2006-11-20-Israeli Realities |
||||
|
||||
|
jewishsightseeing.com, November 20, 2006 |
By Ira Sharkansky
EILAT, Israel —I recently sat with an American
visitor in the breakfast room of an Eilat hotel. He expressed
sentiments widespread not only among our overseas friends, but
among many Israelis: how tragic that we have to endure the
threat of Palestinian violence.
It is tragic, but it is not the whole story. I
asked the American to look around. To our left were some 20 or
30 meters of buffet laden with more delicacies than we could
possibly taste in several sittings. Outside the clean windows
were two swimming pools waiting our pleasure. Beyond was a
promenade stretching for a kilometer or more with stalls selling
cheap imports from India, as well as classier shops with the
better goods of Western Europe and North America. I urged him to
think of the people in Gaza, who most likely hate us and support
those who threaten us. Their living standards are so far beneath
what we were enjoying in the resort, and what we have at home,
as to make a detailed comparison grotesque. And if we suffer
from the prospect of violence from them, they suffer from the
reality of the IDF's retaliation or pre-emptive strikes.
In retrospect, this was a defining moment. It
clarified the reality of Israelis' lack of peace, but also the
balance of power and suffering.
Our suffering is not distributed equally. The
residents of Sderot are paying the bill in this chapter of
Jewish history. A few hours after my conversation with the
visitor, we heard of a rocket that killed a women, and injured
two other residents of that poor town. The report went on to
indicate that this was the 10th death from rockets in Sderot
since the first attack six years ago.
That represents ten personal tragedies of a kind
none of us wants to experience among our family or
acquaintances. Yet it may be a smaller incidence of death than a
population the size of Sderot's suffers from traffic accidents
and other calamities in places that consider themselves at
peace.
Perhaps more weighty on the residents of Sderot
is the constant fear that a rocket will fall, and the frequent
sounds of warning sirens and explosions. People want to leave
the town, but most of them are unlikely to find work readily
elsewhere. And if they put their apartment on the market, it is
doubtful that anyone would make an offer.
Currently we are hearing about the Russian
billionaire who is making a high profile donation of a week's
stay in a classy Eilat hotel for the people of Sderot. We also
hear that several of the thousand or so who have made the trip
are saying they will not leave the hotel when their week is up.
Also, a number of children waited hours for buses that were
delayed, and then did not make it through the rush to get
themselves a place. Fortunately, we heard about the subsidized
migration only as we were on our way home.
If the people of Sderot are suffering more than
others at the present, residents of Jerusalem, Netanya, and
Hadera suffered more than the average during the earlier season
of suicide bombings, and the people of Haifa, Nahariya, Carmiel,
Kiryiat Shmona, Zefat, Tiberias, and smaller Jewish and Arab
settlements in the north paid their bill during the rocket
attacks from Lebanon. Many of us have had a turn at the focus of
Palestinian violence, even while more Palestinians are likely to
have suffered more persistently from Israeli violence.
We are stuck living alongside a population that
may desire peace, but lacks the mechanisms to deal with
religious and political fanatics, or those who are simply mad.
The IDF retaliates and pre-empts, but respects moral standards
as high as those of any military engaged in anything more than
parades and shining equipment. Most of us accept the
limitations. We realize that we can limit Palestinian terror
with our military power, but not stop it entirely, and that
Palestinian politicians have shown themselves unwilling or
unable to control those who would rather die violently than live
peacefully.
Being fatalistic is not correct, politically or
intellectually. But it is suitable in this setting.
We also pay a price of international condemnation
from those who think it is all, or mostly, our fault. We can
curse them as hypocrites and perhaps anti-Semites, and draw some
consolation from realizing that most of them live in homes and
enjoy resort hotels no more attractive than our own. We are
paying the price for being Jews in a Jewish state, but also
enjoying the advantages that come with a pragmatic capacity to
recognize reality, and to achieve what is possible.
|