2015:
The Year of Blatant and Unapologetic Israeli Fascism
It
was a year in which there wasn't even a semblance of peace talks or a
diplomatic process, but that’s probably a good thing; enough with
the charade.
Gideon
Halevy
31
December, 2015
Thursday
night will mark the end of a pretty awful year. There weren’t any
wars for a change, leaving Israel free to deal with itself. There are
times when launching a decent war, as Israel knows and loves, seems
to be the best thing to do. Dealing with itself does Israel no good.
When it cannot hide behind the routine “unavoidable war,” all its
wounds and scars are revealed.
According
to the 2015 Democracy Index, published by the Israel Democracy
Institute last month, Israelis have it good. That was the response of
some three-quarters of them, up from the 66 percent who were happy in
2014.
What
improved this year? Supermodel Bar Refaeli got married (and
arrested); musician Ninet Tayeb (and news presenter Yonit Levi) had
babies. Eighty percent of Israelis believe that the state of the
nation is good, or at least so-so. Eighty-eight percent of the Jews
feel that they belong.
But
look what happened to the Arabs: Only 32 percent feel an affinity
with the state, compared to 59 percent the previous year – the most
dramatic and worrisome drop of the year. But who’s counting and who
even cares?
What’s
important is that 86 percent of the Jews say they are Zionists, 61
percent support a declaration of loyalty as a condition for the right
to vote, 60 percent (more young people than older ones) believe the
state should be allowed to monitor citizens’ Internet use and a
majority believes that human rights organizations are pests.
According
to numerology it was a special year – 67 years since the founding
of the state in ‘48 and 48 years of occupation that began in ‘67.
There are still many who ask, will it last another 50 years? Will the
occupation last another 50? There is no other country in which such
questions are asked.
Twenty-four
Israelis and 128 Palestinians have been killed so far in the current
mini-intifada. The demographic balance is preserved; more than five
times more Palestinians have been killed than Jews, though it is a
significant decrease from previous successes. One hundred
Palestinians killed for every Israeli in Operation Cast Lead and 37
for every Israeli in Operation Protective Edge. But never before has
an official order to kill been issued, as happened this year.
It
was a year in which there wasn’t even a semblance of peace talks or
a diplomatic process, but that’s probably a good thing; enough with
the charade. It was also the year in which the United States gave
Israel carte blanche to act as it wished, perhaps more than any other
year. The most turbulent demonstrations were by those of Ethiopian
origin, with the parents of “sardines” (children in crowded
classrooms) also making their voices heard. That was the upper limit
of protest in Israel.
The
election in March led to the most right-wing government in history
and the most nationalist Knesset ever, which is legislating
accordingly. It was a year in which all shame was lost, One no longer
has to explain why left-wing organizations must be ultra-transparent
while right-wing groups are exempt, or why, at a time when only the
right is violent, it’s the left that’s traitorous.
It
was the year that heralded the start of blatant and unapologetic
Israeli fascism. One could not say that before. But a year after
Operation Protective Edge, a year in which citizens feared to
protest, the fruit ripened. The battle for the regime was abandoned
without a fight. It is still in full swing, but the results are in;
there is no one left to stop the downward slide.
Israelis
were preoccupied with lots of things this year, from Sara Netanyahu’s
bottle deposits to the suicide of senior police commander Ephraim
Bracha. Of the 30 most-read stories on Haaretz’s Hebrew website,
not a single one had to do with the occupation or the cracks in
Israeli democracy, other than a recent, sweet story about the little
Jewish boy who insulted an Arab rider on a bus (“Do you have a
knife?”) and ended up hugging her in a true Hollywood happy ending.
A
nice end to a bad year. The next one looks to be even worse.
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