Al-Jazeerah History  
	 
	
	
	Archives  
	 
	
	
	Mission & Name   
	 
	
	
	
	Conflict Terminology   
	 
	
	Editorials  
	 
	
	
	
	
	Gaza Holocaust   
	 
	
	Gulf War   
	 
	
	Isdood  
	 
	
	Islam   
	 
	
	News   
	 
	
	
	News Photos 
	  
	 
	
	
	Opinion 
	
	
	Editorials  
	 
	
	
	
	US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)   
	 
	
	www.aljazeerah.info
	  
      
       
      
        
        
     | 
     | 
    
     
      Israeli Occupiers Who Became Victims of their 
	  Military Occupation Broke the Silence   
	By Eileen Fleming 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 16, 2011 
	 “Occupation of the (Palestinian) Territories” is being published in 
	Hebrew and by Breaking 
	the Silence, “a group of Israeli ex-soldiers with an established record 
	of gathering first-person accounts of the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) 
	operations. The information was meticulously checked and re-checked for 
	accuracy; there is no mistaking the ring of truth in the reports, which 
	reveal consistent patterns, and thus have a powerful cumulative force. To 
	read them is to see the profound moral corruption of the occupation in all 
	its starkness. They show us ordinary, decent young soldiers, caught up in an 
	impossible situation, sometimes trying desperately to make sense of that 
	situation, but mostly following their orders without question. In a number 
	of cases, those interviewed have clearly been psychologically and 
	spiritually scarred by their participation in horrific events of which they 
	had little understanding at the time.    “Most painful of all is the 
	inescapable realization that the events reported by the soldiers—in 
	straightforward, unpretentious, searing language—are in no sense unusual. 
	They describe the rule and the norm, the very stuff of the occupation, now 
	forty-three-and-a-half years old and going strong. No one involved in 
	maintaining it gets away unscathed in heart or soul, including the ordinary 
	soldiers who do what they’re told, although only a small number are capable 
	of the kind of articulate reflection on their experience that we find in 
	this book.    “But it is not only the soldiers and the policemen and 
	the judges and the bureaucrats who pay a personal price, along with their 
	Palestinian victims. As the Israeli philosopher Yeshayahu Leibowitz 
	predicted forty-three years ago, the occupation has brutalized Israeli 
	society as a whole and eroded the moral foundation of our very existence. If 
	there is still hope for Israel, it lies with those remnants of the peace 
	camp that remain active and, in particular, with groups such as Breaking the 
	Silence, who offer a taste of the bitter, but perhaps ultimately healing, 
	truth.” [1]    In 2009, the testimonies of fifty-four Israeli combat 
	soldiers who participated in Operation Cast was published by
	Breaking the Silence. 
	  The testimonies exposed significant gaps between the report by the 
	Israeli military and the events on the ground.   Israeli Forces 
	"accepted practices" included the needless destruction of hundreds of homes 
	and mosques, the firing of phosphorous gas into populated areas, the killing 
	of innocent victims with small arms, the destruction of private property, 
	and a permissive atmosphere in the command structure that enabled soldiers 
	to act without moral restrictions.    The testimonies revealed that 
	the soldiers were not given directives stating the goal of the operation and 
	one soldier testified, "there was not much said about the issue of innocent 
	civilians." 
  Many soldiers said that they fought without seeing "the 
	enemy before their eyes."    "You feel like an infantile little kid 
	with a magnifying glass looking at ants, burning them," one of the soldiers 
	testified that "a 20-year-old kid should not have to do these kinds of 
	things to other people." 
  Mikhael Mankin said, "The testimonies prove 
	that the immoral way the war was carried out was due to the systems in place 
	and not the individual soldier. This is an urgent call to Israel's society 
	and leadership to take a sober look at the foolishness of our policies." 
	  On the last day of my fifth trip to Israel-Palestine, on 27 July 2007, 
	I met with Mikhael Mankin, a religious Jew and former Infantry Lieutenant in 
	the Israeli Defense Force/IDF who served six years in the occupied 
	territories of Bethlehem, Hebron, Ramallah, Jenin and the Gaza Strip.   
	Mikhael was discharged from the IDF in 2002 and had become the Foreign 
	Relations Manager of 
	Breaking the Silence, and he said:   "I am a practicing Jew and in 
	two weeks we go into the month of repentance; which requires acknowledging 
	our sins. We cannot change things until we acknowledge our culpability.   
	"The problem is government policy that is implemented by young soldiers and 
	whenever religion is involved, we will have fundamentalism. The Israeli 
	peace and justice activists are less than 1% of Israeli society and anybody 
	who is an activist is an optimist. You cannot do anything if you do not 
	believe you can do something to change the situation. We have to remind 
	ourselves that we are the minority; [it appears that] we are loosing, but we 
	remind ourselves we are right!   "Everybody in Israel knows somebody 
	who has served in the occupied territories. The situation in 2007 is worse 
	than 2006 and it looks worse for 2008, but more and more activists-like 
	Anarchists Against the Wall and Tayoush are actively working with 
	Palestinians against the occupation, they are not afraid to travel in the 
	occupied territories and are learning Arabic. Two, three years ago you 
	wouldn't have heard anything; but now every week Israelis are getting 
	arrested for fighting the occupation.   "A few years ago, the soldiers 
	you have encountered at the checkpoints would have been me. Soldiers like 
	myself who served during the second intifada, got our education on the job. 
	You all have visited more places [the past nine days] than most Israelis 
	ever have. Israeli's have no idea what is happening in the occupied 
	territories. But, so far in 2007 we have given more Israeli's a tour through 
	Hebron than we did in 2005 and 2006 combined. Hebron is a ghost town, the 
	settlers are unbearable and every soldier who is stationed there understands 
	the 600 settlers there are psychotic; insane.     "I became very 
	opinionated while in the army, but I kept it all to myself. Nobody talks 
	about it in the army and I was the commander and did not know until after I 
	got out that one of the other soldiers in my unit was feeling the same way, 
	until he gave his testimony. Israeli society wants you to believe you are a 
	bad apple for speaking out because unless you trust the system, it will fall 
	apart. Most Israelis who get out of the army leave the country and are 
	probably all drugged out. They suffer posttraumatic syndrome but we are the 
	victimizers. My age group is getting the hell out of here or walling 
	themselves off from society and are not involved in anything.    "Over 
	450 former soldiers have now given their testimonies and we don't publish 
	any stories without the corroboration coming from another former soldier and 
	the testimonies are kept anonymous.   "You have to understand you must 
	preach to your own people; we want to shake up the comfortable people who 
	may agree with us in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, but are not activists yet." 
	    Another Israeli ex-soldier of Breaking the Silence wrote:   
	"Since our discharge from the army, we all feel that we have become 
	different. We feel that service in the occupied territories and the 
	incidents we faced have distorted and harmed the moral values on which we 
	grew up.
  "We all agree that as long as Israeli society keeps sending 
	its best people to military combat service in the occupied territories, it 
	is extremely important that all of us, Israeli citizens, know the price 
	which the generation who is fighting in the territories is paying, the 
	impossible situations it is facing, the insanity it is confronting everyday, 
	and the heavy burden it bears after being discharged from the IDF, a heavy 
	burden that hasn't left us.    "That's why we decided to break the 
	silence, because it's time to tell. Time to tell about everything that goes 
	on there each and every day.   "We all served in the territories. Some 
	served in Gaza, some in Hebron, some in Bethlehem and the rest served in 
	other places. We all manned checkpoints participated in patrols and arrests 
	and took part in the war against terror. We all realized that the daily 
	struggle against terror and the daily interaction with the civilian 
	population has left us helpless. Our sense of justice was distorted, and so 
	were our morality and emotions.   "The reality we experienced was made 
	of: Innocent civilians being hurt, Kids not going to school because of the 
	curfew, and parents who can't bring food home because they can't go to work.
	
  "This reality has stayed us and will not go away. After discharge 
	from the army, we decided that we shouldn't go on. We shouldn't forget what 
	we ourselves did and what we witnessed. We decided to break the silence." 
	  Another ex-soldier said, "There is a very clear and powerful connection 
	between how much time you serve in the territories and how fucked in the 
	head you get." [2]   The former soldiers of Breaking the Silence began 
	by breaking the silence about Hebron, the most painful place I have ever 
	been, but I have not yet made it into Gaza!   In June 2005, my guide 
	through Hebron was Jerry Levin, who was then a full-time volunteer with 
	Christian Peacemaker Teams/CPT. Jerry had also once been CNN's Middle East 
	bureau chief in the 1980's. At the time, Jerry was a secular Jew who was and 
	is married to Sis, a life-long Christian.
  Jerry had been kidnapped 
	and held hostage in Lebanon by the Hezbollah for nearly a year, and after he 
	experienced a mystical Christmas Eve and shortly thereafter escaped from 
	captivity when the door to his ‘cell’ was left unlocked. Ever since Jerry 
	and Sis have dedicated their lives to the Palestinian cause for equal human 
	rights.   Jerry is lightly built and sprouts bilateral hearing aids 
	and he told me, "Every time I get ready to return to Palestine, everyone 
	asks me, 'Aren't you afraid?' I reply, of what, the Palestinians? No way! 
	But when it comes to the Israelis soldiers, you bet I am!"
  Hebron in 
	2005 was filled with three thousand Israeli soldiers and a few hundred 
	Israeli settlers/colonists/squatters who had displaced the indigenous 
	Palestinians.   The eighteen- to twenty-one-year-old soldiers 
	patrolled the streets with their weapons at the ready and turned Jerry and I 
	away at the first checkpoint we came to. Jerry smiled as he told me, "Most 
	of the soldiers don't like the CPTs. Whenever they won't let us through, we 
	just go another way, and always, eventually, get where we want to go."   
	The narrow, winding stone streets of Hebron are centuries old, but in the 
	21st century, one side is Palestinian and the other Israeli, but their only 
	connection to the other is a thick, deeply sagging netting strung above ones 
	head that catches the huge rocks, shovels, electronic equipment, furniture, 
	and all manner of debris that have been flung onto it by the 
	settlers/colonists/squatters.   I asked Jerry if it ever gave way and 
	hit Palestinians on the head and he responded, "That's the intention, but it 
	gets cleaned out about every year or so. Come back in a few months, and this 
	netting will be much closer to your head. The settlers just throw whatever 
	they want onto the netting; they do what ever they want and get away with 
	it. The CPT's run interference by nonviolent resistance; we get the children 
	and woman to where they need to be going and back again. Sometimes, the 
	settlers curse and stone us all; it keeps it interesting."   Jerry 
	pointed out all the formerly Palestinian homes that the settlers have 
	painted graffiti, such as "GAS THE ARABS" and Stars of David upon.  The 
	oppression affected me viscerally and I was nauseous all day and threw up 
	all that night. I felt as if I had entered into every movie set and 
	photograph of the Jewish ghettos before the Holocaust.   Ever since my 
	first journey to Israel-Palestine in June 2005, I have tried to break the 
	silence about the undemocratic state of Israel - and my governments aiding 
	and abetting of it-on the World Wide Web.    My target audience has 
	always been the misinformed and uninformed American Christians, for as 
	Mikkael said, we must preach to our own, even when our own will not listen. 
	    1. http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2011/jan/09/no-one-wants-to-know-israeli-soldiers-occupation/ 
	2. http://www.breakingthesilence.org.il/about_e.asp 
	    LEARN MORE: 
	Breaking the Silence        
 
  --  Eileen 
	Fleming,  Founder of WeAreWideAwake.org Staff Member of Salem-news.com 
	A Feature Correspondent for Arabisto.com  Producer "30 Minutes with 
	Vanunu" and "13 Minutes with Vanunu"  Author of "Keep Hope Alive" and 
	"Memoirs of a Nice Irish American 'Girl's' Life in Occupied Territory" and 
	BEYOND NUCLEAR:
	
	Mordechai Vanunu's FREEDOM of SPEECH Trial and My Life as a Muckraker: 
	2005-2010 
	http://www.youtube.com/user/eileenfleming 
 
  Only in Solidarity 
	do "we have it in our power to begin the world again."-Tom Paine
 
  
	 
	  
	  
	  
       
       
       | 
     | 
     
      
      
      
      
     |