What the Stabbings in Israel Reveal about Palestinian Society!
Gaza cleric Muhammad Sallah (left) calls on Palestinians to carry out more stabbing attacks against Jews in an October 9 sermon. That same day, a Palestinian man (right) is arrested for stabbing an Israeli teenager with a vegetable peeler. |
Cultures have personalities, meaningful collections of attitudes and behaviors! If so, what does the ongoing wave of stabbings of Israelis—elderly passersby, strangers on buses, boys on bikes, infants in carriages—say about Palestinian culture? Who are they, really?
One suggestion is that Palestinian culture has been overtaken by psychosis. But what is the underlying cause of this flight to unreality? Part of the answer is sadomasochism.
All cultures have a touch of
sadism. Political success requires defeating and humiliating enemies in
battle, if only occasionally. Individuals capable of or prone to
committing terrible pain upon others are found everywhere. And all
societies endorse a degree of institutional sadism—police, prisons,
military—as part of their monopoly on violence. But for most, pain is
only a means to an end, political success and cultural survival, which
are the true pleasures.
Characterizing Palestinian sadism merely as the result of pervasive incitement is inadequate.
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Sadism of course is hardly
restricted to Palestinian culture. Native American tribes routinely
tortured and killed their captives for sport. Torture is rife in Afghan
and Pakistani society, as well as in Mexico and Central America. ISIS
broadcasts its beheadings, crucifixions and mass killings as messages to
their enemies and to display religious devotion and resolve.
The leaders of Palestinian culture do. As Gaza's Sheikh Muhammad Sallah put it,
"My brother in the West Bank: Stab! My brother is the West Bank: Stab
the myths of the Talmud in their minds! My brother in the West Bank:
Stab the myths about the temple in their hearts!" This merely
operationalized Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas' dehumanizing call to arms:
"Al-Aksa is ours and so is the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. They have
no right to desecrate them with their filthy feet. We won't allow them
to do so and we will do whatever we can to defend Jerusalem." To these
we may add generations of Fatah newspapers, Hamas summer camps, Friday
sermons, children's TV characters like Nahoul the bee, and much more.
Palestinian culture rejects empathy with Israelis as deviance.
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Individual Palestinians, of
course, are disgusted by kidnapping and murder, by rocket attacks, and
by the inevitable retaliation. But few speak out for fear of ostracism
and violence. Palestinian culture as a whole rejects empathy with
Israelis as deviance.
Why the inability to feel a
human connection with Jews and Israelis? One explanation is that their
experience at the hands of Israelis is so uniquely terrible that however
Palestinians respond is logical and virtuous. In this narrative
dispossession and 'occupation' legitimize Palestinian violence, which is
not really violence at all but ' legitimate resistance' by victims par
excellence.
Decades of theatrical – and individual – violence necessarily and by design provoked Israeli responses. At every step potential gains were secondary to inflicting real and psychological pain on Israeli civilians and the political-cultural goal of 'publicizing the Palestinian cause.' Israeli counterattacks were used to rally support, quash peaceful voices, and cement the reign of the PLO and then Hamas. Retaliation was demanded and then reveled in, amidst blood and ashes, reinforcing the self-perception of Palestinian victimhood.
The goal of Hamas's rocket
campaign of 2014 was sadistic, random destruction, but the construction
of an entire battlespace within and below Gaza's civilian population was
deeply masochistic. Tunnels connected homes, clinics and schools in
order to be tactically useful for fighting and strategically useful when
destroyed. The population was not merely a human shield for Hamas, but a
line of defense that Hamas knew would be destroyed. When tunnel
entrances are behind someone's kitchen sink, to what extent were Gaza's
civilians also aware of Hamas's strategy? They became, willingly and
not, human sandbags.
Masochism has effects beyond
dead civilians and the desired international condemnation. It demands
that Palestinian society be dragged by the violence of the street, by
factions and "rogue cells," whose unauthorized and untimely violence
must be endorsed lest resistance be 'betrayed.' The deepest 'cycle of
violence' is the individual who invites punishment for the whole, which
must then be endorsed and endured.
The masochism of the current
stabbing campaign is apparent, since any rational analysis based on
experience would conclude that Israelis will suffer but Palestinians
will ultimately suffer more. But against this is something else,
captured neatly in Hamas' preaching "Killing Jews is worship that draws us close to Allah."
Here is a religious appeal to a higher reality that cannot be refuted
by logic or experience. Masochism is an avenue to salvation,
transforming murderers into heavenly beings.
Why a culture of sadism and
masochism? Some of the answer is the experience of the Palestinians
across the past 100 or 150 years with the Turks, British, and Jews. But
it is also the mutually reinforcing natures of patriarchal, theocratic, and authoritarian (PTA) culture and Islamic ideology.
In cultures with nuclear
families and not clans, where the individual is the ultimate locus of
free will and where politics have no divine sanction, failures—like acts
that invite retaliation—are cause to replace leaders, behavior, or
ideas.
Palestinian sadism isn't just political; it's supremely personal.
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But PTA cultures have entirely
different logic; predictable failures usefully generate adverse
conditions that must then be overcome by more of the same. Failure
reinforces the existing culture, its leaders, and general resolve.
Provocations must be therefore redoubled. Failure is success; adversity
has been created and must be surmounted. And proclamations that
"My son is an offering to the Al-Aqsa, congratulations to him on the
Martyrdom-death" are ideological keys to the continued cycle of power
and suffering.
What is the response to
sadomasochism and religion in international affairs? First is to
recognize it for what it is, an entirely different set of cultural
premises and behaviors, with self-reinforcing logic, that plays off
superficial Western images of victims and victimizers.
Second, notions of collective
gain, through negotiation or strategies of coercion and benefits, may
apply partially or not at all. Finally, one must take Palestinian
leaders at their word and recognize that they are playing a zero sum
game in which Israel simply cannot exist.
When suffering is embraced, when
one side truly loves death more than life, how can peace be made? What
is the price and who is willing to pay? These questions remain
unanswered.
http://www.meforum.org/5564/palestinian-stabbingsAlexander H. Joffe, a Shillman-Ginsburg fellow at the Middle East Forum, is a historian and archaeologist.