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Israeli Academic
Extremism
Hebrew University - Zeev Sternhell (Dept of Political Science)
explains why Lawbreaking by Leftists is Moral, but by Religious
People it is 'Political' and Immoral
'An ethical uprising, anchored in adherence to
universal norms, completely personal in nature and accompanied by a
willingness to pay its full price, has nothing in common with the
violent and organized rebellion that is taking place today in the
settlements. This rebellion is essentially political. ...The yeshiva
is a way of life, not an institution you enter just to study. It is
a monolithic institution, led by an autocrat, that encompasses all
the spheres of a student's life. There you learn to obey, not rebel
against the consensus or some intellectual authority.'
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1137607.html
Not all refusal is the same
By Zeev Sternhell
25/12/2009
Since the first evidence of the organized
Jewish uprising in the West Bank, which is now assuming
unprecedented proportions, great efforts have been made to create an
artificial symmetry between the systematic rebellion in the
settlements and the refusal to serve in the territories that was
prevalent at the beginning of the decade.
To understand how fundamentally distorted this
comparison is, we should point out a few facts. Early in 2002 a
group of 50 officers and sergeants from combat units signed a
document in which they refused - for ethical reasons - to take part
in the acts of oppression required by service in the territories.
Soon afterward 600 combat soldiers added their signatures. When
about 40 of the refuseniks were sentenced to time in a military
prison, several hundred faculty members in the universities and
colleges published a letter supporting the refuseniks, many of whom
were students. Among the signatories was this writer, one of whose
more talented students was sitting behind bars.
In those days, that was a proper and worthy
act. Since then the Israel Defense Forces has learned to live with
fighters who would not hesitate to risk their lives on the
battlefield but are not willing to be a cog in the occupation
machine: The problems are solved quietly, without statements being
released, on the level of the army unit. At the same time, a
colonial police force has been established - the Kfir Brigade - to
release combat units from carrying out the occupation's daily tasks.
An ethical uprising, anchored in adherence to
universal norms, completely personal in nature and accompanied by a
willingness to pay its full price, has nothing in common with the
violent and organized rebellion that is taking place today in the
settlements. This rebellion is essentially political. By the same
token, it is absurd to draw a parallel between the hesder yeshivas
that combine Torah study and military service with the universities,
or between rabbis and professors. These yeshivas are not pluralistic
institutions that encourage skepticism or represent the entire range
of viewpoints and opinions. They are not institutions that include
men and women, secular and religious people, Jews and Arabs,
leftists and rightists.
The yeshiva is a way of life, not an
institution you enter just to study. It is a monolithic institution,
led by an autocrat, that encompasses all the spheres of a student's
life. There you learn to obey, not rebel against the consensus or
some intellectual authority. True, we can reasonably assume that
there are differing viewpoints within the hesder yeshivas, and that
there are differences of opinion between them and their leaders. But
when it comes to public declarations and political decisions, the
ranks there close. The fact is, the head of the Har Bracha yeshiva,
Rabbi Eliezer Melamed, received loud and unhesitating support.
Indeed, to an outsider it would seem that the
intention of the hesder yeshivas, particularly the more extreme
ones, is to impart first to the army and then to all society the
values of halakha and the principles of extreme nationalism; this
approach rejects the very concept of equality among people, nations
and cultures. The settlement leaders and the hesder yeshiva rabbis,
the IDF chief rabbi, Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman and the chairman
of the Knesset Constitution, Law and Justice Committee, David Rotem,
all have the same objective: to subordinate reason, autonomy of the
individual and the right of free choice to halakha and the
principles of the supremacy of the Jewish people, the only natural
ruler of the entire land. That is how the prevailing norms at Har
Bracha are meant to shape the face of all Israeli society.
However, the immediate goal is to protect the
settlements by constantly flaunting the ultimate threat of a civil
war. In this battle the hesder yeshivas are playing the role of a
strike force, so they are the apple of the settlements' eye. In
fact, these units are devoted, disciplined and readily available.
This is where the future leadership is being educated; using the
hesder yeshivas, the settlement movement aspires to gradually
increase its influence over the army and ensure that within 10 to 15
years, much of the senior command will be in its hands. This means
that the chauvinist and clerical right wing will acquire even
greater influence over Israeli politics.
Indeed, the entire goal is political, and to
achieve it the yeshiva heads will sign any understandings with the
army we want, as long as they can continue with their work. The time
when they have enough power to paralyze the government's ability to
act on future peace agreements is steadily approaching.
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