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“When
one thinks that this is what is necessary for Israel to survive, that the
Zionist dream is based on the repeated slaughter of innocents on a scale that
we’re watching these days on television, that is really a profound crisis”
By
Amy Goodman
The
Israeli assault on the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip has entered its
fourth week. This military attack, waged by land, sea and air, has been going
on longer than the devastating assault in 2008/2009, which killed more than
1,400 Palestinians. The death toll in this current attack is at least 1,300,
overwhelmingly civilians. As this column was being written, the United Nations
confirmed that a U.N. school in Gaza, where thousands of civilians were seeking
shelter, was bombed by the Israeli Defense Forces, killing at least 20 people.
The United Nations said it reported the exact coordinates of the shelter to the
Israeli military 17 times.
Henry
Siegman, a venerable dean of American Jewish thought and president of the
U.S./Middle East Project, sat down for an interview with the “Democracy Now!”
news hour. An ordained rabbi, Siegman is the former executive director of the
American Jewish Congress and former executive head of the Synagogue Council of
America, two of the major, mainstream Jewish organizations in the United
States. He says the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories must end.
“There
is a Talmudic saying in the ‘Ethics of the Fathers,’” Siegman started, “‘Don’t
judge your neighbor until you can imagine yourself in his place.’ So, my first
question when I deal with any issue related to the Israeli-Palestinian issue:
What if we were in their place?”
He
elaborated, “No country and no people
would live the way Gazans have been made to live ... our media rarely ever
points out that these are people who have a right to live a decent, normal
life, too. And they, too, must think, ‘What can we do to put an end
to this?’”
Born
in Germany in 1930, Siegman and his family were persecuted by the Nazis. “I
lived two years under Nazi occupation, most of it running from place to place
and in hiding,” he recalled. His father took his mother and their six children
to Belgium, to France, to North Africa, then, after two months at sea, dodging
German submarines, they arrived at Ellis Island. He told us: “I always thought
that the important lesson of the Holocaust is not that there is evil, that
there are evil people in this world who could do the most unimaginably cruel
things. That was not the great lesson of the Holocaust. The great lesson of the
Holocaust is that decent, cultured people, people we would otherwise consider
good people, can allow such evil to prevail, that the German public—these were
not monsters, but it was OK with them that the Nazi machine did what it did.”
His
father was a leader of the European Zionist movement, which sought a national
homeland for the Jewish people. Siegman said: “As a kid even, [I was] an ardent
Zionist. I recall on the ship coming over, we were coming to America, and I was
writing poetry and songs—I was 10 years old, 11 years old—about the blue sky of
Palestine. In those days we referred to it as Palestina.”
Henry
Siegman became a prominent leader in American Jewish life. When I asked him to
reflect on his long history with Zionism and to respond to the current assault
on Gaza, he said: “It’s disastrous. ... When one thinks that this is what is
necessary for Israel to survive, that the Zionist dream is based on the
repeated slaughter of innocents on a scale that we’re watching these days on
television, that is really a profound crisis - and should be a profound crisis
- in the thinking of all of us who were committed to the establishment of the
state and to its success.”
I
asked Siegman to watch a clip from CBS’s “Face the Nation.” The show’s host,
Bob Schieffer, recently closed the program by saying, “Last week I found a
quote of many years ago by Golda Meir, one of Israel’s early leaders, which
might have been said yesterday: ‘We can forgive the Arabs for killing our
children,’ she said, ‘but we can never forgive them for forcing us to kill
their children.’”
Siegman
said that he had seen the broadcast. He replied: “If you don’t want to kill
Palestinians, if that’s what pains you so much, you don’t have to kill them.
You can give them their rights, and you can end the occupation. And to put the
blame for the occupation and for the killing of innocents that we are seeing in
Gaza now on the Palestinians—why? Because they want a state of their own? They
want what Jews wanted and achieved?”
As
the United States resupplies Israel with ammunition, more than 250 children in
Gaza have been killed. Instead of providing weapons, the U.S. and the rest of
the world should pressure Israel to stop the slaughter.
Henry
Siegman (born 1930) is a German-born American, president of the
"U.S./Middle East Project". He is a non-resident research professor
at the Sir Joseph Hotung Middle East Program, School of Oriental and African
Studies, University of London, a former Senior Fellow on the Middle East at the
Council on Foreign Relations, and a former National Director of the American
Jewish Congress.
Siegman,
a Jewish American, was born in 1930 in Frankfurt, Germany. Moving to the United
States, Siegman studied and was ordained as an Orthodox Rabbi by Yeshiva Torah
Vodaas. He served as a chaplain in the Korean War, where he was awarded the
Bronze Star Medal and the Purple Heart.
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