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      To: The Collective Human Conscience 
    
      Subject: A Failed Israeli Society Collapses While Its 
      Leaders Remain Silent
     
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Avraham Burg
Speaker of Israel's Knesset 
from 1999 to 2003 
Former chairman of the 
Jewish Agency for Israel. 
A Failed Israeli Society Collapses While Its Leaders 
Remain Silent 
http://www.evanscartoons.com/burg.htm
By AVRAHAM BURG
The Zionist revolution has always rested on two pillars: a 
just path and an ethical leadership. Neither of these is 
operative any longer. The Israeli nation today rests on a 
scaffolding of corruption, and on foundations of oppression 
and injustice. As such, the end of the Zionist enterprise is 
already on our doorstep.
There is a real chance that ours will be the last Zionist 
generation. There may yet be a Jewish state here, but it 
will be a different sort, strange and ugly. There is time to 
change course, but not much. What is needed is a new vision 
of a just society and the political will to implement it. 
Nor is this merely an internal Israeli affair. Diaspora Jews 
for whom Israel is a central pillar of their identity must 
pay heed and speak out. If the pillar collapses, the upper 
floors will come crashing down. The opposition does not 
exist, and the coalition, with Arik Sharon at its head, 
claims the right to remain silent. In a nation of 
chatterboxes, everyone has suddenly fallen dumb, because 
there's nothing left to say. We live in a thunderously 
failed reality. Yes, we have revived the Hebrew language, 
created a marvelous theater and a strong national currency. 
Our Jewish minds are as sharp as ever. We are traded on the 
Nasdaq. But is this why we created a state? The Jewish 
people did not survive for two millennia in order to pioneer 
new weaponry, computer security programs or anti-missile 
missiles. 
We were supposed to be a light unto the nations. In this we 
have failed. It turns out that the 2,000-year struggle for 
Jewish survival comes down to a state of settlements, run by 
an amoral clique of corrupt lawbreakers who are deaf both to 
their citizens and to their enemies. A state lacking justice 
cannot survive. More and more Israelis are coming to 
understand this as they ask their children where they expect 
to live in 25 years. Children who are honest admit, to their 
parents' shock, that they do not know. The countdown to the 
end of Israeli society has begun.
It is very comfortable to be a Zionist in West Bank 
settlements such as Beit El and Ofra. The biblical landscape 
is charming. From the window you can gaze through the 
geraniums and bougainvilleas and not see the occupation. 
Traveling on the fast highway takes you from Ramot on 
Jerusalem's northern edge to Gilo on the southern edge, a 
12-minute trip that skirts barely a half-mile west of the 
Palestinian roadblocks, it's hard to comprehend the 
humiliating experience of the despised Arab who must creep 
for hours along the pocked, blockaded roads assigned to him. 
One road for the occupier, one road for the occupied. This 
cannot work. Even if the Arabs lower their heads and swallow 
their shame and anger forever, it won't work.
A structure built on human callousness will inevitably 
collapse in on itself. Note this moment well: Zionism's 
superstructure is already collapsing like a cheap Jerusalem 
wedding hall. Only madmen continue dancing on the top floor 
while the pillars below are collapsing. We have grown 
accustomed to ignoring the suffering of the women at the 
roadblocks. No wonder we don't hear the cries of the abused 
woman living next door or the single mother struggling to 
support her children in dignity. We don't even bother to 
count the women murdered by their husbands. Israel, having 
ceased to care about the children of the Palestinians, 
should not be surprised when they come washed in hatred and 
blow themselves up in the centers of Israeli escapism. They 
consign themselves to Allah in our places of recreation, 
because their own lives are torture. They spill their own 
blood in our restaurants in order to ruin our appetites, 
because they have children and parents at home who are 
hungry and humiliated. We could kill a thousand ringleaders 
and engineers a day and nothing will be solved, because the 
leaders come up from below from the wells of hatred and 
anger, from the "infrastructures" of injustice and moral 
corruption. 
If all this were inevitable, divinely ordained and 
immutable, I would be silent. But things could be different, 
and so crying out is a moral imperative. Here is what the 
prime minister should say to the people: The time for 
illusions is over. The time for decisions has arrived. We 
love the entire land of our forefathers and in some other 
time we would have wanted to live here alone. But that will 
not happen. The Arabs, too, have dreams and needs. Between 
the Jordan and the Mediterranean there is no longer a clear 
Jewish majority. And so, fellow citizens, it is not possible 
to keep the whole thing without paying a price. 
We cannot keep a Palestinian majority under an Israeli boot 
and at the same time think ourselves the only democracy in 
the Middle East. There cannot be democracy without equal 
rights for all who live here, Arab as well as Jew. We cannot 
keep the territories and preserve a Jewish majority in the 
world's only Jewish state-not by means that are humane and 
moral and Jewish. Do you want the greater Land of Israel? No 
problem. Abandon democracy. Let's institute an efficient 
system of racial separation here, with prison camps and 
detention villages. Qalqilya Ghetto and Gulag Jenin. Do you 
want a Jewish majority? No problem. Either put the Arabs on 
railway cars, buses, camels and donkeys and expel them en 
masse-separate ourselves from them absolutely, without 
tricks and gimmicks. 
There is no middle path. We must remove all the 
settlements-all of them-and draw an internationally 
recognized border between the Jewish national home and the 
Palestinian national home. The Jewish Law of Return will 
apply only within our national home, and their right of 
return will apply only within the borders of the Palestinian 
state. 
Do you want democracy? No problem. Either abandon the 
greater Land of Israel, to the last settlement and outpost, 
or give full citizenship and voting rights to everyone, 
including Arabs. The result, of course, will be that those 
who did not want a Palestinian state alongside us will have 
one in our midst, via the ballot box. That's what the prime 
minister should say to the people. He should present the 
choices forthrightly: Jewish racialism or democracy. 
Settlements or hope for both peoples. False visions of 
barbed wire, roadblocks and suicide bombers, or a recognized 
international border between two states and a shared capital 
in Jerusalem. But there is no prime minister in Jerusalem.
The disease eating away at the body of Zionism has already 
attacked the head. David Ben-Gurion sometimes erred, but he 
remained straight as an arrow. When Menachem Begin was 
wrong, nobody impugned his motives. No longer. Polls 
published last weekend showed that a majority of Israelis do 
not believe in the personal integrity of the prime 
minister-yet they trust his political leadership. In other 
words, Israel's current prime minister personally embodies 
both halves of the curse: suspect personal morals and open 
disregard for the law-combined with the brutality of 
occupation and the trampling of any chance for peace. 
This is our nation, these its leaders. The inescapable 
conclusion is that the Zionist revolution is dead. Why, 
then, is the opposition so quiet? Perhaps because it's 
summer, or because they are tired, or because some would 
like to join the government at any price, even the price of 
participating in the sickness. But while they dither, the 
forces of good lose hope. 
This is the time for clear alternatives. Anyone who declines 
to present a clear-cut position-black or white in effect-is 
collaborating in the decline. It is not a matter of Labor 
versus Likud or right versus left, but of right versus 
wrong, acceptable versus unacceptable. The law-abiding 
versus the lawbreakers. What's needed is not a political 
replacement for the Sharon government but a vision of hope, 
an alternative to the destruction of Zionism and its values 
by the deaf, dumb and callous. Israel's friends 
abroad-Jewish and non-Jewish alike, presidents and prime 
ministers, rabbis and lay people-should choose as well. They 
must reach out and help Israel to navigate the road map 
toward our national destiny as a light unto the nations and 
a society of peace, justice and equality.
For an in-depth Biography of Avraham Burg go to:
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/biography/ABurg.html
Translated by J.J. Goldberg. Avraham Burg was speaker of 
Israel's Knesset from 1999 to 2003 and is a former chairman 
of the Jewish Agency for Israel. He is currently a Labor 
Party Knesset member. This essay is adapted by the author 
from an article that appeared in Yediot Aharonot. 
 
Avraham Burg
(1955 - )
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Avraham Burg, Speaker of the Fifteenth Knesset, was born in 
Jerusalem in 1955. 
Following his military service as an officer in the 
Paratroop Division, Avraham Burg became one of the leaders 
of the protest movement against the war in Lebanon. (He was 
wounded by the hand grenade thrown at the protesters of the 
Peace Now movement in Jerusalem that caused the death of 
Emil Grunzweig.) 
In 1985, he was appointed by then Prime Minister Shimon 
Peres to serve as his adviser on Diaspora Affairs, a 
position he continued in until 1988. That year Burg was 
elected to the Knesset on the Alignment Party List, where he 
was a prominent member of the Foreign Affairs and Defense 
Committee, the Finance Committee and the State Control 
Committee. 
Burg was elected to the Knesset once again in 1992, having 
placed third on the Labor Party list, after the late Yitzhak 
Rabin and Shimon Peres. Until 1995, he served as Chairman of 
the Knesset Education and Culture Committee. 
In February 1995, Burg was elected Chairman of the Executive 
of the Jewish Agency for Israel and the World Zionist 
Organization and, on taking up this position, resigned from 
the Knesset. Under Burg's leadership there were significant 
changes in the structure and role of the National 
Institutions, which began to operate in several new areas, 
such as the restitution of Jewish property stolen during the 
Holocaust and the battle for religious pluralism and 
tolerance among the Jewish people. He stepped down from this 
position in 1999 to run for the Knesset on the One Israel 
list, and in July 1999 was elected Speaker of the Knesset.
Avraham Burg's father, Dr. Yosef Burg, was a prominent 
leader of the National Religious Party, who served as 
minister in Israeli governments from the first years of the 
state until the 1980's. 
Burg is married to Yael, born in France, a psychologist and 
the principal of a Jerusalem high school. They live with 
their six children in Nataf, a small, mixed 
religious-secular community close to Jerusalem. 
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Source: Israeli Foreign Ministry 
 
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