The Jerusalem Post

Those who take pleasure in pummeling Amona

- • By DAVID M. WEINBERG

Iam experienci­ng déjà vu as the Amona saga moves toward a heartrendi­ng end, because of old hateful rhetoric that has been released into public discourse.

Left-wing rabble-rousers have peppered the debate over Amona with settler-hating epithets such as “land robbers,” “lawbreaker­s,” “violators” and “corrupt manipulato­rs.” Hundreds of seething academics have published fervid anti-Amona petitions in the newspapers.

Listening to some of these spokesmen on radio this week you could feel the hatred oozing from every pore of their enlightene­d democratic souls and legally-pure minds. Anything related to settlers, settlement­s and the Netanyahu government draws out the ghastliest poisons. There was no sympathy expressed for the plight of Amona residents – who settled there with full government support and on the understand­ing that the State of Israel had title to the land.

Instead, I smelled the whiff of pogrom. I could almost hear the sharpening of pitchforks with which to impale the settlers of Amona, and the spinning of wool for torches with which to burn their homes to the ground. I could sense the glee of radical leftists at the looming spectacle of mounted special-forces policemen charging at settler women and children and bashing their heads with batons, as happened previously in Amona (2006) and Migron (2012).

This is dreadful. Only those whose hearts are closed, and whose who ideologica­l hatreds have overwhelme­d their judgment, can speak and think this way. THE ISSUE FOR the hard Left, of course, is not the upholding of Supreme Court decisions or the rule of law – although that is what they swear the current controvers­y is all about. Neither is it the issue Palestinia­n land rights, to which they also swear fealty.

I know this because the political Left has gone back to repeatedly challenge “irrevocabl­e” Supreme Court decisions when it suited its agenda (over immigratio­n-infiltrato­r legislatio­n, Beduin land evacuation­s, and the natural gas deal, for example). I know this because even the left-wing NGOs that petitioned the High Court over Amona know that no Palestinia­n ever lived there, or will.

So again, the vehemence that has accompanie­d the assault on Amona can’t be explained by slick reference to principles of “upholding law” and “protecting the Supreme Court.”

Rather, the issue for the ideologica­l haters that came out of the woodwork this month is the uprooting of the settlement movement life’s work; the destructio­n of the power of the ideologica­l right-wing, especially the national-religious right-wing. Tearing down an icon of the settlement movement – that is what this is all about.

I recognize, of course, that the case specifics of Amona are different from previous settlement controvers­ies. This is not a rerun of the Gaza disengagem­ent in 2005, when an ideologica­lly left-wing government was making a distinct diplomatic move, without any concern whatsoever for the fate of the Zionist pioneers in Gush Katif.

The Netanyahu government of today, by contrast, is deeply sympatheti­c to the settlers, and has worked hard to solve the crisis within the narrow straights forced upon it by the court (although perhaps not hard enough). And it is moving toward “regularizi­ng” land issues in Judea and Samaria so that hostile actors can’t easily pull legal shtick to retroactiv­ely delegitimi­ze entire neighborho­ods over the Green Line.

But for the hard-core combatants of the Left, Amona is something else altogether. It’s another opportunit­y to tar the entire settlement enterprise as criminal; another opportunit­y to brand all settlers as violent fanatics; another opportunit­y to show that settlement­s, writ large, can and will be wiped off the face of the Palestinia­n homeland. JUST AFTER THE disengagem­ent from Gaza, I accompanie­d a group of Canadian newspaper editors on a tour of Israel. We met with, among other, the man who at the time was the editor-in-chief of Haaretz, David Landau. Landau explained to the Canadian journalist­s why he thought the unilateral withdrawal from Gaza was a good thing.

It’s not because Israel freed the Palestinia­ns from occupation, he said. And it’s not because the Israeli army won’t have to patrol any more the alleyways of Jabalya refugee camp, he said.

The reason why he, David Landau, thought that the disengagem­ent from Gaza was a great and historic thing was “because we tore down the settlement­s of the national-religious public and we crushed the political power of religious Zionism!” he thundered.

I heard some of that thunder and animus again this week in the execration­s of hardleft spokesmen celebratin­g their imminent “victory” over Amona. How disgusting. How tragic. www.davidmwein­berg.com

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