Photo Credit : Tag de Banksy. Saaaarf London, UK.
Je viens de rentrer de Jérusalem où j’ai participé à une conférence organisée par le quotidien israélien Haaretz, une occasion de sentir l’atmosphère et de renouer des contacts.
Le jour-même de la conférence, nous avons subi la première alerte aux roquettes à Tel-Aviv.
Quelques remarques et mes impressions à propos de cette nouvelle guerre entre l’Etat d’Israël et le Hamas:
Cette guerre est une continuation des guerres précédents: une répétition désespérante d’un même scénario: suite à une série d’incidents – ici – le rapt et l’assassinat de 3 jeunes Israéliens en Cisjordanie, suivis de l’assassinat d’un jeune Palestinien a déclenché l’envoi de roquettes depuis Gaza sur Israël et les bombardements israéliens sur Gaza.
Et une nouvelle intervention terrestre de l’armée israélienne dans la Bande de Gaza avec son cortège ASYMETRIQUE de victimes essentiellement civiles (300 morts à Gaza, 2 morts israéliens).
Une guerre après l’autre, sans solution politique avec une mobilisation sans précédent des médias et des réseaux sociaux en Israël autour du gouvernement et de l’armée.
Or, nous savons bien qu’il n’y pas de solution militaire à chacun de ces conflits et que cette solution ne peut qu’être POLITIQUE.
Solution que ne proposent ni le gouvernement israélien qui refuse toute idée de rendre les territoires occupés dans le cadre d’une négotiation globale avec l’Autorité palestinienne, pas plus que le Hamas, plus affaibli que jamais depuis qu’il a été abandonné par le régime syrien et le nouveau gouvernement égyptien.
Et je vous recommande la lecture du discours prononcé par le grand écrivain israélien David Grossman, à la conférence de Haaretz du 8 juillet dernier.
On hope and despair in the Middle East
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http://www.haaretz.com/misc/article-print-page/1.601993?trailingPath=2.169%2C2.216%2C2.217%2C2.1434%2C Page 1 of 2
Haaretz.Com 19/07/14 12:56
The government of Israel, the governments of Israel, act like prisoners of despair. Like its helpless victims. I do not remember ever hearing any serious statement about hope from Benjamin Netanyahu, or from any of his ministers and advisers. Not even one word of a vision of the possibilities a life of peace could offer, or about the chance that Israel could become part of a new fabric of alliances and interests in the Middle East. How did even the word itself, “hope”, become a dirty, incriminating word, second only to the word “peace” in its dangerous levels of radiation? It’s maddening to think that the tremendous military power Israel has amassed is not giving it the courage to overcome its fears and existential despair and take a decisive step that will bring peace. The great idea of the founding of the State of Israel is that the Jewish people has returned home, and that here, we will never be victims again. Never shall we be paralyzed and submissive in the face of forces mightier than us. Look at us: The strongest nation in the region, a regional superpower that enjoys the support of the United States on an almost inconceivable scale, along with the sympathy and commitment of Germany, England and France – and still, deep inside, it sees itself as a helpless victim. And still it behaves like a victim – of its anxieties, its real and imagined fears, its tragic history, of the mistakes of its neighbors and enemies. This worldview is pushing the Jewish public of Israel to our most vulnerable and wounded places as a people. The very essence of “Israeliness,” which always had a forward-looking gaze and held constant ferment and constant promise, has been steadily dwindling in recent years, and is being absorbed back into the channels of trauma and pain of Jewish history and memory. You can feel it now, in 2014, within very many of us “new” Israelis, an anxiety over the fate of the Jewish people, that sense of persecution, of victimhood, of feeling the existential foreignness of the Jews among all the other nations. What hope can there be when such is the terrible state of things? The hope of nevertheless. A hope that does not disregard the many dangers and obstacles, but refuses to see only them and nothing else. A hope that if the flames beneath the conflict die down, the healthy and sane features of the two peoples can gradually be revealed once more. The healing power of the everyday, of the wisdom of life and the wisdom of compromise, will begin to take effect. The sense of existential security. Of being able to raise children without abject fear, without the humiliation of occupation or the dread of terrorism. The basic human desires for family and livelihood and study. The fabric of life. Among the two peoples today, the agents of despair and hatred have practically taken over, so it may be hard to believe that the picture I’ve described is truly possible. But a situation of peace will start to produce the agents of hope and closeness and optimism; it will give rise to more people who have a practical interest, unrelated to ideology, in creating more and more ties with members of the other people. Perhaps eventually, after some years, a deeper attachment will evolve, even genuine friendship between these two peoples, and those human beings. Such things have happened. But for now let us suffice with all those mundane situations in which Israelis and Palestinians could live with one another like human beings. We, the people who have gathered at this Israel Conference on Peace cling to this hope, and preserve it in our heart. We cannot afford the luxury and indulgence of despair. The situation is too desperate to be left to the despairing, for accepting despair amounts to an admission that we’ve been defeated. Defeated not on the battlefield, but as human beings. Something deep and vital to us as humans was taken away, was stolen from us, the moment we agreed to let despair to have a dominion. He whose policy is essentially a thinly veiled, profound despair is placing Israel in mortal danger. He who behaves thus cannot pretend to speak about being “a free people in our land.” He may sing “Hatikva,” “The Hope,” our national anthem but in his voice we hear: Our despair is not yet lost, the despair of two thousand years. We who have gathered here today, and many others who are with us in spirit, insist upon hope. A hope that is not wide-eyed, a hope that won’t give up. A hope that gives us – Israelis and Palestinians both – our only chance to resist the gravitational pull of despair. David Grossman is a writer. His works include “See Under: Love,” “To the End of the Land” and “Falling Out of Time.” This article was translated by Anne Hartstein Pace. |
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