Israeli Knesset member Yossi Sarid (C), Secretary-General of
the Meretz Party, gestures as he talks to police and soldiers during his visit
to the West Bank city of Hebron ,
Jan. 8, 2003. (photo by REUTERS/Nayef Hashlamoun)
Eulogizing former Meretz leader and Minister Yossi Sarid, who passed away Dec. 4, is not simply bidding
farewell to a gifted and fascinating politician, a man for all seasons with a
finely honed pen, a proud leftist. A eulogy of Yossi Sarid is taking leave of a
vanishing turn of phrase, of a dying form of discourse and of a sinking political
culture. The new speak that has in recent years taken root in every corner of
Israel’s public sphere was a foreign tongue to the shrinking camp of which
Sarid was one of the most articulate and courageous spokespeople. From
conversations I had with him and from assiduous reading of his articles, I came
away with the impression that Sarid sensed his words of wisdom were blowing in
the wind. He spoke the leftist language of democracy, Judaism and morality to a
state that was turning in front of his very eyes increasingly zealous,
ultra-Orthodox, nationalistic, right wing and colonial. The political language
so familiar to him had become irrelevant in the new Israeli existence.
Sarid’s death is an additional nail in the coffin of rational political discourse based on facts and on an educated analysis of changing realities in
Sarid learned firsthand that the secret of the right’s
victory and the sinking of the left was not to be found in the elites shutting
themselves off in what has come to be known derisively as the "State of Tel Aviv." In the hardest years of the first Lebanon war in the 1980s, the Sarid family
packed up and moved to the Lebanon
border town of Kiryat Shmona and later on to the
village of Margaliot on the border. He taught
civics, as a volunteer, in communities along the northern border and in later years
in the Gaza border town of Sderot
in the south, but the right somehow managed to make the name Sarid synonymous
with “traitor,” “Israel
hater” and “a knife in the back of the nation.” Were it not for his writing
skills and the respectable pulpit he received from Israeli daily Haaretz, Sarid
would have invariably lost his special standing as a national prophet of doom
after leaving politics 10 years ago. His finely honed pen accorded him the
dubious honor of being the messenger delivering bitter news to the nation and
suffering the consequences at the hands of the enraged public.
With Sarid’s death, the left has lost a wise son, equally versed in the writings of Jewish sages as he was in the origins of Marxism. He had a self-deprecating humor and sarcastic wit. At his fingertips there were to be found more knowledge and understanding of Jewish wisdom and law than in all the offensive long-winded language of Culture Minister Miri Regev and Knesset member Yariv Levin (both of the hawkish camp in the Likud Party). Sarid used to say that being Jewish does not mean burying the sons in order to occupy the graves of the fathers (a reference to soldiers dying in wars to preserve patriarchal burial sites). Sarid’s downfall symbolizes
Sarid was one of the last denizens of the dovish camp within
the Labor Party — a movement that has all but forsaken the peace agenda,
concealed the Oslo Accord and even changed its name in the last March 17
elections to a more “centrist” one: the Zionist Camp — all in a transparent and
hopeless ploy to court the voters of the right. Sarid, like Shulamit Aloni
(also former leader of Meretz), crossed the lines in 1984 from the big Labor
Party to the Ratz Party that evolved into the small Meretz Party. Both
preferred joining the leadership of a small principled, biting opposition
party, to sticking with a large, toothless ruling party. Nonetheless, when
Labor leaders Yitzhak Rabin and Ehud Barak needed the support of Meretz to
promote diplomatic initiatives, Aloni and Sarid did not stand idle on the
sideline. Both proved that a balance can be found between principled ideology
and active involvement in running the affairs of state as knowledgeable and
honest government ministers.
In recent years, Sarid lost all hope that he would live to
see the left restored to its glory days. He watched with deep regret the
results of the last elections, which almost voted his party — the only one
in Israel
whose banner carries the combination of “leftist” and “Zionist” — out of
the Knesset. Like many of his fellow travelers, he could not stand the
delegitimization and demonization conducted by the right, with Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu at its head, against anyone opposed to the policies of
occupation and settlements. He, too, was left helpless as the waves of hatred swept up Jews and Arabs, forcing them
to live on their swords. He watched with anguish as Israel was turned into an outcast,
even among its best friends — and his best friends — in the world.
Sarid was a living embodiment of the kind of life we, the public, could have had —
It is customary to say (quoting Israel's national poet Haim
Nachman Bialik's poem, “Should Your Soul Wish to Know”) of soldiers killed on
the battlefield that “in death they willed us life.” In death, Sarid willed the
lovers of peace, democracy and integrity, those who walked in his footsteps for
years, a continued struggle for Israel ’s
well-being, for its enlightenment and yes, also for its security. Go in peace,
friend.
Sarid: a good apple in
the midst of rotten ones
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