The Russian discotheque Dolphi, devastated by the Friday night
blast, stands on the shore of Manshieh, a destroyed Palestinian
neighborhood of Jaffa, not far from my home. Teenage friends of my sons
used to frequent the place. It is an innocent crowd, brought to the shores
of Palestine by their parents after disintegration of the Soviet Union.
Kids speak Russian, their contacts with Israeli boys and girls of the same
age are quite limited, as is their interest in local affairs. Many of them
are blond and blue-eyed, some dress in the outmoded punk style, they drink
more than it is good for them. A Lost Generation, they call themselves.
Few of them are Jews by any reasonable criteria, and Israeli radio
informed that it would be quite impossible to bury the victims in the
hallowed ground of the Jewish cemetery. Their fate is not an easy one in
the Jewish state: they are supposed to serve in the army, but the army
makes it difficult for them to swear the oath of allegiance on the Gospel.
If they perish, they are buried beyond the fence, together with suicides.
As Druse and Circassian minorities, one million strong Russian
community is not an obvious partner of the Jewish supremacists. The
Russians are subject to discrimination. They have low paid jobs, which
provide no security of income. They pay huge interest (three times higher
than in the US) on loans they are given as ‘a settlement grant’ or ‘a
mortgage help’. Many Russians baptize their children, pretty Russian
girls often marry Palestinians. Actually, despite separation rules,
Russians marry Palestinians as often as they marry Israelis. The blast is
liable to enforce their tentative ties with Israelis. That is why it is
important to stress that the circumstances of the explosion are still
surrounded by a cloud of mystery.
INFOPAL expressed doubts whether "any Islamic movement is able
to carry out such a strong attack, given that
most of the recent suicide bombings
have failed to cause significant harm
or damage". On the other hand, Israeli security services have
know-how and facilities needed to cause by one blast the major shift of
alliance of the Russian community. They proved their lack of scruples in
1949, when they bombed the Baghdad synagogue and sent the Iraqi Jews
running to Israel. In 1990-s they instigated rumors of impending pogroms
in Moscow and sent the parents of Dolphi kids on the way to Tel
Aviv. Killing of non-Jewish children was already declared a ‘justifiable
means’ by Madeleine Albright. She spoke about Iraqi children, dying
because of the US-imposed blockade, but her Tel Aviv friends could make
their own conclusions.
Many years from now, Palestinians will unravel the mystery of the
botched suicide bomber wave 2001. They will discover who and why targeted
the Russian disco, or the poorest Hassidic area of Jerusalem, or other
marginal sites, as if trying to enforce the elusive Jewish unity. They
will find out why the only ‘successful’ attack was made on
predominantly non-Jewish kids.
But it is not the only doubt. Susanne Scheidt from Italy posited
a legitimate query: "How come that last summer, when there was no
Palestinian uprising in sight, we read
about numerous cases in which Palestinians, as
soon as they showed up on the beach of Tel Aviv with a bathing suit
in their bag, were instantly spotted
by Israeli police and sent away from the beach?" Could a Palestinian
with a backpack get as far as the queue to the discotheque, without a
connivance of the security services? Until now, there are doubts. Let as
move to a certainty.
Last year we witnessed a severe gang warfare for the control of Russian
night clubs. The warring parties used to throw hand-grenades into the
competing clubs, with some human casualties. Russian discos of Tel Aviv
are fighting for the same market. Their methods are not too gentle. It
would not be impossible to suggest that the fatal attack at the entrance
of the Russian discotheque was caused by the gang war, rather than by a
Palestinian bomber. A year ago there was a dreadful explosion in Moscow
underground station Pushkinskaya, that was immediately ascribed to Chechen
terrorists. Afterwards it became known that the station was bombed by the
racketeers, as the vendors did not pay the protection money.
Now, if it will be found out that the explosion was actually caused by
a rival gang from, say, a neighboring Netania, would the IDF planes bomb
Netania? Would the army besiege Netania? Would Netania city council be
denounced as a terrorist organization? No, this way of collective
punishment is meted out only to Palestinians. That is wrong. Gaza should
be treated in the same way as Netania, Mahmud and Anton should have the
same rights as Doron and Boris. Then, probably, there will be no reason
even for suspicions and doubts.
We should object both to the premature presumption of a Palestinian
involvement, and to the racist style of collective punishment. Israelis
are too fast in this game. When a single Jewish terrorist shot a German
diplomat in Paris in 1938, the Nazi government replied with the Kristallhacht,
a massive pogrom that carried away one hundred lives. When a single
pro-Iraqi terrorist shot an Israeli diplomat in London in 1982, Israeli
government unleashed the invasion of Lebanon and killed forty thousand
people. Maybe it was the thing to do in the days of Genghis Khan, but not
any more.
Next day after the bombing, Jewish mob tried to lynch Palestinians and
destroy the mosques in Jaffa. The police blocked their advance. Israeli
press made a lot of profit out of this action. But I see no reason to
congratulate the police: they knew, as we all know, that the work of the
lynching mob will be done by the Israeli army. Surely they will target
Palestinians just because they belong to the same ethnic group as the
supposed bomber.
Nobody demands ‘the Jews’ to pay for the dirty dealings of Milken,
Rich and Maxwell, or for Sharon massacres. ‘The Palestinians’ should
not pay for excesses of individuals. While there are still reasonable
doubts as to the identity of the bombers, one thing is certain: collective
ethnic-based punishment is a crime against humanity.