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           |  | 
 The Sea and the River Rhetoric in the 
	Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
 
 By Uri Avnery
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 17, 2012
 
 
 
 “Palestine, from the Jordan to the Sea, belongs to us!” declared 
	Khalid Misha'al last week at the huge victory rally in Gaza.
 
 “Eretz 
	Israel, from the sea to the Jordan, belongs to us!” declare right-wing 
	Israelis on every occasion.
 
 The two statements seem to be the same, 
	with only the name of the country changed.
 
 But if you read them 
	again carefully, there is a slight difference. The direction.
 
 
 FROM THE sea to the river, from the river to the sea.
 
 Therein lies 
	much more significance than meets the eye. It shows how the speaker sees 
	himself – coming from the East or from the West.
 
 When one says 
	“from the river to the sea”, one sees oneself as belonging to the extensive 
	region known to Westerners as the “Middle East”, a vital part of the Asian 
	continent. The term “Middle East” is, itself, a patronizing expression with 
	colonial undertones – it suggests that the area has no independent standing. 
	It exists only in relation to a far-away world center – Berlin? London? 
	Washington?
 
 When one says “from the sea to the river”, 
	one sees oneself as coming from the West and living as a bridgehead of the 
	West, facing a foreign, and probably hostile, continent.
 
 In its 
	long recorded history, going back many thousands of years, this country – 
	whether Cana'an, Palestine or Eretz Israel – has seen many waves of invaders 
	who came to settle here.
 
 Most of these waves came from the 
	hinterland. Cana'anites, Hebrews, Arabs, and many others came from the East. 
	They settled here, mingled with the existing population and were soon 
	absorbed, creating new mixtures and establishing natural relations with the 
	neighboring countries. They fought wars, made peace, prospered, suffered in 
	times of drought.
 
 The ancient Israelite kingdoms (not the mythical 
	ones of Saul, David and Solomon but the real historical ones of Ahab and his 
	successors) were a natural part of this environment, as witnessed by 
	contemporary Assyrian and other documents.
 
 So were the Arabs of the 
	7th century. They settled among the locals. These very slowly converted from 
	Christianity and Judaism to Islam, adopted the Arabic language and became 
	“Arabs”, much as the Cana'anites before them had become “Israelites”.
 
 QUITE DIFFERENT was the way of those invaders who came from the West.
 
 There were three waves: the Philistines in antiquity, the Crusaders in 
	the Middle Ages and the Zionists in modern times.
 
 Coming from the 
	West (even if, like the first Crusaders, overland)]  the invader sees 
	the vast enemy continent before him. He clings to the shore, establishes a 
	bridgehead and advances to enlarge it. Significantly, no “western” invader 
	ever established borders – they advanced or retreated as their forces and 
	circumstances decreed.
 
 This historical picture applies, of course, 
	only to those invaders who came and settled in the country. It does not 
	concern the invading empires which just wanted to control the area. They 
	came from all directions and moved on – Hittites and Egyptians, Assyrians 
	and Babylonians, Persians and Greeks, Romans and Byzantines, Mongols, Turks 
	and British. (The Mongols came here after destroying Iraq, and were beaten 
	decisively by the Muslim general Baybars, heir of Saladin, in one of the 
	most decisive battles in history.)
 
 Eastern Empires usually 
	continued through Egypt to the West, turning North Africa into a Semitic 
	sphere. Western Empires continued to the East, towards India.
 
 Tutmosis, Cyrus, Alexander, Caesar, Napoleon and many others came and passed 
	on – but none of them left a lasting mark on the country.
 
 LIKE THEIR 
	predecessors coming from the West, the Zionists had a bridgehead mentality 
	from the start, and have it to this day.
 
 Indeed, they had it even before the Zionist movement was officially founded. 
	In his canonical book, Der Judenstaat, Theodor Herzl, the visionary whose 
	picture hangs in the Knesset plenum hall, wrote that the future Jewish State 
	would form a part of the “wall against Asia”. It would serve as a “forward 
	position of the culture against the barbarism”.
 
 Not just 
	culture, but The Culture. And not just barbarism, but The Barbarism. For a 
	reader in the 1890s, these needed no explanation: Culture was white and 
	European, Barbarism was everything else, whether brown, red, black or 
	yellow.
 
 In today’s Israel, five generations later, this mentality 
	has not changed. Ehud Barak coined the phrase which reflects this mentality 
	more clearly than any other: “We are a Villa in the Jungle”.
 
 Villa: culture, civilization, order, the West, Europe. Jungle: barbarism, 
	the Arab/Muslim world surrounding us, a place full of wild animals, where 
	anything can happen at any moment.
 
 This phrase is repeated 
	endlessly and accepted by practically everyone. Politicians and army 
	officers may replace it with ”the neighborhood” (“Shekhuna”). Daily 
	examples: “In the neighborhood in which we live, we cannot relax for a 
	moment!” Or: “In a neighborhood like ours we need the atom bomb!”
 
 Moshe Dayan, who had a poetic streak, said two generations ago in the most 
	important speech of his life: “We are a generation of settlers, and without 
	the steel helmet and the cannon we cannot plant a tree and build a 
	house…This is the fate of our generation, the choice of our life – to be 
	prepared and armed, strong and tough, or otherwise the sword will slip from 
	our fist and our life will be snuffed out.” In another speech, a few years 
	later, Dayan clarified that he did not mean just one generation – but many 
	to come, endlessly – the typical bridgehead mentality which knows no 
	borders, neither in space nor in time.
 
 (Just a personal remark: 
	sixty-five years ago, a year before the foundation of Israel, I published a 
	pamphlet which opened with the words: “When our Zionist fathers decided to 
	set up a [national home in this country] they had the choice between two 
	courses: They could appear [as] a bridgehead of the “white” race and the 
	master of the “natives” [or] as the heirs of the Semitic political and 
	cultural tradition [leading] the war of liberation of the Semitic peoples 
	against European exploitation…”)
 
 The difference between 
	sea-to-river and river-to-sea is not just political, and far from 
	superficial. It goes right to the roots of the conflict.
 
 There is 
	no escape from the simple truth that there will be two states between the 
	river and the sea – as well as between the sea and the river.
 
 Unless we want the whole country – sea to river, river to sea – to become 
	one vast graveyard.
 
 
 
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