Israel has exhibited three stages
of denial in its treatment of
the Palestinians since the formation of the
state in 1948,
allowing it to stay blind to its status as an occupying power.
Eva Illouz Nov 11, 2015 8:36 AM
In the long and fascinating list
of indignities that can befall the human spirit (such as crippling anxiety and
depression, addiction, sadism), the most bewildering is also the one that seems
the most harmless: denial.
Denial is the mind’s capacity to
block out, forget, push aside and minimize information that is uncomfortable or
painful to the self. Psychoanalysis was the first to pay systematic attention
to denial and viewed it as a fundamental strategy to cope with the world when
it threatens the self. Sigmund Freud called it a “defense mechanism”: A memory
that, for example, undermines the love for a parent will often be erased from
our consciousness. Psychoanalysis, then, views denial with a kind of
intellectual benevolence: if it is involuntary and unconscious, and if it is a
form of self-protection, it is not morally reprehensible.
But denial is not only the
unconscious and harmless mechanism of self-defense against threats to the self.
Denial is also the semi-conscious, semi-deliberate strategy to ignore what we
do not want to see about ourselves and the world. It is a relationship we have
with ourselves, in which we hide information through strategies that are at
once deliberate and nonconscious. In this sense, denial is a moral action.
Take the example of the man who
smokes and knows that “smoking kills” because he reads this every day on the
pack of cigarettes he buys. This man has no particular desire to die. In fact,
he lives a good life and values his life. He enjoys cigarettes because he
enjoys life. He knows cigarettes kill, and yet does not know it. Every day, he
renews with himself a pact of ignorance and persists in ignoring, forgetting,
pushing aside what he knows. How does he do this? By telling himself different
stories: he will stop smoking soon; cigarettes kill only some people and not
others; he smokes less cigarettes and for less time than his friends; his life
has always been a lucky one; he does a lot of sport and eats healthy food; his
parents have great genes. If we could hear the silent voices of people who live
with the denial of uncomfortable truths, we would hear a constant hum and buzz
of self-told stories. Denial is, therefore, not a lack of knowledge, but a
complex form of knowledge. This complex form of knowledge takes three forms.
One is the one psychoanalysis has
discussed: an erasure of memories: “It never happened” is the proposition taken
by this (non)-knowledge. It is a blank where there should have been a word.
The second form taken by
denial-as-knowledge ignores the consequences of our actions, for ourselves and
others. It takes the form of “X is true, but it will not happen to me.” For
example, the man who ignores the fact that smoking may harm his own health and
that of his children. This denial ignores the future.
Take the example of the man who
smokes and knows that “smoking kills” because he reads this every day on the
pack of cigarettes he buys. This man has no particular desire to die. In fact,
he lives a good life and values his life. He enjoys cigarettes because he
enjoys life. He knows cigarettes kill, and yet does not know it. Every day, he
renews with himself a pact of ignorance and persists in ignoring, forgetting,
pushing aside what he knows. How does he do this? By telling himself different
stories: he will stop smoking soon; cigarettes kill only some people and not
others; he smokes less cigarettes and for less time than his friends; his life
has always been a lucky one; he does a lot of sport and eats healthy food; his
parents have great genes. If we could hear the silent voices of people who live
with the denial of uncomfortable truths, we would hear a constant hum and buzz
of self-told stories. Denial is, therefore, not a lack of knowledge, but a
complex form of knowledge. This complex form of knowledge takes three forms.
One is the one psychoanalysis has
discussed: an erasure of memories: “It never happened” is the proposition taken
by this (non)-knowledge. It is a blank where there should have been a word.
The second form taken by
denial-as-knowledge ignores the consequences of our actions, for ourselves and
others. It takes the form of “X is true, but it will not happen to me.” For
example, the man who ignores the fact that smoking may harm his own health and
that of his children. This denial ignores the future.
Denial is thus not only about
pushing aside some traumatic memory that has been inflicted on us by a harsh
world; it is a choice to actively ignore the truth in front of our eyes. Denial
is the art of “fudging” reality, of turning hard facts into vague, hazy images.
As in voodoo mythology, where a zombie is at once alive and dead, denial is a
zombie form of knowledge, dead and alive, something we know and don’t know.
Denial is not only the property
of individuals. It can be, and in fact often is, a property of groups such as
families and nations. Many families can build mutual loyalty only by denying
their own emotional pathology and violence. Nations similarly and typically
build for themselves glorious pasts and impeccable identities through denial of
the violence they perpetrated. Using Nietzsche’s words, we may say that
politics is the art of determining “the boundary at which the past has to be
forgotten if it is not to become the gravedigger of the present.” What to
remember and what to forget is crucial to modern polities. Not by chance is
Winston Smith, the hero of George Orwell’s “1984,” in charge of rewriting
history and newspaper articles: the belief in a regime of power depends on
believing in its past. Such belief can be maintained only if the collective
past is believed. We may say that how open, just and moral nations and
countries are can be evaluated based on the degree to which, and the ways in
which, they deny or acknowledge their past wrongdoings.
Some nations practice denial as a
systematic policy, but we usually do not think of them as open societies. Yet I
do not believe there is another way to characterize Israeli policy vis-à-vis
the occupied territories. The mind-boggling, jaw-dropping claim that the State
of Israel can quietly annex these territories, control the lives of 2.6 million
Palestinians and still remain Jewish and democratic is denial on an uncanny
scale – denial turned into grand political strategy (Palestinians and Israeli
Arabs together would make up 4.3 million of the total population of Israel, a
fact that would compel Jewish Israel to exercise an inhumane and unsustainable
control over other human beings). The originality of the politics of the
messianic right, which has been in power for more than a decade, can be defined
as a politics of denial, and politics as denial on a scale rarely seen in the
democratic world. However, contrary to common perceptions, I suggest that the
denial that characterizes the politics of the territories could become a policy
because the politics and policy inside the Green Line had already long been a
politics of denial, perhaps since the inception of Zionism.
1: Denial as a blank – it never
happened
How could a state so stubbornly
deny the screamingly just claim of independence by Palestinians? It was easy to
ignore because Israel
consistently denied there were even people on the land, let alone people who
were expelled from their lands. The slogan of Zionism – “A land without a
people for a people without a land” – was either a conscious, cynical lie or a
denial that the victims of abject European anti-Semitism could also be the
perpetrators of violence, expulsion, expropriation. This denial was considerably
facilitated by the initial refusal of Arab states to share Palestine and to abide by the 1947 UN vote,
and made it far, far easier for early Zionists to deny their actions and to
shift the burden of responsibility onto Arab nations.
Denial No. 1 – denial as
suppression – takes the form of erasure, a blank. But the supreme irony of that
blank is that it must be incessantly produced and reproduced by the state.
Take the so-called “Nakba Law”
that passed in 2011. This law determined that any organization that receives
government funding may be subject to sanctions if it funds an event that refers
to Independence Day as a day of mourning (Nakba, meaning “catastrophe” in
Arabic, is the Palestinians’ term for the formation of Israel in 1948).
According to the Israel Democracy Institute, this law was aimed specifically at
preventing financing of Nakba Day “events” by Arab organizations that received
funding from the state. Last March, Maariv journalist Kalman Libeskind strongly
condemned the argument that the Nakba should be taught in the Israeli education
system, because giving it a place in the Israeli classroom would amount to
claiming that Jewish existence on Israeli land is theft. Even worse, to teach
the Nakba narrative alongside the Zionist narrative would be to claim there is
no distinction between good and evil, truth and falsehood.
Another example: Journalist Erel
Segal wrote in the right-wing, religious-Zionist newspaper Makor Rishon last
April: “In the name of multiculturalism and the attempt to undermine the Jewish
state from within, people want to teach here in the narrative of the aggressor.
This is arrogance redoubled with outrageous nerve.”
A poll conducted by the Israel
Democracy Institute before Independence Day last year found that 58 percent of
the Jewish public supports the Nakba Law, with only a third against it. In
other words, what is unique about the Israeli case is that it not only denies
the violence of the initial colonization of the land, but views the natives –
those who inhabited the land – as the aggressors. This inversion of victim and
perpetrator is a clear, classic example of denial, which at once erases one’s
wrongdoing and projects it onto the other side.
In erasing its violent beginning,
most notably its expropriation of Arab lands and the creation of Palestinian
refugees, Israel
was probably no worse than most other peoples. But the difference between
Israel and other nations is that, while most Western nations gradually opened
up about their pasts and agreed to display contested memories, or even to adopt
wholesale the version of the minority (Jews in Germany; Native Americans in the
United States, Indigenous Australians, etc.), Israel has gone in the opposite
direction and increasingly made the erasure of the Arabs’ own version of their
history into an official policy of the Jewish state, in order to increase the
legitimacy of Zionism. The control and erasure of the past was caused by the
increasing involvement of settlers in Israeli politics, where the legitimacy of
Israel
and the legitimacy of the territories became one single cause.
The result of this tactic,
however, is not without irony: The persistent denial of the Nakba makes Zionism
less, rather than more, legitimate in the eyes of its Arab minority and in the
eyes of most of the enlightened world. Acknowledging officially that some Arabs
were forced out of their lands, and enabling a minority group to express its
own historical experience, would strengthen rather than weaken the moral and
political authority of Zionism (this writer believes that the great catastrophe
that befell the Arab natives of the land does not undermine the legitimacy of
early Jewish nationalism).
To further illustrate my point: Germany and Turkey
both committed atrocious genocides, and yet what enabled Germany to
become a moral world leader is that it acknowledged its crimes. Turkey will
never attain this moral status not because it committed worse crimes, but
because it will not acknowledge its past.
Commenting on the shocking recent
behavior of Eastern European countries in the face of the humanitarian crisis
of refugees at the door of Europe, the Princeton historian and sociologist Jan
T. Gross remarked, “Eastern Europe, by contrast [to Germany], has yet to come
to terms with its murderous past. Only when it does will its people be able to
recognize their obligation to save those fleeing in the face of evil.” Opening
up one’s collective memory to contested narratives increases rather than
decreases the moral status of a state. Commenting on a poem by concentration
camp survivor Dan Pagis, literary critic James Wood put it well: Worse than
suffering itself “is to have the reality of one’s suffering erased.”
2: Denial as a hijacking of the
future
The second form of denial is not
one that erases the past, but that hijacks the future for the sake of preserving
both the comfort and the ideology of certain groups in Israeli society.
Strategies to ignore the
consequences of one’s actions in the future are like those of the smoker who
persists in not defining his heavy smoking as a gamble on his and his children’s
health. The messianic politics of the territories is a spectacular gamble on
the future of all Israel,
with stakes as high as the collapse of the Zionist project in the space of a
few short decades.
In an article published in
The Marker last June, which dealt with an economic boycott of Israel, it was
argued that the boycott has actually existed for a long time and operates on
many levels, far from the spotlight. It keeps expanding all the time and will,
if it maintains this level of expansion, bring serious damage to the Israeli
economy.
An internal report by the Finance
Ministry’s chief economist two years ago stated that in the extreme case of a
European Union ban on Israel, which would include 100 percent damage to Israeli
exports to Europe and the cessation of European investment in the country, the
annual loss for Israeli exports would be $88.1 billion, GDP would suffer a $40
billion shortfall, 36,500 jobs would be lost and investment would fall $10.9
billion.
These dire economic consequences
would be only the beginning: Soon, Israel would turn into a rogue
state that would develop as an isolated military fortress, living off sales of
arms and security equipment to the rest of the world; internally, it would be
characterized by rampant poverty, inequalities, religious fanaticism and lack
of education.
Last September, Haaretz editor
Aluf Benn wrote an article laying out what is in store for Israel. The
core secular part of Israeli society is shrinking, with minority groups –
Haredim, religious Zionist and Arabs – expanding around it, weakening the
secular classes. Based on figures in the Statistical Abstract of Israel, the
trends are clear: a generation ago, 60 percent of Israeli children learned in
secular state schools. Two years ago, only 41.5 percent of the first grade
attended those same schools. The data estimate that, by 2019, only 37.2 percent
of first-graders will go to secular state schools. Deliberate state policies
triggered this demographic revolution since Ben-Gurion. Israel is already
sharply split between hostile tribal groups and will continue splitting
further; because it is becoming a religious country, we can expect that its
legal, moral and cultural core will, in fact, be mostly inspired and shaped by
halakha (Jewish religious law), and will see a large proportion of its
population suffer from under-education and chronic unemployment. Such
demographic policy characterized different governments and was based on denial
that this social model is unsustainable.
Economists have a particularly
accurate way of describing the mechanism at work in such hijackings of the
future: optimism bias – defined as a cognitive flaw in the judgment of one’s
actions, which tends to under-evaluate the risks of one’s decisions and the
likelihood of losses or damages entailed by such decisions. In other words, an
optimistic bias is the error that makes the gambler who has a few wins at the
beginning of the evening develop the belief that he will continue to win until
the wee hours.
Settlers and the
religious-Zionist camp have many good reasons to entertain the gambler’s
optimism bias with regard to Israel’s
future. They are convinced that God’s hand itself wrote the history of Israel
for the last 70 years and that this history was written just for them (the
birth of Israel against all odds; the Six-Day War as a divine miracle; Yitzhak
Rabin’s murder as an unfortunate but positive historical accident; the collapse
of the Israeli left as proof of its moral weakness, etc.).
Optimism bias is likely to be
particularly delusional among settlers, since in Jewish theology Jews are the
only people God engages with seriously for his grand plans. Israeli nationalism
was interpreted in this theological frame: As the manifestation of an intimate,
privileged and exclusive relationship between the Jews and God. The denial of
the future by settlers has theological reasons, but the same theological strain
was present in secular Zionism and easily penetrated the Green Line.
In 2015 OECD research that
compared well-being in 36 countries, Israel ranked at the bottom of
almost all the objective measures of well-being: personal security, work-life
balance, civic engagement and governance, environmental quality, housing, etc.
And yet, miraculously, Israel ranked in fifth position with regard to
subjective well-being – certainly testimony to Israelis’ happy temperament, as
well as their inability to understand the low quality of their institutions, a
symptom of the optimism bias that makes this country endearing to some,
unbearable to others.
The optimism bias of a nation
sure that God (or history) will always be on its side resembles that of the
heavy smoker who takes everyday good health as the irrefutable and tangible
proof that God has personally written eternity insurance to him. But, as we all
know, the fact that a smoker is healthy now doesn’t mean cancer won’t start
tomorrow.
3: Denial as seeing, yet not
seeing
A large proportion of the Israeli
population is increasingly numb and indifferent to the humanitarian disaster
that plagues Palestinians. These Israelis are in the same position as the woman
who sees her husband sexually abusing his daughter and yet fails to register
it. We witness an astounding numbers of house demolitions, killings of
children, expropriations of land, administrative detentions, torture, violations
of international rights, daily crimes of theft, vandalism, attacks by settlers
against Palestinians, with the deliberate denial of the army which often stands
near, and stands idly by. What fogs our vision is the fact that the lawlessness
of the occupied territories is protected by the army itself – the most moral
army in the world.
The reason why the government of
settlers has undermined the moral authority and work of human rights
organizations like Yesh Din, B’Tselem or the Public Committee Against Torture
is due to the fact that these organizations compel us to look at what our gaze
is trying to avoid. They force us to call what Israel is doing by its proper name.
They oppose the denial,
They are the eyes that see. For
example, a report by Yesh Din has addressed Israeli soldiers’ practice of
standing idly by in the face of crimes committed by Israeli civilians against
Palestinians and their property in the territories – a practice that is almost
as old as the occupation itself. The term “standing idly by” refers to
incidents in which Israel Defense Forces soldiers witness attacks on
Palestinians or their property and do nothing to prevent or stop them, or to
immediately detain and arrest the offenders. Such passive protection of the
violence, and violation of law and human rights, is the same as the passive
gaze of the mother who looks at her husband abusing their daughter, a denial of
the crime, and ultimately a denial of her own humanity.
From the early days of the
occupation, the IDF’s “command ethos” has evaded its responsibility, defined by
the Supreme Court as one of the major, fundamental obligations of a military
commander in an occupied territory. The military’s refusal to uphold its
obligations allows the practice of standing idly by to proliferate, and
expresses yet another aspect of the policy of denial toward illegal activity by
Israeli civilians.
The soldiers’ practice of
standing idly by has been documented for decades by both government agencies
and human rights organizations. Yet the army and Israeli society continue to
see without seeing, to have their consciousness numbed by fuzzy slogans about
“military defense” and “military security.”
Here, too, the state’s denial of
lawlessness in the territories can take place only because of processes within
Green Line Israel.
As has often been said, Israel
is not a state with an army, but an army with a state. The state budget for
2015 stipulates that the Defense Ministry receive 57 billion shekels ($14.7
billion). This is in addition to another 7 billion shekels allocated to the
ministry for 2014. Defense expenditure is the single biggest item in the state
budget, accounting for some 16 percent of it.
The Defense Ministry budget is
different from other government departments, in that it enjoys special budget
rights, is completely controlled by the Defense Ministry, is usually
classified, and spending changes do not require the prior approval of Knesset
members.
In other words, the Defense
Ministry and security establishment function like a bureaucracy independent
from the rest of the country, a bureaucracy that expands with no regard for
other collective needs, such as health, education or culture. “Military
security” has replaced all foreign and domestic policy. Life inside the Green
Line has become the life of a military trench: we request only to survive, and
the demands of survival have hijacked any and all political considerations,
thus depriving Israelis of the capacity to see and to grasp the evils that are
committed in their name.
Denial is not simply a flaw of
our consciousness, as psychoanalysis sometimes naively suggests. Denial is a
pact of ignorance we make with ourselves, a choice to know and not to know, and
is thus a particularly disturbing moral deficiency. A gambler who stakes the
house of his children because he is thoroughly convinced he will beat the
casino is less likely to be cured of his compulsion than the nervous gambler who
remains aware of the risks. A woman who bullies her colleague, but thinks
herself cute and witty, is more laughable than an ordinary bully.
Blindness to oneself is the stuff
of comedies, but in politics denial is not funny. Adam Smith, one of the
founders of modern economics, put it perfectly: “The overweening conceit which
the greater part of men have of their own abilities is an ancient evil remarked
by the philosophers and moralists of all ages.”
The tragedy of this comical flaw
is that it only becomes aware of itself when it contemplates the havoc and
damage it has wreaked.
Denial on a grand scale, as
exists in Israel, not only fogs consciousness and numbs moral intuition, it
also makes possible Netanyahu’s claim that Hitler never intended to destroy the
Jews, while remaining at his post without being forced to resign. We can hear
this and resume our daily routine because Israel is now built around a
gigantic lie. In Václav Havel’s stunning words: we have become accustomed to
“living in the lie.”
Prof. Eva Illouz is a sociologist
and author of nine books.
Israeli Newspaper Haaritz Snippets
European Commission Adopts
Guidelines for Labeling Products From Israeli Settlements
EU Ambassador to Israel Lars Faaborg-Andersen
was summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem
to be reprimanded over the decision.
Barak Ravid Nov 11, 2015 3:03 PM
The European Commission adopted
Wednesday morning the Notice on indication of origin of goods from the
territories occupied by Israel
since June 1967, a senior EU official said. According to the official, the
notice will contain guidelines for labeling of products from West bank
settlements.
Netanyahu: Issues of Jerusalem and Temple
Mount Are Unsolvable
At Center for American Progress,
prime minister does not rule out 'unilateralism' on Israel's
part, but says Israel
will need 'broad international' support.
Barak Ravid (Washington D.C.
)
Nov 11, 2015 12:26 AM
WASHINGTON
D.C. - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that he believes the
issues of Jerusalem and the Temple Mount
to be unsolvable, and did not rule out unilateral steps on Israel's part in the West
Bank.
UN Report Slams Israel’s Response
to Child Prostitution
From government to courts to
schools, state’s system is failing to protect young victims, says Committee on
the Rights of the Child.
UN Report Slams Israel’s Response
to Child Prostitution
From government to courts to
schools, state’s system is failing to protect young victims, says Committee on
the Rights of the Child.
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