The New Year has begun
and after the euphoria of the Holydays we
discover, all too naturally, that some of our problems remain the same.
Hopefully, we have gained some spiritual clarity from our prayers and
with that clarity, a better way of looking at the issues than we might
have had before.
The High Holydays emphasize to me how concerned I am
for the welfare, not
only of myself and my family, but for the State of Israel and the whole
Jewish
people, of which I am a part. As I've mentioned from the pulpit often,
the first thing I do when I look at the paper in the morning is to see
if there's
some news about Israel and often the last thing before I turn off my
computer and disconnect myself from the web is to see what the latest
events are in the Israeli media.
November is a memorable
month in the calendar of the life of the Jewish
people for it was in that month I believe that the United Nations, with
the miraculous assent of the United States and its greatest antagonist,
the
U.S.S.R., agreed and voted for the creation of the State of Israel. It
is an act
I am sure that the political pundits of both countries and of the United
Nations
have long regretted, but Hashem works in mysterious ways. Every so often,
I come across an article that I think should be disseminated to all Israel
loving Jews. It is one of these articles that is the substance of this
month's message for it carries the passion and clarity and understanding
that all of us should have as we think about Israel.
In a message dated 10/13/2003
9:44:48 PM Central Daylight Time,
sheljo@webtv.net writes:
Subj: The Israeli Bottom Line (Sent from
the Internet)
The Day Jimmy Carter
was Reduced to Silence
By Yehuda Avner
Sep.11, 2003 Jimmy Carter, peanut farmer,
ran an austere White House.
Consonant with his innate Calvinistic intuitions, he cast himself in the
role of
citizen - president. He banned Hail to the Chief, slashed the entertainment
budget, sold the presidential yacht, pruned the limousine fleet, and generally
rid his mansion of foppery, artifice, and pretentiousness. He even carried
his own bag. So when he welcomed prime minister Menachem Begin to the
White House in July 1977 with a flamboyant ceremony fit for a king - replete
with a 19-gun salute, a march-past of all the armed services, and a choreographed
parade of the Army Old Guard Fife and Drum Corps in the white livery of
the Revolutionary War - the media rightly conjectured that this was a
token of either high esteem or pure flattery. US ambassador Samuel Lewis
confided that it was a bit of both: "The president was persuaded
that in dealing with Begin honey would get him a lot further than vinegar,"
he said.
And, indeed, the talks did get off to a decent start. The two leaders
and their advisers exchanged views on such sensitive topics as an Israel-Arab
peace parley in Geneva, the Soviet mischief in the Horn of Africa, and
the PLO menace from Southern Lebanon. Then came a pause, and when coffee
was served the president and the premier sipped in silence, each sizing
the other up as if by mutual consent in preparation for what was next
to come. And what came next was an amazingly detailed presentation of
the Likud creed on the inalienable rights of the Jewish people to Eretz
Yisrael. This being the first summit between a Likud premier and an American
president, Menachem Begin was determined that Jimmy Carter hear firsthand
what he stood for.
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, an unruffled man as a rule, became quite
agitated upon hearing that Judea, Samaria, and the Gaza Strip were not
to be relinquished. He contended that this would put pay to any plan for
a Geneva peace conference. The president thought so, too. Carter wore
a mask of politeness as he peered at his notes, written in his neat penmanship
on heavy bond White House stationary, but one could tell by his clenched
jaw that irritation lurked beneath. He said in his reedy Georgian accent:
"Mr. Prime Minister, my impression is that your insistence on your
rights over the West Bank and Gaza would be regarded as an indication
of bad faith. It would be a signal of your apparent intention to make
the military occupation of these areas permanent. "It will close
off all hopes of negotiations. It would be incompatible with my responsibilities
as president of the United States if I did not put this to you as bluntly
and as candidly as I possibly can.” Mr. Begin, Carter railed, exasperation
flaring in his steely, pale-blue eyes, "there can be no permanent
military occupation of those conquered territories." We Israeli officials
around the conference table in the Cabinet Room, where the meeting was
held, eyed each other with sideways squints.
But Begin had readied himself for this encounter with this post-Watergate
president of moral renewal - Carter the preacher with a penchant for self-righteousness.
So he leaned back and gazed with deceptively mild eyes above the president's
head at the old brass chandelier hanging over the grand oak table. He
was not going to be rushed. He knew that he and the president were on
vastly different trajectories, a no-exit confrontation on the settlement
of the biblical heartland. Carter was as cast iron as himself. He would
not bend.
Nevertheless, Begin had somehow to persuade this judgmental man, who wanted
to be a healer, this energetic doer with the empirical mind of an engineer,
that he honestly and truly wanted peace, and that the territories were
not only a matter of historic rights but also of vital security. So when
he returned Carter's stare he did so with a look that was grave and commanding.
"Mr. President," he said, "I wish to tell you something
personal - not about me, but about my generation. What you have just heard
about the Jewish people's inherent rights to the Land of Israel may seem
academic to you, theoretical, even moot. But not to my generation. To
my generation of Jews these eternal bonds are indisputable and incontrovertible
truths, as old as recorded time. They touch upon the very core of our
national being. "For we are an ancient homecoming nation. Ours is
an almost biblical generation of suffering and courage. Ours is the generation
of Destruction and Redemption. Ours is the generation that rose up from
the bottomless pit of Hell."
His voice was mesmeric, his tone deeply reflective, as if reaching down
into generations of memory. The sheer ardor of his language nudged the
table to intense attention. "We were a helpless people, Mr.President.
We were bled white, not once, not twice, but century after century, over
and over again. We lost a third of our people in one generation - mine.
One-and-a-half million of them were children - ours. No one came to our
rescue. We suffered and died alone. We could do nothing about it. But
now we can. Now we can defend ourselves." Suddenly he rose to his
feet, his face as tough as steel. "I have a map," he said, intrepidly.
An aide snappily unrolled a 3x5 chart between the two men. "There
is nothing remarkable about this map," Begin went on. "It is
quite a standard one of our country, displaying the old armistice line
as it existed until the 1967 Six Day War, the so-called Green Line."
He ran his finger along the defunct frontier, which meandered down the
center of the country." And as you see, our military cartographers
have simply marked the infinitesimal mileages of defensive depth we had
in that war." He leaned across the table and pointed to the deep
brown-colored mountainous area which covered the northern sector of the
map. "The Syrians sat on top of these mountains, Mr. President. We
were at the bottom." His finger marked the Golan Heights, and then
rested on the green panhandle below. "This is the Hula Valley. It
is hardly 10 miles wide. They shelled our towns and villages from the
tops of those mountains, day and night." Carter gazed, his hands
clamped under his chin. The prime minister's finger now moved southwards,
to Haifa: "The armistice line is hardly 20 miles away from our major
port city," he said. And then it rested on Netanya: "Our country
here was reduced to a narrow waist nine miles wide."
The president nodded. "I understand," he said. But Begin was
not sure that he did. His finger trembled and his voice rumbled: "Nine
miles, Mr. President. Inconceivable! Indefensible!" Carter made no
comment. The finger now hovered over Tel Aviv, and then it drummed the
map: "Here live a million Jews, 12 miles from that indefensible armistice
line. And here, between Haifa in the north and Ashkelon in the south"
- his finger ran up and down the coastal plain - "live two-thirds
of our total population. And this coastal plain is so narrow that a surprise
thrust by a column of tanks could cut the country in two in a matter of
minutes. For whosoever sits in these mountains" - his fingertips
tapped the tops of Judea and Samaria - "holds the jugular vein of
Israel in his hands."
His dark, watchful eyes swept the stone-faced features of the powerful
men sifting opposite him, and with the conviction of one who had fought
for everything he had ever gotten, tersely declared: "Gentlemen,
there is no going back to those lines. No nation in our merciless and
unforgiving neighborhood can be rendered so vulnerable and survive."
Carter bent his head forward, the better to inspect the map, but still
said nothing. His eyes were as indecipherable as water. "Mr. President,"
continued Begin in a tone that brooked no indifference, "This is
our map of national security, and I use that term in its most unembellished
sense. It is our map of survival. And the distinction between the past
and the present is just that: survival. Today, our menfolk can defend
their women and children. In the past they could not. Indeed, they had
to deliver them to their Nazi executioners. We were tertiated, Mr. President."
Carter lifted his head. "What was that word, Mr. Prime Minister?"
"Tertiated, not decimated - The origin of the word 'decimation' is
one in 10. When a Roman legion was found guilty of insubordination one
in 10 was put to the sword. In our case it was one in three - tertiated!"
And now, with moistening eyes, and in a voice that was deliberate, stubborn,
his every word weighed, Begin declared, "Sir, I take an oath before
you in the name of the Jewish people - this will never ever happen again."
And then he broke down. He compressed his lips, which began to tremble.
Unseeingly, he stared at the map, struggling to blink back the tears.
He clenched his fists and pressed them so tightly against the tabletop,
his knuckles went white. He stood there, head bent, heart-broken, dignified.
A hush, as silent as a vault, settled on the room. Seized by his private,
infernal Shoah reverie, he peered past Carter with a strange reserve in
his eyes, a remote stare. It were as if he was looking through this born-again,
Southern Baptist president from way inside himself, from that deep, Jewish
intimate place of infinite lament and eternal faith - the place of long,
long memory. And hidden down there, in that place, he was standing with
Moses and the Maccabees. Carter bowed his head and remained in an attitude
of respectful frozen stillness. Others looked away.
The tick of the antique clock on the marble mantelpiece suddenly grew
audible. An eternity seemed to hang between each tick. The silence was
deafening. It was a thunderbolt of national resolve never to go back to
those lines. By degrees, in slow motion, the prime minister raised himself
to his full height and the room came back to life. Carter considerately
suggested a recess, but Begin said it wasn't necessary. He had made his
point.
The writer, a veteran diplomat, was an
adviser to four prime
ministers, including Menachem Begin. (avner28@netvision.net.il).
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