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The
New People |
The Ethics of Revenge
by a father who lost his son to terror
A speech by Yitzhak Frankenthal, Chairman of the Families Forum, at a rally
in Jerusalem on Saturday, July 27, 2002, outside the Prime Minister’s residence.
My beloved son Arik, my own flesh and blood, was murdered by Palestinians. My
tall blue-eyed golden-haired son who was always smiling with the innocence of a
child and the understanding of an adult. My son. If to hit his killers, innocent
Palestinian children and other civilians would have to be killed, I would ask
the security forces to wait for another opportunity. If the security forces were
to kill innocent Palestinians as well, I would tell them they were no better
than my son’s killers.
My beloved son Arik was murdered by a Palestinian. Should the security forces
have information of this murderer’s whereabouts, and should it turn out that he
was surrounded by innocent children and other Palestinian civilians, then - even
if the security forces knew that the killer was planning another murderous
attack that was to be launched within hours and they now had the choice of
curbing a terror attack that would kill innocent Israeli civilians but at the
cost of hitting innocent Palestinians, I would tell the security forces not to
seek revenge but to try to avoid and prevent the death of innocent civilians, be
they Israelis or Palestinians.
I would rather have the finger that pushes the trigger or the button that
drops the bomb tremble before it kills my son’s murderer, than for innocent
civilians to be killed. I would say to the security forces: do not kill the
killer. Rather, bring him before an Israeli court. You are not the judiciary.
Your only motivation should not be vengeance, but the prevention of any injury
to innocent civilians.
Ethics are not black and white – they are all white. Ethics have to be free
of vengefulness and rashness. Every act must be carefully weighed before a
decision is made to see whether it meets the strict ethical criteria. Ethics
cannot be left to the discretion of anyone who is frivolous or trigger-happy.
Our ethics are hanging by a thread, at the mercy of every soldier and
politician. I am not at all sure that I am willing to delegate my ethics to
them.
It is unethical to kill innocent Israeli or Palestinian women and children.
It is also unethical to control another nation and to lead it to lose its
humaneness. It is patently unethical to drop a bomb that kills innocent
Palestinians. It is blatantly unethical to wreak vengeance upon innocent
bystanders. It is, on the other hand, supremely ethical to prevent the death of
any human being. But if such prevention causes the futile death of others, the
ethical foundation for such prevention is lost.
A nation that cannot draw the line is doomed to eventually apply unethical
measures against its own people. The worst in my mind is not what has already
happened but what I am sure one day will. And it will – because ethics are now
being twisted and the political and military leadership does not even have the
most basic integrity to say: "we are sorry".
We lost sight of our ethics long before the suicide bombings. The breaking
point was when we started to control another nation.
My son Arik was born into a democracy with a chance for a decent, settled
life. Arik’s killer was born into an appalling occupation, into an ethical
chaos. Had my son been born in his stead, he may have ended up doing the same.
Had I myself been born into the political and ethical chaos that is the
Palestinians’ daily reality, I would certainly have tried to kill and hurt the
occupier; had I not, I would have betrayed my essence as a free man. Let all the
self-righteous who speak of ruthless Palestinian murderers take a hard look in
the mirror and ask themselves what they would have done had they been the ones
living under occupation. I can say for myself that I, Yitzhak Frankenthal, would
have undoubtedly become a freedom fighter and would have killed as many on the
other side as I possibly could. It is this depraved hypocrisy that pushes the
Palestinians to fight us relentlessly. Our double standard that allows us to
boast the highest military ethics, while the same military slays innocent
children. This lack of ethics is bound to corrupt us.
My son Arik was murdered when he was a soldier by Palestinian fighters who
believed in the ethical basis of their struggle against the occupation. My son
Arik was not murdered because he was Jewish but because he is part of the nation
that occupies the territory of another.
I know these are concepts that are unpalatable, but I must voice them loud
and clear, because they come from my heart – the heart of a father whose son did
not get to live because his people were blinded with power. As much as I would
like to do so, I cannot say that the Palestinians are to blame for my son’s
death. That would be the easy way out, but it is we, Israelis, who are to blame
because of the occupation. Anyone who refuses to heed this awful truth will
eventually lead to our destruction.
The Palestinians cannot drive us away – they have long acknowledged our
existence. They have been ready to make peace with us; it is we who are
unwilling to make peace with them. It is we who insist on maintaining our
control over them; it is we who escalate the situation in the region and feed
the cycle of bloodshed.
I regret to say it, but the blame is entirely ours.
I do not mean to absolve the Palestinians and by no means justify attacks
against Israeli civilians. No attack against civilians can be condoned. But as
an occupation force it is we who trample over human dignity, it is we who crush
the liberty of Palestinians and it is we who push an entire nation to crazy acts
of despair.
Finally, I call on my brothers and sisters in the settlements – see what we
have come to.