the enduring struggle for survival
... there is a Jewish state today because of hard men, like Ariel Sharon, who
were ready to play by the local rules … and had contempt for those in Israel or
abroad who he believed did not understand the kill or be killed nature of their
neighborhood.
The results of Israel ’s
war of Independence
left over 500 Palestinian villages totally destroyed, 750,000 driven from their
homes and crowded into refugee camps to live more like caged animals than as
fellow human beings for the rest of their lives. Ariel Sharon was the heart of Israel . I am
surprised that Friedman is willing to admit it.
When Palestinian farmers, still clutching land deeds and
holding keys to their homes, were forced to live on about 11 cents a day,
slipped back into the new State of Israel to “steal” a little of the crops they
themselves had planted, Sharon called them thieves and drove them back by
force. When a Jewish mother and her two children were killed, Sharon was called upon to retaliate.
As commander of Unit 101, a newly formed reprisal and
sabotage group, this “warrior without restraints,” ordered his men to cause
maximum damage to the village
of Qibia . With great
pride, these defenders of Israel
locked frightened Palestinians in their homes and massacred sixty-nine, mostly
women and children, to teach them a lesson about Israel .
During his second stage, in which Friedman said Sharon , “embodied a
fantasy that, with enough power, the Israelis could rid themselves of the
Palestinian threat, that they could have it all.” Sharon
proudly announced his plans:
We’ll make a pastrami sandwich of
them. We’ll insert a strip of Jewish settlement,
in between the Palestinians,
and then another strip of Jewish settlements, right across the
West Bank, so
that in 25 years’ time, neither the United Nations, nor the United States ,
nobody, will be able
to tear it apart.[2]
Twenty five years later he was still saying:
because everything
we take now will be ours. Everything we don’t grab will go to them. [3]
Perhaps I am being unfair. Prime Minister Sharon did pull the
Jewish settlers from the Gaza Strip, which was proclaimed as a great sacrifice
by Israel
for peace. However, Friedman fails to mention that at the same time, Israel was building 13,000 units for Jews only
on Palestinian land in the West Bank, and those moving from Gaza were offered $227,000 to relocate.
Palestinians driven from their homes in 1948 and 1967 were given no
compensation for the lives and land taken from them by force. Sharon ’s disengagement was hardly a
liberation. It’s hard to feel liberated
when surrounded by a hostile army. Israel
maintained control of all crossing points, sea and air space. Gaza remained alive only as an outdoor
prison. Israel
walled in Gaza , continued to control all access
in and out of Gaza ,
cut off fuel, electricity and restricted the flow of humanitarian aid including
medical supplies. Gaza may have been evacuated
but remained under Sharon ’s
total control
I fail to see the evidence of a more peace minded Sharon as Friedman writes, “having, orchestrated a
unilateral withdrawal from Gaza , he (Sharon) surely would have tried something
similar in the West Bank if he had not had a
stroke.” This is the man who, “ on the
day that Rabin shook hands with Arafat, vowed that he would destroy the Oslo
Peace process.”[4]
And, if he did pull out of West Bank ,
what would be left? A land checkered
with Jewish only roads, checkpoints, walls and military regulations that keep
Palestinians locked up in isolated bantustans.
But, what could you expect from a man who, back in 1980, convened a meeting with
some of his top generals and other top military and security people and had
them sign a blood oath which committed them to fight to the death to prevent
any government of Israel
withdrawing from the West Bank .[5]
Friedman references a biography of Sharon entitled, “He doesn’t Stop at Red
Lights.” I guess not. The cross street is packed with slow moving compacts and
he is driving a tank. He goes to war when he is the only one with an army.
As far as I can tell, Sharon ’s
life remained dedicated to Zionism. He seemed to believe that Jews were God’s
chosen people to be privileged above all others. To him, there were only two
kinds of people: Jews and everybody else. He did not want a Jewish state, at
least not one with all the restrictions imposed by the Hebrew prophets. He
wanted a Zionist state. I never saw
evidence to indicate otherwise. Friedman
is right about one thing. Sharon truly did
represent Israel .
Thomas Are
January 30, 2014
[1] The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, January 17, 2014. p. A-11.
[2] Max
Blumenthal, How Ariel Sharon Shaped Israel’s Destiny, The Nation, January 11,
2014.
[3] Ariel
Sharon, Israeli Foreign Minister, addressing a meeting of the Tsomet Party,
Agence France Presse, November 15, 1998.
[4] Alan
Hart, Zionism, The Real Enemy of the
Jews, (Clarity Press, Atlanta ,
2009) Volume One., p. 40.
[5] Alan
Hart, Zionism, The Real Enemy of the
Jews, (Clarity Press, Atlanta ,
2009) Volume Three., p. 228.
.