Ahed Tamimi - a poem

Started by yankeedoodle, January 23, 2018, 01:23:35 PM

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yankeedoodle



Below is a computer-generated translation of the poem.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BeQwx9RgSRH/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=embed_legacy
yonooshילדה-
וכשקצין 17 did something terrible Israeli proud
again invaded her home
is knocked slapped him.
She was born into this this ובסטירה
were fifty years of occupation and humiliation.
and on where to be told a story of the struggle
the mujahed, tamimi,
's facade is of hair,
as well as David לגולית Lester and save friend,
be in the same line with
Jean glow, hannah סנש and Anna Frank.

All Hell has broken loose because an Israeli poet has written this brief verse championing Ahed Tamimi as a new Joan of Arc, or Anne Frank.

Israeli Defense chief urges IDF radio to ban poet praising Palestinian 'Joan of Arc'
https://www.rt.com/news/416750-israel-minister-ban-poet/

Top Israeli officials are embroiled in a war of words after the defense chief urged IDF radio to ban famed poet Yonatan Geffen on its stations. The artist earlier praised a jailed Palestinian activist for slapping a soldier.

"I told Army Radio this morning to stop playing or interviewing Yonatan Geffen on all its stations," Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman tweeted Tuesday.

Yonatan Geffen, a 70-year-old Israeli poet and songwriter, published a short poem celebrating teenage activist Ahed Tamimi, who has become an iconic figure after videos of her confronting IDF soldiers from two years ago and last December went viral.

Calling Tamimi "a beautiful 17-year-old girl," the poet wrote: "in that slap were 50 years of occupation and humiliation." "Like David who slapped Goliath, you will be in the same ranks as Joan of Arc, Hannah Senesh and Anna Frank," Geffen writes in the poem, published on Instagram.

Israel "will not give a platform to a drunk who compares a child who perished in the Holocaust and a brave fighter who fought the Nazis to Ahed Tamimi, a brat who attacked a soldier," Lieberman said of the poet.

Attorney General of Israel Avichai Mandelblit, dismissed the defense minister's calls, saying that he had no right to give orders to Army Radio, and that "the legal authority to determine the content that the station will broadcast is reserved for the professional employees of the station."

Mandelblit, however, added that his statement does "not legitimize the content of [Geffen's] outrageous remarks," according to the Jerusalem Post.

In response, Liberman said that as defense minister, he is "the shield for all the soldiers" and he is guided "by common sense that stands above bureaucratic directives."

Culture Minister Miri Regev slammed the poet for sympathizing with Tamimi, who is "not pure," but rather "a terror-supporting criminal who is now sitting in detention." Regev advised Geffen not to act "like a poet who has been recruited to free Palestine."

Last month, Tamimi was arrested days after the incident in the West Bank. Later, a military court indicted the teenager with aggravated assault, along with her mother and cousin. The latest viral video shows Tamimi, her mother Nariman, and her cousin Nour, confronting the two IDF soldiers in the village of Nabi Saleh. The women can be seen pushing, slapping, and kicking the heavily-armed servicemen, who ordered them to leave.



yankeedoodle

What a surprise this is: 

[quote Now Geffen has recanted, saying he was "effectively under house arrest" since the poem was published. He had become so controversial that he feared to show his head: "I was under siege for a week, didn't open the door, didn't eat for a week".     [/quote]

Israeli poet apologizes for comparing Ahed Tamimi to Anne Frank
http://mondoweiss.net/2018/01/israeli-apologizes-comparing/

The Israeli poet Yehonatan Geffen caused great outrage in Israel when he posted a poem (on his Instagram) comparing Ahed Tamimi to iconic Jewish heroes during the Holocaust– Hanna Szenes and Anne Frank, alongside Joan of Arc–causing Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman to call for banning him completely from army radio, as well as all other media. 

Now Geffen has recanted, saying he was "effectively under house arrest" since the poem was published. He had become so controversial that he feared to show his head: "I was under siege for a week, didn't open the door, didn't eat for a week".

Geffen spoke at a cultural event in Petah Tikva Saturday night, on Holocaust Memorial day, per the Jerusalem Post:

"t was really a mistake, and I apologize for it, in particular to all those who were personally offended."

The Defense Minister showed his immediate compassion, with Jewish religious overtones:

"He who confesses and renounces [sins] finds mercy", he said, quoting from Proverbs 28.

The Moldavian night-club-bouncer-cum-Defense Minister, and illegal settler, is apparently vying for other ministerial posts – Ministry of Religious Affairs, perhaps? It was Lieberman who was the main inciter against Geffen, even renouncing outright the state attorney opinion that as a Minister he should not interfere in army radio program decisions. True, Lieberman did not call for the decapitation of Geffen with an axe, or for his drowning in the Dead Sea, as he has suggested be done to Palestinians, but he "effectively" put Geffen under "house arrest".

Geffen's "house arrest" is nothing compared to the continued occupation of Ahed Tamimi's Nabi Saleh, or compared to her continued incarceration – six weeks awaiting trial and counting – a girl of 16 in an Israeli prison, kept there until end of procedures because "she might slap again".

Nor is Geffen's "house arrest" anything near that of Dareen Tatour, the Palestinian-Israeli poet who wrote, "Resist them". Tatour has been under arrest since October 2015. She is currently under house arrest, awaiting her next hearing, set for February 15th. 

But Yehonatan Geffen is now a free man. After a few moments of actual solidarity with the oppressed, he tasted the wrath of Israeli society. He recanted, came back into the fold, and has now received the merciful benedictions of 'rabbi Lieberman'.

But wait – Geffen does not give up so easily. He had to make another tongue-in-cheek crack about his error, to show he's not totally lost his spirit, and that he has not completely capitulated to Israeli fascism. So what does he say?

"I could have, in that same line, compared her to Wonder Woman and Gal Gadot."

Oh boy. That's maybe provocative for Israelis in the sense that they don't want their heroes compared to Ahed Tamimi at all, but that is provocative in a whole other, cynical sense: in which an oppressed individual is equated with her oppressor. Gal Gadot is not just an actor, and she's not really a Wonder Woman. As Susan Abulhawa wrote in her piece "The wonder of imperial feminism" in Al Jazeera,

[Gadot] "is an avowed Zionist and cheerleader of war crimes. Gal Gadot, the actor in the lead role [of Wonder Woman], was an active soldier in the military when Israel invaded and carpet-bombed Southern Lebanon in 2006. In 2014, Gadot sent a message of support for Israeli soldiers as they were slaughtering more than 2,100 human beings imprisoned in a seaside enclave with no place to hide or escape. They bombed whole neighbourhoods, burying families in the rubble of their demolished homes. For 52 days, they rained death from sky, land, and sea on to defenseless civilians in the most densely populated place on earth."

Abulhawa asks, "What if Hollywood made this film in the 1980s and cast a militant apartheid supporter for the role of Wonder Woman? Would the US media focus on her acting talent and beauty instead of the fact that she openly and proudly asserts her right, as a white woman, to subjugate the natives of her country? What is even more bewildering is that Gadot is being touted as a feminist (per her own claim) and, remarkably, as a woman of colour. Queen Latifah fits that bill and would have made an excellent Wonder Woman, but I digress."

Is that the character Geffen jokes that he could have compared Ahed to, seriously? Why? Because it would seem provocative for Israelis but still not be as egregious as comparing Ahed to Holocaust heroes? Is Geffen even aware of how cynical it would be to equate an oppressed with an oppressor? Probably not; these thoughts would probably hardly occur to any Israeli. The comparison to Gadot and Wonder Woman will be dismissed as silly, but not as criminal as the comparison to Szenes and Frank. Gadot's many Zionist fans will no doubt be a bit offended, because how dare Geffen even suggest Ahed is a hero, because of course Gadot is a hero.

Yehonatan Geffen is now back to his normal 'leftist' life: the privileged Jewish-Israeli that he is, having succumbed to the fascist pressure to renounce his sinful comparisons. And the girl whom he once supported, has now been sacrificed on the altar of Jewish heroism and martyrdom, something which apparently cannot be compared to anything else, anywhere and eternally so.

Move on folks. Just another ripple in the chronicles of the 'only democracy'.