Other Schools
Open University – Yigal Levy (Dept of Sociology) helps
to spread lies about "Jewish jihad" and "war crimes" during
Operation Cast Lead
"We have reached the point where a critical
mass of religious soldiers is trying to negotiate with the army
about how and for what purpose military force is employed on the
battlefield," said Yigal Levy, a political sociologist at the Open
University who has written several books on the Israeli army.
The new atmosphere was evident in the
"excessive force" used in the recent Gaza operation, Dr Levy said.
More than 1,300 Palestinians were killed, a majority of them
civilians, and thousands were injured as whole neighbourhoods of
Gaza were levelled.
"When soldiers, including secular ones, are
imbued with theological ideas, it makes them less sensitive to human
rights or the suffering of the other side."
http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=30234
Did the Israeli Army Wage Jewish Jihad in
Gaza?
The greater role of Jewish extremist religious groups in the
Israeli army came to light last week when it emerged that the army
rabbinate had handed out a booklet to soldiers preparing for the
recent 22-day Gaza offensive, notes Jonathan Cook.
Jonathan Cook
First Published: 2009-02-05
Religious extremists' rapid rise through the
ranks
Extremist rabbis and their followers, bent on
waging holy war against the Palestinians, are taking over the
Israeli army by stealth, according to critics.
In a process one military historian has termed
the rapid "theologisation" of the Israeli army, there are now entire
units of religious combat soldiers, many of them based in West Bank
settlements. They answer to hardline rabbis who call for the
establishment of a Greater Israel that includes the occupied
Palestinian territories.
Their influence in shaping the army's goals and
methods is starting to be felt, say observers, as more and more
graduates from officer courses are also drawn from Israel's
religious extremist population.
"We have reached the point where a critical
mass of religious soldiers is trying to negotiate with the army
about how and for what purpose military force is employed on the
battlefield," said Yigal Levy, a political sociologist at the Open
University who has written several books on the Israeli army.
The new atmosphere was evident in the
"excessive force" used in the recent Gaza operation, Dr Levy said.
More than 1,300 Palestinians were killed, a majority of them
civilians, and thousands were injured as whole neighbourhoods of
Gaza were levelled.
"When soldiers, including secular ones, are
imbued with theological ideas, it makes them less sensitive to human
rights or the suffering of the other side."
The greater role of extremist religious groups
in the army came to light last week when it emerged that the army
rabbinate had handed out a booklet to soldiers preparing for the
recent 22-day Gaza offensive.
Yesh Din, an Israeli human rights group, said
the material contained messages "bordering on racist incitement
against the Palestinian people" and might have encouraged soldiers
to ignore international law.
The booklet quotes extensively from Shlomo
Aviner, a far-right rabbi who heads a religious seminary in the
Muslim quarter of East Jerusalem. He compares the Palestinians to
the Philistines, the Biblical enemy of the Jews.
He advises: "When you show mercy to a cruel
enemy, you are being cruel to pure and honest soldiers … This is a
war on murderers." He also cites a Biblical ban on "surrendering a
single millimetre" of Greater Israel.
The booklet was approved by the army's chief
rabbi, Brig Gen Avichai Ronsky, who is reportedly determined to
improve the army's "combat values" after its failure to crush
Hizbollah in Lebanon in 2006.
Gen Ronsky was appointed three years ago in a
move designed, according to the Israeli media, to placate hardline
religious elements within the army and the settler community.
Gen Ronsky, himself a settler in the West Bank
community of Itimar, near Nablus, is close to far-right groups.
According to reports, he pays regular visits to jailed members of
Jewish terror groups; he has offered his home to a settler who is
under house arrest for wounding Palestinians; and he has introduced
senior officers to a small group of extremist settlers who live
among more than 150,000 Palestinians in Hebron.
He has also radically overhauled the rabbinate,
which was originally founded to offer religious services and ensure
religious soldiers were able to observe the sabbath and eat kosher
meals in army canteens.
Over the past year the rabbinate has
effectively taken over the role of the army's education corps
through its Jewish Awareness Department, which co-ordinates its
activities with Elad, a settler organisation that is active in East
Jerusalem.
In October, the Haaretz newspaper quoted an
unnamed senior officer who accused the rabbinate of carrying out the
religious and political "brainwashing" of troops.
Dr Levy said the army rabbinate's power was
growing as the ranks of religious soldiers swelled.
Breaking the Silence, a project run by soldiers
seeking to expose the army's behaviour against Palestinians, said
the booklet handed out to troops in Gaza had originated among
Hebron's settlers.
"The document has been around since at least
2003," said Mikhael Manekin, 29, one of the group's directors and
himself religiously observant. "But what is new is that the army has
been effectively subcontracted to promote the views of the extremist
settlers to its soldiers."
The power of the religious right in the army
reflected wider social trends inside Israel, Dr Levy said. He
pointed out that the rural cooperatives known as kibbutzim that were
once home to Israel's secular middle classes and produced the bulk
of its officer corps had been on the wane since the early 1980s.
"The vacuum left by their gradual retreat from
the army was filled by religious youngsters and by the children of
the settlements. They now dominate in many branches of the army."
According to figures cited in the Israeli
media, more than one-third of all Israel's combat soldiers are
religious, as are more than 40 per cent of those graduating from
officer courses.
The army has encouraged this trend by creating
some two dozen hesder yeshivas, seminaries in which youths can
combine Biblical studies with army service in separate religious
units. Many of the yeshivas are based in the West Bank, where
students are educated by the settlements' extremist rabbis.
Ehud Barak, the defence minister, has rapidly
expanded the programme, approving four yeshivas, three based in
settlements, last summer. Another 10 are reportedly awaiting his
approval.
Mr Manekin, however, warned against blaming the
violence inflicted on Gaza's civilians solely on the influence of
religious extremists.
"The army is still run by the secular elites in
Israel and they have always been reckless with regard to the safety
of civilians when they wage war. Jewish nationalism that justifies
Palestinian deaths is just as dangerous as religious extremism."
Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist
based in Nazareth, Israel. His latest book is "Disappearing
Palestine: Israel's Experiments in Human Despair" (Zed Books). His
website is www.jkcook.net. A version of this article originally
appeared in The National.
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