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Journalists have a greater
responsibility today than ever before. They can provide the vital
combination of accuracy, rationality, balance and historical context
that is needed to offset politicians
A colleague from London asked me what I would say to Israeli journalists
if I could talk to them on issues related to this war and the broader
conflict between Arabs and Israelis. I replied that we cannot and do not
talk directly, due to the state of war and consequent legal and
political constraints.
If we could talk openly, there would be
much to discuss. Journalists have a greater responsibility today than
ever before. They can provide the vital combination of accuracy,
rationality, balance and historical context that is needed to offset the
amateurish leadership and catastrophic policies of most politicians and
officials in Israel, the Arab world and the United States - now
conspicuously joined by neo-vacuous Tony Blair.
When Israeli, Arab and other journalists
merely parrot their government lines, they do everyone a disservice.
When they repeat the hysterical assumptions and flawed interpretations
of their semi-crazed politicians - as I believe is common in Israel
today - they become instruments of war, rather than purveyors of fact
and dispassionate analysis. But when they cut through official spin and
associated propaganda, and help their public understand the roots of the
problem, and thus the path to its resolution, they rise to their highest
professional and personal stature. So here's what I would say to
journalists in Israel: read Deuteronomy and act on its moral and
political principles.
Deuteronomy, a pivotal book of the Hebrew
Bible (the Old Testament), is supremely relevant here because it blends
the three issues that I believe Israeli, Arab and international
journalists must affirm in order to honor their professional dictates
along with their own humanity. These are: good governance anchored in
the rule of law; a moral foundation for human relations anchored in the
dictate to treat others as you want others to treat you; and the
towering divine commands to 'choose life' and 'pursue justice'.
Deuteronomy is an appropriate balm because
it emphasizes - in both human society and the divine plan - the central
value of justice that is anchored in a system of codified laws that are
administered fairly by compassionate and competent judges. The most
beautiful and powerful part of Deuteronomy is verses 18-20, ending with:
'Justice, and only justice, you shall pursue.'
How is this relevant to the
Israeli-Lebanese war today and issues beyond this round of fighting? I
believe it is crucial, because the single biggest reason that Israel has
found itself locked in ever more vicious wars with assorted Arab
neighbors is its refusal to resolve the conflict with the Palestinians
and other Arabs on the basis of the rule of law, and to resolve disputes
on the basis of both parties enjoying equal rights.
On the two occasions that it has made
resolutions on the basis of law and equal rights - the peace treaties
with Jordan and Egypt - Israel has found calm, official acceptance and
some normal contacts with citizens in those Arab lands. But in Lebanon,
Syria and Palestine, where Israel has acted unilaterally and in a
predatory and violent way, it has reaped only resistance, ever more
fierce and proficient with the years.
The common Israeli view - one that Bush
and Blair have swallowed in its entirety - sees the Arabs and Iran as
pits of Islamic terror and anti-Semitic savagery that want only to kill
Jews and annihilate Israel. They are free to live in this imaginary
world if they wish to, but the consequences are grim, as we see today.
Subjugated and savaged Arabs will fight
back, generation after generation, just as the Jews did historically,
inspired as they were by the moral force of the 'Deuteronomistic' way.
If the world does not offer you justice, you fight for your rights.
The missing element in Israeli behavior is
to ask if Israel's own policies have had any impact on reciprocal Arab
behavior. If this is a war between two sides - which I believe it is -
then both need to examine their policies, and make concessions to
resolve their disputes. Peace-making and conflict resolution must be
anchored in law that dispenses justice equally to all protagonists. The
law we have to deal with here comprises UN resolutions and bodies of
international conventions and legal precedents.
We cannot pick one UN resolution we want
implemented - say, 1559 - and forget the others, such as, say, 242 and
338. This is what has happened since 1967 and even before. The rights of
Israel have been given priority over the rights of Arabs, and this
skewed perception has been backed by US might.
I wish Israeli journalists would apply to
their writing and analysis the moral dictates and divine exhortations
that their Jewish forefathers passed down from generation to generation:
obey the law, treat others equally, pursue justice, choose life.
Journalists should identify the legitimate rights, grievances and needs
of both sides by providing facts rather than propaganda.
Israel and the US have ploughed ahead for
decades with a predatory Israeli policy that savages Arab rights, land
and dignity. In return, public opinion in the Arab world has become
violently anti-Israeli, and resistance movements have emerged in
Palestine and Lebanon. If current policies continue, similar movements
will emerge elsewhere, just as Hamas and Hizbollah were born in the
early 1980s in response to the Israeli occupation of their lands.
Moses had it right, perhaps because he
accumulated much wisdom during his 120 years of life. Meet the
legitimate demands of both parties to a dispute, he said, and a fair,
lasting resolution will emerge. Ignore the centrality of justice and
equal rights for both parties, and you will be smitten by divine fire -
or fated to fight your adversaries forever, as Israel seems to have
opted to do.
Rami G. Khouri is the Editor-at-large of
the Daily Star newspaper in Beirut
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