Yaacov Lozowick has been reading Yehuda Avner's book on Israeli Prime Ministers.

Ever since the Six Day War, we learn, American leaders (not to mention all the others) are fixated on this version or that of having Israel hand over the territories it acquired in that war in return for peace. There is never (as told in this book) any discussion of what will keep the peace going once the agreement has been reached. There's this puzzle, and it can be resolved by moving these pieces in these ways… and what happens afterward? Well, there will be peace,of course, and nothing will threaten it ever, so no-one needs to think much about it; it will be gloriously boring. No-one in the book ever brings up the possibility that the conflict can't be resolved by Israel giving back those territories because the conflict was always about much more than them. It's not mentioned, not considered, not part of the discourse. To which one might add that in 1992 the author visited with the retired Margart Thatcher, who admitted that when she met Begin in 1980 (?) she had never given much thought to the Holocaust, and thus didn't know how important it was to Begin and most Jews.

Not only is there abysmal ignorance about those strange Arabs; there's not much thought given to the Jews, either. Merely a mathematical solution for a conflict. Frightening.

[Via Solomonia]

Posted in

2 responses to “More than territory”

  1. clazy8 Avatar
    clazy8

    “when she met Begin in 1980 (?) she had never given much thought to the Holocaust, and thus didn’t know how important it was to Begin and most Jews”
    Can that be true? What does it mean? My first reaction was to assume she had given it less thought than I — as if I in fact did know how important etc. But the idea seems so absurd that I wonder if she had actually been holding herself to a higher standard.

    Like

  2. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    Yes, it’s difficult to know what to make of that. A genuine Thatcher blindspot, or simply her polite acknowlegement that perhaps, like most non-Jews, she’d failed to appreciate quite how significant the memory of the Holocaust was for Israel and Israelis?

    Like

Leave a comment