Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

'We can live in peace'...John Lennon (photo: Dafna Tal)

Mahzor

Mahzor

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Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

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Ben Heine

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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

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Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Yiddish version

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Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Danny Zamir, Convenor of IDF Soldiers Testifying About Gaza Abuse, is Himself Abused

Danny Zamir (photo: Israel Eshel)

Danny Zamir (photo: Israel Eshel)

Talk about shooting the messenger: Danny Zamir, director of the Yitzhak Rabin military preparatory academy at Oranim College, organized a meeting of his graduates to discuss their experiences in Gaza.  The resulting soldiers’ testimonies of cold-blooded murder of Gaza civilians have riveted Israeli attention for the past week.  Ethan Bronner wrote a N.Y. Times Week in Review story about them as well.

But Zamir’s efforts haven’t sat well with a certain patriotic constituency within Israeli society, one that sees the IDF as a sacred national institution that is beyond reproach.  Though I’m sure Zamir didn’t expect to be lionized for his efforts, he probably didn’t expect to be vilified either.

Not only have Israelis accused him of smearing the IDF, they’ve accused him of aiding and abetting the nation’s enemies who are only waiting to pounce upon such stories to justify their hatred of Israel.  The IDF itself initiated this campaign by revealing that Zamir had been imprisoned briefly in the 1990s when he refused to guard a settler group holding a provocative religious ceremony at Joseph’s Tomb.  They attempted to shoot the messenger.

The campaign also took the form of attacks like this one (Hebrew) in the Israeli right-wing press.  Assaf Oron also notes that one person in the online comment thread falsely claimed the testimonies had been debunked. Another IDF regiment commander claimed the stories were unsubstantiated after little more than a quick internal inquiry. Assaf’s rejoinder is telling:

Well, that settles it. The IDF never lies. Only dirty leftists do.

Zamir himself seems to be a throwback to an earlier era in the IDF when officers wrestled with moral and political dilemmas. When they strove not just to fight, but to understand why they were fighting. It’s important to hear his portrayal of his motives for airing the testimonies:

For some reason, many of those who responded angrily to the failures depicted in the soldiers’ stories connected our project to a leftist worldview or to opposition to military service.

The demand to uncover any failures of the army’s ethical code during the Gaza operation must never be seen as “against” the IDF. Precisely the opposite [is the case]. This is an act that derives from a sense of responsibility for, and full participation in what happens within the army, which is, after all, composed of all of us.

The claims that the mass media exposure of the acts of our soldiers will serve as lighter fluid in the hands of Israel haters is unjustified. Israel haters don’t require such material [to peddle their hate]. On the contrary, an innocent Arab civilian grappling with Israel’s image, seeing the forthright discussion surrounding this episode will see before him a living, breathing democratic society struggling with its failures.

…Enough lies and hatred. Morality is strength, not weakness.

Unfortunately, the Danny Zamirs of Israeli society have largely been passed over by historical events.  The high standards and moral values he attempts to uphold have been trashed by so many within the army itself and the political echelons.  But we must still appreciate the heroic efforts made by such as him to uphold a sense of national decency and honor in the midst of fighting a war.  If Israel had more of him it might not be in the quagmire it is in.

It isn’t surprising that in the midst of such smears and pressure that Zamir appears to equivocate about the value of the Gaza war itself.  It seems almost a sop to his Israeli opponents that he concedes basic elements of anti-Hamas propaganda (such as the claim they they use human shields).  In truth, and this is a weakness of Zamir’s approach, he is less interested in the question of whether the war should have been fought than in HOW that war was fought.  A man of his word, as limited as that might sometimes be, he tells us his chief concern is for the IDF itself and he leaves the more difficult political questions to others.

Related posts:

  1. Breaking the Silence: IDF Women Soldiers Testify to Abuse
  2. IDF Soldiers Admit ‘Shoot to Kill’ Orders Against Gaza Civilians
  3. Breaking the Silence Gaza War Soldiers’ Testimonies (part 2)
  4. Israeli Border Police Videos Document Abuse of Palestinian Civilians
  5. Israeli Rightists Warn IDF Soldiers of Prison Time Thanks to New Israel Fund

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136 Responses to “Danny Zamir, Convenor of IDF Soldiers Testifying About Gaza Abuse, is Himself Abused”

  1. Alex Stein says:

    Well I think that both Palestinians and Jews should have national and political collective rights, but not one at the expense of the other, hence the need for a sensible partition (hopefully leading to a more integrated solution in the long-term).

  2. Alex Stein says:

    Well, Peter, I think you’re overly concerned with the Holocaust. It’s not forbidden territory, but analogies should be accurate, and I’ve seen nothing here to suggest that the Warsaw Ghetto analogy is.
    As for Gaza, I think that the discourse between left and righ or zionist and anti-zionist or however you want to phrase it would be improved when both sides acknowledged that the following two statements can be simultaneously true.
    1) Israel does a number of terrible things.
    2. Israeli bad deeds are exaggerated.

    2 does not exclude 1; 1 does not exclude 2, yet most discourse is built around the assumption that one excludes the other.

  3. Alex Stein says:

    Richard – is there any chance I can be taken off moderation? It’s a bit frustrating to post responses to people only for them to be seen ten hours later.

    • I’m trying to figure out why you’re being moderated. I can’t find either yr e mail or IP in my moderation list. Is it possible that you’re using dynamic IP? If so, my blog is set up to moderate all first time IPs, which would be why your comments are being moderated.

  4. Alex Stein says:

    How do I find out if I’ve got dynamic IP? It happens both when I write from my home laptop and when I write from work…

    • I think this comment was moderated as well & not published immediately. But it should’ve been since I approved a comment of yours yesterday fr. this IP. I’m a little befuddled why you’re in moderation given that you’re using the same IP as last night. I’ll look more closely at my moderation list to see if any of the IPs you use are still in there. But I already checked last night & they weren’t as far as I could tell.

      But I do apologize for the inconvenience.

  5. Alex Stein says:

    Richard – I don’t know what you mean by recognising Hamas. I am talking in formal terms – the international system works via recognition. The idea that Israel has to recognise Hamas is as meaningless as saying Iran should recognise Israel’s right to exist. Israel has done deals with the Palestinians over the issue of recognition – deals which unfortunately (and for this Israel has to take a large share of the responsibility) haven’t made much progress beyond the stage of rhetoric, but Hamas can’t even bring themselves to make that rhetorical commitment.

    But if we were to accept your formulation, how would we get out of the morass? What if I said “Israel has no obligation to recognise Hamas unless and until Hamas is willing to recognise Israel”?

    • the international system works via recognition.

      I don’t know what this means. It sounds like a definitive statement, but is empty of meaning.

      I find it odd that you say that Hamas must recognize Israel, but Israel has no such obligation to recognize Hamas. And I don’t have a clue what you mean by “formal terms.” The PLO did not recognize Israel before it began negotiating with Israel. Why change the rules solely for Hamas?

      I don’t believe either party needs to recognize the other BEFORE they negotiate. The goal of negotiations is to get to recognition & acceptance of ea. other. But this may not be a precondition (unless you merely want to set up terms that destroy the chance of any negotiation happening).

  6. Alex Stein says:

    Wikipeida is good on the issue of recognition
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_recognition

    Somehow, Hamas have to show that they acknowledge the right of Israel to sovereignty over part of the land – one per cent would do for me. Now Israel has done that – unfortunately it’s only shown it’s willing to create a Palestinian bantustan, but I believe that to be more than what Hamas are prepared to accept (the odd contrary statement to the western media notwithstanding, which should of course be pursued seriously by concerned third parties). There’s no point in embarking on negotiations in Hamas if there is no possibility to end the conflict. Long-term truces are pointless; it would be better to stay in the OPT than to go down that road.

    • There’s no point in embarking on negotiations in Hamas if there is no possibility to end the conflict. Long-term truces are pointless; it would be better to stay in the OPT than to go down that road.

      Just when I was beginning to believe you actually had a few good things, informative things to say about the conflict, you prove me wrong. A long-term truce is what Hamas is offering w/o any negotiations haven’t happened yet. For you to make the horrible statement that you’d rather continue Israel’s heinous Occupation because Hamas doesn’t offer you what you want BEFORE there’s been ANY negotiations is ridiculous. I’m sorry you don’t recognize that.

  7. Alex Stein says:

    Well first of all Hamas’ statements about a truce fall into the category of their contrary statements to western media etc – I hope the Obama administration will pursue them to find out how serious they are. I’m a believer in 242, which means land for peace. Withdrawing from the OPT without a peace deal would be a strategic liability. Israel needs to pursue policies that will get Palestinian consensus on something along the lines of a Geneva Accords. This means stopping settlement expansion, removing checkpoints etc etc. But, given what’s happened in Gaza and Lebanon, unilateral withdrawal wouldn’t be very sensible.

  8. Gideon says:

    A minor correction to your translation of the excerpt from Zamir’s article (and you might consider including the link to the Hebrew original) – he doesn’t say an “innocent Arab civilian” but “innocent Western citizen”.

  9. I’m not sure why, when I’ve made a pretty clear statement on the issues, you have to ask me to clarify myself. But the answer is yes. But such a charge will only resonate when it involves rockets that actually killed or injured an Israel civilian. There haven’t been very many of those. But yes, I’d support charges in those cases.

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