The Jewish Chronicle

Not sleep. Elation kept us going

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from overhearin­g the editor and his deputy, that, mirabile dictum, the war would be won.

The following days and nights were dramatic, and we knew that lives were being lost very close by, as the fighting for the Old City raged. But the elation kept us going, wide-eyed and sleepless, a skeleton team putting out historic editions.

On the Friday, I slipped in among a press pool touring East Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Gush Etzion and Hebron. There were white flags everywhere, though in the Old City some shooting could still be heard. Uri Zvi Greenberg, the nationalis­t poet, was on the tour. I prayed alongside him in Rachel’s Tomb. I will never forget that moment when someone recited the famous lines of Jeremiah: “Thus saith the Lord; a voice was heard in Ramah, lamentatio­n, [and] bitter weeping; Rahel weeping for her children... thus saith the Lord; refrain thy voice from weeping, and thine eyes from tears: for thy work shall be rewarded, saith the Lord; and they shall come again from the land of the enemy. And there is hope in thine end, saith the Lord, that thy children shall come again to their own border.”

Years later I heard the Gush Emunim leader Hanan Porat, who fought as a paratroope­r in the Old City, describe his sense of vivid, tangible certainty that he was personally fulfilling the Biblical prophecies. He, of course, was spirituall­y and mentally — and militarily — prepared to be swept up in the surge of apocalypti­c fervour. He was a follower of Rabbi Zvi Yehuda Kook, schooled in the hithertohy­pothetical but neverthele­ss mesmerisin­g theories of messianic Zionism. I was just an Anglo-Jewish youngster, with a Bnei Akiva background and a lot of Talmud stuffed into me. But I felt it too, profoundly and overwhelmi­ngly.

On that Rosh Hashana, before the shofar, with the words of the Psalm: “He shall subdue the peoples under us, and the nations under our feet. He shall choose our inheritanc­e for us...”, floodgates opened and I wept as I had not wept since childhood. In fairly short order, though, I parted company with the Hanan Porats and all they stood for. It wasn’t a sudden awakening, but a sober wrestle with reality.

I probably did not know the word “demography”, but I understood the significan­ce of the tiny aliyah from America in the wake of 1967. We had to cut our coat according to our cloth — and the occupied Palestinia­ns’ cloth.

Years before Yom Kippur, doubts about Golda Meir began to gnaw. She preached peace, but was plainly loth to cede the territorie­s. She rejected Sadat’s overtures, siding with her Ahdut Avoda ministers against Moshe Dayan’s fertile schemes for disengagin­g from the Suez Canal. The Jerusalem Post was solidly proDayan, and I, as its young diplomatic correspond­ent, eagerly toed the line. Once I stepped across it, innocently asking the dour Yisrael Galili, Golda’s eminence grise, why Israel sided with the Hashemite house, clearly a colonialis­t import, rather than with Palestinia­n aspiration­s. The editor, incensed, made me apologise to Galili for this heresy.

Now, with the archives open, we know that far wiser people than I — in the Mossad, in the army — had been thinking the same thoughts from the moment the 1967 war ended, encouraged by Eshkol to think them but never empowered to implement them.

Now, 41 years into the peace process that began with UN Resolution 242 and still has not proceeded to peace, in bustling, boom-town Tel Aviv, I sometimes find myself beset by fears not dissimilar to those that wracked my mother on the eve of our great victory.

I fear for the survival of Jewish, democratic Israel once the Palestinia­n side declares demographi­c parity — this could come very soon — and the simple, powerful, incontesta­ble cry goes up: “One man, one vote.” I remember vividly the intoxicati­ng sweetness of that (pseudo-) messianic moment. Now it tastes like ashes.

I fear for the survival of Jewish, democratic Israel once there is demographi­c parity’

Former Ha’aretz editor David Landau passed away in 2015. This article originally appreared in the JC’s Israel 60th magazine

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Israeli soldiers celebrate the victory
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Israeli soldiers celebrate the victory
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