Different
Planets
When
"Murderer
Kuntar",
Became "Hero
Samir al-Kuntar".
By Uri
Avnery
20/07/08 "ICH"
-- - I
SPENT the
whole day
flipping
between the
Israeli
channels and
Aljazeera.
It was an
eerie
experience:
in a
fraction of
a second I
could switch
between two
worlds, but
all the
channels
reported on
exactly the
same
occasion. In
one section
of the
breaking
news, the
events
happened at
a distance
of a few
dozen meters
from each
other, but
they could
just as well
have
happened on
two
different
planets.
Never before
have I
experienced
the tragic
conflict in
such a
stunning
immediacy as
last
Wednesday,
the day of
the prisoner
swap between
the State of
Israel and
the
Hezbollah
organization.
THE MAN who
stood at the
center of
the event
personifies
the abyss
that
separates
the two
worlds, the
Israeli and
the Arab:
Samir al-Kuntar.
All Israeli
media call
him
"Murderer
Kuntar", as
if that were
his first
name. For
the Arab
media, he is
"Hero Samir
al-Kuntar".
29 years
ago, before
Hezbollah
had become a
significant
factor, he
landed with
his comrades
on the beach
of Nahariya
and carried
out an
attack that
has
imprinted
itself on
the Israeli
national
memory with
its cruelty.
In the
course of
it, a four
year-old
girl was
murdered,
and a mother
accidentally
suffocated
her small
child while
trying to
keep it from
giving away
their hiding
place.
Kuntar was
then 16
years old -
not a
Palestinian,
nor a
Shiite, but
a Lebanese
Druze and a
communist.
The action
was set in
motion by a
small
Palestinian
fraction.
Years ago I
had an
argument
with my
friend Issam
al-Sartawi
about a
similar
incident.
Sartawi was
a
Palestinian
hero, a
pioneer of
peace with
Israel, who
was later
assassinated
because of
his contacts
with
Israelis. In
1978 a group
of
Palestinian
fighters
("terrorists"
in Israeli
parlance)
landed on
the shore
south of
Haifa in
order to
capture
Israelis for
a prisoner
swap. On the
beach they
came across
a
photographer
who was
innocently
strolling
around and
killed her.
After that
they
intercepted
a bus full
of
passengers,
and in the
end all of
them were
killed.
I knew the
photographer.
She was a
gentle young
woman, a
good soul,
who liked
taking
pictures of
flowers in
nature. I
remonstrated
with Sartawi
about this
despicable
act. He told
me: "You
don't
understand.
These are
youngsters,
almost kids,
untrained
and
inexperienced,
who are
operating
behind the
lines of a
dreaded
enemy. They
are scared
to death.
They cannot
act with
cool logic."
That was one
of the few
instances
where we did
not agree -
though both
of us were,
each within
his own
people, on
the fringe
of the
fringe.
This
Wednesday,
the
difference
between the
two worlds
was apparent
in its most
extreme
form. In the
morning, the
"Murderer
Kuntar" woke
up in an
Israeli
prison, in
the evening
the "Hero
al-Kuntar"
stood in
front of a
hundred
thousand
cheering
Lebanese
from all
communities
and parties.
It took him
but a few
minutes to
cross from
Israeli
territory to
the tiny UN
enclave at
Ras-al-Naqura
and from
there to
Lebanese
territory,
from the
realm of
Israeli TV
to the realm
of Lebanese
TV - and the
distance was
greater than
that
transversed
by Neil
Armstrong on
the way to
the moon.
By talking
endlessly
about the
"Bloodstained
Murderer"
who will
never be
freed,
whatever
happens,
Israel has
turned him
from just
another
prisoner
into a
pan-Arab
hero.
Nowadays it
is already a
banality to
say that one
person's
terrorist is
another's
freedom
fighter.
This week, a
slight
movement of
the finger
on the TV
remote
control was
enough to
experience
this
first-hand.
EMOTIONS RAN
high on both
sides.
The Israeli
public was
immersed in
a sea of
sorrow and
mourning for
the two
soldiers,
whose death
was
confirmed
only minutes
before the
return of
their
bodies. For
hours on
end, all the
Israeli
channels
devoted
their
broadcasts
to the
feelings of
the two
families,
who the
media had
spent the
last two
years
transforming
into
national
symbols (as
well as
rating-boosting
instruments).
No need to
mention that
not a single
voice in
Israel said
even one
word about
the 190
families,
the bodies
of whose
sons were
returned to
Lebanon on
the same
day.
In this
whirlpool of
self-pity
and mourning
ceremonies,
the Israeli
public had
no energy
and interest
left for
trying to
understand
what was
happening on
the other
side. On the
contrary:
the
reception
accorded to
the Murderer
and the
victory
speech of
the
Mastermind
of Murder
only added
fuel to the
flames of
fury, hatred
and
humiliation.
But it would
have been
really
worthwhile
for Israelis
to follow
the
happenings
there,
because they
will have a
lot of
impact on
our
situation.
IT WAS, of
course,
Hassan
Nasrallah's
big day. In
the eyes of
tens of
millions of
Arabs, he
has won a
huge
victory. A
small
organization
in a small
country has
brought
Israel, the
regional
power, to
its knees,
while the
leaders of
all the Arab
countries
are bending
the knee
before
Israel.
Nasrallah
promised to
bring Kuntar
back. For
that purpose
he captured
the two
soldiers.
After two
years and
one war, the
newly freed
prisoner
stood on the
tribune in
Beirut,
dressed in a
Hezbollah
uniform, and
Nasrallah
himself,
endangering
his personal
safety, came
out and
embraced him
in front of
the TV
cameras, as
a cheering
crowd went
wild with
enthusiasm.
Faced with
this
demonstration
of personal
courage and
self-confidence,
its dramatic
flair so
characteristic
of the man,
the Israeli
army reacted
with the
inane
statement:
"We would
not advise
Nasrallah to
leave his
bunker!"
Aljazeera
brought all
this live,
hour after
hour, to
millions of
homes from
Morocco to
Iraq and the
Muslim world
beyond. It
was
impossible
for Arab
viewers not
to be swept
along on the
waves of
emotion. For
a young
person in
Riyadh,
Cairo, Amman
or Baghdad,
there was
only one
possible
reaction:
Here is the
man! Here is
the man who
is restoring
Arab honor
after
decades of
defeats and
humiliation!
Here is the
man,
compared to
whom all the
leaders of
the Arab
world are
dwarfs! And
when
Nasrallah
announced
that "As
from this
moment, the
era of Arab
defeats has
come to an
end!" he
captured the
spirit of
the day.
I suspect
that there
were also
quite a
number of
Israelis who
made
unflattering
comparisons
between this
man and our
own cabinet
ministers,
the
champions of
empty,
boastful
verbiage.
Compared to
them,
Nasrallah
looks
responsible,
credible,
logical and
determined,
without spin
and hollow
words.
On the eve
of the huge
rally, he
addressed
the public
and forbade
firing into
the air, as
is common in
Arab
celebrations.
"Anyone who
shoots,
shoots at my
breast, my
head, my
robe!" he
declared.
Not a single
shot was
fired.
FOR LEBANON
it was a
historic
day.
Something
like this
has never
happened
before: all
the
country's
political
elite,
without
exception,
turned out
at Beirut
airport to
welcome
Kuntar, and
at the same
time to
salute
Nasrallah.
Some of them
were
gnashing
their teeth,
of course,
but the
understood
very well
the way the
wind is
blowing.
They were
all there:
the
President of
Lebanon, the
Prime
Minister,
all the
members of
the new
cabinet, the
leaders of
all the
parties, all
the
communities
and all the
religions,
all living
past
presidents
and prime
ministers.
The Sunni
Saad Hariri,
who has
accused
Hezbollah of
involvement
in the
assassination
of his
father; the
Druze Walid
Jumblat, who
has demanded
the
liquidation
of Hezbollah
more than
once; and
the Maronite
Christian
Samir Geagea,
who bears
the
responsibility
for the
Sabra and
Shatila
massacre;
together
with many
others who
but
yesterday
were
showering
Hezbollah
with every
possible
obscenity.
In his
speech, the
new
President
praised all
those who
took part in
freeing
Kuntar, thus
conferring
national
legitimacy
not only on
the
Hezbollah
action that
precipitated
the war, but
also on the
military
function of
Hezbollah in
defending
Lebanon.
Since the
President
was until
recently the
commander of
the army,
this means
that the
Lebanese
army, too,
embraces
Hezbollah.
On
Wednesday,
Nasrallah
became the
most
important
and powerful
person in
Lebanon.
Three months
after the
crisis that
almost
caused a
civil war,
when Prime
Minister
Fuad Siniora
demanded
that
Hezbollah
turn over
its private
communication
network,
Lebanon has
become a
unified
country.
Demands like
the
disarming of
Hezbollah
have become
a pipe
dream.
Lebanon is
also united
in the
demand for
the
liberation
of the
Shebaa farms
and for the
delivery by
Israel of
the maps of
minefields
and the
deadly
cluster
bombs left
by our army
after the
second
Lebanon war.
Those who
remember
Lebanon as a
doormat in
the region,
and the
Shiites as a
doormat in
Lebanon, can
appreciate
the
immensity of
the change.
IN ISRAEL,
some people
blame the
prisoner
swap for the
dizzying
ascent of
Nasrallah
and the
whole
national-religious
camp in the
Arab world.
But Israel's
responsibility
for these
trends
started long
before Ehud
Olmert's
attempts to
distract
attention
from his
diverse
corruption
affairs.
All those
are to blame
who
supported
the stupid
and
destructive
Second
Lebanon War,
which was
enthusiastically
hailed on
the first
day by all
the media,
the
"Zionist"
parties and
the leading
men of
letters. The
bodies of
the two
captured
soldiers
could have
been
retrieved by
negotiations
before the
war much in
the same way
this has
been done
now. This is
what I wrote
at the time.
But one can
trace the
blame even
further
back, to
Ariel
Sharon's
First
Lebanon War.
Then, too,
all the
media, the
parties and
the leading
intellectuals
deliriously
welcomed the
war on the
first day.
Before that
disastrous
war, the
Shiite
community
was our good
and quiet
neighbor.
Sharon is
responsible
for the
ascent of
Hezbollah;
and the
Israeli
army, which
assassinated
Nasrallah's
predecessor,
gave
Nasrallah
the
opportunity
to become
what he now
is.
Neither
should one
forget
Shimon
Peres, who
created the
disastrous
"Security
Zone" in
South
Lebanon,
instead of
getting out
in good
time. And
David
Ben-Gurion
and Moshe
Dayan, who,
in 1955,
proposed
installing
"a Christian
major" as
dictator of
Lebanon, who
would then
sign a peace
treaty with
Israel.
The deadly
mixture of
arrogance
and
ignorance
that is
typical of
all Israeli
dealings
with the
Arab world
is also
responsible
for what
happened on
Wednesday.
It would be
wonderful if
this taught
our leaders
some modesty
and
consideration
for the
feelings of
others, as
well as the
ability to
read the map
of reality,
instead of
living in a
bubble of
national
autism. But
I am afraid
that the
opposite
will happen:
a
strengthening
of the
feelings of
anger,
insult,
sanctimoniousness
and hatred.
All the
Israeli
governments
bear
responsibility
for the
national-religious
wave in the
Arab world,
which is
much more
dangerous
for Israel
than the
secular
nationalism
of leaders
like Yasser
Arafat and
Bashar
al-Assad.
THIS WEEK,
another
important
thing
happened: in
one great
leap, the
Syrian
president
jumped from
American-imposed
isolation
into global
stardom at a
grandiose
international
show in
Paris. The
pathetic
attempts by
Olmert,
Tzipi Livni
and a band
of Israeli
reporters to
shake the
hand of
Assad, or at
least a
minister, a
low official
or a
bodyguard,
were pure
slapstick.
And still
more
happened
this week:
the No. 3 in
the US
Department
of State
officially
met with
Iranian
delegates.
And it
became clear
that the
negotiations
with Hamas
over the
next
prisoner
swap are
still in
deep freeze.
The new
situation
harbors many
dangers, but
also a host
of
opportunities.
The new
status of
Nasrallah as
a central
player in
the Lebanese
political
game imposes
on him
responsibility
and caution.
A
strengthened
Assad may be
a better
partner for
peace, if we
are ready to
take the
opportunity.
The American
negotiations
with Iran
may avert a
destructive
war, which
would be a
disaster for
us, too. The
legitimization
of Hamas by
the
negotiations,
when they
are resumed,
may lead to
Palestinian
unity, like
the unity
achieved now
in Lebanon.
Any peace
agreement we
signed with
them would
really have
legs to
stand on.
In two
months
Israel may
have a new
government.
If it wants
to, it could
start a new
initiative
for peace
with
Palestine,
Lebanon and
Syria.
Uri Avnery's
אמת מול אמת
