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David Horovitz: As the Walls Close In
The Palestinians call it the "Apartheid Wall," and many the world over dutifully echo the description. Across the region, Arab leaders complain that the Jews should know best of all not to ghettoize. In Europe, they march angrily in protest and denunciation, demanding trade boycotts and divestment, and those with the time and the passion come to join the Palestinians at the fence, to risk their lives to prevent its construction.
But it is not only the Palestinians who are being fenced in. By skewing the barrier, small-mindedly routing parts of it inside the West Bank, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has helped skew the perception of its primary purpose and effect as well. The expected anti-Israel ruling at the International Court of Justice in The Hague will deepen the distortion. Angered by the thoughtlessness of the route, even President Bush has occasionally resorted to public criticism of a wall snaking through the West Bank.
In truth, of course, it is we ourselves who are being closed off and caged in, as well. Pounded by suicide bombers, we see no alternative but to try and separate ourselves physically and impermeably from hostility to our east -- the better to cling on to our sovereign sliver on the western edge of the land mass, the better to avoid being swept out to sea.
But this shrinking room for maneuver is not the exclusive plight of the Jews in Israel. Jews around the world seem to be running out of space again, physically and psychologically. If anti-Semites had not made enough headway in Europe through their sophisticated misrepresentation of 42 months of intifada confrontation, cowing some in Diaspora communities into hiding public signs of their faith and looking to escape to less hostile environments while alienating others from their historic homeland, now Mel Gibson has arrived to add fuel to the flames.
Gibson�s brutal, pounding gore-fest, with its venal, Der St�rmer Jewish Christ-killers, which I endured out of a sense of journalistic obligation with a predominantly young, black, rapt audience in a Chicago theater almost three weeks after its blockbuster opening, has plenty of North American Jews worried too. They should be. Its calculated anti-Semitism oozes from almost every frame into open, trusting minds, staining their perception of the origins of their faith. Yet debate over its unmistakably hostile agenda is rapidly being superseded in the American media by open-mouthed appreciation for its sheer money-making power, with questions about Gibson�s motives pushed roughly aside by materialistic respect for the self-belief and determination that has scored him such an against-the-odds, dead-language "Crossover Hit" (as Entertainment Weekly headlined an article in its March 12 issue, reserving the headline "Sensitive Issue" for a piece on the new Starsky & Hutch movie). "Among Wednesday openers, ["The Passion" is] the best five-day premiere ever, which was great news for director Mel Gibson and star Jim Caviezel," the magazine reported with trite breathlessness, noting that Gibson�s name "has now been on 11 movies that have banked more than $100 million in domestic box office." Suggesting that the director might have pioneered a new mainstream market for religious films, it added admiringly that he "scores points for risking his own cash ($30 million) on what until recently was viewed as a provocative art flick."
Surveys show high proportions of viewers emerging from the torture -- the teenage black girl three seats along jerked involuntarily and wailed out loud as the nails were pounded through gristle and flesh -- to insist that nothing they had seen affected their attitudes to Jews. As an American Jewish friend observed wryly and anxiously, "That can only make you wonder what they thought of us beforehand." And the lack of condemnation from Israel�s would-be allies in the Christian evangelical movements of Gibson�s malevolently selective use of sources can only reinforce longstanding doubts about the wisdom of such alliances.
Precisely at the point in the Jewish calendar where we are enjoined to gather and retell the story of our glorious liberation, it seems as though barriers are rising again to separate, denigrate, sanction, contain and constrain us. What we crave, in the absence of divine salvation, is unified, invigorated leadership. What we have is confusion -- among Diaspora leaders reduced to talking to themselves about ways and means of responding to anti-Semitism, and among Israeli leaders whose inconsistency and failure of resolve has reduced their people to a state of weary resignation at each new bombing outrage.
Our government is still risking soldiers� lives and killing both Palestinian gunmen and innocents in what are deemed essential Gaza anti-terror incursions, and spending millions to bolster security at settlements there, at the very same time as pledging to imminently bolt the Strip. Our prime minister is citing the security imperative for urgently leaving Gaza (from where March 14�s two suicide bombers came, apparently breaching the fence for the first time) while staying put in the West Bank, source of dozens upon dozens of terror attacks on our sovereign territory. Our multi-party coalition is willing to risk the dangers of unilateral withdrawal from Gaza because of an insistence that there is no one to talk to on the other side, and yet makes not even a token effort to engage with Arab leaders, ahead of the end-of-the-month Tunis summit, on a possible new effort at regional dialogue.
We like to believe that the plagues visited on ancient Egypt, which we recall at the Pesah Seder were a one-time thing. So what we are going through now, we must hopefully conclude, is no modern version of impenetrable darkness. But where then, this Passover, is the light?
April 5, 2004
Columnists
- David Horovitz: An Olympian Ideal
- Hirsh Goodman: Beware!
- Gershom Gorenberg: The Zealot�s Subtext
- Ehud Ya'ari: What New Order?
- David Horovitz: History Repeating Itself
- Hirsh Goodman: Legal Limits
- Ehud Ya'ari: Demolish for Peace
- Stuart Schoffman: Healing from Zion
- David Horovitz: The Pregnancy Test
- Hirsh Goodman: On Top of Everything Else
- Gershom Gorenberg: Return to Hawara
- David Horovitz: The Elephant and the Gavel
- Hirsh Goodman: Is The War Over?
- Ehud Ya'ari: Slowing Down
- David Horovitz: Making Withdrawal Even Tougher
- Hirsh Goodman: A Historic Decision
- Ehud Ya'ari: Handle with Care
- David Horovitz: Creative Thinking
- Hirsh Goodman: Beneath It All
- Ehud Ya'ari: Dreams across the River
- Stuart Schoffman: Ethics of My Father
- David Horovitz: Ask All the People
- Hirsh Goodman: The Disengagement Party
- Ehud Ya'ari: Not So Fast
- Hirsh Goodman: Still Baffled over Vanunu
- Ehud Ya'ari: �Gated Community�
- Stuart Schoffman: A Measure of Kindness
- Judy Maltz: Bibi�s Bonus
- David Horovitz: Learning From Lockerbie
- Hirsh Goodman: Happy Independence Day, Despite It All
- David Horovitz: But Was It Wise?
- Ehud Ya'ari: Keep the Gloves Off
- Stuart Schoffman: Under the Banner of Heaven
- David Horovitz: As the Walls Close In
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Eastern Border
- Gershom Gorenberg: Sharon�s Bulldozers, Then and Now
- Ehud Ya'ari: Get It Right This Time
- Judy Maltz: Bank Shots
- David Horovitz: Steering Blind
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Road to Katif
- Gershom Gorenberg: Fundamentalism on Film
- David Horovitz: A Baffling Exchange, or Worse
- Ehud Ya'ari: It�s Not So Bad
- Stuart Schoffman: Regime Change
- David Horovitz: Park Your Caravans Elsewhere, the Envoy Says
- Ehud Ya'ari: Marking Time, Regressively
- Gershom Gorenberg: Dump Bush, Help Israel
- David Horovitz: A Strategy for Disengagement
- Hirsh Goodman: Get Smart
- Ehud Ya'ari: Why There, and Not Here?
- Stuart Schoffman: Going South
- David Horovitz: Qadhafi or Saddam
- Hirsh Goodman: A Quiet Earthquake
- Gershom Gorenberg: Legacy of the Kiosk Caper
- Ehud Ya'ari: An Offer in Disguise
- David Horovitz: Dr. Olmert�s Diagnosis
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Northern Slippery Slope
- David Horovitz: Intolerable Complacency
- Ehud Ya'ari: �Shabbat Shalom, Dirty Jews�
- Judy Maltz: Formula for Tragedy
- David Horovitz: Not Just Anti-Semitism
- Hirsh Goodman: A Look in the Mirror
- Ehud Ya'ari: Pipe Dreams
- Stuart Schoffman: Uncomfortable Positions
- David Horovitz: The Travails of a Rejected Politician
- Hirsh Goodman: Amir's Curse
- Gershom Gorenberg: Prefer Peace to the Temple Mount
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Hamas-Jihad Axis
- David Horovitz: Sharon Loses Israel
- Hirsh Goodman: Cries in the Dark
- David Horovitz: He�s Winning
- Hirsh Goodman: Message from Above
- Ehud Ya'ari: Meet Abu Ala
- David Horovitz: Don�t Avenge Us, Protect Us
- Hirsh Goodman: A Harmful Illusion
- Ehud Ya'ari: It�s Either with Him -- or without Him
- Stuart Schoffman: Close to Home
- David Horovitz: Give Them All an F
- Hirsh Goodman: Gosh! We Have a Problem
- Ehud Ya'ari: Counterattack
- David Horovitz: In a Land Too Near Chelm
- Stuart Schoffman: Rejoicing with Rafaela
- David Horovitz: Happy �Hudna�?
- Hirsh Goodman: The Silence of the Lambs
- David Horovitz: Ilan Ramon�s Vital Perspective
- Hirsh Goodman: Time to Take a Bow
- Ehud Ya'ari: Syria�s Silent Earthquake
- Gershom Gorenberg: Anti-Family Values
- David Horovitz: Don�t Open the Champagne Yet
- Ehud Ya'ari: It�s Over
- Hirsh Goodman: Boom Baby Boom
- David Horovitz: The Glass Half Full
- Hirsh Goodman: Civil War, Uncivil Behavior
- Stuart Schoffman: The Circumcision Monologues
- David Horovitz: As the Pastoral Memories of Aqaba Fade
- Hirsh Goodman: Sharon the Unspontaneous
- Ehud Ya'ari: Riding Low
- David Horovitz: Lobbying, and Its Limits
- Hirsh Goodman: My Yiddishe Brother
- Ehud Ya'ari: Yes Now, Buts Later
- David Horovitz: Goodbye, Mitzna. Goodbye, Labor?
- Hirsh Goodman: Boss Sharon
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Baghdad Effect
- David Horovitz: By Their Tourist Sites You Shall Know Them
- Hirsh Goodman: A �Nebechdik� Race
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Small White Hope
- David Horovitz: Thinking the Unthinkable
- Ehud Ya'ari: A Pesah Miracle
- Gershom Gorenberg: Where the Free Market Flunks
- David Horovitz: Hoping for a More Peaceful Pesah
- Hirsh Goodman: 'In-bedding'
- Ehud Ya'ari: Where Have All the Flowers Gone?
- Stuart Schoffman: The Memory of Egypt
- David Horovitz: Meanwhile, in Iran...
- Hirsh Goodman: On the Firing Line
- David Horovitz: Ejected
- Hirsh Goodman: On Hope
- Ehud Ya'ari: Mahdi Now
- David Horovitz: The Highest Stakes
- Hirsh Goodman: Danger: Big Spender
- Ehud Ya'ari: Yes, Prime Minister!
- David Horovitz: Who Won the Elections?
- Hirsh Goodman: On Symbolism
- Ehud Ya'ari: A Sinai Rendezvous
- Stuart Schoffman: Among School Children
- Ehud Ya'ari: Beware of a �Farhoud�
- David Horovitz: Deaf to the People
- Hirsh Goodman: Sharon�s Shambles
- Ehud Ya'ari: Syria On the Boil
- David Horovitz: Setting New Standards
- Hirsh Goodman: No to Unilateralism
- Ehud Ya'ari: Iraq Now
- Hirsh Goodman: Sharon�s Nemesis
- Ehud Ya'ari: The Real Issue
- Judy Maltz: Thanks, But No Thanks
- David Horovitz: Choices
- Hirsh Goodman: Mitzna, The Morning After
- Ehud Ya'ari: Not Just Anti-Semitic Lies!
- David Horovitz: A Despicable Failure of International Will
- Hirsh Goodman: Italy without the Pasta
- Ehud Ya'ari: Breaking Loose
- Stuart Schoffman: The Spider�s Strategy
- Hirsh Goodman: �Shush, There�s a War Going On�
- Ehud Ya'ari: Iraq First
- Stuart Schoffman: Gandhi�s Legacy
- David Horovitz: The Oslo Discords
- Hirsh Goodman: Wallowing in It
- Gershom Gorenberg: Sharon�s Lessons for Bush
- David Horovitz: Trouble at the Source
- Hirsh Goodman: Wake-Up Call
- Ehud Ya'ari: Great White Hope?
- David Horovitz: Savaged in the Lion�s Den
- Hirsh Goodman: Confusing Times
- David Horovitz: Full Disclosure
- Hirsh Goodman: Silence That Kills
- Ehud Ya'ari: Another Local Legend
- David Horovitz: When Nowhere Is Safe
- Gershom Gorenberg: Chelmonics
- Ehud Ya'ari: Step It up
- David Horovitz: A Vacuum in the Center
- Hirsh Goodman: Zap -- You�re Jewish
- Ehud Ya'ari: Babysitting the PA
- David Horovitz: Facts on the Ground
- Hirsh Goodman: Watch the �A� Word
- Gershom Gorenberg: Barak, Stay Home
- Ehud Ya'ari: Shortcut to Saddam
- David Horovitz: Vindication
- Hirsh Goodman: Food for Thought
- Ehud Ya'ari: Back for a While
- David Horovitz: Lerner�s Virus
- Hirsh Goodman: The Giver and the Taker
- Ehud Ya'ari: Reformation
- Masterful Sharon?
- No More Herring
- Slightly Different Terror
- Of Laws and Sausages
- What Reforms?
- Visions of Venice
- Europe Buys the Big Lie
- The Republicans Love Israel? Look Carefully.
- Three Cheers for the Spooks
- Not by Force Alone
- A Statistic Waiting for Leadership
- The Return of the PLO
- The Real War of Independence
- Ramallah Plus
- Looking to Washington
- Blood, Sweat and Cappuccino
- The Sands Are Shifting
- Who�s Preventing Normalization?
- War
- The Lieutenant�s Story
- Which Solution Do We Want?
- A Rudderless Ship
- While Syria Sleeps
- Get the Message Across
- An Unwanted Casualty
- A Lion in Winter
- The Dance of Death
- The Only Ray of Hope
- Divided We Stand
- Imagine
- Arafat Is Arafat
- Barking Up the Wrong Tree -- for Now
- Suspend Fire
- Bend, But Not Break
- Do As They Say, Not As They Do.
- Coming Clean
- Shattered
- Saddam 2002
- The Wholeness of a Split Identity
- The Hamas Challenge
- Battle Fatigue
- Beware the Generals
- Same Sharon, Same Dangers
- Stand Steadfast, on the Sidelines
- Going Nowhere
- A New Yalta
- The Wrong Coalition
- He's Not in Control
- A Degree of Intifada
- There is No Alternative
- Ominous Opportunity
- The Post-Twins Era
- My Brothers' Keeper
- Unhappy Anniversary
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