TORONTO - Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert wants citizens of Sderot and Ashkelon to get used to constant rocket
barrages from Gaza, but the problem could be solved by paying Palestinians to
leave the territory, a prominent right-wing MK said in Toronto last week.
"Every year Israel spends 10 per cent of their national income on the concept of
[the Oslo accords]-on building fences, on destroying Jewish villages, on putting
guards at each coffee shop or store. It's crazy," Moshe Feiglin, right, leader
of the Manhigut Yehudit (Jewish Leadership) faction of Israel's Likud Party,
told some 200 people at Shaarei Tefillah Synagogue, after a March 27 speech
sponsored by the Jewish Defense League of Canada.
"We're talking about more than 60,000 people on the payroll. We're talking about
$150 billion that Israel spends every 10 years," the former Likud leadership
candidate said, noting that a survey done recently at a Palestinian university
found that most of the students want to leave Gaza.
"That money is enough to give every Arab family in Yesha [Gaza] $250,000. They
want to leave, we have the money. We're spending it anyhow. We have the money to
help them, encourage them to have a future somewhere else."
According to Ynetnews, Olmert recently told board members of the Barzilai
Medical Center in Ashkelon that living with rocket attacks has been Israel's
reality for the past 60 years, and that he has "no way of preventing these
things from recurring."
"Basically, he said, 'Get used to it. I have no solutions. Get used to it,'"
said Feiglin, who co-founded the group Zo Artzeinu (This is our Land) to protest
the Oslo accords in 1993.
"That means that 63 years after the gates of Auschwitz opened, they are supposed
to get used to the fact that every once in a while, a Jew is going to get killed
because he is a Jew. He has an army, a president, the most modern, strong army
in the Middle East, Parliament - why did we do all that? Why did we even
establish the State of Israel to begin with? Because we agreed that we would not
get used to that."
Feiglin admitted that his Gaza solution would likely not come to pass, and he
ventured another approach that he said could improve security in Israel.
He said the best way to remedy the problem in Gaza is to consider the case of
the Golan Heights.
"The border of the Golan Heights between Israel and Syria is the quietest border
and the safest and most peaceful border," Feiglin said.
He argued that Israel achieved peace on the Syrian border by following five
rules: the Syrian Arabs who lived there were evacuated and "encouraged to
leave." As well, the land was occupied, it was annexed, Jewish settlements were
established, and Israel and Syria never signed a peace treaty.
"And look what we have: a great peace in the Golan."
Feiglin said the biggest obstacles Israel must overcome are within its own
borders, adding that from the moment the late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin shook
hands with the late Palestinian Authority president Yassir Arafat, Israel
started playing a completely different game, one that gave the advantage to the
Arabs.
"Let's assume someone comes to your house and tells you, 'Your house is mine.'
And you shake his hand and you tell him, 'You know what, let's compromise. What
will people think? Who will they think the house really belongs to?" Feiglin
asked.
He said most homeowners would do whatever it takes to kick that person out of
their house.
"You would do everything you can so people would understand that you don't
accept this claim. The minute you shake his hand, you lost the match," Feiglin
said.
He said when Israel pulled out of Gaza in 2005, media from around the world
flocked to witness the event.
"There was no one in the world who did not see what the Jews were doing to
themselves. The Jews showed the entire world that the land of Israel does not
belong to them, but that it belongs to the Arabs. And from now on, we are the
bad guys and the good guys are the Arabs."
He said part of the overall solution to Israel's problems is to seek leadership
that works in the name of God.
"Israel needs leadership that leads the State of Israel [based] upon Jewish
values, leadership that knows where he comes from, knows where he is going."
In last August's primaries, Feiglin who ran for the Likud party leadership with
the tagline, "Feiglin, because he has a God," received about 24 per cent of the
votes against Likud party leader Benjamin Netanyahu's 73 per cent.
Feiglin said that a few years ago, no one would have believed that he would
garner a quarter of the votes against Netanyahu.
"But I'm telling you that, with G-d's help, next primary, I'm going to win."