I - The Theological Myths
by Roger Garaudy
1 - The Myth of the "Promise" : Promised Land or Conquered
Land?
The Fundamentalist interpretation of political Zionism.
* "If one possesses the book of the Bible, if one considers oneself
as the people of the Bible, one should possess all the Biblical lands."
General Moshe Dayan. "Jerusalem Post". August 30th 1967.
* On February 25th 1994, Doctor Baruch Goldstein massacred Arabs praying
at the tomb of the Patriarchs.
* On November 4th 1995, Ygal Amir assassinated Isaac Rabin, "by order
of God", and of his group of "warriors of Israel", to
execute whoever should yield to the Arabs the "Promised Land"
of "Judah and Samaria" (present-day Cis-Jordania).
a) The Christian exegesis
Albert de Pury, a professor of the Old Testament at
the Protestant Faculty of Theology at Geneva, sums up his doctorate thesis
in the following words:
"Divine promise and cultural legend in the cycle of Jacob»
(2 volumes,Gabalda Publishers, Paris 1975), in which he integrates, discusses
and prolongs the research of the greatest contemporary historians of the
Scriptures, including Albrech Alt and Martin Noth (see : "History of
Israel" by M.Noth,French translation published by Payot, 1954; "Theology
of the Old Testament", 1971,Labor et Fides publishers, Geneva, by Von
Rad, "Ancient History of Israel" (2 volumes) by Father R. de Vaux,
Paris 1971.
"The Biblical theme of the gift of the country has its origin in the
'patriarchal promise', in other words in the divine promise made, according
to the tradition of Genesis, to the patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
The stories in Genesis relate several times and in different ways, that
God promised the patriarchs and their descendents the ownership of the land
in which they were in the process of settling. This promise was made at
Sichem (Genesis 12/7), at Bethel (Genesis 13/14-16; 28/13-15;
35/11-12) and at Mamre, near Hebron (Genesis 15/18-21; 17/4-8),
in other words at the principal sanctuaries of Samaria and Judea, and appears
to apply above all to the region of present-day Cisjordania.
"Biblical narrators present us the history of Israel's origins as a
succession of well-defined periods in time. All the memories,stories, legends,
tales or poems in their possession, handed down by oral tradition, were
inserted by them within a specific genealogical and chronological framework.
This determination to put order in handed-down tradition and to classify
it also left its mark on the compilation of the patriarchal tales.
"Each of the patriarchs was probably an eponymous hero or legendary
figure of independent origins, but for the narrators of the Bible all the
names must be united in the same family tree. Thus Abraham is presented
as the father of Isaac and as Jacob's grandfather. The eponyms of the twelve
tribes of Israel are regarded as the sons of Jacob, etc. It is these twelve
sons of Jacob - the embryo of the "people of Israel" concept -
who left Palestine for Egypt because of a famine. After an exile of 400
years, their descendents having become the "people of Israel"
in the meantime, they left Egypt, wandered about in the desert and finally
conquered the land which had been promised to their ancestors. As almost
all contemporary exegets agree, this schema is mostly fictitious.
"The works of Albrecht Alt and Martin North have revealed especially
that the division into successive periods (Patriarchs - bondage in Egypt
- conquest of Canaa) is artificial."
It is admitted today that most of the tribe and clans
which, in the 12th or the 11th century B.C., joined up to become the "people
of Israel" (perhaps in the form of a confederation) were originally
groups of semi-nomads who had become sedentary in central Palestine, Transjordania,
Galilee and the Neguev over the course of the previous centuries.
Most of these clans claimed to be descended from an
eponymous ancestor about whom they had preserved a body of stories and legends.
Thus one of these clans regarded itself as issued from the "patriarch"
Abraham ; another was issued from Jacob, while others still were considered
to be the descendents of Ruben, Simeon or Joseph.
It was only during the assimilation and unification
of these different tribal groups that their "ancestors", who had
no links originally between them, became integrated within a single geneological
system. It is likely that the "Abraham" and "Isaac"
became assimilated to the "proto-Israelite" tribes at a time when
Jacob-Israel had already become the common ancestor of the twelve tribes.
Thus Isaac had to make do with the status of Jacob's "father",
while Abraham was enthroned at the root of the genealogy, thus becoming
Isaac's "father".
To sum up, we can see that the Israelite "conquest"
was not the "Blitzkrieg" it is made out to be in the book of Joshuah,
but rather the outcome of a gradual "Landnahme" by nomadic groups.
The few military skirmishes that may have occured only came in the final
phase of a long process of infiltration and sedentarization.
Most exegetes have considered and continue to consider
the promise of the patriarchs in its classic form (cf for example Genesis
13/14-17 or Genesis 15/18-21) as a post-eventum legitimization
of the Israelites' conquest of Palestine under David's reign. In other words,
the promise was introduced in the patriarchal tales to turn that "ancestral
epic" into a prelude and an announcement of the golden age of David
and Solomon.
It was the custom of the heads of the clans to consult
the oracle of the god El at the local sanctuary frequented by the tribe
at the time of year when they got ready to leave the fertile lands to go
to their winter pastures. The priest of the sanctuary would then reveal
to them an "oracle of salvation" which gave the clan the assurance
of divine protection during the transhumance and of its safe and sound return
to the summer pastures at the end of the rainy season. Furthermore, as the
patriarchal tales show us, these oracles could carry a promise of sedentarization
in fertile regions.
We can now summarily circumscribe the origins of the
patriarchal promise :
1. The promise of land, understood as a promise of sedentarization,
was first addressed to groups of nomads who were still submitted to the
practice of transhumance and who aspired to settlement somewhere in inhabitable
areas. In this form the promise may have been part of the religious and
narrative heritage of several different tribal groups.
2. The goal of the nomadic promise was not the political and military conquest
of a region or a whole country but sedentarization within a limited territory.
3. Originally, the patriarchal promise spoken about in Genesis was not granted
by Yahveh (the god who had entered Palestine with the "Exodus group")
but by the Canaanite god in one of his local hypostases. Only the local
god, owner of the land, could offer nomads sedentarization on his lands.
4- Later, when the nomadic clans had become sedentary and had regrouped
with other tribes to make up the "people of Israel", the ancient
promises took on another dimension. The goal of sedentarization had been
reached and the promise henceforth had political, military and "national"
implications.
Thus reinterpreted, the promise was seen as the foreshadowing
of the definitive conquest of Palestine, as the announcement and the legitimization
of the Davidian empire. None of the promises reported in the book of Genesis
have avoided this reinterpretation. The content of the patriarchal promise
"Whereas the "nomadic" promise aiming for the
sedentarization of a clan of shepherds probably goes back to an ante eventum
origin, the same does not hold true of the promise that took on "national"
dimensions. Given the fact that the "Israelite" tribes united
only after their settlement in Palestine, the reinterpretation of the nomadic
promise to a promise of political sovereignty must have been made post eventum.
Thus the promise in Genesis 15/18-21, which envisages the sovereignty of
the chosen people over all the regions located "between the Egyptian
Torrent (Wadi 'Arish) and the Great River, the Euphrates", and over
all the inhabitants of those lands, is clearly a vaticinium ex eventu inspired
by the Davidian conquests. It must also be pointed out that other "goals"
were added to the initial promise, notably that of countless descendents
and the divine blessing. Each narrator has conferred his particular stamp
upon the promise. The Yahvist insisted on the countless descendence, while
Deuteronomy emphacized the possession of the lands of Canaa and the Sacerdotal
on the alliance with Yahveh implied in the promise. Exegetic research has
made it possible to establish that the broadening of the "nomadic"
promise into a "national" promise must have happened before the
first patriarchal tales were set in writing.
"The Yahvist can be regarded as the first great narrator (or rather
as the editor of tales) of the Old Testament; he lived at the time of Solomon.
Consequently, he was the contemporary and the witness of those few decades
when the patriarchal promise, reinterpreted in the light of David, seemed
to have been fulfilled beyond all hopes. A careful reading of the tales
shows us that the aim of the Yahvist was to point out the permanent opposition
between the indignity of the people to whom the promise was made and the
incomprehensible grace of Yahveh. The Genesis 12/3b passage is one of the
key texts for the understanding of the work of the Yahvist.
"According to this text, the blessing of Israel must have as its corollary
the blessing of all the "clans on earth ('adamah)". The clans
of the fertile land are, first and foremost, all the tribes which share
Palestine and Transjordania with Israel.
"We are thus not in a position to assert that at such or such a time
in history God revealed himself to a historical figure called Abraham and
conferred upon him the legal deeds of possession to the land of Canaa. From
the juridical point of view, we have no land-act signed "God"
to show for, and we even have good reasons to believe that the scene in
Genesis 12/1-8, 13/14-18 does not reflect a historical event. The promise
in Genesis 15/18 does not allow us either to claim the Euphrates (or even
the Jordan) as a frontier of Israel, any more than the visions of the Apocalypse
enables us to anticipate the material unfolding of events at the end of
time.
"Is it possible then to "actualize" the patriarchal promise
? If to actualize the promise means to use it as a deed of property or to
put it at the service of a political claim, however legitimate it may be,
then the answer is certainly not. No policy has the right to claim the guarantee
of the promise for itself. One cannot rally in any way to those among the
Christians who consider the Old Testament as a legitimization of the present
territorial claims of that State."
Source : All these texts are taken from the conference given on February
10th 1975 at Cret-Berard (Switzerland) during a symposium on the theological
interpretations of the Israeli-Arab conflict, published in the magazine
: "Theological and religious studies" n° 3, 1976 (Montpellier).
b) The Jewish prophetic exegesis
(Conference by Rabbi Elmer Berger, ex-president of the
"Jewish League" in the United States)
"It is inadmissible for anyone to plead that the setting-up
of the present state of Israel has been the fulfillment of Prophecy and
that therefore all acts performed by the Israelis in order to set their
state up and to maintain it have been automatically ratified in advance
by God. The present-day political Israel has, for all of us, obliterated
or, at least, adumbrated, the spiritual Israel. I propose to examine two
fundamental elements of the prophetic tradition.
"a - First when the Prophets evoked the restoration of Zion, it was
not the land itself which was of a sacred nature. The absolute and indisputable
criteria of the prophetic concept of the Redemption was the restoration
of the Alliance with God, at a time when that Alliance had been broken by
the King and his people.
"Micah spells it out clearly : "Hear, I pray you, O heads of Jacob,
and ye princes of the house of Israel that abhor judgment and pervert all
equity. They build up Zion with blood, and Jerusalem with inequity...Therefore
shall Zion for your sake be plowed as a field, and Jerusalem shall become
heaps, and the mountain of the house as the high place of the forest."
Source : Micah III,1-12.
" Zion is holy only if the Law of God reigns above it.
And this does not mean that every Law edicted at Jerusalem is a holy one.
"b- It is not only the land which depends on the observance and fidelity
to the Alliance : the people reinstalled in Zion have the same obligations
of justice, uprightness and faith to the Covenant with God.
"Zion could not expect the restoration of a people resting on treaties,
alliances, military balances of power or a military hierarchy seeking to
establish its superiority over the neighbours of Israel. ....The prophetic
tradition clearly shows that the holiness of a land does not depend on its
soil, nor that of its people's sole presence on that territory. The only
thing that is sacred and worthy of Zion is the divine Covenant which expresses
itself in the deeds of its people.
"The present State of Israel has no right whatsoever to claim the accomplishment
of the divine project for a Messianic age.... It is pure demagogy of soil
and blood. Neither the people nor the land are holy and deserving of any
spiritual privilege in this world. Zionist totalitarianism which seeks to
subject the entire Jewish people, even by violence and force, makes it a
people among others and like others."
Source : Rabbi Elmer Berger : "Prophecy, Zionism and the state of
Israel." Ed. American Jewish alternatives to Zionism. Conference at
Leiden University (Netherlands) on March 20th 1968.
* * *
Ygal Amir, Isaac Rabin's assassin, is neither a delinquent
nor a madman, but a pure product of Zionist education. The son of a rabbi,
an excellent student at the clerical University of Bar Ilan near Tel Aviv,
he has been brought up on the teachings of the Talmudic schools. A first-rate
soldier in the Golan, one of his books was the biography of Baruch Goldstein
(who murdered 27 Arabs praying at the tomb of the Patriarchs at Hebron a
few months ago). Ygal Amir probably saw, on Israeli State television, the
long documentary on the "Eyal" group (the Warriors of Israel)
swearing on the tomb of Theodore Herzl, the founder of political Zionism,
to "execute whoever would yield to the Arabs the 'Promised Land' of
Judah and Samaria" (present-day Cis-Jordania).
The assassination of President Rabin, (like the killings
of Goldstein) are inscribed in the strict logic of the mythology of the
Zionist Fundamentalists : the order to kill, says Ygal Amir, "comes from
God", as in the days of Joshua.
Source : "Le Monde" (AFP) November 8th 1995.
Ygal Amir was not an isolated case within Israeli society
: on the day of Isaac Rabin's murder, the Kiryat Arba and Hebron settlers
danced for joy, reciting the psalms of David, round the mausoleum erected
to the glory of Baruch Goldstein.
Source : "El Pais" (Spain), November 7th 1995. p. 4.
Isaac Rabin was a symbolic target, not because he supposedly
"fought for Peace all his life". as Bill Clinton claimed at Rahin's
funeral. In fact, Rabin was at the head of the occupying forces at the begining
of the "Intifada", and it was he who gave the order to "break
the bones" of the children of the Palestinian soil, whose only weapon
was the ancient stones of their land with which to defend their ancestral
soil.
But Isaac Rabin was a realist who had understood (like
the Americans in Vietnam and the French in Algeria) that there could be
no definitive military solution when an Army clashes not just with another
army but with an entire people. He had therefore agreed on a compromise
solution with Yasser Arafat: a portion of the territories, whose occupation
had been condemned by the United Nations, would be granted administrative
autonomy. But the Israeli army would continue to protect the "colonies"
stolen from the natives and which had turned into seminars of hate such
as Hebron.
This was already going too far for the Fundamentalists who
had benefited from this colonialism: they created round Rabin - whom they
presented as a "traitor" - the climate of hatred which led up
to his infamous assassination. After thousands of Palestinians, Isaac Rabin
was a victim of the myth of the "Promised Land", ancient pretext
for bloody colonialism.
This assassination by a fanatic shows once more that
a genuine peace between a State of Israel, secure within the frontiers established
by the 1947 partition, and a wholly independent Palestinian State, must
involve the radical elimination of the present-day colonialism, in other
words of all the colonies which are from within the future Palestinian State,
unending sources of provocation and so many detonators for future wars.
2- The myth of the "chosen people"
"Thus speaketh the Lord : my firstborn son is Israel." - Exodus
IV,22
An Fundamentalist interpretation of political Zionism.
"The inhabitants of the world can be disseminated between Israel and
the other nations taken as a whole. Israel is the chosen people: chief dogma."
Source : Rabbin Cohen: "The Talmud" Ed.Payot, Paris 1986.p.104.
This myth is the belief, without any historical foundation
whatsoever, according to which monetheism was born with the Old Testament.
It would appear, on the contrary, from the Bible itself that its two principal
transcribers, the Yahvist and the Elohist, were not monotheists, either
of them; they only proclaimed the superiority of the Hebrew god over the
other gods, and his "jealousy" regarding them (Exodus XX, 2-5).
Kamosh, the god of Moab, is acknowledged (Judges XI, 24 and Kings II,
27) as "the other gods" (Samuel I, XXVII,19) (Kings I,
27).
It was only after the exile, and especially with the
Prophets, that monotheism asserted itself, in other words when formulas
such as : "Thou shalt have no god than I." (XX,4) turned
into ones that were not content with demanding obedience to Yahveh and to
no other gods (as is repeated in Deuteronomy) : "You shall not follow
other gods." (VI,14), but which proclaimed : "I am God,
there are none others." (Essau XLV,22). This indisputable assertion
of monotheism dates from the second half of the VIth century B.C. (between
550 and 539 B.C.).
For monotheism was the fruit of a long ripening process
of the great cultures of the Middle East, those of Mesopotamia and Egypt.
As early as the XIIIth century B.C. the pharaoh Akhenaton had the plural
of the word "god" erased from all the temples. His "hymn
to the sun" is paraphrased almost word for word in Psalm 104. The Babylonian
religion was heading towards monotheism; when he evoked the god Marduk,
the historian Albright delineated the stages in that transformation : "When
it is recognized that the numerous different divinities are only manifestations
of a single god... it is only one step away from reaching a certain monotheism.
"
Source : Albright. "Les religions dans le Moyen Orient." p.
159
The "Babylonian Poem of Creation" (which dates
from the XIth century B.C.) bears witness to these "final steps"
: "If humans are divided as to the gods, we by all the names we shall
have named him by, let him be He, our God." This religion reached a
high degree of interiority, in which the image of the suffering Upright
man appears :
"I want to praise the Lord of wisdom...My God has forsaken
me ... I paraded as a Lord and now I hug the walls... Each day I moan like
a dove and tears burn my cheeks. And yet prayer was wisdom for me, and sacrifice
my law. I believed I was in God's service, but who from the depth of the
abyss can understand the divine ways ?
"Who, if not Marduk, is the master of the resurrection? You whose clay
he originally moulded, Sing the glory of Marduk."
Source : Op. cit. p. 329 to 341.
This image of Job preceded Job himself. A similar image
of the "suffering upright man" is that of Danel (not the Daniel
of the Hebrew Bible) punished by God and brought back to earth by his lord
; it can be found in all the Ugaritic texts of Ras Shamrah, in what has
been called the Canaan Bible , which preceded that of the Hebrews since
Ezekiel mentions Danel next to Job (Ezekiel XIV, 14 and 20).
These are parables whose spiritual meaning in no way
depends on historical authentification. This also holds true for that wondrous
parable of resistance to oppression and of liberation that we find in the
tale of Exodus. It matters little, therefore, that « the crossing of
the reed-filled sea cannot be regarded as a historical event, as Mircea
Eliade writes , and that it does not concern all the Hebrews but only a
few groups of fugitives. It is, however, significant that the date of this
grandiose flight from Egypt was made to coincide with Easter...given renewed
value and integrated to the holy history of Yahvism.
From 621 B.C. on, the celebration of the Exodus replaced
a genuine Canaan agrarian rite at Easter, in spring : the feast of the resurrection
of Adonis. The Exodus thus became the founding act of the rebirth of a people
rescued from slavery by its god. The divine experience of this rescue of
man from his ancient bonds is to be found in many different races, from
the long wanderings of the Aztec tribe, "Mexica" in the XIIIth
century : after more than a century of trials, the tribe arrives in the
valley to which its god has led it, opening the way where no road had been
traced before.
The African Kaidara also had the same tradition of a
journey of initiation towards freedom. The settlement on a land of nomadic
or wandering tribes is linked - especially in the Middle East - to the giving
of a promised land to a people by a god.
There are myths at every stage of man's human and spiritual
development in all civilizations. That of the Deluge, whereby God punished
the sins of men and began his creation again, is to be found in all civilizations
since the Mesopotamian Gilgamesh to the Popol Vuh of the Mayas of Guatemala
(Part I, chapter 3).
Hymns of praise to God are born of all religions, such
as the psalms in honour of the Incas' mother goddess,Pachacamac, and their
other gods as well :
"Wiraqocha, root of being, God, always near... who creates
saying : let man be ! let woman be ! Wiraqocha, luminous lord, God who causes
to be and to die... Thou who renewest creation, Keep thy creature a long
time, that it may perfect itself ... walking along the straight path."
If it were not for an ethnocentric prejudice in our
path, why should we not reflect on all these sacred texts, which were an
"Ancient Testament" for each of their people, and study the moment
of the discovery of the meaning of life ?
Only then would the message of life and the words of
Jesus attain their true universality : it would be rooted in all the experiences
men have had of the divine, and not restricted - and even stifled by a unilateral
tradition. The very life of Jesus, his radically new vision of the Kingdom
of God as no longer resting on the power of the mighty but on the hope of
the poor, would cease to be eclipsed by a historical schema going only from
promises of victory made to one People until their final victory.
We have here evoked in their anteriority only religions
of the Middle East, in which dawned monotheism and which exterted an influence
on the Hebrews. In other non-Western cultures the move towards monotheism
is even more ancient. For example the Vedas of India.
"Wise men give the Sole Being more than one name."
(Hymn of the Rig-Veda III,7). Vrihaspati "It is our Father,
who contains all the gods." (III,18 ) "He who is our Father
has engendered and contains all beings. God alone, he has made the other
gods. Everything that exists acknowledges him as Master...You know He who
has created all things; it is the same as the one who is within you."
(CXI,11) "His names are many, but He is One."
These sacred texts date from the XVIth to the VIth century
B.C., and Father Monchanin (S.J.), in his effort of intuition to place himself
within the Vedas, called them : "the absolute liturgical poem."
Source : Jules Monchanin : "Mystique de l'Inde, mystére chrétien".
P.231.229.
3. The myth of Joshua : ethnic purification.
"And from Lachish Joshua passed unto Eglon, and all Israel with
him...And they took it on that day, and smote it with the edge of the sword,
and all the souls that were therein he utterly destroyed that day...And
Joshua went up from Eglon, and all Israel with him, unto Hebron." (Book
of Joshua X,34)
An Fundamentalist interpretation of political Zionism.
On April 9th 1948, Menahem Beghin and his Irgun troops
massacred the 254 inhabitants of the village of Deir Yassin, men, women
and children.
We are studying this passage of fossilization of the
myth into history and the claims of that "historical touch-up job"
to justify a policy, in just one specific case : that of the instrumentalization
of the Biblical tales. They have never ceased to play a determinant role
in the fate of the West, insofar as they covered its most bloody deeds,
from the persecution of the Jews by the Romans, then by the Christians,
until the Crusades, the lnquisition, the Holy Alliance, the colonial dominations
exerted by the "chosen people",until the exactions of the state
of Israel, not only through its policy of expansion in the Middle East,
but also through the pressures of its lobbies, the most powerful of which
is the American one, that plays a major role in the American policy of world
domination and military aggression. This is the reason for our choice :
the exploitation of a mythical past is influencing the future towards what
might prove to be world suicide.
* * *
The Bible contains some of the most outstanding images
of the divine presence in history, from that first and grandiose explosion
beyond our petty morals and logic, of the transcendent sacrifice of Abraham,
to the eternal symbol of mankind's flight from servitude in the epic of
Exodus, along with the great prophecies of Amos and Ezekiel, of Isaiah and
Job, all the way to the announcement of a new alliance with David.
This "new alliance" (or "New Testament")
heralds the greatest mutation in the history of men and gods with the advent
of Jesus, whom, as the Fathers of the Eastern Church put it : « God
became man so that man could become God. » Then, with Saint Paul,returned
the traditional vision of a sovereign, all-powerful God who directs the
life of men and communities from above and from without, not through the
Jewish "law" any more but through a Christian "grace"
which similarly destroys man's responsibility.
"It is through grace that you are saved. You have
nothing to do with it. It is the gift of God." (Ephesians. II. 10)
We will not deal with the Bible in general, but only with that part of it
which is claimed to inspire the theocratic lsraeli regime of today and the
Zionist movement : the Torah (which the Christians call the Pentateuch,
in other words the five first books : Genesis, Exodus, Levitique, Numbers
and Deuteronomy) and its so-called "historical" annexes, the books
of Joshua, Judges, Kings and Samuel; it does include the "prophetic"
portions of the Torah, which constantly recall that "God's alliance
with men" is unconditional and universal, bound to the observance of
the divine law and open to all nations and all mankind.
* * *
The Torah (the Pentateuch) and the "historical"
books (as has been proved for more than a century by the exegetes) are a
compilation of oral traditions, set in writing by the scribes of Solomon
in the IXth century B.C. Their chief preoccupation was to legitimize (by
amplifying them) the conquests of David and his empire; these are in any
case impossible to verify through other historical documents or archeological
traces. There are no other sources than the Bible, except for the story
of Solomon. of which we find some evidence in the Assyrian archives. Before
then,no sources, outside the Biblical tales, can confirm or infirm the historical
veracity of the Torah. For example, the archeological vestiges of Ur in
Irak give us no more information on Abraham than the excavation of the ruins
of Troy have given us on Hector or Priam.
In the Book of Numbers (XXXI, 7-18) we are told
of the exploits of the "sons of Israel" who, when they vanquished
the Madianites, "killed all the men as the Lord had ordered Moses to
do", "took all the women into bondage", "burned all
the cities." When they returned to Moses, "Moses was wrathful.
What ! he told them, you have suffered all the women to live...! Now, go
forth and slay all youths, and slay all the women who have known a man in
wedlock... But all the virgins...keep them for yourselves." (14-18).
During the conquest of Canaan, the successor of Moses,
Joshua, carried on with this systematic policy of "ethnic purification"
dictated by the God of the armies.
"On that day, Joshua seized Maqqeda and slew them all,
including the king with the edge of his sword, and all the souls that were
therein; he let none remain in it; but did unto the king thereof as he did
unto the king of Jericho And Joshua passed from the Libnah and all Israel
with him, onto Lachish into the hand of Israel which took it on the second
day and smote it with the edge of the sword, and all the souls that were
therein, according to all that he had done to Libnah.
Then Horam, king of Gezer, came up to help Lachish ;
and Joshua smote him and his people, until he had left him none remaining.
And from Lachish Joshua passed on to Eglon and all Israel with him; and
they encamped against it and fought against it : and they took it on that
day, and smote it with the edge of the sword, and all souls that were therein
he utterly destroyed that day according to all that he had done to Lachish.
And Joshua went up from Eglon, and all Israel with him, unto Hebron; and
they fought against it."
Source : The book of Joshua. X, 34 , X 36.
And the litany continues, enumerating the "sacred
exterminations" perpetrated in Cisjordania. We must, before such tales,
raise two fundamental questions :
1 - That of their historical truth ;
2 - That of the consequences of a literal imitation of this exaltation of
a policy of extermination.
a - Regarding the first point :
Here, we come into conflict with archeology. Excavations
have apparently revealed that the Israelites arriving at the end of the
XIIIth century B.C. could not have taken Jericho because the city was already
deserted. The mid-Bronze Age city was destroyed towards 1550 B.C. and subsequently
abandoned. It was sparsely resettled in the XIVth century B.C. : pottery
dating from this period has been found in Mid-Bronze Age tombs that were
re-utilized, and a house containing a small pitcher dating from the mid-XIVth
century B.C. Nothing can be attributed to the XIIIth century. There are
no traces of New Bronze Age fortifications. The conclusion of Miss K.M.
Kenyon is that it is impossible to associate a destruction of Jericho with
an entrance of the Israelites at the end of the XIIIth century B.C.
Source : Cf. K.M. Kenyon, "Digging up Jericho", London 1957,
pp. 256-265;
"Jericho", in "Archeology and Old Testament
Study", D.Winton, Oxford, 1967, spec. pp. 272-274 ; H.J. Franken, "Tell
es-Sultan and Old Testament Jericho", in OTS, 14 (1965), pp. 189-200.
M.Weippert, "Die Landnahme der isrealitischen Stamme, pp.54-55.
The same holds true of the "taking of Ay".
"Of all the tales of conquest, this one is the most detailed
: it contains no miraculous element and appears to be the most likely. Unfortunately,
archeology gives it the lie.
"The site was searched by two different expeditions. The results tally
: at the time of the Early Bronze Age, Et-Tell was a large city whose name
is unknown to us, and which was destroyed during the Early Bronze Age, around
2,400 B.C. It remained deserted until after 1,200 B.C., when a poor, unfortified
village grew up upon a portion of the ruins. This village subsisted only
until the beginning of the Xth century B.C. at the latest; after which the
site was definitively abandoned. At the time of the arrival of the Israelites,
there was no city of Ay, there was no king of Ay, there was nothing but
a 1,200 year-old ruin."
Source : Père de Vaux (O.P.) : "Histoire ancienne d'Israel".
Ed. Lecoffre et Gabalda. Paris 1971 TI, p.565.
See : in 1933-35 by Judith Marquet-Krause, "Les
fouilles de 'Ay (etTell), Paris 1949, then by J.A. Callawy from 1964, Cf.
J.A. Callaway, Basor 178 (after 1965), pp. 13-40 ; RB, 72 (1965), pp. 409
415 ; K. Schoonover, RB 75 (1968) pp. 243-247 ; 76 (1969), pp. 423-426 ;
J.A. Callaway, Basor, 196 (Dec. 1969), pp. 2 -16.
b - Regarding the second point.
Why, therefore, if a Jew is pious and an Fundamentalist (in
other words a literal reader of the Bible) should he not follow the example
of such highly prestigious figures as Moses and Joshua ?
Is it not said in Numbers, of the conquest of Palestine
(Canaan) : "And the Lord hearkened to the voice of Israel, and delivered
up the Canaanites; and they utterly destroyed them and their cities"
(Numbers XXI,3), and regarding the Amorites and their king : "So they
smote him, and his sons, and all his people, until there was none left alive
: and they possessed his land." (Numbers XXI, 35)
Deuteronomy does not demand only spoliation of the land
and the expulsion of its inhabitants, but massacre, as it repeats : «
And when the Lord thy God shall deliver them before thee, thou shalt smite
them and utterly destroy them;thou shalt make no covenant with them, nor
shew mercy unto them. » (Deuteronomy VII, 2)
From Sharon to Rabbi Meier Kahane, it is the prefiguration
of the way the Zionists behave towards the Palestinians. Was not Joshua's
voice that of Menahem Begin, when, on April 9th 1948, the 254 inhabitants
of Deir Yassin, men, women and children, were massacred by his "Irgun"
troops,to force the unarmed Arabs to flee out of terror?
Source : Menahem Begin : "La révolte : Histoire de l'Irgoun"
(p.200). Editions Albatros. 1978.
He called upon the Jews "not only to push back
the Arabs but to lay hold of all Palestine." Was it not the voice of
Joshua which made itself heard through Moshe Dayan, when he said :
"If one owns the Bible and one considers oneself to be
the people of the Bible, one should also own the lands in the Bible."
Source : "Jerusalem Post", August 10th 1977.
The voice of Joshua also made itself heard in the words
of Yoram Ben Porath when he was quoted in the major Israeli newspaper, "Yediot
Aaronoth" on July 14th 1972 :
"There is no such thing as Zionism, as colonization by
the Jewish State, without the eviction of the Arabs and the expropriation
of their lands."
As to the means of that dispossession of the lands,
they were set by Rabin when he was general-in-chief of the occupied territories
: to break the bones of the Intifada stone-throwers. What was the reaction
of the Israeli Talmudist schools? To help to power one of the people most
directly responsible for the Sabra and Chatila massacres : General Rafael
Eytan, who asked for the "reinforcement" of the existing Jewish
colonies.
As we have seen, Moses and Joshua applied to the letter
these prescriptions of their God in the Torah. Literalism leads to the same
massacres.
Animated by the same convictions, Doctor Baruch Goldstein,
a colonist of American descent from Kiryat Arba (Cisjordania) killed over
fifty Palestinians with a machine-gun as they were praying at the Tomb of
the Patriarchs. He was a member of an Fundamentalist group founded under the
patronage of Ariel Sharon (under whose protection were perpetrated the massacres
of Sabra and Shatila, and who was rewarded for his crime by a promotion
: Minister of Housing, in charge of developing the "colonies"
in the occupied territories). Baruch Goldstein is now the object of a genuine
cult on the part of the Fundamentalists, who come to put flowers on his grave
and to kiss it, for he was strictly faithful to the tradition of Joshua,
having received the order to exterminate all the people of Canaan in order
to seize their lands.
* * *
This "ethnic purification" which has become
systematic in the State of Israel, stems from the principle of ethnic purity
which must prevent the mixing of Jewish blood with the "impure blood"
of any other race.
In the lines that follow God's order to exterminate
the population put at their mercy, the Lord advises Moses that his people
must not be allowed to marry the girls from these peoples (Exodus,XXXV,16).
This command of the Torah is confirmed in the same terms
in Deuteronomy : the "chosen people" (Deut. VII,6) must
not mingle with others : "Thy daughter thou shalt not give unto his
son, nor his daughter shalt thou take unto thy son." (Deut. VII,3)
This "apartheid" is the only way to prevent the soiling of the
race chosen by God, the faith that binds it to Him.
This separation from the Other has remained the law
: in his book "le Talmud" (Paris, Payot 1986, p.104), Rabbi Cohen
wrote : "The inhabitants of the world can be divided between Israel
and the other nations taken as a whole. Israel is the chosen people : a
capital dogma." On their return from exile,"Ezra and Nehemiah"
watched over this the re-establishmentt of this "apartheid." :
Ezra weeps because the "Holy (sic) race has mingled
with the peoples of the lands" (Ezra IX, 2)...With the divine
blessing, people are punished :
Pinhas impales a mixed-blood couple... and thus wins
Jehovah's approbation. Ezra orders racial selection and exclusion : "all
those who had taken strange wives, they cast them away, women and children"
(Ezra, X, 44). Nehemiah says of the Jews : "Thus cleansed I
them from all strangers." (Neh : XIII, 30).
This mixophobia and rejection of others go beyond the
racial dimension. To refuse the other's blood through mixed mariage is also
to refuse his religion, his culture or his way of being. Thus Jehovah fulminates
against those who move away from his truth, the only possible truth, of
course : Sophonia struggles against foreign ways of dressing, Nehemiah against
foreign languages : "I saw Jews that had married wives of Ashdod, of
Ammon and of Moab. And their children spake half in the speech of Aschdod,
and could not speak in the Jews' language, but according to the language
of each people. And I contended with them, and cursed them, and smote certain
of them and plucked off their hair... " (Nehemiah,XIII, 2325)
All those who disobey the law are harshly judged. Next
to the multiple divine speeches demanding racial purity flourish the comments
of those who adhere to these rules, such as Rebekah, wife of Isaac and mother
of Jacob, who declares : "I am weary of my life because of the daughters
of Heth ; if Jacob take a wife of the daughters of Heth...what good shall
my life do me ?" (Genesis XXVII, 46). Samson's parents, outraged
by their son's mariage to a Philistine woman, cry out : "Is there never
a woman among the daughters of thy brethren or among all my people, that
thou goest to take a wife of the uncircumcised Philistines ?" (Judges,
XIV, 3)
Haim Cohen, who was a judge at the Supreme Court of
Israel, noted "the bitter irony of fate which has led the same biological
and racist laws propagated by the Nazis and which inspired the infamous
Nuremberg laws, to serve as a basis for the definition of Judaism within
the State of Israel." (see Joseph Badi : "Fundamental Laws of
the State of Israel". New York 1960, p.156).
And indeed, during the trial of the war criminals at
Nuremberg, the question was raised at the interrogation of Julius Streicher,
the race "theoretician" :
"In 1935, at the Nuremberg Party Congress, the "racial
laws" were promulgated. During the preparation of the law-project,
were you called upon for consultation and did you participate in any way
in the elaboration of these laws ?
"The accused (Streicher) : - Yes, I believe I participated in it insofar
as, for years, I had been writing that all mixing of German and Jewish blood
had to be prevented in the future. I wrote articles to that effect, and
I have always repeated that we had to take the Jewish race,or the Jewish
people, as a model. I have always repeated in my articles that the Jews
were to be regarded as a model by other races, for they have given themselves
a racial law, the law of Moses, which says :
"If you go unto foreign lands, you must not take foreign wives. And
this, Gentlemen, is of great importance in judging the Nuremberg laws. It
was these Jewish laws that were taken as a model. When, centuries later,
the Jewish legislator Ezra saw that, despite this, many Jews had married
non-Jewish wives, these bonds were broken. This was the origin of Jewery
which, thanks to its racial laws, survived for centuries, whereas all the
other races and civilizations were destroyed."
Source : Trial of the major war criminals before the International Military
Court (Nuremberg : November 14th 1945 October 1st 1946). Official French
text. 26th April 1946 Debates, Tome XII. D 321).
This was indeed how the jurists who acted as advisers
for the Nazi Ministry of the Interior, had elaborated the "Nuremberg
Laws, of the right of the Reich population and the protection of German
blood and of the German honour." These jurists, Bernard Losener and
Friedrich Knost, thus commented the text in the compilation : "The
Nuremberg laws" :
"According to the Fuhrer's will, the Nuremberg laws do
not really imply measures designed to accentuate and perpetrate racial hatred
: on the contrary, such measure signify the begining of a lull in relations
between the Jewish people and the German people. If the Jews already had
their own State, in which they would feel at home, the Jewish question could
be considered resolved, as much for the Jews as for the Germans. It is for
this reason that the most convinced Zionists have not raised the least objection
against the spirit of the Nuremberg laws."
Hebrew racism, the model for all other racisms, appears as an ideology of
the extermination of different peoples.
"The Puritan settlers of America, when they hunted down
the Indians to grab their lands, invoked Joshua and the 'sacred exterminations'
of the Amalecites and the Philistines."
Source : Thomas Nelson, "The Puritans of Massachussets", Judaism,
Vol XVI, n°2 1967
Between mixophobia and Cannanite-style Shoah, we now
have an ideology of population "transfer" which is approved of
by 77% of the rabbis in Judea-Samaria. This doctrine of exclusion and extermination
is partly founded on religion (it is GOD who wills it), but this in no way
excuses the political Zionism of the refusal of others. In Leviticus, God
enjoins the Jews not to practise the mixture of "species" (Lev.XX.20,25)
as He himself has distinguished Israel from the other nations (Lev. 20,24),
to practise racial discrimination (« I will make a distinction between
my people and your people », (Ex. IIX, 19).
In 1993, Chief Rabbi Sitruk could declare without any fear of being called
to order by any authority whatsoever :
"I would wish young Jewish men never to marry any but Jewish
girls."
This phobia reaches its highest point when Israel is
at stake. Thus Israel "which shall be holy" (Lev.XX,26)
must not "soil" itself through contact with the other nations
that God has taken "in disgust" (Lev. XX, 23). The prohibition
is oft repeated. God threatens and storms when it is not respected :
"Neither shalt thou make marriages with them (the Canaanite
nations); thy daughter thou shalt not give unto his son, nor his daughter
shalt thou take unto thy son..." (Deut. VII,3-4).
"Else if ye do in any wise go back, and cleave unto the remnant of
these nations, even these that remain among you, and shall make marriages
with them, and go unto them, and they go to you ; know for a certainty that
the Lord your God will no more drive out any of these nations from before
you; but they shall be snares and traps unto you, and scourges in your sides,
and thorns in your eyes, until ye perish from off this good land which the
Lord your God hath qiven you." (Joshua. XXIII. 12-13)
On November 10th 1975, at a plenary session of the United
Nations, it was declared that Zionism was a form of racism and racial discrimination.
Since the break-up of the Soviet Union, the United States have taken over
the U.N. Among many other acts of international banditry, it obtained the
repeal of the just 1975 resolution, once more washing away the blood that
covers Israel and its leaders. In fact, nothing has changed since 1975;
or rather, the repression, the slow massacre of the Palestinian people and
colonization have increased tenfold.
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