Hebrew University
Hebrew University – No
sooner does Leftist Professor Avishai Margalit (Dept of Philosophy)
receive the Israel Prize than he launches yet another of his
Diatribes
But do you have a solution to what you call “the historical core of
Jerusalem”?
There
should really be joint sovereignty over this part, and the
administration of it should be by UNESCO. Don’t change the physical
part of the city, because it’s a treasured heritage of the whole
world, and of the Abrahamic religions. The administration should be
made up of both Israelis and Palestinians.
http://www.jpost.com/Features/InThespotlight/Article.aspx?id=173355
Israel's top
philosopher: Lift the siege!
By STEVE LINDE
19/04/2010
Avishai Margalit says the blockade on Gaza is a disaster.
Prof.
Avishai Margalit is considered to be the country’s foremost
philosopher. In granting him this year’s Israel Prize for
Philosophy, the prize committee described Margalit as “one of the
most important philosophers in the State of Israel and one of the
most valued in the world today.”
Known as
a clear thinker, eloquent speaker and incisive writer, he is on the
left of the political spectrum and advocates what he calls a return
to “the little Israel” of 1948.
While
defining the current situation in the Middle East as “a moment of
truth,” Margalit doesn’t believe a solution will be imposed on
Israel and the Palestinians by the US, although he wishes President
Barack Obama would “bump their heads together.”
His
specific appeal to the government as Israel marks Independence Day
is to lift the blockade on Gaza it imposed in June 2007 when Hamas
took control of the territory.
“To
create this huge jail and believe that something good will emerge
because now it’s quiet, that’s an illusion,” he says. “Actually,
it’s moral bankruptcy and a terrible illusion.”
Born in
1939, Margalit grew up and was educated in Jerusalem and did his IDF
service in Nahal. He received his BA, MA and PhD summa cum laude
(1970) in philosophy from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
becoming a lecturer and head of the philosophy department at the
university before retiring as professor emeritus in 2006.
Margalit
is currently the George F. Kennon Professor at Princeton’s Institute
of Advanced Studies, and has taught at several prestigious
universities in the UK and US, including Oxford and Standford.
A
founding member of Peace Now in 1978, he later served on the board
of B’Tselem.
He has
authored a few highly acclaimed books, including On Compromise
and Rotten Compromises, Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes
of Its Enemies, The Ethics of Memory and The Decent
Society.
Margalit
has also published articles for The New York Review of Books
on a range of social, cultural and political issues, writing
profiles on politicians including Yitzhak Rabin, Ariel Sharon and
Shimon Peres, as well as on philosophers Baruch Spinoza, Martin
Buber and Yeshayahu Leibowitz.
He is
married to Edna Ullmann-Margalit, who is a professor of philosophy
at the Hebrew University, and both of them are members of the
university’s Center for Rationality and Decision Theory. They have
four children and five grandchildren.
Margalit
spends much of his time researching and writing at the Van Leer
Institute’s library in Jerusalem, where I interviewed him – in
English – last week.
How
would you describe the state of the nation of Israel this
Independence Day?
I think
it’s in a troubled state. I mean life inside Israel, inside the
Green Line, is very pleasant at the moment. But I think all
recognize that it’s a troubling state of affairs since we face a
clear-cut dilemma: If we go on as is, as we did in the last 42
years, from ’67 on, which means one political entity from the Jordan
to the Mediterranean – call it whatever you want – it’s clear that
this is an entity that most Israelis and most of the world cannot
live with. Which means eventually it will emerge into an apartheid
state, whether you like it or not, because the only way to keep the
Palestinians in line is on more and more repressive terms, and
that’s the logic of the situation.
I think
for Israel it’s the defeat of Zionism in a grand way, and the only
way is basically the small Israel, with all the dangers that it
involves. We never expected after ’48 to live in a happy state; we
knew that we’d take risks but at least we created a coherent
society, and now I think it’s an incoherent society that either will
be morally defeated or live in an intolerable situation for most of
the people in it, on whatever grounds. So I think this is actually a
moment of truth.
In
your new book, you write that “rotten compromises are not allowed,
even for the sake of peace.” What do you mean by that?
The
tenor of my book is that I prefer just a peace over a just peace.
Namely, sometimes an imperfect peace that is not just is preferable
to struggling for a just peace that can create tremendous injustice
on the way. So the main tenor is to advocate compromise. There are
cases in which keeping an inhumane regime or making a deal with an
inhumane regime even for the sake of peace is unjustified.
I don’t
think that if Switzerland or Sweden made peace with Germany, this
was justified. This doesn’t mean, necessarily, that they should have
gone to war with Germany because maybe they couldn’t afford to go to
war. But to make peace with Germany was unjustified. So to make a
peace with an inhumane regime which is cruel and humiliating in an
unjust way is unjustified.
You
were born in Jerusalem and have spent most of your life in
Jerusalem. Has anyone ever turned to you, as Israel’s top
philosopher, for a creative solution on Jerusalem?
Actually, I was born in a hospital in the Jezreel Valley, but I have
lived here all my life. Jerusalem has become a misnomer for so many
agendas.
After
’48, there was a consensus in Israel, that the borders of ’48 are
the borders of Israel, including the Galilee, which consists mostly
of Arab Israelis. After ’67 there was no consensus and in order to
create a consensus, they used the term “Jerusalem.”
The
Jordanian Jerusalem was less than 2,500 acres. The Jerusalem of now
is an infinite land, which includes 40 villages – and who would call
[the Palestinian neighborhood of] Shuafat Jerusalem? Jerusalem is
just an appeal to annexation, that will be consensus. That’s what
Jerusalem means. The holy basis of Jerusalem, the historical core,
is less than one percent of Jerusalem. That’s the historical truth.
The whole City of David is just 15 acres. That’s what we are talking
about.
Jerusalem is such a misnomer. People actually swear in the name of
Jerusalem who can’t stand the city. The Zionists never liked the
city, because it reminded them too much of old Europe, and the city
that I like they can’t stand. They rush to Tel Aviv on Thursday from
the Knesset. Most of them don’t live here. They won’t even send
their kids on a field trip with the school to Jerusalem. Yet they
swear in the name of “heavenly Jerusalem” – which is utterly
non-concrete Jerusalem – with no feel for the city.
But
do you have a solution to what you call “the historical core of
Jerusalem”?
There
should really be joint sovereignty over this part, and the
administration of it should be by UNESCO. Don’t change the physical
part of the city, because it’s a treasured heritage of the whole
world, and of the Abrahamic religions. The administration should be
made up of both Israelis and Palestinians.
Do
you think Netanyahu and Abbas can reach a deal of some kind?
There is
nothing stable here. Lots of people who were willing to go along
with Oslo have become disenchanted and are not willing to give it
another try. There is tremendous mistrust on both sides. The
prospect now of a deal out of free will of the two sides seems too
remote and too unrealistic.
What
will happen if [Palestinian Authority Prime Minister] Salam Fayyad
declares an independent state along the borders of 1967, but we are
willing to negotiate a swap one on one? And then get recognition
from almost all the world, and de facto recognition from the United
States?
Then
people will have to talk differently. I believe that on both sides,
including in Gaza, more or less 70 percent of the population can
gradually agree to live under the conditions that Clinton outlined.
I don’t say they will do it on their own initiative, but passively
they can live with it and accept it. But then there are 30 percent
on both sides who are more vehemently opposed to this, and there is
no political mechanism on both sides to bring it about.
I
believe we are left with what Yeats said: “The centre cannot hold...
The best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate
intensity.”
And
that’s the situation we are in.
Do
you think Israel should talk to Hamas?
About
what? There is very little to talk to with Hamas. If you can talk,
you should talk. Indirectly, directly. This is not the issue. What
is intolerable is the belief that you can put a million and a half
people under siege and believe that something good will come out of
it, and this will undermine the Hamas regime. This collective
punishment is inhumane. I am surprised that the world accused Israel
of doing it and not Egypt. Obviously Egypt is part of the siege.
Both do it.
I see
the dilemma. You don’t want the Hamas to succeed because that’s what
they want. They want to be the avante-gard of the Palestinian
community, to show that they can create a mobile society, and they
need one place like Gaza to succeed. And Israel rightly doesn’t want
them to succeed.
The
other extreme is to push them so hard that something will happen. I
think in between there are lots of options. They don’t have to
succeed. You don’t have to make their lives easy in terms of a
success story, but on the other hand to create this huge jail and
believe that something good will emerge because now it’s quiet,
that’s an illusion. Actually it’s moral bankruptcy and a terrible
illusion.
In
what way?
Because
collective punishment is unjust. There are kids, there are people
who want to study and go abroad. There are people who want to
conduct some semblance of life. You can’t put a million and a half
people, most of them refugees, under siege and then start lamenting
the settlements that were destroyed. After all, we gave them the
license to vote. They voted for Hamas with the understanding that
it’s acceptable.
So
your appeal to the government would be to lift the siege?
There
are things that you should take seriously to make sure that you get
as much as you can, but basically, lift the siege, yes! I think that
the siege can’t go on, and I think that it is a disaster. Basically,
the Hamas smashed the Fatah. They took over Gaza.
I
believe there was a preemptive strike. I think both the Americans
and [former Fatah chief in Gaza Muhammad] Dahlan tried to mount a
coup in Gaza, which failed. It’s not that the Hamas are squeamish,
but they were quite afraid of taking over by military means, I
think.
But when
they discovered that they were threatened, they became wild. I think
that the decision to allow the elections was a major disaster, a
major mishandling of the situation.
And we
went along with it. I think that Bush and Condoleezza Rice wanted to
show that democracy in the Middle East is all over, in Iraq and
here, and for that fantasy, for this PR showcase, they were willing
to do this thing, which was mad on the face of it. There’s no point
now in blaming Sharon, but we went along with it, and the people who
voted had all the reasons to believe at the time that this was
acceptable. No one told them that this is unacceptable, and suddenly
because of the result of the vote, there is a serious problem.
What
is your reading of the so-called crisis in the relations between
Israel and the US?
I think
there is a change in America which is not a superficial one. For the
first time, after 42 years, actually after 62, I think there is an
army lobby run by Mullen, Petraeus and McChrystal, and the idea is
the following: We tried Fallujah in Iraq, namely destroying the
insurgency the way Israel did in Gaza. It didn’t work. We have to
win over their minds, and the strategy is to separate.
The only
solution in Afghanistan and Pakistan is to separate the Taliban from
al-Qaida. For that we need to win a possible compromise with the
Taliban, and disassociate them from al-Qaida. Since the conflict
here became so evocative in recruiting political Islamists all over
the world, we have to tone down the conflict or eradicate it.
That, I
think, is the common wisdom. That’s what Petraeus, in his testimony,
said. And for the first time, the Israel lobbies, which is AIPAC and
the others that are basically right wing, face a counter lobby which
Obama can unleash at any time.
That’s a
new ball game. In that sense, something dramatic changed, I believe.
This doesn’t mean that Obama will impose a solution.
I don’t
believe that anyone can impose a solution that the two sides won’t
accept. What Eisenhower did in ’56, that was a different era. I
don’t see a direct threat on the Americans, with the Sixth Fleet in
Haifa, so to those who wait for Obama to solve the problem for the
two sides, I say: He can help, he cannot solve. It’s like waiting
for Godot.
I don’t
believe that’s a realistic expectation. I wish he would impose
something on the two sides, and bump their heads together, but I
don’t believe he will do this unless the stakes are high for him,
and I don’t see it that way.
Finally, let me ask you, what is your dream for the future?
Back to
the little Israel that we knew and loved, all of us, and I think
that we should do it with as much agreement as we can. We should go
back, roll back, and concentrate on Israel. Ending the occupation is
a moral and Zionist imperative.
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