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« Israel is not Sparta, it’s Athens » – The Jerusalem Post (02/07/2010)
The Jerusalem Post, par Bernard-Henri Lévy, pour The Jerusalem Post
A l’occasion du colloque « Défendre la démocratie » à Tel-Aviv, dont il a fait l’ouverture le 31 mai dernier, Bernard-Henri Lévy a rencontré le Jérusalem Post. Conversations à bâtons rompus.
L.L.
For a philosopher known for having an opinion on virtually everything, Bernard-Henri Lévy can be surprisingly terse. Shrugging his shoulders and raising his hands as if to ask “isn’t it obvious,” Lévy responds to the question “why as such a staunch supporter of Israel did you put your name to the recent JCall petition,” with the answer “because I am a supporter of Israel.”
But, I put to him, the Right accuses JCall of being shortsighted, of not understanding history and of erroneously putting the onus on Israel when the formula of land for peace is dead and when it is incumbent on the Arabs to recognize Israel as a Jewish state for peace to be made.
The accusation seems to animate Lévy. ”There are two different things,” he explains as he leans forward across the table in the lounge of Tel Aviv’s chic Hotel Montefiore. “Israel recognized by the Arabs, of course. But Israel recognized as a Jewish state by the Arabs, why? The Arabs absolutely must recognize Israel. But the question of whether Israel is a Jewish state or a secular state or whatever is for Israel to decide, not for the Arabs.
“This [Binyamin] Netanyahu claim is absurd on an international level. You cannot ask anybody to recognize a state as a Jewish state or a Christian state or a Muslim state or a secular state. It’s not the problem of international law. International law supposes that the Arabs recognize, definitely, forever, clearly, the full legitimacy of Israel. This is clear on an international level. Recognize Israel as a Jewish state? This is not the problem of the Arabs. Not only do I not ask, I don’t even recognize [the right of] the Arabs to decide what Israel will be. Israel is what the Jewish people makes of it.”
Lévy pauses for a second before adding: “What I know is that I am more than anyone linked to this country, I am linked to this country with all my soul and flesh and I want the best for this country, and the best for this country is peace.”
THE AUTHOR of some 30 books, including a 2006 collection of essays on the US, American Vertigo: Traveling America in the Footsteps of Tocqueville, Who Killed Daniel Pearl? and Left in Dark Times: A Stand Against the New Barbarism, Lévy, 61, was here last month for a Forum Israel – France debate titled “Democracy and Its Challenges” organized by the French embassy.
On that count, he considers Israel a miracle. “The miracle of Israel,” he says, “is that in spite of being constantly at war, it has kept its democratic characteristics and I don’t see many other examples in the world of that. My country, France, after six or seven years of war in Algeria had put in parenthesis, had frozen, quite a good number of freedoms and liberties and democratic rights. The vibrancy, the vitality, the solidity, the constancy of Israeli democracy is amazing. So many countries, nearly all of them, after 60 years of a constant state of war would have taken some liberties with liberty.
“There is Athens and Sparta. Athens for peace and Sparta for wartime. Israel has been at war for 60 years, but is is still not Sparta, it is Athens. This is great, this is amazing.”
Lévy has been writing for years on the dangers of modern anti-Semitism, an anti-Semitism where, he says, the time-worn cliches of the past are readapted, reintegrated and reformulated into a system where Israel has become a synonym for the worst of this world, where hatred of Jews has become associated with defense of the oppressed, where the Jew has been transformed into the executioner, the Jew-hater into the Jew, and where delegitimizing Israel has become a respectable synonym for an ancient scourge.
Demonization of Israel, warns Lévy, is a problem not only in France, not only in Europe, but increasingly in America, and that, he adds, is something that is underestimated both in Israel and in the Jewish world at large.
“America is not a complete paradise of pro-Israel feelings,” he states. “Today, there are strong currents developing inside America that are not so favorable for Israel. This is one of the reasons we are in a hurry to make peace. We cannot wait 10 more years.”
Lévy though harbors no illusions that peace will be a magic wand that will reverse the trend. The anti-Semite, he says, will always find a new means of justification.
“Anti-Semitism, anti-Zionism, which are often the same, will not be solved by a gesture of goodwill,” he says. “They are there. You will never uproot anti-Semitism. Those who hate Israel, if they have not one reason, they will find another one, but that’s not the point. The point is that Israel has the right to live in peace, and the duty toward its citizens to give them a normal life. Israel deserves this. What I say is that peace is more easy today than it will be in a few years.”
Lévy questions how long the US will remain Israel’s best and most faithful ally.
“Nothing is eternal in the history of human beings,” he says, “nothing lasts forever, things change. Politicians have a tendency to believe that the situation of the moment can be frozen for eternity. That is not the case.
“I don’t want to be a prophet of bad omen, but nothing grants that this miraculous friendship will last forever. I know that some say, and it is true, that there is a metaphysical link between Israel and America, that there is a common narrative, the founding fathers, new Jerusalem, etc., but you have also some countercurrents that unfortunately can be strong and we have to take care of that.
“You have some minorities organizing themselves in America who are not favorable to Israel at all. You have anti-Zionism and demonization of Israel in America too. The book of [Stephen] Walt and [John] Mearsheimer about the weight of the pro-Israeli lobby on the foreign policy of America has made some real damage in some weak minds in America. The denial of the Holocaust is not a French speciality. You have some sects on the West Coast of America that are very active on these grounds too.”
While he sees shifting trends in the US, Lévy believes there is now « a window of opportunity with an administration in America, that, whatever some say, is really favorable to Israel.”
HE DESCRIBES Barack Obama as a “goodwill guy” and commends him for being “the first president of America for a long time who did not wait until the last month of the last year of his mandate to try to help, to try to be an ambassador of goodwill.”
George W. Bush and Bill Clinton, says Lévy, waited until it was too late. “Camp David and Taba might have been achieved if it they were undertaken two years before,” he asserts. “It was too late with Clinton racing for his own legacy… the clock was ticking down and [Yasser] Arafat took advantage of that and he played tricks with Ehud Barak, who was incredibly brave and courageous and offering all that could be reasonably offered.”
Does Lévy then, as a signatory to JCall, believe that Obama is pursuing the right policy, that Israel needs to be pushed to make peace?
“You may call it pressure from Obama,” he retorts, “but it is a fact; it is not toughness, it is in the interest of Israel. There was a book by Amos Oz called Help Us to Divorce [also published as How to Cure a Fanatic]. Sometimes between two people you have to have an ambassador of goodwill, you have to have someone helping you to divorce, to make peace and so on. Obama can be this guy.”
Lévy is aware that the divorce is unlikely to be amicable and says that Israel should concentrate on its own interests and not concern itself with how its partner – the Arab world – will conduct itself once the split is complete.
“You, me, the political class in Israel, we can deal only with the decisions of Israel. What can happen in Gaza, what can happen in Syria, is for a big part out of our reach,” he says. “So let’s solve the parts of the problem which are within our reach, which we can solve… I will not be the one and you will not be the one and Bibi Netanyahu will not be the one to solve the problems of the Arab world.”
What happens then if the divorce turns nasty, if Israel makes an agreement with a regime today that is replaced by a hostile regime tomorrow?
Lévy is stoic. “This is the progression of history,” he says. “Today you will deal with Mahmoud Abbas and Mahmoud Abbas can be replaced tomorrow by a Hamas-style regime. If you have to take a worst case scenario, I prefer a real war against a real army than this state of occupation with civilians and maybe tomorrow a third intifada and so on.”
If Obama is the divorce counselor, does Lévy believe Netanyahu is ready for a settlement. In his previous term as prime minister, Netanyahu was the subject of stinging criticism from Lévy who called him a “danger to Israel.” Now though, he says that Netanyahu has “changed a lot and learned a lot.”
“We had two meaningful discussions recently and from what I understand he is not the same Netanyahu,” Lévy observes. “My feeling is that he is clever enough to have the temptation to leave a mark on the history of his people, and I hope so for him and for Israel and for the Jewish people. But I believe he has matured and he has learned a lot. Opposition is often a good laboratory where you can learn about your own mistakes, where one can see things from above. This is what I thought. I may be wrong.”
Lévy, a committed secularist, describes himself as belonging to a “strong Jewish current that ranges from Emmanuel Levinas to Martin Buber to Franz Rosenzweig to Gershom Scholem.” These figures, he says, are the “beating hearts of secular Judaism,” a Judaism that he adds is “as Jewish as the religious one.” At the same time, though, Lévy notes that he has what he calls a “profound, speculative, metaphysical interest in the Jewish texts” and reveals that of late he has become more involved in Jewish studies “but in a secular way.”
Despite his liberal philosophy and perhaps because of his deep secularism, Lévy has come out in support of controversial recent proposals in France to ban the burka.
HE SEES no contradiction between his liberal stance and his support for the ban. “The burka is not a religious but a political emblem,” he explains. ”Politically it means the occupation and humiliation of women. I am attached all over the world to the key principle of equality between sexes, secularism, to men and women being equal. The burka is just a humiliation. If it was in the holy text, were it a proscription by Islam, I would not be involved. Except that even then I would say all holy texts are adapted to the era.
“But that is not the case, it is not in the holy texts. All the serious scholars of Islam admit today that it does not belong to the body of principles of Islam. It is just a political way in Europe, No. 1, to humiliate women and, No. 2, to test the capacity of resistance of democracy, and democracies must resist that even if there is only one [burka]. People sometimes say, ‘Okay, but we have only a few hundred burkas,’ but when you deal with constitutional principles, even one exception is too much. You cannot say I’m not going to forbid a crime because there are only a few. To impose inequality on women in France is a crime, so even if there are only a few dozen, you need a law.”
The encounter between Islam and the West and radical Islam are issues that Lévy has investigated intensively. Asked how he explains the phenomenon of Western-born Muslims who have committed terrorist attacks, he replies: “This encounter can produce the best and sometimes can produce the worst. They are the worst product of this encounter and they are the symptom of this encounter when it fails. Thank God they are only a minority, although a minority that does a lot of damage.”
What then is the right model for integration, multiculturalism or the melting pot? Lévy would choose the middle way. “There is probably an excess in France of republicanism, which is that we ask probably too much from our citizens of non-Western origins in terms of abandoning their roots and identity. On the other hand in England they ask and demand too little. I believe that the good path is in between.”
Once again, Lévy has words of praise for Israel on how it has handled its own encounter with its Arab citizens. “The fact that in spite of 60 years of war, in spite of this propaganda from outside on some citizens of Israel, the model of Haifa still works is a miracle. In France it would be already a non-law area with riots, not a few days like five or six years ago, but all year around, so it’s a miracle, a democratic miracle. In Israel you have a pattern of citizenship which works well in times of war, strangely well, and which will work amazingly well in times of peace. You will see, having achieved what has been done in times of war, what will be done in times of peace.”
by Ilan Evyatar
Publié également le 6 Juillet 2010
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Le 20 avril 1981...
BHL invité au Petit Journal de Noël, de Yann Barthès, Canal +
Chère Madame Lazar, pardonnez-moi pour ce commentaire que je vous ai emailé, trébuchant sur quelques fautes de frappe. Le voici à présent, après corrections. Merci par ailleurs, pour ce site maginifique.
…
Reconnaître Israël plutôt que l’État juif, à quel Juif cela pourrait-il poser problème? Reconnaître l’État-nation Israël, c’est reconnaître l’existence d’une nation de Jacob, c’est voir dans l’État du fils d’Isaac, celui des douze tribus dont il est le père. En somme, reconnaître Israël, c’est reconnaître que lorsque l’on foule le sol d’Israël, on ne pose pas les pieds en Ismaël, pas plus qu’en Édom. Or, est-ce que le fait qu’Israël ne soit pas Ismaël efface Ismaël de la carte du monde? Sans doute aux yeux de l’ignorant qui ne sait pas qu’Ismaël a quitté Abraham depuis quatre mille ans pour aller donner naissance à une grande nation loin d’Isaac et de sa descendance. Et qu’en est-il de l’effacement redouté pour Édom? Aux dernières nouvelles, Édom fut assimilé à Rome, et Rome se porte bien à quelques milliers de milles de la côte Ouest de l’Orient, n’ayant pas donné le moindre signe d’une volonté d’extraire de sa botte la jambe romuléenne. Alors vous me direz, quid de Suleiman? Comment fera-t-il l’Ismaélite pour se sentir Israélien? À cela je vous réponds, il fera comme je fais, moi le Juif né au pays de Clovis. Il contribuera à la révolution permanente d’une nation ayant pour instinct d’assurer sa propre conservation, et pour ce faire, d’assimiler tout ce qui arrivant de l’extérieur ou survenant de l’intérieur, sera en mesure de maximiser les chances de son évolution optimale. Que le Français d’origine juive offre au royaume des Francs ou à la république laïque posée sur celui-ci, une chance de faire entendre sa voix au sein du chœur de la symphonie mondiale, et vous verrez qu’il ne se sentira plus le moins du monde exclu de ce monde.
Je me sens en France absolument chez moi. Je suis très conscient de l’incommensurable dette de mon pays à l’égard de mes ancêtres. Je suis aussi conscient de ce qu’il me doit. Mais cela ne me fait pas oublier tout ce que nous lui dûmes, mes ancêtres et moi-même, de biens comme de maux. Et si la France d’aujourd’hui n’est ni juive ni chrétienne ni quoi de sacré ou de saint que se soit d’autre, il n’en reste pas moins que je ne chercherais pas à mettre dans ma tête ou dans la tête des autres qu’à l’élaboration du Codex Theodosianus, fut consulté Gamaliel VI, dernier Nassi duquel l’empereur n’autorisa la désignation d’aucun successeur, ou que ce fut Rachi de Troyes qui fonda le protestantisme quand même la traduction de la Bible par Martin Luther fut inspirée de son exégèse par le truchement du frère mineur et judéo-convers, Nicolas de Lyre. Un peuple est comme un livre et un livre est fait pour être lu. Il ne faut pas en effacer une ligne. Il ne faut pas en effacer un mot. Il ne faut pas en effacer une lettre. Le lecteur d’une nation qui se permettrait d’en sauter un ou plusieurs chapitres pourrait se trouver en très mauvaise posture dès lors que certain personnage lui étant inconnu, réapparaîtrait dans un prochain tome et s’y conduirait selon comme un lecteur attentif et respectueux de l’auteur eût pu s’y attendre et en tirer l’inestimable avantage de déjouer ses mauvais tours ou d’attirer sur lui ses bienfaits. Les Juifs non seulement sont dépositaires d’une Histoire colossale, mais leur capacité sans égale à assurer le transfert de l’antique témoignage de la Révélation du Sinaï, lequel comprend le témoignage de la manière dont s’effectuèrent ces transferts successifs, vers chaque nouvelle génération, empêcha le délitement de leur peuple malgré deux mille ans d’exil et de dispersion. Ils sont en même temps ce peuple extra-historique si merveilleusement décrit par Franz Rozensweig, mais ils sont aussi le peuple duquel et de par lequel Shalom Wittmayer Baron authentifia la dimension religieuse de l’Histoire autant que la dimension historiciste de la religion.
Car une nation n’est pas un Golem. Car un État-nation n’est pas un État-golem. Car même les Etats-Unis ne sont pas une personne abstraite, sans passé, sans mémoire, sans caractère ayant décidé des actions désormais mémorisées et formant la tapisserie des Heures passées ici. Or ce « passé ici », aucune laïcité ne saurait l’effacer, quand la guerre de laïcisation de la nation aura été l’un de ces événements ineffaçables de la mémoire nationale. Et si un jour, un Arabe israélien était élu président de l’Israël démocratique, il devrait a priori d’un tel processus d’accession avoir été traversé par les lettres de feu des 613 mitsvot et en répercuter le parfum avec autant de ferveur que le fils du Kényan Barack Obama Senior, avant de pouvoir à présent y apposer sa griffe, a dû faire siennes les couleurs de l’Histoire et les valeurs politiques et religieuses de l’Amérique des Pères fondateurs. Israël n’est pas aujourd’hui davantage que depuis Chaoul, une théocratie absolue, or que reste-t-il d’une théocratie sans absoluité, et pour même qu’un demos futur le laïcise ou aille jusqu’à l’athéiser, pour paraphraser Lévinas, si Israël ne connaît pas le Talmud, le Talmud, lui, le connaît.
Commentaire par Asermourt — mercredi 7 juillet 2010 @ 11:34