Frequently, the victims of terrorism include
those people that the terrorists would otherwise spare, or even protect,
including the Arab population of Israel who suffered casualties from
Hezbollah bombs alongside their Jewish neighbors. According to FSM
Contributing Editor Stephen Schwartz, it is in these people, who could
escape violence but instead stand with their neighbors and their homes
against their ostensible peers, that the world glimpses the commitment
to civilization that is truly under assault.
Haifa and Sarajevo: A Meditation
Stephen Schwartz
August 16, 2006
The civilized world has been promised an end to the carnage at the
border of Lebanon and Israel. People of faith and goodwill look toward
dissolution of the Hezbollah militia and the rescue of Lebanese
democracy, the hostage of Hassan Nasrallah and his Shia Muslim
radicals. Residents of northern Israel and southern Lebanon have begun
returning to their homes.
An important story has been ignored by the mainstream media (MSM) in the
month of continuing terror: the saga of those Israeli Arabs who suffered
alongside Jews, under the rocket fire coming from the north.
Israeli Arabs, like Jews, were forced into shelters by Hezbollah
missiles. Many Arabs evacuated the northern quarter of Israel. Personnel
with whom I work closely at the al-Qasemi Academy, a Sufi Muslim
teaching institution just inside the Israeli border, sent e-mails to me
describing their concern and, in one case, a decision to take shelter in
Jerusalem.
The city of Haifa, known for Jewish-Arab solidarity over many
generations, played a special, symbolic role in the torment of the past
four weeks. With a combination of arrogance and fear, Hassan Nasrallah
broadcast a speech telling Israeli Arabs to abandon the great port. He
said, “I call on you to leave this city. I hope you do this...please
leave so we don't shed your blood, which is our blood.”
Nasrallah's demand reflected weakness rather than
strength. Notwithstanding the disinformation purveyed far and wide,
Hezbollah provoked great resentment among ordinary Lebanese and Arabs
for its adventurism, which proved disastrous for all those living on
both sides of the border. One Haifa resident, a high school teacher
named Azam Halabi – almost certainly an Arab – was quoted in the
Toronto Star of August 15, 2006. As he resumed his normal habit of
fishing off the breakwater that is one of the city's prominent features,
he commented, “Now there is a feeling that something is going to be all
right. Today, we have a hope.”
Political and media demagogues may continue their pattern of incitement
against Israel and adulation of Hezbollah, but ordinary people will
increasingly assert their right to live in peace, to support their
families, and to pursue their work in a secure and free society – free,
above all, of the menace of sudden murder.
In pondering the fate of the Israeli Arabs, targeted by Hezbollah
alongside their Jewish neighbors, it was inevitable that I would be
reminded of Sarajevo, the Bosnian capital where I learned lessons about
interfaith cooperation, about friendship between Muslims, Jews, and
Christians, and about how civilized people defend their city – lessons
that changed my life. It was said then, by a Muslim woman journalist I
knew, Azra Alimajstorovic, that the victims of Sarajevo were neither
Muslim, nor Serb, nor Croatian, nor Jewish; they were all Sarajevans,
neither more nor less.
Israeli Arab Sufis will now restore and continue their educational
program. With them in my heart, I recalled some Serbs I know who stayed
in Sarajevo while “their own people” rocketed and sniped at them and
their neighbors, killing more than 12,000 people, including 1100
children. Like my colleagues from the al-Qasemi Academy, some Sarajevo
Serbs refused to be stampeded against those with whom they had spent
their whole lives.
Indeed, Serbs stood among the heroes of Sarajevo's defense. Gen. Jovan
Divjak, an officer in the former Yugoslav Army, is a Serb who directed
resistance along Sarajevo's front lines. One night, four years after the
end of fighting and imposition of the Dayton Accord in 1995, I sat with
a woman friend and watched a documentary in which the brave Divjak
defied gunfire from Serb irregulars – terrorists no less than Hezbollah
– keeping his head high as he confronted those intent on destroying his
life, his family, and his history.
When Divjak took me to visit the trenches above Sarajevo, I commented on
how shallow they were, and wondered aloud if they had been filled in by
the passage of several winters, and alteration between snow and thaw on
the ground. No, Divjak told me, they had never been deep, because they
were dug with the bare hands of the Bosnian fighters. Divjak now directs
a charity helping Bosnian children.
Another Sarajevo hero I know is Mirko Pejanovic, of the local Serb Civic
Council. Pejanovic also refused to leave the city and participated in
its civic life throughout the years of the siege. Yet another figure was
Dragan Vikic, who had been commander of special police units in Sarajevo
when the cruel encirclement and assault on the city began. After the
war, Vikic gained no special honors or enrichment from his courageous
act. Today he owns a small cafe.
Northern Israel will rebuild quickly and the Israeli Arabs who live
there will share in the reestablishment of a normal society, with the
help of friends in America and around the world.
We live in an age where terrorists seek to burst apart the bonds of
civilization – a word derived from the Latin civitas, or city –
just as the words citizen and civility originate with
the idea of the city. Wars between countries are passing from our
experience; we now survive, if we are lucky, wars between fanatical
ideologues and ordinary people.
Those of us who believe in civility, citizenship, civilization – and
ultimately in the city itself – will stand with those who have refused
to abandon their cities: Haifa, London, New York, Sarajevo. We will
defend the foundation of faith: love thy neighbor. We will prevail, as
Serbs loyal to Sarajevo and the Israeli Arabs who love Haifa will
prevail. We will defend our city, which is the city of humanity.