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Genocide Announced
"All
of the Palestinians must be killed; men, women, infants, and
even their beasts." This was the religious opinion issued
one week ago by Rabbi Yisrael Rosen, director of the Tsomet
Institute, a long-established religious institute attended
by students and soldiers in the Israeli settlements of the
West Bank. In an article published by numerous religious
Israeli newspapers two weeks ago and run by the liberal
Haaretz on 26 March, Rosen asserted that there is evidence
in the Torah to justify this stand. Rosen, an authority able
to issue religious opinions for Jews, wrote that
Palestinians are like the nation of Amalekites that attacked
the Israelite tribes on their way to Jerusalem after they
had fled from Egypt under the leadership of Moses. He wrote
that the Lord sent down in the Torah a ruling that allowed
the Jews to kill the Amalekites, and that this ruling is
known in Jewish jurisprudence.
Rosen's article, which created a lot of noise in Israel,
included the text of the ruling in the Torah: "Annihilate
the Amalekites from the beginning to the end. Kill them and
wrest them from their possessions. Show them no mercy. Kill
continuously, one after the other. Leave no child, plant, or
tree. Kill their beasts, from camels to donkeys." Rosen adds
that the Amalekites are not a particular race or religion,
but rather all those who hate the Jews for religious or
national motives. Rosen goes as far as saying that the
"Amalekites will remain as long as there are Jews. In every
age Amalekites will surface from other races to attack the
Jews, and thus the war against them must be global." He
urges application of the "Amalekites ruling" and says that
the Jews must undertake to implement it in all eras because
it is a "divine commandment" .
Rosen
does not hesitate to define the "Amalekites of this age" as
the Palestinians. He writes, "those who kill students as
they recite the Torah, and fire missiles on the city of
Siderot, spread terror in the hearts of men and women. Those
who dance over blood are the Amalekites, and we must respond
with counter-hatred. We must uproot any trace of
humanitarianism in dealing with them so that we emerge
victorious."
The
true outrage is that most of those authorised to issue
Jewish religious opinions support the view of Rabbi Rosen,
as confirmed by Haaretz newspaper. At the head of those
supporting his opinion is Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu, the
leading religious authority in Israel's religious national
current, and former chief Eastern rabbi for Israel. Rosen's
opinion also has the support of Rabbi Dov Lior, president of
the Council of Rabbis of Judea and Samaria (the West Bank),
and Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu, the chief rabbi of Safed and a
candidate for the post of chief rabbi of Israel. A number of
political leaders in Israel have also shown enthusiasm for
the opinion, including Ori Lubiansky, head of the Jerusalem
municipality.
There
is no dispute among observers in Israel that the shooting in
Jerusalem three weeks ago that killed eight Jewish students
in a religious school was pivotal for Jewish authorities
issuing religious opinions of a racist, hateful nature. The
day following the Jerusalem incident, a number of rabbis led
by Daniel Satobsky issued a religious opinion calling on
Jewish youth and "all those who believe in the Torah" to
take revenge on the Palestinians as hastily as possible. A
week following the operation, a group of leading rabbis
issued an unprecedented religious opinion permitting the
Israeli army to bomb Palestinian civilian areas. The opinion
is issued by the "Association of Rabbis of the Land of
Israel" and states that Jewish religious law permits the
bombing of Palestinian civilian residential areas if they
are a source of attacks on Jewish residential areas. It
reads, "when the residents of cities bordering settlements
and Jewish centres fire shells at Jewish settlements with
the aim of death and destruction, the Torah permits for
shells to be fired on the sources of firing even if civilian
residents are present there."
The
opinion adds that sometimes it is necessary to respond with
shelling to sources of fire immediately, without granting
the Palestinian public prior warning. A week ago, Rabbi
Eliyahu Kinvinsky, the second most senior authority in the
Orthodox religious current, issued a religious opinion
prohibiting the employment of Arabs, particularly in
religious schools. This religious opinion followed another
that had been issued by Rabbi Lior prohibiting the
employment of Arabs and the renting of residential
apartments to them in Jewish neighbourhoods. In order to
provide a climate that allows Jewish extremist organisations
to continue attacking Palestinian citizens, Rabbi Israel
Ariel, one of the most prominent rabbis in the West Bank
settlement complex, recently issued a religious opinion
prohibiting religious Jews involved in attacks against
Palestinians to appear before Israeli civil courts.
According to this opinion, they must instead demand to
appear before Torah courts that rule by Jewish religious
law.
Haaretz newspaper noted that what Rabbi Ariel was trying to
achieve through this religious opinion has in fact already
taken place. The first instance of such a court in Kfar Saba
ordered the release of a young Jewish woman called Tsevia
Teshrael who attacked a Palestinian farmer in the middle of
the West Bank. And there are Jewish religious authorities
that glorify killing and praise terrorists, such as Rabbi
Yitzhaq Ginsburg, a top rabbi in Israel who published a book
entitled Baruch the Hero in memoriam of Baruch Goldstein,
who committed the Ibrahimi Mosque massacre in 1994 when he
opened fire and killed 29 Palestinians as they were
performing the dawn prayer in Hebron in the southern West
Bank. Ginsburg considers his act "honourable and glorious".
The
danger of these religious opinions lies in the fact that the
religious authorities issuing them have wide respect among
religious Jewish youth. And while only 28 per cent of
Israel's population is religious, more than 50 per cent of
Israelis define themselves as conservative and grant major
significance to opinions issued by Jewish religious
authorities. According to a study conducted by the Social
Sciences Department of Bar Elon University, more than 90 per
cent of those who identify as religious believe that if
state laws and government orders are incongruous with the
content of religious opinions issued by rabbis, they must
overlook the former and act in accordance with the latter.
What
grants the racist religious opinions a deeper and
far-reaching impact is the fact that for the last decade
followers of the Zionist religious current, who form nearly
10 per cent of the population, have been seeking to take
control of the army and security institutions. They are
doing so through volunteering for service in special combat
units. The spokesperson's office in the Israeli army says
that although the percentage of followers of this current is
low in the state's demographic makeup, they form more than
50 per cent of the officers in the Israeli army and more
than 60 per cent of its special unit commanders. According
to an opinion poll of religious officers and soldiers
supervised by the Interdisciplinary Centre Herzliya and
published last year, more than 95 per cent of religious
soldiers and officers say that they will execute orders from
the elected government and their leaders in the army only if
they are in harmony with the religious opinions issued by
leading rabbis and religious authorities.
Wasil
Taha, Arab Knesset member from the Tajammu Party led by Azmi
Bishara, says that these religious opinions lead to the
committal of crimes. He mentions religious opinions issued
by a number of rabbis in mid-1995 that led to the
assassination of former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
at that time. "If that's what happens when religious
opinions urge attacks against Jewish leaders such as Rabin,
what will the situation be like when they urge attacks
against Palestinian leaders and the Palestinian public?" he
asks. "We, as Arab leaders, have begun to feel a lack of
security following this flood of religious opinions, and we
realise that the matter requires a great deal of caution in
our movements as we are certain that there are those who
seek to implement these opinions," he told Al-Ahram Weekly.
Taha
dismisses those who ask about the role of the government and
Israeli political cadre in confronting these extremist
religious opinions. "The ministers in the Israeli government
and the Knesset members compete to incite against the
Palestinian public and don't hesitate to threaten expulsion
of the Palestinians who live on their land in Israel and
carry Israeli citizenship outside of Israel's borders, just
as former deputy premier Avigdor Lieberman and
representative Evi Etam did," Taha said. He notes that
Palestinian citizens within Israel have begun to take
extreme precautionary measures since the issue of these
religious opinions, including security measures around
mosques and public institutions and informing officials of
public demonstrations so that members of Jewish terrorist
organisations can be prevented from attacking participants.
Taha holds that the sectors of the Palestinian population
most likely to be harmed by these religious opinions are
those living in the various cities populated by both Jews
and Palestinians, such as Haifa, Jaffa, Lod, Ramleh and
Jerusalem.
Palestinian writer and researcher Abdul-Hakim Mufid, from
the city Um Fahem, holds that the religious opinions of
rabbis have gained major significance due to the harmony
between official rhetoric and that of the rabbis. Mufid
notes that official Israeli establishments have not tried to
confront the "fascist" rhetoric expressed in these religious
opinions even though they are capable of doing so. "Most of
the rabbis who issue tyrannical religious opinions are
official employees in state institutions and receive
salaries from them. And the state has not held these rabbis
accountable or sought to prohibit the issue of such
opinions," he told the Weekly.
Mufid
points out that when the official political institution is
in a crisis, the Zionist consensus behind these religious
opinions grows more intense, and offers as an example the
religious opinions relied upon by Rabbi Meir Kahane in the
early 1980s to justify his call to forcefully expel the
Palestinians. Mufid adds that Israel in practice encourages
all those who kill Palestinians, and points to the way that
the Israeli government dealt with the recommendations of the
Orr Commission that investigated the Israeli police's
killing of 13 Palestinians with Israeli citizenship in
October of 2000. The government closed the file even though
the commission confirmed that the police had acted
aggressively towards the Palestinian citizens. Mufid
suggests that what makes the racist rhetoric the rabbis
insist upon influential is the silence of leftist and
liberal voices, and the lack of any direct mobilisation
against it.
http://weekly.ahram.org
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