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IN EVERY language
there are some words that cannot be properly translated into any other.
It seems that they express something intimately connected with the
speakers of that language and rooted in their history, traditions and
reality. Such words become international expressions, appearing in other
languages in their original form.
For example, the
German word "Schadenfreude". Or the English word "gentleman" and the
American word 'business". Or the Russian word "pogrom" (originally
meaning devastation). Or the Japanese word "kamikaze" (divine wind, the
title given to suicide bombers). Or the Mexican "manana" and the similar
Arabic "bukra" (both meaning tomorrow. The difference between them? The
joke says: Bukra is not so urgent.) And, lately, the Palestinian "intifada".
The most prominent
Hebrew addition to this international lexicon is "chutzpah", a word that
has no equivalent in any other language. Some English words may come
close (impertinence, cheek, insolence, impudence), but none conveys the
full meaning of this Hebrew-Yiddish expression. It seems that it
reflects something that is especially characteristic of Jewish reality,
which was transferred to the State of Israel, which defines itself as a
"Jewish State".
THE PRESIDENT of
Israel is supposed to symbolize the common denominator of all our
citizens. Therefore it is proper for him to symbolize this trait, too.
And indeed, it is
difficult to imagine a more quintessential chutzpah than the behavior of
His Excellency, President Moshe Katzav. He is the supreme symbol of
Israeli chutzpah.
Katzav has been
accused of the sexual harassment of several women who worked for him in
the President's office, as well as in his earlier public offices. At
least three of them accused him of rape.
Such accusations
are, of course, far from a conviction. The investigation is still going
on. The President, like any other citizen, must be presumed innocent
until found guilty in court. It is quite possible that in the end he
will not even be indicted, or - if this happens - that he will be
acquitted, though perhaps only for lack of proof.
But that is not the
point. The point is that the President of the state, like Caesar's wife,
must be above suspicion. It is sufficient that there be reasonable
grounds for suspecting the President - such as a criminal investigation
- for him to resign his office. If he is later acquitted, so much the
better.
Let it be clear: I
have nothing against Moshe Katzav personally. On the contrary, I have
praised him on TV for his readiness, in spite of belonging to the Likud,
to listen to Arab citizens. I once brought to him a delegation of
leaders from the West Bank, and he treated them with the utmost
courtesy.
But as a citizen of
Israel I am ashamed. The affair in which he is involved dishonors the
office and, indirectly, the entire state. "Citizen Number 1" has become
the butt of jokes.
One thing can be
said in his favor: in his chutzpah, too, he symbolizes the state, or, at
least, the ruling elite.
THE KING of
chutzpah, its very personification, is the Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert.
If he had a gram of
shame, the minimum of decency, he would have resigned the day after the
cease-fire. There is no need for an inquiry to decide the obvious: that
he is guilty of a long line of disasters that have caused the death of a
thousand human beings, including almost 200 Israelis - men, women, old
people and children.
It can be debated of
what exactly to accuse Olmert: the starting of an unnecessary and
hopeless war (as I believe), or "only" the incompetent conduct of the
campaign from start to finish along. But any one of these is enough for
a decent person to go home and wait there for the results of the
inquiries.
But Olmert does not
even dream of doing that. He continues as if nothing has happened. In
the US this is called "stonewalling". He stands there naked like the
emperor in the children's story. All the promises he made only a few
months ago, during the election campaign, have dissipated like smoke in
the wind. He has no political plan left. He has not even the ability to
carry out any plan, if he had one. He has no time to think about
anything, except his political survival.
Winston Churchil
once said about a former British Prime Minister: "The right honorable
gentleman sometimes stumbles on the truth, but he always hurries on as
if nothing has happened." Olmert, similarly, hurries on his way.
He objects to the
investigation of the war through the instruments prescribed by law. He
tries to set up a whitewash investigation by an unquestioningly loyal
group chosen by himself. He goes on using every opportunity to make
another of his banal, cliché-laden speeches, which do not contain a
single word of truth, or even of interest.
That is chutzpah.
Not chutzpah in the harmless, jocular sense often signified by this
word, but a dangerous, rude and aggressive chutzpah. In practice, the
state remains without leadership. It is unable to take bold decisions in
a situation which demands them. His personal survival overshadows
everything else, from the problem of the prisoner exchange to the daily
killing of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.
It must be stated
again and again: the state is not private property. It is not the some
booty that belongs to whoever has succeeded in laying his hands on it,
accidentally or not. It is a national treasure entrusted by the citizens
to a particular politician, which must be given back by him if he is
proven unable or incompetent to exercise his duties. Any other attitude
is chutzpah.
NO NEED to waste
words on the chutzpah of Amir Peretz. It speaks for itself.
He bears personal
responsibility for all the blunders of the war, from the unthinking
decision to start it, up to the last military decision. From the
boastful beginning to the bitter end he showed a shocking inadequacy. A
decent person would have resigned the moment the guns fell silent. His
refusal is chutzpah.
The chutzpah of
Peretz is almost bizarre. He achieved political power on the basis of
his explicit promise to carry out basic social reforms. Not only did he
ignore this promise, he did the very opposite. His effort to continue
now as if nothing has happened and even to present himself as a social
leader is pathetic.
BUT EVEN these three
champions - Katzav, Olmert and Peretz - pale in comparison with Dan
Halutz.
Together with
likeminded people I demonstrated opposite the Ministry of Defense when
he was sworn in as Chief-of-Staff. It was clear to us that such a
person, who had behaved as he did behave and who had said what he did
say was not fit to lead the Israeli army. But even we did not foresee in
our wildest imagination that in such a short time, and in such an
extreme manner, he would confirm our darkest forebodings.
From a purely
military point of view, Halutz is the greatest failure in the annals of
the Israeli army. From a human point of view, he justified the prophecy
that he has a brilliant future in the court of The Hague. From a
political point of view, his understanding equals that of a primary
school pupil (if the pupil community will excuse me.)
The boastfulness of
the Air force, the arrogance of an incompetent general, the brutality of
a person who is able to bring tragedy to hundreds of thousands with
batting an eyelid - all of these were exposed during the war.
As has been
published, he told the government on the sixth day of the war that from
that moment on there was no possibility of achieving anything more. Said
so and did not demand to stop, said so and went on with the killing and
destroying, day after day, night after night. On the eve of the
cease-fire he sent his soldiers into a militarily senseless, completely
unnecessary offensive, in which the lives of 33 of his soldiers were
sacrificed.
But Dan Halutz does
not resign. It doesn't even enter his mind. This week, at a meeting of
former generals, accusations and even insults were slung at him, and he
did not budge.
A decent person
would have resigned at once. It is clear that an officer who has failed
in this manner, who is so much distrusted by the army, cannot carry out
the general overhaul demanded now - the replacing of the entire general
Staff, and especially the replacing of all the commanders who were in
charge of the campaign. Can a person who refuses to bear the
responsibility for this entire bungled campaign demand that his
subordinates shoulder theirs?
When chutzpah is the
norm in the army - what chance is there for its rehabilitation?
I KNOW, there are
several arguments for keeping the champions of chutzpah in office. There
are no obvious alternatives. The bad may be replaced by worse. Olmert's
resignation may lead to new elections, in which the more extreme Right
may win. His resignation may also lead to the inclusion in the
government of Avigdor Liberman, compared to whom the Frenchman Le Pen
and the Austrian Haider are bleeding-heart liberals. Who can guess who
and what might come after Halutz?
All these arguments
are valid, but they must give way to one simple demand: Chutzpah must
not be allowed to reign. The acceptance of personal responsibility by
the directors of the government and the army is an essential feature of
a healthy society. It is a simple moral imperative, like the categorical
imperative of Kant, an imperative that does not allows for any
compromise.
The
Talmud warns against "chutzpah towards heaven" (God). We must warn
against chutzpah towards civil society, the sovereign on earth.
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