Not a Fish (provincially speaking)



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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

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Breakfast

Liverpool Tales from the Mersey Mouth

Exploring Peoples & Cultures through Stories & Connections

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Israelity

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Neither Here Nor There
Sha!
on the face
Good News from Israel
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Inner Balance
Gil in South America
This Normal Life
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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

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Meryl Yourish
Is Full Of Crap
dejafoo
Mersey Mouth (not actually a blog)
In Context
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IsraelPundit
The Protocols of the Yuppies of Zion
Harry's Place
Strawberry Chips
Heretics' almanac
Silent Running
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Jewish Current Issues
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Doves and Pomegranates
Segacs's World I Know
Crossing the Rubicon2
Eric the Unread
Boker Tov, Boulder!
normblog
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zaneirani
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Mutated Monkeys
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I Dream, Therefore I Am
growabrain
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What's Brewing
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Which surprised her
a small victory
Little Green Footballs
Israpundit
soxblog
Amitai Etzioni
Rhythms of Grace
Soul Food Cafe
SteynOnline

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Saturday, February 19, 2005
I have met quite a few youngish Syrian-born Israelis in recent years. One is a friend at work. They all tell fascinating stories about how they managed to get out, which I will not repeat here, so as not to spoil it for others. All except one, who completely refuses to say anything at all about his past. He was twenty when he left Syria, so it's not that he's forgotten. The others all say that their families had been wealthy and well-connected in Syria.

My friend at work, who left as a teenager and is now in his twenties, has been rubbing his hands in glee at the
rising tension between Lebanon and Syria following the assassination of Rafiq Hariri. No love lost there.
posted by Imshin 19:14
Swinging left again, slightly.
Talking about how the wheel turns, I can hardly read Naomi Ragen’s newsletters any more. She and I no longer have as much in common.

Now that it’s going to happen in the foreseeable future I have no real doubts about disengagement. No, I don’t think the Palestinians are suddenly different, that true peace is around the corner, that they don’t still plan to get Haifa and Jaffa and Tal al-Rabih (yes, I hadn’t heard of this place* either till last week, but apparently it’s where I’ve been living since 1985). However, I do think we have to give them a ladder to get out of this mess. Arafat wasn’t interested in such a ladder. Perhaps Abu Mazen really is.
_________________________

*Hammas map of Palestine

posted by Imshin 19:00
Friday, February 18, 2005
Some local history
I have often said here that I regard the
Arab uprising in British mandate Palestine between the years of 1936 and 1939 as the real first Intifada. Here is a photograph of houses of Jewish residents on the outskirts of Tel Aviv destroyed by Arabs from Jaffa during the outbreak of disturbances in 1936.
Tel Aviv 1936

Before 1948, a lot of Jews lived in Jaffa. During the fighting that followed the UN decision of November 1947 to divide British mandate Palestine between its Jewish and Arab inhabitants, the Jews of Jaffa had to flee to neighboring Tel Aviv, which was also under Arab attack. Here is a photograph of a tent camp that was erected to house the Jewish refugees.
Tel Aviv 1948

Both photographs are from the Israeli National Photo Collection
posted by Imshin 22:12
All very useful stuff.
The weather has been hot and dry for a few days. We’re back in short sleeves.

This morning Bish and I joined my friends from art class in the Friday market in Dizengoff Circle. I guess you could call it a
chachke market. It apparently started off a few years ago as a market for people to come and sell their old bits and bobs, but this morning a lot of the vendors looked pretty much like pros to me. It was great fun, looking at all the wonderful old stuff for sale, a stroll down memory lane.

Among other things, there were rows and rows of little porcelain figurines; many, many children’s books we read when we were young; antique-y looking jewelry; heavy old silver cutlery; ugly tea sets; some really cool old handguns; loads of wristwatches (Bish bought one); flea-bitten old clothes (I can’t believe I used to wear nearly only stuff like that at one time); and, of course, more Soviet army medals and insignia than you ever thought existed, never mind being sold on the street in Tel Aviv. We even came across a signed copy of Menahem Begin’s "The Revolt" (in Hebrew).

I think some of the shoppers were just as colorful as the wares on sale.
posted by Imshin 17:05
Thursday, February 17, 2005
Shai looks at some things now that it's twelve years snce he came back. Interesting.
posted by Imshin 21:54
Wednesday, February 16, 2005
Ooh the results of the Jibbies.
Mazal Tov to the winners.
posted by Imshin 21:43
Tuesday, February 15, 2005
Oh shucks, and I was just about to badmouth my boss. Trust CNN to spoil my fun.
posted by Imshin 20:02
Losing
On the 29th November 1947, the UN General Assembly adopted a plan to divide British mandate Palestine between its two main groups of inhabitants at the time – Arabs and Jews. Although both groups felt that the details of the plan were unjust, each group reacted very differently. The Jews reacted by celebrating, believing that less than what they thought they deserved was better than nothing at all; the Arabs reacted by attacking the Jews, refusing to even consider compromise.

A terrible, bloody war ensued. Its result was that the Jews got their state. They also got part of the land that the UN had destined for the Arab inhabitants, many of whom had fled, if not involved in the fighting. The rest of the part of the country destined for the Arabs was conquered by their brethren, neighboring Arab states that had marched in ostensibly to get rid of the Jews for them, and had stayed on - Jordan in the east; Egypt in the south west. The Arab inhabitants of British mandate Palestine were left with nothing at all.

We tend to get angry at the repetitive Palestinian victim narrative, but we shouldn’t really. It’s just sad. They’re stuck in this self-destructive blame game. It leads them nowhere. No, it does lead them somewhere. It leads them spiraling further and further downwards.

The reason Zionism survived 1921 and 1929 and 1936 and 1939 and 1948 and 1967 and 1973 and 1987 and 2000 etc etc etc, was that Zionism was about the future, about building, about creativity, about putting the past behind us, about doing something new and better while making the best of some very bad situations, about forgiving, about moving on, about not looking back in anger.

Because anger paralyzes you. Then it kills you.

With all the cynicism of this day and age, I believe Zionism is still going strong, un-cool as this may sound, and what’s more, it’s still about all those things. It’s not about the Babylonians, and it’s not about the Greeks, and it’s not about the Romans, and it’s not about the Spanish Inquisition, or Martin Luther or the Cossacks or the Nazis or the fedayeen or terrorism (this list goes on and on). It’s about us and doing our best for today and for tomorrow.

Yes, you’re right. We do tend to wallow in the Holocaust, among other things. But we mustn’t forget that back in the nineteen fifties, just a few years after the fact, our leaders bravely decided that now there was a new Germany, and they publicly created a new dialogue and a new relationship with this Germany and quite a warm one at that. There was a great deal of angry public debate on the Israeli street about this issue at the time, but they did not back down, those tough leaders who made this country a reality, and now we take it for granted.
I’m so grateful we didn’t get stuck in the Holocaust. I’m so grateful we took the horror and devastation and built ourselves a brave new world out of the ruins. And there were quite a few other things we didn’t get stuck in, as well.


The minute the Palestinians, as a people, can put their anger and their indignation and their victimization behind them, and start building, the sky’s the limit. They’re every bit as capable as we were, are. And they’re lucky enough to have the whole world rooting for them. That’s a damn sight more than we ever had.

And do you know what? I bet you any money, the minute it happens, when it really happens, even with all our past disappointment in them, even with all our pain and all our dead, seventy percent of Israelis, if not more, if not far more, will be there at the sidelines, cheering them on, ready to lend a helping hand if asked, and if I know my fellow countrymen and women, if not asked, as well. (Maybe that’s part of the problem. We tend to rub their noses in it, even when we really don’t mean to.)

We’re not perfect, far from it, but at least we’re trying.

posted by Imshin 17:25
Sunday, February 13, 2005
Some politicians and ministers from the Likud have been complaining of threats to their lives and the lives of their children. Bibi Netanyahu had a car tire punctured at a wedding last week. This is all very worrying.

These threats are coming from the extreme right wing opposition to disengagement. However, Tzvi Hendel, Knesset member from the National Unity party, told Yediot Aharonot that he thinks it is a conspiracy to de-legitimize the far right. Bish chuckled at this and said he remembered Arik Sharon saying exactly the same thing before Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated. How the wheel turns.
posted by Imshin 08:32



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