Not a Fish (provincially speaking)



The meaningless chatter of your regular split personality Israeli mother trying to make sense of current insanity

Home

Not a Fish archives

Sample chatter
Dear Amanda.
On life and death.
Smash the Jewish State.
The way it is.
Matildas.

Stories
Why was this night different?
Walid.
The Witch and Prince Charming.
The Birthday Boy.
The Brit.
Avraham's Honor.

On Israeliness
Those who pay the price.
Nice.
The Hevr'e.
Ma'amouls.
The Shtetl Collective.
Women in Israeli politics.
Different 'M's.
Being a Jew in Israel.
Sponja.
Shofar Meditation.

On Provincialism
1. Elqana
2. Tel Aviv
3. Oslo
4. Israelis
5. Americans
6. Palestinians

On Zionism
This is where it ends.
Israel is not all about abusing.
Listening.
To a Jewish Non-Zionist Friend.
Hannah Senesh.

Why blog?
A mushy explanation

More
Breakfast

Liverpool Tales from the Mersey Mouth

Exploring Peoples & Cultures through Stories & Connections

Israeli blogs

Israelity

An Unsealed Room
Balagan
Israellycool
treppenwitz
Alisa In Wonderland
WHAT-O!
SavtaDotty
Dutchblog Israel
Civax
Just Jennifer
the view from here
Neither Here Nor There
Sha!
on the face
Good News from Israel
Chayyei Sarah
Inner Balance
Gil in South America
This Normal Life
Karen Alkalay-Gut
Yishay Mor
Rishon Rishon
2HaTs (in Canada)
anglosaxy
If I forget thee...
FactsOfIsrael
My Obiter Dicta
diary of an anti-chomskyite
The Fool's Page
Hatshepsut

More blogs

Meryl Yourish
Is Full Of Crap
dejafoo
Mersey Mouth (not actually a blog)
In Context
PooterGeek
The Head Heeb
IsraelPundit
The Protocols of the Yuppies of Zion
Harry's Place
Strawberry Chips
Heretics' almanac
Silent Running
Melanie Phillips
Renegade Rebbetzin
JeW*SCHooL
AtlanticBlog
Tallrite Blog
Jewish Current Issues
Blissful Knowledge
Miriam Shaviv
Doves and Pomegranates
Segacs's World I Know
Crossing the Rubicon2
Eric the Unread
Boker Tov, Boulder!
normblog
Kesher Talk
Roger L. Simon
USS Clueless
zaneirani
Haggai's Place
Brian Ulrich
Occam's Toothbrush
Mutated Monkeys
Manolo
I Dream, Therefore I Am
growabrain
One-Sided Wonder
What's Brewing
Shark Blog
Tim Blair
Wizbang
Just World News
Peter Levine
Which surprised her
a small victory
Little Green Footballs
Israpundit
soxblog
Amitai Etzioni
Rhythms of Grace
Soul Food Cafe
SteynOnline

Contact*:
imshin at bigfoot dot com

*Please note:
I might choose to quote anything you write to me, on this blog, unless you ask me not to, but I will not use your name, when doing so, unless you specifically say that I can.


Useful Sites
*Where to buy Israeli Products
*A concise history of Israel, and more
*Ehud Yaari explains the situation
*Looking for friends or family in Israel?

Remembering Shiri Negari


The WeatherPixie

Israeli blogs

<< List
Jewish Bloggers
Join >>

<< ? Israeli Blogs # >>

Weblog Commenting by HaloScan.com

Not a Fish archives

This page is powered by Blogger.

Saturday, January 11, 2003
The wolf inside us.
Meryl Yourish sent us all over to read this Tom Paine post about his transformation from peace-loving leftie to blood-sucking...er...vampire. I’ve never seen Buffy, but I know what he’s talking about.
posted by Imshin 22:27
Aren’t we in a strange situation, here in Israel, with regard to the Iraq offensive? We want it to happen. We know we stand to gain from it. But the immediate dangers it poses for us mean that we’re not very happy about it.
posted by Imshin 22:05
Put off by Sharon’s suspected corruption?
Last night on Israel TV channel 2, top Israeli pollster Mina Tzemach gave her analysis about the Likud’s situation. Their problem, she says, is the new voters. Not the diehard Likud voters, who will vote Likud anyway, but the new ones that have come from the left or from the religious Shas. I’m not sure she’s right. I don’t think people who came from the left necessarily think Arik Sharon is a saint and therefore will not necessarily be disappointed.

Take me for instance. I don’t find the question of whether Sharon can mortgage his farm or not the interesting question. The interesting question is how he came to have a spacious private farm leased from the Israel Lands Administration in the first place.

I wasn’t born yesterday. I remember Sharon. I haven’t forgotten him as Minister of Agriculture. My beloved middle school teacher had to wait patiently in Haifa for many years before her village in the Galilee was built, because he had sent all the bulldozers to build settlements in the territories first. I haven’t forgotten him as Minister of Housing, when he hastily erected badly planned slum dwellings in shoddily constructed caravans for hundreds of thousands of new immigrants who were pouring in. Needless to say, these caravan towns soon became crime ridden and drug infested and those who were able fled, while the poorest and the uneducated were trapped. I haven’t forgotten his thuggish behavior in Likud Party conferences, either.

And of course, I haven’t forgotten him as Defense Minister and architect of the Lebanon war. His part in the build up that ultimately led to the murder of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin is also fresh in my mind.

I won’t be surprised if Sharon turns out to be corrupt. I’d be surprised if he wasn’t.

I didn’t vote for Sharon when he was up against Barak in February 2001 and I was very worried when he was elected, given his track record. But he has surprised me in his ability to handle this war with a restraint we didn’t know he had in him.

As I see it, the “instant” solutions suggested by both the far right (harsher measures against the Palestinians), and those remaining in the left (go back to negotiating with Arafat and implement a unilateral separation) are dangerous and hysterical. I think what we need now, is to internalize that there are no instant solutions and that it is imperative for us to show the Palestinians that on one hand, we are strong, resilient and determined and that we can’t be broken by terrorism, and on the other hand, we are not planning to annihilate them, and are ready to make peace and compromise with them, if they give us a chance. This requires patience and forbearance, qualities neither the far right nor the left seem to possess. Sharon, surprisingly enough, despite his track record and despite his age (or maybe because of it) does seem to be in possession of these qualities. I don’t know about his ability to make peace, but we’re not there yet. When the time is ripe for the difficult compromises he talks about, if he doesn’t come through, he will have to go.

I would rather it be someone else and I would rather it be the
foreign policy platform offered by Shinui, which is more to my liking, but without the ranting figurehead and the anti-religious slant (not because I don’t agree with it, but because now is the time for unity). But there it is. These are the options. As I see it, what we need is a strong Likud that will be a powerful leader of a moderate coalition. But maybe I’m wrong. Who knows?

In this Friday’s Maariv, Ben-Dror Yemini (Hebrew) explains that Mitzna being elected is the worst thing that could happen to Arafat right now, and he’s giving out subtle messages, through an advisor, that he’d like Mitzna to be elected, so as to make sure he isn’t.

The Frog has been discussing the fact that neither left nor right in Israel have been very good at keeping to the law, and that includes Amram Mitzna’s “alleged back-handers from Haifa property developers”.

We’re back to basics. What matters is not who is more likeable, who looks better on TV or who is not being investigated by the police, but what they’re going to do if elected.

If I have to hold my nose while putting the envelope in the ballot, so be it. It won’t be the first time.

posted by Imshin 20:37
Friday, January 10, 2003
Shabbat Shalom.
posted by Imshin 16:32
Maariv’s weekend magazine has picked up the Israel Shamir saga (Hebrew link). You may remember I wrote a few posts in August about this incredible character (a real live Jewish-Israeli vicious anti-Semite of the Jews-eat-the-blood-of-Palestinian-children-for-Passover kind, I kid you not): Here [scroll down to “The Israeli Noam Chomsky? (I don’t think so!)”], here and here.
posted by Imshin 16:20
I'm now inaccessible to readers in China
along with all other blogspot.com blogs, according to
John Ray. I don't think I've ever been accessed by anyone from China.
posted by Imshin 12:38
I know nothing about how Middle Eastern studies are taught in the USA. All I know is that I find it very difficult to read Edward Said without getting very upset. So I don’t really have an opinion about what Martin Kramer has to say on this subject, but it’s interesting nevertheless. After reading the third chapter of his ”Ivory Towers on Sand”, which is available online, I popped over to Amazon.com to read the reviews, as I often do. A very interesting discussion develops there. I suggest reading all the reviews and not just the favorable ones on the first page. Martin Kramer also writes a blog.
posted by Imshin 11:52
Thursday, January 09, 2003
The Frog has come through (I knew he would)
with regard to my memorable mention on a Fatah forum (famous at last).

“I had a look at the Arabic site. My "computer Arabic" is a little poor so I'm not certain that I understand all the terms they use for web-surfing. From what I understand, they are saying that "Not A Fish is an institution (or probably a "web site") that offers a 'connection' (probably a "link" in computing terms) to the Simon Wiesenathal Centre, that is running a campaign under the slogan 'let's act (?) now' to protest against the novel. Similarly, the former site offers a link to Amazon.Com in France and publishes the information about the novel presented on that site."

Both sites are discussed under the heading "Sites relating to the Subject".

The next one mentioned is "Our Jerusalem", a Jewish Extremist site according to this report.”


I see. All pertaining to that book about Palestine that that Egyptian-Italian adolescent is said to have written. I’m not naming the book or the author. I was first on google about this, for a while, I’m sorry to say. I’ve given it enough publicity.

posted by Imshin 22:50
So Sharon called a press conference
to explain about the loan thing. He started with a lengthy attack of the Labor party for conducting a witch-hunt against the Likud and himself and then went on to sort of explain his part in the loan thing, rather lamely. While he was talking, the transmission suddenly stopped mid-sentence and the presenters in the newsroom explained that Judge Heshin, head of the central election committee, had ordered them to stop the transmission in the middle, because it was election propaganda.

I heard an analyst say that Sharon was aiming the speech at his voters and is less bothered about what the analysts have to say about his performance, and they have had plenty so far. So have the left-wing politicians.

It’s a bit embarrassing for a prime minister to be cut off like that, though, isn’t it? I wonder how the Likud voters will see this. The first poll to follow the exposure of this affair shows an interesting influence on voters, but it was taken too close to the publication to mean anything. Not that polls should be taken seriously. I’ll never forget going to bed in 1996, knowing we (Labor, Peres…) had won the elections, and waking up the next morning to discover the exit polls had been dead wrong. This Reshet Bet radio station poll (Hebrew), taken yesterday, indicates that a substantial percentage of Israelis (48%) sees this loan affair as a false charge. (40% sees it as a serious matter with suspicion of bribery and fraud).

I only know how all this is affecting me personally. If I’m anything to go by, Labor shouldn’t be too jubilant.

Anyway, we’re now watching a Maccabi Tel Aviv basketball game (at least Bish is), so I’m spared the ranting of indignant Labor and Meretz leaders.

Update: The Frog on this.

posted by Imshin 22:17
Israel Supreme Court: Bishara and Marzel can run in the elections
“A panel of 11 Supreme Court justices on Thursday overturned the Central Elections Committee's decisions to disqualify Arab MKs Ahmed Tibi, Azmi Bishara and the Balad party from running in the January 28 election. The court also upheld the decisions to allow far-right activist Baruch Marzel to run, and to disqualify Likud candidates Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz and Moshe Feiglin”.

Although I personally think it is justified that both Bishara and Marzel be disqualified from running, I’m rather relieved by this. One less headache.

Bishara is still awaiting his trial for supporting terrorism in a speech delivered in Syria.

posted by Imshin 18:10
Occam's Toothbrush. New address. Looks nice.
posted by Imshin 17:56
Wednesday, January 08, 2003
Corruption again?
Haaretz has caused a media storm by exposing a secret Justice Ministry document about a police investigation into some financial stuff Arik Sharon and his sons are involved in, which could be illegal.

You can read the original Haaretz story
here and today's follow-ups here and here.

Arik Sharon's lawyers and advisors claim very convincingly that the whole issue is completely legal and above board.

It's all a bit complicated for me to understand. I'm hopeless with anything to do with banks and money and collateral. It's early days to see where this is all going.

This could lose the Likud the elections, or it could end up as a boomerang and bring back voters who have drifted off, when they see that Mitzna might win as a result.

posted by Imshin 20:50
I seem to have been mentioned on an Arabic language forum that seems to be affiliated with Fatah. I can’t see the Arabic writing, so I can’t even attempt to read it, let alone understand what it says with my pathetic schoolgirl Arabic.
posted by Imshin 17:50
Tuesday, January 07, 2003
16th January 2003 is the day generations of Israelis’ childhood dreams come true (present company included). The first Israeli astronaut is scheduled to be launched into space aboard space shuttle Columbia. Very exciting.

* * *

The twilight zone
I live in a quite central part of Tel Aviv. A few years ago, long before this Terror War was anything more than a gleam in Yasser Arafat's eye, I was awakened in the middle of the night by vehicles racing past and a loudspeaker shouting out "Konunoot Sfeega! Konunoot Sfeega!" (I think this would be translated as: Alert of incoming attack). Needless to say I was rather alarmed. I woke up Bish and we discussed what we should do. Then we rang up the police, who said nothing had happened and everything was under control. This was even more alarming.

The next morning, on the news, there was a report about some idiot that had tried to parachute off one of the Azrielli buildings, which were in the last stages of construction. At the time, they were the tallest buildings in the Middle East. A taller building has since been built in Ramat Gan, just across the road. Of course, the security forces, not knowing what was happening, initially, had treated the event as a terrorist attack. The idiot was lucky to get out of it alive.

New Yorkers will be familiar with the feeling of living in a science fiction movie.

They have told us to stock bottled water. 12 liters a person. That means I need 48 liters which is 32 bottles. This, I think, maybe besides teaching the children in school how to put on gas masks ("Ima, what if we're all alone in the apartment when there is a missile attack and we can't put on our gas masks properly?"), and informing us that they won't be inoculating the public for small pox just yet, is the first real official instruction issued to the general public. Why did they tell us this, before they even started with TV programs explaining about sealed rooms, air-raid shelters, sirens? What's with the water, davka?

posted by Imshin 18:02
She's been reading the Guardian again. Quick exit to Tal's blog, before it's too late.

George Monbiot outlines the planned action of opposers to the war with Iraq in Britain and makes an emotional plea for like-minded Brits to get up off their couches and from in front of their tellies and take part in the planned anti-war demonstrations. It will be interesting to see where this is going, if anywhere. I am told the Guardian has a rather small readership.

Mr. Monbiot is advocating quite vehement civil disturbances, albeit non-violent. He stresses that large-scale arrests, during these protest activities, can only serve to get the point across, but warns that calling for a general strike could be counterproductive.

”They all hate us. So where do I go on holiday?” wonders Rod Liddle, also in today's Guardian. He goes on to list the grievances of every last mountain village (okay, so I'm exaggerating) on Planet Earth against vacationing loyal subjects of the former British Empire. "So where can we go? Apart from good old Israel?" Har har. (Why did I get the feeling that was coming when I started reading this article?)

I've got news for you, pal. No one particularly likes you over here, either. I'll never forget the look of disdain I got as a very small child after an inquisitive kid, at the local bus stop on the way home from my very new school (I think it was on that first traumatic day), had ascertained that I wasn't from
* * A M E R I C A * * (eyes shining with excitement) but from England (ugh). Years later she was my leader at scouts but I never mentioned that we'd met before. By that time, I had enthusiastically cast off my inferior, unfashionable past forever, like the slough of a snake, but I still got a few accusing nudges, when we learnt about the British Mandate at school.

Join the club. We're very familiar with the feeling of being disliked everywhere (well, everywhere that requires less than a ten hour flight, that is). Aren't I lucky that I already live somewhere with "nice" weather, so I don't have to go searching for somewhere sunny to spend my hols? Good old Israel is good enough for me. Har har.

See? Bish's not being able to take time off work is in fact a blessing in disguise (and anyway, have I mentioned he hates flying?).

posted by Imshin 18:01
Gil is taking a break till February. He promises to come back if the war with Iraq begins before that and Iraq attacks Israel. For what it’s worth, Gil, I don’t think your analysis is confused at all, and I will miss it very much. :-(

Before Gil goes, go read what he has to say about Mitzna and Sharon.

posted by Imshin 17:57
An Israeli blog I hadn't been aware of, Sha!, discusses Shinui and gives an historic perspective, as well. (I can’t link to the specific post. Scroll down to 28th December).

And while we’re on the subject, Yoel Marcus, in the Haaretz article I linked to yesterday, suggests that some of the people who plan to vote for Shinui are “disappointed ex-Likudniks who can't bring themselves to vote Labor”. He says that they see Shinui as a way station. It doesn't sound like Marcus has been talking to many Likud voters lately. None of the disappointed Likud voters I know would dream of voting for Labor right now. They would rather not vote at all, and I know quite a few people who plan to do just that.

My friend at work is one of them. She also says many of the blue-collar workers she rides the morning bus with at 6 o'clock (am) every day feel the same way.

posted by Imshin 17:56
It turns out most of those killed in the terrorist attack on Sunday weren't foreign workers after all. Most of the 22 victims were Israeli. Not that it matters much. An effort is being made to make things easier for the foreigners injured. Family members are being flown in to be with their loved ones, and the new immigration administration has promised to halt all its activities in Tel Aviv (arresting and deporting foreign illegals) for the time being. I understand Israel is flying the bodies of the foreigners killed in the attack back to their countries of origin.

Sunday is the foreign workers' day off and many of them come to Tel Aviv from other areas in the country to meet with their friends and go to church. I am relieved that all the foreign workers I know personally are accounted for.

posted by Imshin 17:56
Monday, January 06, 2003
Look what Laurence noticed.

posted by Imshin the settler.
posted by Imshin 23:02
A “funny” thing happened today
At five minutes to one, towards the end of Reshet Bet radio station’s daily entertainment bulletin (the presenter murmured something apologetic about this bulletin being rather inappropriate on such a day) there was a break in the transmission as news came in of a fresh terrorist attack near Hadera. I immediately shouted out to the girls in the next office “Pigua” and I could hear one of them finishing her phone call with her daughter in a hurry, so she could turn on the radio. Reshet Bet’s field reporter came on the air. She said she had arrived on the scene along with other reporters and ambulances, only to find there was no scene. Thinking they had got the wrong address the entourage continued to the next junction. Again – nothing. The one o’clock news, minutes later, cleared up the mystery. Sonic boom from a passing aircraft had frightened people in the area, and they had rung the police to inform of an attack.

Pilots have to be very careful these days to refrain from causing sonic boom. This guy will probably be disciplined for causing panic.


* * *

Ari Shavit explains the case against Azmi Bishara running for Knesset:

“On March 8, 2002, while Fuad al Hurani was busy preparing the explosive belt he would blow up in the Moment Cafe in Jerusalem, MK Azmi Bishara published an article in the Israeli weekly Fasal al-Makal in which he wrote passionately in support of the intifada and the alternative of resistance. He mocked those who called on the Palestinians to condemn the violence and condemned what he called "this heroic, glorious struggle." Nowhere in the article did Bishara bother to distinguish between a legitimate struggle against the occupation and the illegitimate struggle against the existence of a nation-state for the Jews. He did not condemn, with even a single word, the killing of Jews for the sake of killing Jews.

It must be remembered: In February-March of 2002, Operation Defensive Shield had not yet taken place. Israeli tanks did not yet control Jenin and Ramallah. The Palestinians had the upper hand; Israel was helpless, bleeding in a flood of terror attacks. Three days before Bishara's article came out, three people were killed in the Sea Food Market in Tel Aviv. Two weeks earlier 11 were killed in Beit Yisrael in Jerusalem. Horror reigned on Palmach Street, Nili Street and Rav Berlin Street in Jerusalem. Many Israeli Jews huddled in the memories of their Holocaust. Many Israeli Jews felt Jewish destiny was knocking on their doors.

But Bishara the humanist did not find the wherewithal to come up with a single word of comfort for them. Bishara the democrat did not include a single word of reservations about the ritualistic acts of murder that were taking place against Jewish Israelis. And while writing in Arabic, to an Arab audience, at one of the climaxes of the Arab attack on the state of Israel, Bishara did not demand the attackers cease.”


Oddly enough, although the whole article builds up as an advocacy for banning Bishara from running for Knesset, Shavit’s bottom line is that Bishara and his party Balad should not be banned from the elections. He says that something should be done, but he doesn’t offer any concrete alternative to banning them. The last two paragraphs completely contradict the rest of the article.

posted by Imshin 19:06
Seeing as I've started posting again as a result of yesterday's murderous attack, I might as well stick around. OK, OK, I admit it. I just couldn’t do it. I couldn’t take a break for more than five days. I’m hooked. I’m an addict. It could be worse you know, it could be gambling or heroin (God forbid, tfu tfu tfu).

Cutting short a holiday in Israel is not unusual. Sadly, for many people I know, it's the rule rather than the exception.

In 2000, Succot fell in mid October. Bish had wanted to do a Vipassana course (ten days of meditation in complete silence, with no contact with the outside world), in the Arava, for a long time, but it was very difficult to organize. Bish is self-employed and it's virtually impossible for him to take time off work (hence the importance of our weekends in Mitzpe Ramon). Moreover, I have to be at work at 7 o'clock every morning, long before the girls leave for school. Bish is the one who sees them off to school in the morning. The Succot holiday (in which I work half days, the girls are on holiday and tend to sleep late in the mornings and business is slow in Bish's office) was therefore the perfect time for him to do this course. We entered him in the course months in advance, to make sure he had a place. Now the course was a few days away. I think we had even packed his bag.

So much has happened since it's hard to remember what was happening here in October 2000. Israeli Arabs were rioting violently all over the country, and blocking roads. The northern part of the country was actually cut off from the rest of the country for regular people some of the time. Even parts of Yaffo (Jaffa), in the southern part of Tel Aviv, were closed for a while, meaning you couldn't reach Bat-Yam by going through Yaffo (unheard of for anyone but those who remembered the 1948 war). All this was in addition to the terrible violence in the territories. The feeling was decidedly apocalyptic. All out war with the surrounding Arab countries seemed to be a step away.

Bish decided not to go to his long-awaited course. He didn't want to leave the girls and me alone and go to a place where, unless someone had died, we wouldn't be able to contact him. He hasn't had the opportunity to go since, although he hasn't given up hope.

* * *

Our Sis and Dad have been wondering if I caught anything on my very short fishing holiday. Well, I did catch two little fishies, and one of them I'm throwing straight back. My comments.

While I greatly appreciate 99% of the feedback I get here, and the lovely friends whom I wouldn’t have met otherwise, I dread reading the 1% that I find unpleasant and unsettling.

One kindly soul suggested that if I can't stand the heat I should get out of the kitchen. Well, this is my kitchen, and although everyone is welcome to come and taste the broth, I think it's only fair that it should be my decision whom I choose to invite in to join me with the actual cooking. So my comments will have to be disabled for the time being, until I get over my lack of courage. Please feel free to e-mail me, though.

I agree that this is collective punishment of the worst kind, but this is just the way it's going to be for a while.

The second little fishy that came up in my net is the realization that I need a weekly break from blogging. From now on, I will try not to post on Shabbat, save to report terrorist attacks.

* * *

Some interesting things floated past my dinghy while I was out fishing.

One of them was an amusing article about Shinui, written by an utterly hysterical Orit Shohat, which appeared on Friday in Haaretz's secondary growth, the once popular Tel Aviv weekly, Ha’ir, which in 2002 became so left wing as to render it unreadable.

Here is a little taste (my humble translation, no link - they don’t seem to have an online edition):

“Democracy isn’t a particularly efficient method of administration, but its advantage is that it allows to change the government. The moment a state loses its democratic instinct, that compels the citizens to bring down a failing government and try another one in its stead, the whole process can be forfeited in advance. We don’t need elections to vote for a party advocating waiting. The Shinui party, that promises not to create a change in government but to support another national unity government, heralds the loss of hope and the civil eclipse that has come upon us.”.

Well, I must say I had a good laugh about the “democratic instinct” she mentions. I hadn’t been aware of that particular instinct. I was also amused at the ease with which she writes off the democratic process when faced with the unpleasant reality that most of the electorate does not plan to vote for the party of her choice.

The Israeli (mainly leftie) Media’s frantic attempts to de-legitimize Shinui continue unfettered, probably unwittingly serving to enhance the party’s value as a protest vote.
Yoel Marcus also discussed the Shinui issue, in Haaretz on Friday. He actually sounds quite calm, not nearly as hysterical as Orit Shohat. I think he's also off the mark, but that's nothing unusual.

The only article about Shinui I read that didn't seem to be an emotional reaction to the threat Shinui poses the left is Ilan Shahar's. He is Haaretz's expert on ultra-religious affairs and describes the animosity between Shinui and Shas as a reflection of important questions about Israel's identity. These are questions that the larger parties prefer to evade, although the Israeli public finds them crucially important.

Another thing that caught my eye floating along with the driftwood was the refuseniks day in court, last week. I heard one of the leaders of the IDF reservists who refuse to serve in the West Bank and Gaza Strip for reasons of conscience, David Zonshein, speaking on the radio, on his way back to military prison, following the decision of the High Court of Justice to reject the petition submitted by him and seven of his fellow refuseniks. I’d say he is facing a brilliant political career. He masterfully managed to twist the rejection of their petition to look like a great success for him and his fellow refuseniks. When they began their campaign at the beginning of 2002, the refuseniks were certain that they would soon gain wide popular support and start a public movement like the one instigated by “Four Mothers” that eventually brought about Israel’s retreat form Lebanon. According to a story in Haaretz a week or two ago (sorry, it’s archived), they are quite flabbergasted that this hasn’t happened.

I liked Mideast: On Target’s analysis of this affair.

* * *

I think this passage by Eric Hoffer in "The True Believer", is one very appropriate explanation of why the excellent, talented and educated leaders of the Israeli left are not succeeding in convincing anyone but the diehard lefties in Israel, these days:

"In a more or less free society, the leader can retain his hold on the people only when he has blind faith in their wisdom and goodness. A second-rate leader possessed of this faith will outlast a first-rate leader who is without it. This means that in a free society the leader follows the people even as he leads them. He must, as someone said, find out where the people are going so that he may lead them. When the leader in a free society becomes contemptuous of the people, he sooner or later proceeds on the false and fatal theory that all men are fools, and eventually blunders into defeat." (pg. 119)

* * *

The Frog is back and he’s very amusing about Mitzna, although I do not appreciate his derogative tone about my childhood home, which has sadly been taken over by Mayor Mitzna and his pals the mighty developers (or so I’m told).


posted by Imshin 18:03
The latest count is 23 murdered; over 100 wounded, 7 of them critically.

A first name released: A 20 year-old female soldier named Mazal Orkobi, from Azur, near Holon.
posted by Imshin 05:57
Sunday, January 05, 2003
It's Fatah.
posted by Imshin 23:03
18:30: We have just heard two very big blasts.

The ambulances have started going past. The radio says the blasts were in the area of the
old central bus station in Tel Aviv, a very busy and crowded area. This is quite a long way away from here. If we could hear them as loud and as clear as we could, these were very big blasts. No information yet. (18:42)

Update: The first pictures on TV show it's quite near to Bish's office. He got home just before it happened. They're talking about fatalities and a lot of wounded. No numbers yet.

This is rush hour. The emergency services have been finding it difficult to get to the site and then to get the wounded to hospital fast enough.

They're saying it was two suicide bombers in parallel roads.

Update: (20:00) Tel Aviv Chief of Police, Yossi Setbon, just said on Israel TV channel 2 that there are at least 20 dead. Over 40 wounded are in the hospitals. Some are critically wounded.

A lot of the wounded are illegal foreign workers and they're terrified of going to hospital for fear of being deported. The emergency services had to persuade them to get into the ambulances. Heartbreaking. Israel TV is giving out a phone number in English and urging the people to ring and find out about their loved ones and not to be afraid to ring even if they are illegal. Health Minister Nissim Dahan from Shas religious party just appeared on TV and emphasized that the foreign workers need not be afraid to come to look for their loved ones in the hospitals.

Update: (21:00) According to channel 1: At least 19 murdered; About 113 wounded.

posted by Imshin 18:42



home