The Demographic Fear Factor in Israel: Keep Them
Babies Coming!
By Mary Rizzo
ccun.org, May 29, 2008
Most observers of the Israel-Palestine conflict have heard a
phrase without even really reflecting upon what it might mean or any
implications behind it. The phrase is that Israel risks the
detonation of a demographic bomb. The Israelis have been convinced
up until very recently that they are unbeatable in any military
milieu. That belief has allowed them to continue with the Occupation
of Palestine and the inhumane treatment of the Arabs. All Arabs,
even those who have held political office in Israel, are treated as
foreign bodies that need to be extirpated. But, with the curtain of
“permanent victory” being slashed from the rod to the ground, the
illusion of force is dying, and rather than entrust security to the
young men and women aged 18 to 35 in combat fatigues, they are now
pinning their hopes on Jewish lives still in the womb.
While many Israelis will falsely claim that there are total equal
rights for all Israeli citizens (this is a famous and oft repeated
hasbara lie), it is enough to ask
Azmi Bishara
his opinion on the matter. The Knesset Member now lives in exile
because his belief in equality appears to be a menacing security
threat in the eyes of those who lead Israel and, given the lack of
outcry, in the populace. He was accused by the Shin Bet of passing
reserved information, of which he actually had no access to, to
Hezbollah during the 2006 war Israel waged against Lebanon. But if
it’s the Shin Bet doing the accusing, the fear factor would keep
even MKs silent, not to mention a citizen that is not guaranteed any
parliamentary immunity, which is an instrument introduced so that
lawmakers could freely express their views without being imprisoned
for them. If an MK is not even treated according to law for
expressing his pacific point of view of equality that is closer to
Martin Luther
King than it is to
Avigdor Lieberman, what can we expect by way of protection and
justice for common citizens?
There is indeed racism in Israel against Arabs, even those with
Israeli citizenship, as they receive treatment that is “merely”
discriminatory, such as the Palestinian Arab citizens of Israel who
are given the charming epithet, “Fifth
Column”, indicating an internal risk for national security.
Discrimination in allotment of public services and risk of losing
residency rights if they exercise freedom of movement that a Jewish
Jerusalemite enjoys, is the order of the day for Palestinian
Israelis. The Palestinians who are outside the Green Line have
things much harder, as torture, collective punishment and oppression
are the daily bread, a fact that is well-documented and does not
need to be stressed more in this instance.
Yet, all of these people are considered to be an existential
threat to Israel. The fact that THEY, the Arabs who live in the
Occupied Territories and Israel itself, exist is considered to be a
weapon that even the faith in military might can’t compensate for,
in lieu of massacres, deportations and bloodbaths that go under the
name of counter-terrorism.
As a matter of fact, history has always shown that the masses,
when pushed too far, tend to rebel. Restrictive laws, collective
punishment and even exile have never been unsurmountable obstacles
to an oppressed people. Therefore, Israel is correct in assuming
that there is danger in numbers.
However, the numbers they fear don’t concern a popular uprising,
given that so far, there has never been the leader or the historical
circumstance to permit an effective rebellion that will overturn the
state of affairs. There is a great deal of internal division,
fomented also by the “international community”, and the very fact
that Palestinians themselves are divided into groups does not
contribute to an effective popular movement. The Fifth Column is, in
that way, extremely useful for Israel, because the unity that
Palestinians on this side or that side of the Green Line should feel
is undermined at every turn. They are not allowed to be in contact,
nor are they permitted a unified national, political or cultural
identity that they are able to express. As long as the Palestinians
in the Historic Homeland are divided, and into as many segments as
possible, this allows the schizophrenic identity of Israel as a
Jewish Democracy to continue unthreatened in essence. Deporting
Palestinian Israelis is out of the question perhaps more for the
reason of political astuteness than for reasons of ethics and
morality. As the story of Cain and Abel shows, sometimes there is no
greater enemy than one’s own blood, and dividing brothers is
entirely possible and politically feasible.
The numbers that are important to Israel are the number of Jews
that are citizens of Israel. Aliyah worked in the past, and to a
certain extent, still is effective, especially in the young,
upwardly mobile adult sector who is looking for a cheap break away
from the nest. If you go to Tel Aviv or New York, it’s all the same
for an IT expert from the heart of America. The success of
Birthright and other programs that finance not only trips to Israel
for aspiring immigrants, but state financed and privately financed
programs to settle in the Olim in lovely, modern flats, find jobs,
some of them perhaps even created by the Shin Bet just to bring in
the numbers of promising youth, are testament to all of this. Yet
Aliyah is not what is used to be. It is harder to sustain the
expenses of transferring families, and in fact, the settler movement
is no longer willing to live in a rural and traditional way, but
demands bigger homes, gardens in the desert, services that are equal
to those they can get in North America. Private companies that
speculate on the upward mobility factor specialise in proposing real
estate that has little to do with living a life according to Jewish
tradition, but with making a solid investment, profit for the real
estate developer, cheap housing for the newcomer and political
dependence on the government that maintains the apartheid state.
As an article in
Le Monde
Diplomatique expresses, the settler movement has changed its
colours a bit:
We need to look at their social composition and economy, and ask
who profits from the colonial project. What drives ordinary people
to take part in it, becoming instruments of dispossession and
perhaps its future victims? Modi’in Illit is a perfect example. It
was not the work of nationalist-messianic settlers and their
political representatives, but of a heterogeneous social-political
alliance linking real-estate developers, investors looking to make a
profit and politicians pushing the colonisation project.
As a matter of fact, it creates an intense political bond between
those making Aliyah or those moving from Israel to the settlements
and the power structures in Israel. The two entities protect one
another and give the essential oxygen to keep Israel alive as a
Jewish State based on containment of the Arab population and Jewish
control of land and resources. The article continues:
These settlements are not based on messianic fervour alone, but
offer answers to social needs - quality of life for the upper middle
class, jobs and subsidised housing for the underprivileged. They
broaden the social base of the settlement movement and link it to
additional constituencies, particularly the real wall profiteers:
contractors, capitalists and the upper class seeking a grander life
in gated communities, far from the poor and shielded from the
Palestinians. They also tie to colonisation those searching for a
way out of hardship, large families looking for cheap housing or new
immigrants dependent on government subsidies and seeking social
acceptance. These pay the price of the hostility and hatred that the
wall generates, and are completely dependent on capitalists and
politicians.
However, moving families from Israel or from other countries to
the Occupied Territories, while it does increase the electoral power
of those who finance the move and therefore a continuation of
settlement policies, does not guarantee a Jewish majority in times
when the Arab birthrate is far higher than that of Jews in Israel or
the OPTs. What is essential, in the view of some, is to increase the
birthrate. The creation of an “Inner Aliyah” is what moves the
activists of
Efrat, an organisation that seeks to aid women who have decided
to opt for abortion or who are unsure as to whether to continue a
pregnancy. As stated in their site:
Israel is currently fighting a war for her very survival as a
Jewish State. As this is being written Israel’s borders are in
jeopardy due to the demographic threat of being out numbered. The
Arab birthrate is 4.6 double the Jewish birth rate of 2.3. It is
forecasted that the Arabs will be the majority in Israel by the year
2020, less than fifteen years from now.
Israel has lost more than one and a half million Jewish children
to abortion since 1948. In a country of about 5.5 million Jews this
number has great demographic significance. Imagine how much stronger
Israel would have been today with one million more Jews. Imagine if
we could create an “Inner Aliyah” of 10 to 15 thousand Jews a year.
At a cost of just $1,000 per “Oleh” Efrat is a bargain compared to
other Aliyah projects. And the Israeli government wouldn’t even have
to pay for housing or airfare as the potential Olim are already in
Israel just waiting to be born!
Not wanting to go into the issue of abortion itself, what does
seem very interesting is the reasoning behind “keeping them babies
coming”, for the good of the State. It is well known that under
Fascism and Nazism, policies were implemented for increasing the
birthrate of Italians and Germans. The size of the citizens of the
State was considered to be a formidable security weapon and a duty
to the State itself.
From my translation of a Wikipedia entry on
Fascism in Italy:
The Demographic Battle (with the Bachelor’s Tax) to increase the
Italian population according to the concept inherited from an
agricultural tradition, implied that more children means more
available workers and especially more soldiers. For this reason,
having families with many children was encouraged in every possible
way. The fathers of large families received increased salaries, the
mothers were awarded with ribbons, diplomas, gold and silver medals.
Public loans were granted to the new couples that had to be paid
back only if they had not given birth to children or if too few of
them were born. While Efrat is a private organisation, looking
around their site we are informed that they are proud of the support
they gain around the world. Heavyweights in the Washington Israel
Lobby, the
Friends of Lubavitch and the endorsement of many political
figures such as US Senators and other policy makers finance and
promote the program. Obviously, the Israeli demographic question is
seen by some as a “pro-life” campaign and by others as a
“pro-Israel” one. While the ideological reason behind support of it
by those in power may differ, the result is the same: financing so
that the Jewish population increases in order to balance Palestinian
birthrates, which have always been high.
So, a few might be asking, “what’s so bad about women having
babies? Are you picking on Jewish women, as if their families are
worth less?” Actually, it’s not the case at all. If a woman or a
family wants to have children, they should be encouraged to do so,
and this would mean that their society should provide stability for
all of its citizens so that children are not seen as a luxury and a
burden, not only of the family itself, but the society as a whole.
But, it isn’t what I think that matters. What is important to stress
is that it is not about the welfare of individuals and about
improving the society, but it is all about waging a cultural war
against a people that have not yet surrendered.
Let’s have a look at what a Settler Friendly (and self-styled
Machavellian) site, Samson Blinded, has to say in the
post
equating Arabs with roaches:
The phrase “and it was good” concludes every act of Creation.
Everything is good – including the evil, also a created thing.
Everything stems from the divine goodness. Why do we fight, then?
Why not accept the good intentions of Arabs who breed to dominate
the Land of Israel? One answer is that for Jews the ultimate
goodness rests in the Torah, and every opposition to it should be
quashed in the name of goodness. On the practical plane, goodness
doesn’t matter. Our actions toward Arabs are evil. People pursue
self-interest which, in the case of Israel’s right, only
incidentally correlates with the divine goodness of Torah. Roaches
are not happy when we squash them. They are unthreatening, but
merely aesthetically detestable. Arabs, likewise, suffer through no
guilt of their own. They are good, but still have to be evicted from
Israel for the Jewish good.
Judaism resents hunting because animals have to be killed for
food properly, with respect for their lives. Stone Age people
enjoyed hunting because it gave them food; modern hunting is
recreational. Enjoyment of murder, even of animal, is unethical.
There is nothing wrong with Arabs. They lived their lives on the
hills which they plowed for generations when Jews came to their
country.
Naturally, the Arabs fought back – not because of the European
Judophobism, but as normal people who resist their country usurped
by aliens; it’s a pity that Jews are less normal than Arabs and
accept that Arabs breed to become a majority in Israel. Jews have to
push the Arabs out and inflict suffering. That’s regrettable, but
there’s no choice: as we need food to sustain bodies, we also need
sovereignty to sustain our communal body. We “hunt” the Arabs
without enjoying it - just because we have to live in a state of our
own.
I might say that there is very little to add, although terms
such as “breeding” and much less doing it for the sole reason of
becoming “a majority in Israel” denote an image of Arab inferiority
bordering on being less than human in the eyes of this faithful
follower of the Torah, that even the most lazy eye can’t miss. Yet,
it seems as if reasons of eminent domain of Palestinian property to
secure Lebensraum for Jews being the practice has not been enough.
With Aliyah and the programs to get the Israeli birthrate up,
considering people as animals, tools, weapons and cannon fodder is
intrinsic in Israeli thinking and in the thought pattern of those
who support the “right” of a Jewish State to exist in Palestine, no
matter how many justifications they make, or how “humanitarian”
their project for achieving this goal might look. They are in war,
and that embryo is the soldier.
http://palestinethinktank.com/2008/05/25/the-demographic-fear-factor-in-israel%e2%80%a6-keep-them-babies-coming/
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