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Between Good and Evil
by Gilad Atzmon
The main British editorials happen to agree that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has won points in this latest naval round. I find it rather disappointing.
With over 650.000 innocents dead in Iraq and a war against Iran on the horizon, it is about time British columnists stop telling us about tactical gains and losses. Instead they should once and for all endorse a humanist and ethical discourse grounded on genuine responsibility.
The battle between Ahmadinejad and Blair is not a political or diplomatic one, it is not about points. It is actually a clash between civilizations, a fight between humanism and cold pragmatism. As it emerges, in this battle, it is Ahmadinejad rather than Blair who reminds us where goodness rests. Seemingly, a man who has been repeatedly presented by our deluded Western media as a "radical", "fundamentalist" and "Islamofascist" has proved beyond doubt that it is actually him who knows what forgiveness and grace are all about. It was Ahmadinejad who has pardoned the enemy, it was Ahmadinejad that evoked some prospects of a peaceful future.
Brits and Americans should ask themselves whether they can recall
Bush or Blair meeting with any of the many illegally detained
Guantanamo Bay inmates? Brits may also want to ask themselves when was
the last time their Prime Minister was seen chatting with Abu Hamza or
the like?
My usual Ziocon critics would obviously blame me for equating
here innocent naval personnel to murderous blood thirsty
terrorists. I would suggest to them to bear in mind that it is us
who label others as terrorist as much as it is us who generously
entitle ourselves as innocent. I may as well voluntarily suggest to
my possible critics that within this so called cultural clash, it is
again us who launched an illegal war, it is us who are legally and
morally responsible for the on going genocide in Iraq and Afghanistan,
it is our democratically elected governments that supports the
Israelis atrocities in Palestine.
It is our leaders who happen to be
the terrorists who fail to talk to the so called enemy, it is our
leaders who fail to offer any hope for peace. Instead they just prepare
us for many more conflicts to come. More importantly, I may suggest to
my critics that in the eyes of an Iranian, the captured naval personnel
are part of an invasion army that destroys Arab and Muslim states.
I
wonder how the majority of British people would feel about a bunch of
Iranian naval commandos operating in the English Channel stopping every
Western vessel and searching its belly for some potential military
goods. I wonder as well how would some Brits may feel about the Iranian
democratically elected government interfering with the British
Parliaments recent decision to spend dozens of billions on a new
Trident, a weapon designed for indiscriminate killing of millions.
Obviously there is no need to elaborate on these rhetoric questions,
the answers are clear. The vast majority of Brits wouldnt accept
anyone interfering neither with British politics nor with the Kingdoms
territorial water. Yet, for the majority of Westerners constant
intimidation and destruction of Muslim or Arab states seems to be
nothing other than business as usual.
I better admit it; I do
not know where exactly the fifteen British sailors were captured. I am
far from being qualified to say who tells the truth about this saga,
whether the seamen were captured in Iranian sea or was it in an
international water. Reading some expert commentators about the
subject, I tend to believe that no one has a clear-cut answer to offer.
In fact, most British papers have now adopted the notion of caught in
disputed water just to disguise their premature judgment some days
ago.
However, the issue here has nothing to do with truth. The
question to be asked here is why is it so complicated for us Western
people to accept the possibility that the truth of the other may be
slightly or even very different to ours. I may admit that I find it
rather concerning that the British press willingly and blindly bought
the British government account of the naval dispute while dismissing
the possibility that the Iranians may have had an adequate argument to
offer.
At the end of the day, we may have to face it, Blair
and his governments record for telling the truth is not very
impressive. In the last five years the British government has managed
to lie more or less about everything; whether it was Iraqi WMD, 45
minutes of deployment of those imaginary weapons, whether it was a
phantasmic pretext for an illegal war.
It would be fair to
comment that as much as Blair can hardly tell the truth, President
Ahmadinejad has yet to be caught telling a lie. Ahmadinejad, though
being rather unpopular in Britain, is far from deceiving his listener.
Indeed, he has some harsh things to say. Unlike Blair who was generous
enough to admit that the Iranian people have some past to be proud of
(we respect Iran as an ancient civilization, as a nation with a proud
and dignified history Tony Blair, 4.4.06), President Ahmadinejad
insists that Iranian people are entitled as well for a present and even
for a prospect of some future.
The President whom some of us
call Islamofascist, believes actually that the Iranian people are
equal human beings. Thus, he genuinely believes that like more or less
every Western country, his country and his people have the right to
benefit from atomic energy and nuclear research. Is it that outrageous?
I may suggest that considering Western governments are becoming
increasingly enthusiastic about atomic energy, it is basically
impossible to produce any sufficient ethical argument against
Ahmadinejad on that matter. Moreover, bearing in mind the Israeli
nuclear might, there is not a single moral argument for preventing any
of Israels neighbors from having at least a similar deadly capacity.
Ahmadinejad
doesnt shy off. He says what he believes to be right, He believes for
instance that if the Europeans feel guilty for their past crimes
against the Jews, it is the Europeans who should face their past and
take responsibility for the Jews rather than dumping them in the Middle
East on the expense of the Palestinian people. Again, this thought is
rational as well as implacably ethically grounded. Whether we like its
implication or not, is a different matter. Ahmadinejad may be seen by
some as a Holocaust denier, yet as far as I can see, he is one of the
very few statesmen who manages to internalize the real meaning of the
Holocaust. He says No to racism. Accordingly, he believes that Israel,
the Jews-only State, a racially orientated nationalist entity, has no
right to exist. Ahmadinejad has never called for the liquidation of the
Israeli people but rather for the dismantling of the Zionist apparatus.
Again, I see nothing ethically wrong with that.
In the last
days, Ahmadinejad proved again that as far as humanism and peace
seeking are concerned, he is ahead of his Western rivals. Seemingly, we
have a lot to learn from our Muslim brothers. In this cultural clash,
it is us, the West who have lost touch with the notions of empathy and
ethics. May I suggest that it is not Blair and Bush who should be
blamed, it is us the people who are failing collectively to listen to
the cry of the other. Rather than blaming Blair and his shrinking
circuit of supporters, it is us, the silent crowed who should launch
into a self searching process. If humanism, rationality, analytical
thinking and ethics have been seen as Western cultural assets at a
certain stage, it is currently the so called Muslim fundamentalists
who grasp the real meaning of those qualities far better than us.
Ahmadinejad
was there to remind us all what grace was all about. Seemingly, it is
Ahmadinejad who evokes the feeling of goodness and it is Blair who
couldnt match it. It was Blair who couldnt even recruit the minimal
dignity and kindness to salute his foe. British columnists should know
better. Ahmadinejad didnt win by points, it wasnt about winning a
political battle. This was just another chapter in an ongoing clash
between civilizations, between Good and Evil and as it seems, we are
stuck at least momentarily with Bush, Blair and their Ziocon
philosophy, not exactly the civilized one and not remotely the carrier
of goodness so to say.
Gilad Atzmon is an internationally
acclaimed jazz musician whose CD Exile was selected by the BBC in 2003
as Album of the Year. He was born in Israel and served in the Israeli
Defense Force (IDF), and is now living in self-exile in the UK. Visit
his web site at: www.gilad.co.uk. He can be reached at:
gilad@gilad.co.uk
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I suggest you're with 'them'