The Jerusalem Post
Jpost search icon google-icon iphone
  Set as Homepage
Thu, Jun 20, 2013   12 Tammuz, 5773
newspapers magazines
 
    • Breaking News
    • Diplomacy & Politics
    • Defense
    • National
    • Mideast
    • Syria
    • Iran
    • World
    • Business
    • Sports
    • Health & Science
    • Environment
  • Video
  • Opinion
    • Columnists
    • Editorials
    • Op-Eds
    • Letters
  • Jewish World
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts & Culture
    • Food & Wine
    • Travel
  • Features
    • Insights & Features
    • Week in review
    • On the Web
    • Shalva Superheroes
    • Obama in Israel
  • Blogs
    • In the news
    • Judaism
    • From the Middle East
    • Lifestyle
    • Aliya
    • Science and Technology
  • JPost Apps
    • iPhone app
    • iPad app
    • Android app
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • RSS feeds
    • JPost Toolbar
    • JPost Newsletter
    • JPost Alert
  • Premium Zone
    • The Jerusalem Report
    • Magazine
    • Metro
    • In Jerusalem
    • ePaper
    • Expert Opinion
    • Q&A
    • Dash
    • Christian Edition
    • Ivrit
  • French
    • Politique & Social
    • Affaires Palestiniennes
    • Diplomatie & Monde
    • Art & Culture
    • Israel
  • Green Israel
JPost Learn Hebrew  
Advertise with us  
Nefesh Guided Aliyah  
Eldan  
AFMDA  
YTA  
Isram Group  
JPost Twitter  
JPost Facebook  
Classifieds  
         
 
 
    
Breaking News
 
 
  • JPost.com
  • Opinion
  • Columnists
 

Another tack: Dishonest and disgusting

By SARAH HONIG
05/10/2012 22:30
Tweet

In 1942, George Orwell said that “so-called peace propaganda is just as dishonest," intellectually disgusting as war propaganda.

GYMNASIA HERZLIYA’s 1st class photo
GYMNASIA HERZLIYA’s 1st class photo Photo: Jerusalem Post Archives
Back in 1942, George Orwell pointed out matter-of-factly that “so-called peace propaganda is just as dishonest and intellectually disgusting as war propaganda." Like war propaganda it concentrates on putting forward a ‘case,’ obscuring the opponent’s point of view and avoiding awkward questions. The line normally followed is ‘those who fight Fascism become Fascist themselves.’”

Just substitute “terrorist” for the “Fascist” or “Nazi” in Orwell’s text.

We have no way of telling whether said text was perused by Zeev Degani, current principal of Gymnasia Herzliya (the Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium, or in its Hebrew moniker, HaGymnasia HaIvrit Herzliya). If he didn’t read this particular Orwell essay in the Partisan Review, Degani should.

Peace-propagandists, Orwell noted therein, “evade quite obvious objections” with “propaganda-tricks” which include “pooh-poohing the actual record of Fascism,” while “systematically exaggerating” alleged “Fascizing processes” within Allied ranks.

Orwell was intrigued by the “psychological processes by which pacifists who started out with an alleged horror of violence end up with a marked tendency to be fascinated by the success and power of Nazism.”

“Even those who don’t,” he wrote, “imagine that one can somehow ‘overcome’ the German Army by lying on one’s back” and they shun “discussion of what the world would actually be like if the Axis dominated it.”

Sound familiar? It should.

We have too many peace-propagandists among us who cunningly skew our reality and dodge discussion of the ramifications of their recommendations. Degani is one and he is influential beyond his pro forma position.

Degani recently told Channel 2 interviewers that the fault for all that provokes ballyhooed local tongue-clicking is Israel’s resort to force: “A nation which employs violence for years against another nation shouldn’t think that the violence only remains in the neighbor’s field. It comes back to us. We are now at one of the peaks of the enhancement and reinforcement of violence which radiates outward and returns inward.”

In this quintessential encapsulation of left-wing conceit, Degani professed to know instantly and smugly who to blame for loutish manifestations on our society’s margins. He harbored no doubts.

By the criteria of his pedagogic omniscience, everything untoward – from teen rowdies disrupting the Cameri Theater’s performance of Ghetto to football hooliganism – emanates from “occupation.” Regardless of sanctimonious linguistic obfuscation, the ultimate logic of Degani’s analysis leads to the denigration of Jewish self-defense.

According to Degani’s facile outline, everything is neatly black and white, with no complexities, subtleties or suggestions of soft shading. Israel is the villainous ogre and the Arabs under its hobnailed boot are the randomly terrorized victims.

It’s a simplistic formula sure to impress juvenile minds placed under Degani’s charge. Therein lies the danger of his crude, one-dimensional distortion. There’s no depth, no background, no history, no whys and wherefores, no hint of justification for anything. It’s sloganism at its shallowest.

Degani gives voice to anti-Israel propaganda, even though he’s sure to indignantly deny this. He teaches his susceptible pupils to see Israel as its enemies portray it. In our region that’s a recipe for self-destruction no matter how ornately and pretentiously garnished with human-rights palaver.

Yet worse than the affectation of virtue, is the plain fact that Degani is wrong (or perhaps demagogically misleading). Disrespectful and disorderly behavior in our midst doesn’t arise from those segments of Israel’s population of whom Degani most disapproves. There’s no infestation of oafish and boorish outcroppings where ideology, tradition and values are high on the scale of priorities.

The thugs who couldn’t contain themselves at the theater didn’t come from the national-religious school system, for instance. But a disproportionate number of volunteers for IDF combat officers’ training and for crack commando units do hail from that environment. Fewer and fewer come from the milieu favored by Degani.

Conceivably the excessive political correctness of the Degani-model school breeds nihilism. Indeed, in 2010 Degani refused to allow IDF officers into Gymnasia Herzliya in the framework of a program geared to stress the importance of “significant military service.”

The results of Degani-like indoctrination aren’t difficult to detect. In one Tel Aviv school ceremony, around the time of Degani’s barring of the officers, students adamantly refused to sing the lyrics to “I Have No Other Country.” Their ties to this country are by inference tenuous and conditional.

Tel Aviv’s educational institutions have descended very far from those of the city’s visionary beginnings and subsequent trailblazing.

Tel Aviv sprang up around Gymnasia Herzliya. Its building was the first public structure erected in 1909 on the shifting sands that would become the first Zionist urban creation. The Gymnasia was Tel Aviv’s central hub. It was founded four years earlier in Jaffa, dedicated to the premise that all subjects can be taught in Hebrew. It served for decades as a magnet for Jewish youth and as the embodiment of Zionist fervor.

But as per the old adage, it appears sadly that Gymnasia Herzliya’s old age shames its youth.

One would have assumed that given the unique circumstances of its birth, this school’s successive stewards would be particularly cognizant of the historic duty entrusted temporarily in their hands.

Instead of posturing as postmodern guardians of other people’s consciences, they ought to remember that the only reason Gymnasia Herzliya ever took off from its ultra-humble beginnings was an insatiable hunger for Jewish nationalism, as distinct from today’s universalist zeitgeist.

Dr. Yehuda-Leib Metman-Cohen and his wife, Fania, founded the school in their own narrow two-room flat off a winding dark and dank alley near today’s Clock Tower in Turkish-ruled Jaffa. Following the then-predominant European pattern, their secondary school accepted pupils aged nine to 19 and offered a nine-year program. Fania, the author of the country’s first-ever Hebrew arithmetic textbook, taught math while stirring the pots in her makeshift kitchenette and peeling onions. After class, both husband and wife washed down the floors each day.

The original teaching staff of four and student body of 17 soon mushroomed. The Gymnasia especially flourished after its relocation to Tel Aviv. Jewish parents the world over sent their offspring to receive Zionist education in “the first Hebrew city.”

It took nerve and verve to forge ahead with an all-Hebrew curriculum when no modern teaching material existed in Hebrew. Everything had to be fashioned from scratch.

“There was an ecstasy of creativity and pioneering that gripped both children and teachers,” recalled the late Dr. Baruch Ben- Yehuda who was enrolled in the school in 1906 and stayed with it for most of his life, studying there, teaching, becoming an inspiring principal and then president. I interviewed him in 1975, when Gymnasia Herzliya celebrated its 70th birthday.

“Everything we did was revolutionary and we were flushed with the importance of our every accomplishment. Our kids roamed the length and breadth of the county, venturing to neglected far-flung corners to form a bond with Israel’s past and present. This school stood in the vanguard of the Jewish national revival and partook in all our national battles. If Mikve Yisrael epitomized the tie with land, Herzliya epitomized the tie with our nationhood and culture,” Ben-Yehuda argued.

He went on: “There’s no major Zionist ideological movement whose activity cannot be traced to Gymnasia Herzliya. Our students also figured in the practical side of the Zionist endeavor. They guarded Tel Aviv when the Ottoman Turks expelled all its residents in WWI. Our students and graduates – like Eliyahu Golomb and Dov Hoz – were among the founders and driving forces of the Hagana. Many in this school took part in Lehi and IZL underground struggles. Our alumni underpinned Israel’s independence and self-defense.

“Our students fought in the ranks of the Jewish Brigade in WWII and set the IDF in motion. We produced outstanding scientists like Prof. Yuval Ne’eman and national poets like Natan Alterman. A great spirit hovered over this institution – the spirit of a national rebirth,” Ben-Yehuda summed up. “This was a miniature Jewish state – the embryo Israel full of dreamers and fighters. If I seek one word to describe Gymnasia Herzliya it’s patriotism.”

The then-novel passion for Hebrew appears to have nowadays been replaced with a penchant for Orwellian Newspeak, produced prodigiously by Israeli Doublethinkers.

Their misuse of the word “occupation” inculcates in the listener’s ear the notion that Israelis willfully, with no provocation, crossed the blessed Green Line one sunny June morning in 1967, snuffled out Palestinian sovereignty (nonexistent though it was) and sadistically subjugated the ancient Palestinian nation (invented only lately).

Heaven forefend we mention that the territory in question isn’t foreign but directly contiguous to our incredibly narrow-waisted state – an integral part of our ancestral homeland – yet we hadn’t taken it until forced to defend ourselves against attempted genocide and ethnic cleansing.

The prattle in latter-day Gymnasia Herzliya about how “occupation corrupts” advocates relinquishment by Israel of its deterrent potential, making instead do with containing would-be annihilators and reacting to their initiatives.

Yet by not utilizing the capabilities we possess, by not opting for decisive victories and by acquiescing to prolonged conflicts of attrition, we embolden our implacable foes to introduce deadlier means and escalate terror. Half-hearted responses invigorate enemy resolve and increase noncombatant casualties and suffering.

That was Orwell’s observation precisely. Despots, he concluded, “can stand ‘moral force’ till the cows come home; what they fear is physical force.”

Ramallah’s and Gaza’s death-mongers fear physical force. They want Israelis to flee. Israelis who preach withdrawal and protest intermittent IDF actions, help fulfill the enemy’s wishes.

Degani and fellow holier-than-thou peace-pontificators are our present-day counterparts to the antiwar activists of Orwell’s day.

Orwell regarded them as “objectively pro- Fascist. This is elementary commonsense. If you hamper the war effort of one side, you automatically help that of the other. Nor is there any real way of remaining outside such a war as the present one. In practice, he that is not with me is against me.”

www.sarahhonig.com
  • Send
  • Large
  • Small
  • Print
  • Share
This article is by :
Sarah Honig
Recent stories:
  • Another Tack: Plucky in pajamas
  • Another Tack: A very Israeli story
  • Another Tack: The light from London
  • Another Tack: Investigable and non-inves...
Most Viewed in
1
Preconditions have no basis in law or fact
2
President Peres
3
Ending the Chief Rabbinate electoral machinations
4
Terra Incongnita: Rewarding IDF service is not discrimination
JPost Community
Tweet
george orwell WAR propaganda PEACE gymnasia nazi
Tweets about "#jpost"
Share this article
Tweet
Share
Send
Your comment must be approved by a moderator before being published on JPost.com. Disqus users can post comments automatically.

Comments must adhere to our Talkback policy. If you believe that a comment has breached the Talkback policy, please press the flag icon to bring it to the attention of our moderation team.
JPost Services
conferenceConference
newsletterNewsletter
iphoneMobile Apps
kotelcamKotel Cam
kolboJPost Alert
premiumPremium
JPost TV News  
Mobile Apps  
Bank Hapoalim  
Meir Panim  
Israel Law Center  
Inbal Hotel Jerusale  
Meier on Rothschild  
Weizmann Institute o  
JPost Premium Zone  
JPost kotel Camera  
         
 
Israel Focus
JPost TV News
Watch Now!  
Donate to Save Lives in Israel
 
Israel Law Center
The ultimate Mission to Israel, October 21 – 28, 2013 Register now!  
Nefesh B'Nefesh Guided Aliyah
Already living in Israel? Enjoy the Benefits of Aliyah!  
One year International MBA
in English, Bar-Ilan University, Israel – Open House July 9, 2013, 17:30  
Give "Freedom" this Passover
to needy Israeli families. Donate now  
YTA – A Yeshiva in Israel…
in English. Come Join Us  
War Threatens
Protect the People of Northern Israel  
Bank Hapoalim
Israeli's number one bank  
Jerusalem Post Lite
Lite Edition of the Jerusalem Post for English improvement  
Learn Hebrew with us
Get 10 minutes free personal coaching in Hebrew through phone or Skype  
JPost newspapers
Sign up for the JPost newspapers and receive one month free subscription  
Kosher English Magazine
English language weekly magazine - especially for religious people  
JReport Kindle Edition
Now you can get the Jerusalem Report directly to your Kindle  
JPost Premium Edition
The very best articles are available only in our Premium edition  
Lifestyle Magazine
 
 
Real Estate
Meier on Rothschild
Tel Aviv's Most Prestigious Address  
Don't Look For a House!
In Israel, our website will do it for you!  
 
Travel
Tourism Magazine
June 2013  
The Inbal Jerusalem Hotel
Hot summer deal, order now!  
Eldan Rent a Car
20% off all Car Rental Reservations in Israel  
Hertz Car Rental
Special Online Discounts!  
The King David Jerusalem Hotel
One of the world's truly iconic hotels, and a Jerusalem landmark  
 
 
 

Sites Of Interest:

Jerusalem Hotels
KKL-JNF
Poalim Online
BreitBart.com
Our Friends
Jerusalem Attractions
Jerusalem Tours
itraveljerusalem.com

JPost sites:

Learn Hebrew
The Jerusalem Report
Our Magazines
JPost Edition Francaise
Green Israel
Christian World
Jerusalem Post Lite

Services:

JPost Mobile Apps
JPost Premium
JPost Newsletter
JPost Toolbar
JPost News Ticker
JPost RSS feeds
JPost Archives
JPost Alert
JPost Kotel Cam

JPost Conferences:

NYC Conference
Diplomatic Conference

Information:

About Us
Feedback
Staff E-mails
Copyright
Sitemap
News Partners
Advertise with Us
Statistics
Ad Specs
Terms Of Service
Jpost.com, the online edition of the Jerusalem Post Newspaper - the most read and best-selling English-language newspaper in Israel. For analysis and opinion from Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East. Jpost.com offers expert and in-depth reporting from Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East, including diplomacy and defense, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, the Arab Spring, the Mideast peace process, politics in Israel, life in Jerusalem, Israel's international affairs, Iran and its nuclear program, Syria and the Syrian civil war, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israel's world of business and finance, and Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora.
 
About Us | Advertise with Us | Subscribe | Premium | Newsletter | RSS | Contact Us
 
All rights reserved © The Jerusalem Post 1995 - 2012