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TelAviv: Pen Ultimate / Fatal Discourse

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  • TelAviv: Pen Ultimate / Fatal Discourse

    PEN ULTIMATE / FATAL DISCOURSE
    By Michael Handelzalts

    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/weekend/pen-ultimate/pen-ultimate-fatal-discourse-1.416070
    March 2 2012
    Israel

    Laws concerning use or misuse of terminology describing mass atrocities
    do not only color the way we look at the past, but may have existential
    ramifications in the present.

    In 2010, the last year of his life, historian Tony Judt published
    a small book of essays, "The Memory Chalet," most of which was
    written (or rather dictated ) while he was - as he put it - "free to
    contemplate at leisure and in minimal discomfort the catastrophic
    progress of one's own deterioration." In his case, deterioration
    resulting from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS ), also known as
    Lou Gehrig's disease.

    In one of those extremely perceptive and moving essays, entitled
    "Edge People," Judt wrote about people like him, for whom identity
    is far from being self-evident. As labels purporting to define
    "identity" made him uneasy, the outspoken Judt - a nonobservant Jew,
    intellectual, individualist, nonconformist but conservative, by his
    own definition - preferred the edge, "the place where countries,
    communities, allegiances, affinities and roots bump uncomfortably up
    against one another."

    Judt, who was educated in England, lived in the United States and wrote
    about and taught European history, was born in 1948 - the year in which
    the State of Israel (of whose policies he was harshly critical ) was
    also born. He was very much a child of his generation, which may not be
    very different from mine and yours: post-World War II, post-Holocaust,
    post-A bomb, post-traumatic. While pondering his identity, he wrote:
    "... in the wake of a generation of boastful victimhood, [most
    people] wear what little they know as a proud badge of identity:
    you are what your grandparents suffered. In this competition, Jews
    stand out. Many American Jews are sadly ignorant of their religion,
    culture, traditional languages, or history. But they do know about
    Auschwitz, and that suffices."

    That also goes for Israeli Jews. Indeed, according to "A Portrait of
    Israeli Jews: Beliefs, Observance, and Values of Israeli Jews, 2009,"
    a study conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute and the Avi Chai
    Foundation, for nearly all Israelis - 98 percent - "remembering the
    Holocaust" is a guiding principle of their life. And according to
    the same study, among 80 percent of Israelis, that does not in any
    way shake their firm belief that God exists.

    But the suffering of gramp's generation is also a major ingredient in
    non-Jews' identity - for example, witness the Palestinians' persistence
    in commemorating the Nakba, or "catastrophe," caused by the creation
    of the State of Israel; and the insistence by the Armenians that the
    extermination of 1.5 million of their countrymen by the Turks about
    a century ago be recognized by the world as a genocide.

    Loving Juliet could have asked innocently "what's in a name." But
    descendants of hated people believe that it is vital to use the right
    terms to describe their plight in order to uphold their national or
    common identity. Many Jewish and Israeli historians insist that the
    Armenians may have been victims of genocide, but no one should refer
    to their tragedy as an "Armenian holocaust" since nothing compares
    to the Holocaust. That claim holds some water (and a lot of blood )
    - even though Winston Churchill referred to the Armenian massacre
    as a holocaust in a book published in 1929. The same Churchill who
    announced in July 1941 that what the Germans and their collaborators
    were perpetrating in Poland and Lithuania, mostly on Jews, was "a
    crime without a name."

    The issue of terminology is not only a matter of historical
    perspective; there are legal aspects as well: The Knesset has begun
    deliberating legislation that would forbid and punish use, misuse and
    abuse of terms associated with the Holocaust and Nazi extermination of
    the Jews, especially when taken out of the "right" historical context.

    The Knesset also recently outlawed (mutatis much mutandis )
    commemoration of the Palestinian Nakba in state-funded institutions.

    A new French law making it a crime to publicly deny the Ottoman
    Empire's genocide of Armenians was ruled unconstitutional this week
    by France's Constitutional Council. The Turkish penal code stipulates
    that using the word genocide to describe what happened to the Armenians
    is a criminal offense. And denial of the Jewish Holocaust, by the way,
    is punishable both by (among others ) Israeli and French law.

    Such legislation does not only have ramifications vis-a-vis the way
    we view the past, recent or remote: It may also mean the difference
    between life and death in the present or near future. David Scheffer,
    U.S. ambassador at large for war crimes issues from 1997 to 2001,
    pointed out in The New York Times ("Defuse the lexicon of slaughter,"
    Feb. 23 ) that the UN and key Western nations decide whether or
    not to take action in cases of ongoing killings around the globe -
    be it in Bosnia, Rwanda, Libya or Syria - based on "terminological
    certainty about the nature of the killings."

    Scheffer writes apropos the debate in France and Turkey concerning
    declaration of an Armenian genocide, but also in view of the
    bloody events in Syria and what seems to be the confusion among the
    international community regarding how to address them. He reminds us
    that the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
    of Genocide of 1948 does not demand that the parties to the treaty
    take military action to prevent a potential, evolving genocide, but
    rather that prevention "can take military, political, diplomatic or
    economic forms."

    Scheffer advises politicians and policy makers to beware when
    attaching names to mass atrocities-in-progress. He writes: "It is
    the responsibility of historians to establish the facts of distant
    events and of jurists to determine whether these were a genocide,
    crimes against humanity, war crimes, human rights abuses, political
    repression or other crimes against civil or political rights. Using
    the word 'genocide' loosely can be tragically ineffective or
    self-defeating. It can intimidate powerful nations from reacting
    quickly enough to prevent further atrocities."

    For practical purposes, Scheffer advises politicians to "use the phrase
    'atrocity crimes' - a term with no preexisting connotations or legal
    criteria" to describe mass killings. I'm sure his article was read
    and widely appreciated in Homs, Somalia and other places all over
    the world.

    His warning against using "loose terms" for fear that they may cause
    more damage than good, like loose cannons, reminded me of one of the
    so-called paradoxes of Zeno, a Greek philosopher (c. 490-430 BCE ).

    His third paradox, as described by Aristotle in "Physics," is: "If
    everything when it occupies an equal space is at rest, and if that
    which is in locomotion is always occupying such a space at any moment,
    the flying arrow is therefore motionless."

    I know this sounds confusing and seems to deviate from the above train
    of thought, but it is worthwhile to see how this paradox is applied
    by philosopher George Moore (a character in Tom Stoppard's play
    "Jumpers" ) to the predicament of St. Sebastian, a Christian martyr
    killed by the Romans in the third century CE. Moore's observation
    about the saint, who is traditionally depicted as being tied to a
    post and shot with arrows, is: "Since an arrow shot toward a target
    first had to cover half the distance, and then half the remainder,
    and then half the remainder after that, and so on ad infinitum, the
    result was that - though an arrow is always approaching its target,
    it never quite gets there, and St. Sebastian died of fright."

    Coming back to the matter of naming atrocities past and present -
    and leaving the concept of holocaust out of the argument - perhaps we
    really should abstain from using the term "genocide," and possibly even
    forgo "crimes against humanity," "war crimes," "human rights abuses,"
    "political repression" or other crimes against civil or political
    rights, for the good and just cause of "not intimidating powerful
    nations from reacting quickly enough to prevent further atrocities,"
    as Scheffer puts it.

    Which could have led us to rephrase, with a dose of bitter irony:
    Though perpetrators of mass atrocities are in some cases approaching
    their targets, they apparently never quite get there. Thus millions
    of human beings throughout the ages, until our very days, have been
    and still are dying of fright.

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