Hi
Everyone,
My
dear friend Bruce Schimmel wrote this column for the Philadelphia City
Paper. You should read it. I’ve pasted the text below, but the link is:
http://citypaper.net/articles/2005-02-17/canon.shtml
Very
beautiful.
Love,
Irène
loose canon
Come to Israel
Learn
what the world's most dynamic democracy can teach the oldest.
by
Bruce Schimmel
I don't care if
you're Jewish, Catholic, Muslim or Zen Buddhist. And it matters not if your
politics are red, blue or green. If you care about America's
political future, go to Israel.
If you fear what the threat of terrorism is doing to our civic values, go
witness a democracy that's really under fire, yet far more vibrant than ours.
With all due
respect to our soldiers and families who've lost loved ones, Americans don't
live with terror intimately and daily. Every Israeli does. There, the signs of
war are everywhere. In front of every store and restaurant, you are searched.
On every bus, young soldiers fresh out of high school carry M-16s and scan the
crowd. Every child — rich, poor, male, female — is expected to
serve in the armed forces, as nearly every adult in Israel has.
Nations at war
will trade civil rights for security, casting democracy aside as invaders
breach the gates. Since 9/11, America
stopped offering foreigners the protections of our Constitution; our own
citizens' bags can now be searched on the sly. Our right to petition our
government through the Freedom of Information Act is increasingly treated like
a quaint anachronism.
And with the loss
of our basic civil rights, basic civic values have also declined. Our rich
political culture has been reduced to two sets of slogans. Our political system
has become a duopoly of dolts, red and blue clowns spewing snarky one-liners.
Political dialogue has become a subset of sitcoms; our elections are survival
contests where candidates ingest whatever scum that surfaces. The art of
compromise is dead, as governance has become a blood sport where the winner
takes all. We are well on the road to fascism.
In stark contrast
to America, participatory
democracy is thriving in Israel,
a country that has been at war for more than 50 years. Israel's
democracy is an incredibly voracious political critter. It feeds on a vast
garden of ideas, planted by dozens of political parties. In its media,
discussion is fierce, thoughtful and varied; in the Knesset, there are odd
bedfellows indeed and compromises aplenty. And at the ballot box, where
citizens most tangibly express their civic values,three-quarters of its
citizens regularly come out to vote versus the usual American turnout of 50
percent.
Come to Israel and see
for yourself what American media is not telling you. Last year, when I went to Israel for the
first time, readers sent me with a notebook full of people to see and places to
visit. It was an eye-opener. Through you, I met American journalists like Judy
Balint, whose sharp-witted and poignant Jerusalem
Diaries didn't make it to these shores. I visited with David Bedein,
whose detailed investigations into the United Nation's diversion of funds to
Palestinian terrorists are apparently too shocking for our press. Before I
return in April, I hope you'll send more names of journalists who are not being
heard and from whom we can all learn.
But if you've
never been to Israel,
it's time to make your own pilgrimage.
Though tourists
have rarely been targeted, don't get me wrong: Israel
is probably not much safer since Israel's Ariel Sharon and the
Palestinian Authority's Mahmoud Abbas recently shared a front page. The Arab
leaders in charge are still greedy thugs who practice genocide by proxy on
their own, using Israel's
soldiers to pull the trigger. Even after the handshake, after their recent
election, Palestinians are still being promised all of Israel's
land. And that the people of Israel
will simply disappear.
That all the
infidels must be killed is essentially the same battle cry that inspired
suicide attackers to visit our own shores. Except that Israel has been
living in the shadow of hate for more than 50 years.
We can learn from Israel's
experience balancing the demands of war with the needs of civilization. We can
learn again how to foster dialogue under fire. In founding our own nation, Philadelphia created a
Constitution and a Bill of Rights as war raged around us. "We the
people" — American democracy — was invented in Philadelphia: in its
parks, in its pubs, in the quiet conversations of its intimate streets. And as
one of few modern cities to have a viable middle class, that bedrock of
democracy, Philadelphia
can be home to a new kind of common space where common sense prevails.
It's an article of
faith, and it's true, that among Middle Eastern theocracies and thugocracies, Israel is the
sole bulwark of democracy. As Iraq
drowns in violence, despite or because of the American occupation, Israel is our
only friend. For their sake, for our own, we now need to be a friend to Israel.
And the best way
to do that is to go there.
As a pal of mine,
paraphrasing Brecht, likes to say, your friends are the ones that show up. So
show up. Witness the beauty and the horror of a dynamic political culture
inspired by our own highest dreams. Be a friend to a splendid, messy democracy
they learned from America
— and let Israel
be a mentor to us in return.
-- Respond to this article in our Forums -- click to jump there
Irène Hodes
Media Relations Coordinator
Museum of Contemporary Art
220 East Chicago Avenue
Chicago, Illinois 60611
312.397.3832
ihodes@mcachicago.org

February 12 – June 5, 2005
www.mcachicago.org/media