They
hate him that rebuketh in the gate, and they abhor him that speaketh uprightly. (Amos, 5,10)
Israel’s
deputy Chief of Staff, Major-General Ya’ir Golan, in his address at the
memorial service for Holocaust Day, last week said:
“
If there is something that frightens me about the memory of the Holocaust, it
is seeing the abhorrent processes that took place in Europe, and Germany in
particular, some 70, 80 or 90 years ago, and finding manifestations of these
processes here among us in 2016,… there is nothing easier than to simply hate the other,
there is nothing easier than to provoke fears and strike terror; there is
nothing easier than barbaric behaviour, moral corruption and hypocrisy.” Adding, “On Holocaust Remembrance day, it is
appropriate to discuss our abilities to extricate from among us signs of
intolerance and violence, signs that we're heading towards self destruction and
down the road to moral depravity. In fact, Holocaust Remembrance Day is an
opportunity for self-examination.”
Ever
since, General Golan has been under attack from the right-wing political class
(to call them elite would be a contradiction in terms), from the gutters -
sadly well represented in Israel’ government and parliament - right up to prime
minister Bibi Netanyahu who called the comments outrageous,
saying at his weekly Cabinet meeting that "they cause harm to Israel and
cheapen the Holocaust." Look who is f*** talking.
Maybe
a serving general should not be talking about issues, which can be seen as
political by some – but Golan – who is one of the two contenders to become
Israel’s next chief of staff – was evidently willing to give up his career
chances because of his deep worries as to what is happening in Israel.
But,
of course, They
hate him that rebuketh in the gate, and they abhor him that speaketh uprightly.
I do
not know how long Israel will last or whether it will ever become the secular
democracy it was originally established to become – but Yai’r Golan will be
remembered as one of the very few moral lighthouses shining his warning words
in an attempt to prevent a total shipwreck.