared for war. The other generals agreed. But the cabinet was hesitant. The
cabinet members and Prime Minister and a tug-of-war of unimaginable proportions
ensued. During that same stormy meeting my father said to the Prime Minister:
‘Nasser (Egyptian President Gamal Abdul Nasser) is advancing an ill-prepared
army because he is counting on the cabinet being hesitant. He is convinced that
we will not strike. Your hesitation is working in his advantage.’” No mention of
an existential threat but of an opportunity to assert Israeli strength. Years
later this was confirmed by other Generals, including the butcher Ariel Sharon.
In the end the cabinet succumbed to the enormous pressure placed on them by
the generals and approved a pre-emptive attack against Egypt, that began on June
5, 1967. Again I quote: “The surprise attack led to the total destruction of
Egypt’s air force, the decimation of the Egyptian army, and the re-conquest of
the Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula in a matter of days. The Israeli army
also knew the Syrian army was in shambles, and the Jordanians were no match to
the IDF strength. After the campaign against Egypt went so smoothly, the
generals turned their attention to the West Bank and the Golan Heights, two
regions Israel had coveted for many years. Both had strategic water resources
and hills overlooking Israeli territory, and the West Bank contained the
heartland of Biblical Israel, and the crown jewel, the old city of Jerusalem. In
six days it was all over. Arab casualties were estimated at 15,000, (15,000 dead
in 6 days!) Israeli casualties 700, and the territory controlled by Israel had
nearly tripled in size. Israel had in its possession not only land and resources
it had wanted for a long time, but also the largest stockpiles of Russian-made
arms outside of Russia. Israel had once again asserted itself as a major
regional power.”
Now here is where something of immense proportion takes place: remember this
was 46 years ago. At a meeting of the General Staff after the Six Day War, Chief
of Staff Yitzhak Rabin was beaming with the glory of victory. But when the
meeting was nearing its end, my father raised his hand. He was called on, and he
spoke of the unique chance the victory offered—to solve the Palestinian problem
once and for all. For the first time in Israel’s history, we were face to face
with the Palestinians, without other Arabs between us. Now we had a chance to
offer them a state of their own in the West Bank and Gaza. He claimed with
certainty that holding on to the West Bank and the people who lived in it was
contrary to Israel’s long-term strategy. Popular resistance to the occupation
was sure to arise, and Israel’s army would be used to quell that resistance,
with disastrous and demoralizing results. It would turn the Jewish state into an
increasingly brutal occupying power and eventually into a bi-national state.
This was nothing short of prophetic as today we live this exact reality. As he
was saying this, the future leaders of the Intifada (the Palestinian uprising)
were still lying in their cradles.
His words were ignored, his claims brushed aside and instead, blinded by
their newly-gained access to places with mythical/biblical names like Hebron and
Bethlehem, Shilo and Shcem, Israeli leaders began a massive settlement project
to settle Jews in the newly-conquered land. A few years later my father called
on Israel to negotiate with the PLO: The Palestinian Liberation Organization. He
claimed that Israel needed to talk with whoever represented the Palestinian
people, the people with whom we shared this land. He believed only peace with
the Palestinians could ensure our continued existence as a state that was both
Jewish and democratic. Now, all these years later people talk of creating a
Palestinian state in the WB but that option no longer exists.
The myth of Israel being a democracy is still being perpetuated even in light
of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. While Jewish Israelis over there and
AIPAC over here like to think they are the only rightful citizens of their land
and will argue that they live in a democracy, this is far from being true.
Israel has been in control of the West Bank for over four decades and has built
and invested heavily in the West Bank. But Palestinians who make up the vast
majority of the population in the West Bank are excluded from any of it. In
other words, 100% of the construction in the West Bank was done to bring Jews
into the WB and exclude the close to 3 million Palestinians to whom the land
belongs in the first place. Those 3 million Palestinians are left out,
disenfranchised even as they see their lands taken, their homes destroyed and
roads, malls, schools and gated communities being built for Jews only, with no
access to them or their families. Some “democracy.”
And that is not the worst of it. Water, the scarcest resource of all, is
controlled and distributed by the Israeli water authority, including the large
amounts of water that exist within the WB. According to Betselem, the Israeli
human rights organization, the ground water from the Mountain Aquifer is a
shared water source for Israeli and Palestinians. It is the largest and highest
quality water source in the area, producing 600 million cubic meters (mcm) of
water annually. Israel holds almost complete control of the aquifer and exploits
80 percent of the production for its needs, leaving the remainder for the
Palestinians’ use. “The discriminatory and unfair division of shared water
resources creates a chronic water shortage in the West Bank, and is liable to
harm Palestinians’ health.” The World Health Organization recommends a minimal
per capita daily consumption of 100 liters. The daily per capita consumption in
Israel is 242 liters, the consumption in the West Bank is 73 liters per person.
“In certain districts, consumption was as low as 37 liters (Tubas District), 44
(Jenin District), and 56 (Hebron District).” So Palestinians have to buy their
own water back from Israel, as Israel does not recognize Palestinian rights to
the water that exists under Palestinian land. As absurd as it sounds,
Palestinian farmers are prohibited from digging wells on their own land. When
seen as a per year distribution it is even more alarming. Israel distributes the
water as follows: Per capita, Israeli Jews receive 300 cubic meters of water per
year. Per capita Palestinians receive 85 cubic meters per year. (World Health
Organization recommends 100 per year.) Per capita, Jewish settlers in the WB are
allocated 1500 cubic meters of water per year. In other words while Palestinians
have barely enough to drink, Jewish settlers not 500 yards away have swimming
pools and green lawns. So does anyone seriously think that this can go on
forever? Democracy indeed. Now in light of the people’s uprising in the Middle
East, we can expect to see dictatorial regimes falling like dominos. Can we
expect that 5 million Palestinians will continue to live under a regime that is
democratic for Jews but is a brutally oppressive one to Palestinians? There are
close to 6 million Israel Jews and 5.5 million Palestinians sharing the same
country under different laws.
My father, who was a military giant but had also spent years fighting for
justice for the Palestinian cause, was often asked about the question of
Palestinian terrorism. I mention his reply in my book because it is classic:
“Terrorism,” I recall him saying in an interview on Israeli television, “is a
terrible thing. But the fact remains that when a small nation is ruled by a
larger power, terror is the only means at their disposal. This has always been
true, and I fear this will always be the case.”
My father’s predictions have all come true. The work of the Israel lobby in
this country notwithstanding, people around the world are beginning to realize
that there are in fact two nations who live between the Jordan River and the Med
sea and that the brutal regime under which Palestinians live is unacceptable.
And speaking of AIPAC, I remember seeing many of you, the mighty San Diego
AIPAC bunch who are sitting here tonight, at the vigil that was held for the
innocent victims murdered by Israel in Gaza. It was held a couple of months ago
in Balboa Park. You were draped in the Israeli flag, singing and dancing as we
who were there too, separated from you by a line of police and a sense of
morality, tried to recall the names of over 1400 dead, innocent civilians,
police officers, children, women and men who were killed by the state of Israel
in a matter of three weeks.
Those were three weeks of such death and destruction that one can hardly
comprehend. I recall stories of the Israeli air force pilots who flew sortie
after sortie, dumping hundreds of tons of bombs on Gaza, exposing a civilian
population to unimaginable horror and then returning home to their families to
celebrate the Jewish holiday of Hanukah. You see the attacks took place during
Hanukah. Then these pilots, having enjoyed the celebration, slept well in the
comfort of their homes and their beds only to get up the next morning and do it
again, and again, and again. I recall that during the vigil you who were draped
in the Israeli flag held signs that told of the warning the Israeli army gave
the people of Gaza prior to the attacks. They dropped thousands of leaflets to
let the besieged people of Gaza know that this nightmare was about to begin. I
can only imagine the mother who saw the warnings. Knowing that the death and
destruction were pending and knowing also that there was nowhere to go, nowhere
to take her children, nowhere to hide them from the fire, the smoke, the
chemicals and the phosphorous that melts the flesh and won’t be extinguished –
nowhere to go because Israel had imposed a siege, a neverending lockdown on the
people of Gaza. So for the Israeli air force pilots, young men who Israelis and
Jewish Zionists everywhere consider their finest, this was nothing more than
shooting fish in a barrel as they began their merciless onslaught at precisely
11:25 am on December 27, 2008. A date that will forever be etched in our memory
as one of the darkest and most shameful days in the long history of the Jewish
people. A day when the Jewish State committed horrendous, shameful crimes by
dropping hundreds of tons of bombs at the precise time that Gaza children were
out on the street. Between 11 and 11:30 AM, the 800,000 children of Gaza are on
their way to school or returning home from school; it is at this time that the
two shifts of the school day change. That was the time chosen by the Israeli
decision makers to begin the assault.
To emphasize the how criminal this is, I want to read to you the quote from
Charles Glass, a veteran writer and Middle East reporter: In “The Tribes
Triumphant” arguably the one of the best books ever written about the Middle
East, journalist Charles Glass describes children in Gaza on their way to school
in the morning. Everyone should read his book, by the way, and here is what he
writes about children in Gaza: “...in smocks of blue or grey little girls with
white fringe collars, boys leading their younger brothers…with canvas bags of
books on their backs, hair brushed back and faces scrubbed...Thousands and
thousands of children’s feet padding the dusty paths between their mother’s
front doors and their schools…Gaza is a children’s land…beautiful youngsters so
innocent that they could laugh even in Gaza.” These are the people Israel
attacked on that dark, dark December day. Those of you who are here because you
support Israeli brutality will no doubt claim that Israel had the right to act
as it did because it was acting in self-defense. Self defense from kassam
rockets fired by Hammas militants in Gaza. Thousands of rockets that were
launched to kill innocent civilians in Israel.
I know a thing or two about kassam rockets. I was sitting with my children
and relatives in a kibbutz, a stone’s throw from Gaza: relaxing on a Saturday
afternoon as the rockets began flying over us and the alarms went off. It was
frightening. Just this last December a kassam rocket fell in the same kibbutz
near the kindergarten, when children were present. The children were hurt. There
were bloody scratches, shattered glass everywhere and several children were
hospitalized in a state of shock. I saw the hole in the ground created by the
rocket, the size of a large soccer ball. And then I remembered what a crater
made by a one-ton bomb looks like. It is the size of a city block. Children do
not suffer shock or scratches, they are decimated and burned and buried in the
rubble and suffocated from the fumes. Now, multiply that by 100 and multiply
that again and again and keep in mind that in Gaza population density is one of
the highest in the world: 10k per square mile. Yet the Israeli lobby will
justify this. Those among you who are Jewish will be familiar with the story in
the book of Genesis, chapter 18, verses 23-26: God decides to destroy the city
of Sodom and Abraham; the patriarch chastises him and says “wilt thou also
destroy the righteous with the wicked, perhaps there be fifty righteous within
the city” and God promises he will spare the city if he finds 50 righteous
people. But in Israel today there is no Abraham, for as we know there are
800,000 children in Gaza and Israel did not spare them the horror. Hard to
imagine.
I am often accused of being one-sided and not mentioning Palestinian
terrorism. Well this time I will: as my father said it decades ago, when a small
nation is governed by a brutal larger power, some sort of violent resistance is
to be expected. And the victims are always innocents. As for my family’s brush
with terrorism, it was what drove us to learn more about the conflict and to
reach out to our Palestinian neighbors. And the drive, the final push for me to
reach out to Palestinians came as a result of a devastating tragedy: I quote
again from my book The General’s Son: Then, in the fall of 1997, disaster. My
niece Smadar was killed by Palestinian suicide bombers. Hours later, there we
were, driving along the road to the cemetery. Police escorted our procession on
motorcycles, making way for vans carrying the devastated family members of
another Jewish casualty. As we got out of the van, someone approached and asked
me to carry the small coffin. My heart felt far heavier than the heartbreakingly
slight weight on my shoulders. Israelis and Palestinians, family members and
friends from across the political spectrum, famous leaders and ordinary people,
came to give eulogies or express their sorrow at this unspeakable loss. Smadar
was laid to rest near my father, her grandfather, in a small hilltop cemetery
just outside of Jerusalem. To this day my sister Nurit cannot forgive herself
for leaving her baby girl alone out in the cold, damp ground. But when she came
out of her room to face the thousands of mourners she did not ask for
retaliation. She did not beg for revenge. Instead she said this: “No real mother
would want such a terrible thing to happen to another mother.”
It seemed impossible to carry on. But my mother always said that life was
stronger than death. And so we went on. But something had changed. I felt I had
to do something and I knew that meeting and talking to Palestinians was the
right thing to do. And so I did, and I began right here in San Diego where I was
welcomed by the warm embrace of the local Palestinian community.
The experience of meeting Palestinian was comforting, liberating and
heart-wrenchingly difficult. It was comforting because I found that we were very
similar, it was liberating because I found we are not doomed to be enemies
forever, and it was heart wrenching because I realized I did not have full
possession of the truth – that is where you, my AIPAC supporting friends, are
right now: you are not in full possession of the truth and I suggest you get
over it and join me in what was so eloquently described by the great Clovis
Maqsoud as The “Constituency of Conscience.”
I can only imagine that the whites in South Africa, upon seeing the end of
apartheid, wanted so badly to hang on to their dying way of life, corrupt as it
was. I can only imagine that white racists in the Southern states were doing the
same as legalized racism and discrimination came to an end in this country. We
see brutal tyrants everywhere these days, from Libya to the Gulf states, do the
same. Holding on even as they fall one by one. Now Zionists and their supporters
do the same, holding on to the notion that a racist regime can last, that
injustice and horror can last, that crimes against others who are different can
go unpunished. But we are near the end. The Zionist dream of an ethnically,
religiously homogenous state was shattered by the Zionists themselves with their
insatiable hunger for land. In their own hands they created a binational state,
a state where half the population is not Jewish or Israeli but Palestinian Arab.
True they have no rights, true also that they are not counted, but that will
change and sooner than you think.
Change will come because the non-violent resistance movement in towns and
villages all over Palestine will prevail. In Beit-Umar, In Bil’in, in Nabi Saleh,
in Silwan in Ni’ilin, in Shekh Jerrakh, in Maasara, dear friends Palestinians
and Israelis who are committed to justice and democracy, organize non-violent
marches every single week. And this is why we who believe in justice and
democracy are optimistic. The people, grass roots Palestinian leaders who are
dedicated and relentless.
In East Jerusalem, just outside the walled old city and not far from the
Jewish Quarter, sits the neighborhood of Silwan with close to 50,000 residents.
Israel wants to expel families from Silwan in order to build an archeological
park that glorifies its Jewish past. They claim that king David built a city
there some 3,000 years ago and they hope to find the remnants of this city under
the homes of the people of Silwan. Thousands of families may have to leave so
that Israel can build a park to glorify a conquest that took place 3,000 years
ago, never mind that not a shred of scientific evidence exists that such a king
ever lived, any more than there is evidence the world was created in 6 days. The
past trumps the present in Israel – a state that wants to eliminate the
existence of people who live on their land to solidify the myth of a glorious
past.
But the Palestinians constantly and stubbornly interfere with the Zionist
myth making and so the Palestinians, men, women, children and the elderly along
with their schools and mosques, churches and ancient cemeteries and all evidence
of their existence must be destroyed so that Zionist claims to exclusive rights
to the land may be substantiated.
So, those of you who wish to associate yourself with Zionism and AIPAC and
drape yourselves in the Zionist flag, the flag that has come to symbolize
intolerance, hate, racism and brutality, feel free to do so. But know this: When
the trials begin, when the tribunals take their seat, when the “truth and
reconciliation” commission begins its work and when you are finally shamed into
admitting that you are wrong, remember to go down on your knees and beg for
forgiveness of the people you so blatantly wronged. You will not be able to
claim that you “did not know” because we watched you dance as others were
counting their dead. Remember and never forget that you and I and these
witnesses were here today. Because I will not forget you, they will not forget
you and worst of all, your conscience will not let you forget that you draped
yourself in the flag, you supported the killing, and you mocked the bereaved.
The rest of us will move on, and along with the rest of the Middle East we
will follow the example of the brave people of Egypt to create what will surely
be tremendous accomplishment: A democratic, secular state in our shared
homeland, A state where Muslims, Christians and Jews live as equals. A shared
state, a secular democracy, where every vote counts and people raise their
children to love their diverse homeland with its multitude of cultures, its rich
history and its promising future. It is true that there is a misguided
assumption that sharing the land means nations have to be enemies, but that is
not true. Israelis and Palestinian will join together in their shared homeland
and form something that is greater than the sum of its parts. Thank you very
much.
“Miko Peled is a peace activist who dares to say in public what others still
choose to deny. He has credibility, so when he debunks myths that Jews around
the world hold with blind loyalty, people listen. Miko was born in Jerusalem in
1961 into a well known Zionist family.”
http://mikopeled.com/
The HyperTexts