w w w . h a a r e t z . c o m
 |
 |
 |
|
Scenes from the filming of Haim Yavin's series on the settlers: "It's not Jewish, what we are doing there." (Muki Schwartz)
|
 |
 |
| Our man in the territories |
 |
By Tom Segev |
 |
No
one knew until now what veteran television journalist Haim Yavin
thought about the news he has been announcing for more than three
decades, and he is so nonpartisan that one wondered whether he had an
opinion of his own at all. Now, at 72, he is coming out of the closet:
"Since 1967 we have been brutal conquerors, occupiers, suppressing
another people," he says in "Yoman Masa" ("Diary of a Journey"), which
he filmed in the West Bank.
For two and a half years, Yavin
wandered the West Bank and the Gaza Strip with a small hand-held
camera, which he operated himself, without a technical crew. Here and
there he was reviled as the representative of the hostile leftist
media, but in general the settlers spoke to him on the assumption that
he was their man, and justly so: Until now he was everyone's man. The
film he brought back seems intended to salve his conscience: "I cannot
really do anything to relieve this misery, other than to document it,
so that neither I nor those like me will be able to say that we saw
nothing, heard nothing, knew nothing," he says in the film, and in
response to a question asserts: "I did not move left. The country moved
right."
He filmed people who waited for hours at checkpoints and
says this has no security justification. Settlers who heard from him
about a woman who was not allowed to get to a hospital and therefore
was forced to give birth at a checkpoint, try to reassure him: If only
the Israelis are able to maintain domestic harmony, "Mohammed" will
make coffee both for them and for him. Yavin responds: "I am not
willing to rule another people, not willing for `Mohammed' to make me
coffee." He tells again of the woman who was forced to give birth at a
checkpoint and says, "It is not Jewish, what we are doing there."
He believes in withdrawal so that a Palestinian state
will be established and peace will come. "That is the only thing I can
believe in. Other than that I have nothing to believe in - only in
bloodshed," he tells a female settler. His thoughts move to the roots
of Zionist existence. When he hears people describe Zionism as an
expression of racism and colonialism, he is outraged, of course, he
says, but on returning from the West Bank, he asks himself what remains
of the "true Zionism," the Zionism of peace and equal rights: the
Zionism of the settlements?
|
 |
This
is a good foundation for a discussion of the question of whether there
ever was a "true Zionism" that did not dispossess the Arabs of this
land. Be that as it may, in the first two films in a series of five,
Yavin portrays the settlers as members of a fanatic, insane, racist,
despicable, violent and dangerous sect - more infuriating and
despairing than they have ever been seen in an Israeli film.
It
is no wonder that Channel 1 (the state television station, with which
Yavin has been identified for almost 40 years) refused to broadcast the
series. Instead, it will be broadcast starting next Tuesday as the swan
song of Telad on Channel 2: Having failed to win the tender for a
renewed franchise, Telad can allow itself to end its term with
something real.
A soldier in uniform told Yavin that the Hebron
settlers were inciting him to shoot and kill Palestinian children.
Activist Noam Federman and his wife tell him on camera that an
ultimatum has to be presented to the Arab residents of Hebron: Either
they leave the country immediately, or the Israel Air Force will bomb
their homes. Not far from their home, Yavin filmed a bit of graffiti on
a wall: "Arabs to the crematoria." A Border Policeman, a muscular,
tough-looking guy, says in a heavy Russian accent, "I am only following
orders, I do what I am told." Yavin asserts: "We simply do not see the
Palestinians as human beings."
A Peace Now activist who wanders
around in the territories still believes that the settlers can be
evacuated, as France evacuated its citizens from Algeria, but Yavin
does not bring even an iota of hope from the West Bank: "This hilula
[merrymaking] will never be stopped," he states. He recalls, apparently
with sorrow, how Yitzhak Rabin missed the chance to evacuate the Hebron
settlers in the wake of the massacre of Muslim worshipers by Baruch
Goldstein at the Tomb of the Patriarchs in 1994. About 20,000 Hebron
residents were forced to leave their homes then. Yavin feels "sadness
and despair" and says that "maybe it really is preferable to visit
Hebron with a visa."
Yavin believes that the settlers are
"wrong" and are also "endangering us," but in contrast to some of his
friends on the left, he does not hate the settlers; he even "esteems
and likes them," he says. Occasionally he also tries to "balance"
Palestinian bereavement with Israeli bereavement, as though finding it
difficult to discard the usage of the national "we" that became second
nature to him. But not one of the settlers he filmed justifies his high
regard.
Daniella Weiss, one of the original settlers in the
West Bank, articulates for the camera her credo as a mother: We have to
raise tough children. She gives less consideration to life than to the
idea. A woman named Orit Struk reacts to Yavin's arguments with
bloodcurdling laughter and tells him about how a sniper tried to kill
her son.
In any properly run country, the welfare authorities would take away their children.
Yavin,
though, also tries to jettison the superficial thesis that pins all the
blame on the settlers themselves. In his film, too, they are the
"masters of the land"; they issue orders to the army and the army
obeys. But Yavin's series shows that the whole society is to blame for
the injustices of the occupation and also for the war crimes it has
entailed. "We cluck our tongues and move on to the gossip columns," he
says.
A few of the settlers praise the help they received from
two leaders of the Labor Party, Benjamin Ben-Eliezer and Ehud Barak.
One of the original settlers, Elyakim Haetzni, relates that he has been
fighting for a long time to have one of the squares in Hebron named
after Yigal Alon, the father of the settlements, but Alon's widow
objects.
Yavin shows that the left-wing organizations, such as
Peace Now, are effectively moribund and that only a few humanitarian
groups remain, such as Ta'ayush, Physicians for Human Rights, B'Tselem
and MachsonWatch, the women of the checkpoints. The good Israelis in
the film are individuals: an immunologist (Prof. Zvi Bentwich), a
lawyer (Shlomo Laker), a journalist (Haaretz's Gideon Levy), a
Jerusalem plumber (Ezra Yitzhak Nawi) and a soldier in uniform. who
says that he could not remain silent "in the face of such horrors."
Yavin
says that his professional integrity will allow him to go on anchoring
Channel 1's nightly "Mabat News Magazine." However, the broadcast of
the series on a commercial channel raises the question of why we even
need what continues to be called "public broadcasting." It's not worth
the compulsory fee. One way or the other, it will be interesting to
watch the reactions. It's possible that attention will not focus on the
horrific message of the films, but only on the fact that Haim Yavin, of
all people, made them. If he is right about the moral insensitivity
that prevails in the country, most viewers may react like the family in
the Strauss commercial: Mom, Dad and the kids are visiting the Safari
in Ramat Gan. They see an antelope, say "We saw it," and hurry on. They
see a lion, say "We saw it" - and hurry home to lick an ice cream bar. |