We Jews have experienced so much pain in our long and arduous history
that the pain of Islamic terrorism seems to be just another episode of
indescribable suffering. To an extent, this is certainly true. For the
moment, we must endure, and – in the end – we shall prevail. So it has
been before; so it will be again.
It is also true that, whatever its particular source – our pain is
incommunicable. This fact is deeply rooted in the confining space of
each individual human body. Very simply, no human language can ever
really describe pain, an observation that has distinctly special and
important implications for control of violence in the world. But with
specific respect to Islamic terror-violence, this observation has the
decidedly regrettable effect of reducing current Israeli suffering to
an altogether anesthetized inventory of “casualties.”
Israel’s excruciating pain at the bloodied hands of Islamic terrorists
remains subject to the very stark limitations of grammar and syntax. Of
course, everyone who is human has suffered physical pain, and everyone
who has suffered knows that bodily anguish not only defies language,
but that it is also language-destroying. In the case of relentless
Islamic terror against Israelis, this inexpressibility of pain now
stands in the way of acknowledging such terror as pure barbarism.
Shielded by the inherent limitations of language, suicide-bombers are
now able to present themselves before the tribunal of world public
opinion as honorable armed combatants. In fact, however, these
murderers are anything but soldiers or “freedom fighters.” Rather, they
are fearful and gratuitously destructive criminals, killers who combine
a rare species of cowardice with a perverse commitment to inflict great
harm solely for harm’s sake.
Significantly, there is, from the Islamic terrorist point of view, no
reasonable hope of transforming Israeli pain into purposeful Islamic
power. On the contrary, the Hamas/Islamic Jihad/Fatah/Hizbullah (it
makes no difference) resort to carnage and mayhem may inevitably
stiffen even the most liberation minded hearts. So why do these
terrorists continue to enthusiastically inflict pain upon innocents,
tearing up unprotected Jewish bodies with exploding razor blades and
ball bearings and without foreseeable pragmatic benefit? Have these
terrorists now abandoned the usual political playbook of policy
advantage? Have they simply traded in Clausewitz for De Sade?
One partial answer to this question is that Islamic terrorists, in
exactly the same fashion as their intended audiences, are imprisoned by
the remorseless shortfalls of human language. The pain experienced by
one human body can never genuinely be shared with another, even if
these bodies are closely related by blood and even if the physical
distance between them is short. Although widely unacknowledged, the
split between one’s own body and the body of another is always
absolute. For reasons that likely have more to do with Darwinian logic
than the vagaries of compassion, the “membranes” between bodies are
always stubbornly impermeable. This split, therefore, allows even the
most heinous harms to “others” to be viewed “objectively.” Sometimes
these harms can even be accepted as a distinctly pardonable form of
“national liberation.”
For Islamic terrorists and their supporters, the violent death meted
out to Israelis is always only an abstraction. As “infidels,” we hear
again and again, their Jewish victims lack “sacredness.” For the
terrorists, murdering these Jewish victims is not just a minor matter.
It is always “the will of allah.” It is, for them, always a matter for
loud family celebration.
Physical pain within the human body not only destroys ordinary
language; it can actually bring about a visceral reversion to
pre-language human sounds – that is, to those primal moans and cries
and whispers that are anterior to learned speech. While the many Jewish
victims of enemy terror writhe agonizingly from the burns and the nails
and the screws dipped ever so lovingly into rat poison, neither the
world publics who bear silent witness nor the screaming murderers
themselves can ever begin to experience the meaning of what is being
suffered. This incapacity is, to be sure, not an excuse for the
bystanders or for the perpetrators, but it does help to explain why
even callous killing and mutilation by terrorists can sometimes be
construed as rebellion. Moreover, the incommunicability of physical
pain further amplifies Israeli injuries from terrorism by insistently
reminding the victims that their suffering is not only intense, but
that it is also understated. For the Jewish victims there is never an
anesthesia strong enough for the pain, but for the observers and for
the perpetrators the victims’ pain is always anesthetized.
For all who shall still learn about the latest Palestinian or Hizbullah
attack upon a nursery school, a kindergarten van, a city bus, an
ice-cream parlor, a pizza shop or a falafel stand, the suffering
intentionally ignited upon Jewish civilians will never be truly felt.
And even then, this suffering will flicker for only a moment before it
disappears. Although it will be years before the “merely wounded” are
ever again able to move their own violated bodies beyond immeasurable
boundaries of torment, newspaper readers and television viewers will
pause only for a second before progressing to less disturbing forms of
discourse.
By its very nature, physical pain has no decipherable voice, no
touchable referent. When at last, it finds some dimming sound at all,
the listener no longer wants to be bothered. This human listener,
mortal and fragile, wishes pathetically but understandably, to deny his
or her own flesh-and-blood vulnerabilities.
All things move in the midst of death, and the denial of death is
surely humankind’s basic preoccupation. As a result, the pain of others
is necessarily kept at a safe distance and the horror of that pain is
purposefully blunted by language. Islamic terrorists, therefore, are
always much, much worse than they might appear (they are certainly not
“freedom fighters”), and their crimes are not always recognized as
unforgivable and repellent. This problem of justice can never really be
solved, but the sources of any possible improvement lie nonetheless in
suffering, blood and the inevitably common agony of extinction.
From the standpoint of Israel’s ongoing struggle for survival in an
authentically genocidal region, the country’s leaders must soon come to
admit that the time for pretend peace processes is over, that any
political road map is an invented cartography of Jewish annihilation.
Israel’s pain is infinitely more important than any diplomatic logic,
and a deliberately targeted child’s cry of despair is always more
important than even the most subtle strategic calculations, and
freely-flowing human tears have far, far deeper meaning than learned
smiles.
Original
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