Moshe Feiglin
Manhigut Yehudit
11 Menachem Av 5770
22 July '10
Translated from the Makor Rishon newspaperI sat in the garage waiting room. The air conditioner in my car was no match for the July heat. Yehudah the mechanic understood that I was on my way to the hospital and took care of me right away.
"Excuse me, perhaps you are Feiglin?" asked the man sitting next to me.
"Yes, pleased to meet you."
"Do you mind if I ask you a question?"
"Feel free. Maybe I will have an answer."
"Are you really as extreme and dangerous as they say?"
"Maybe you can explain what you think is extreme so that I can answer."
"Look, before the Disengagement, people from Gush Katif came to my moshav and attempted to explain their point of view. I invited them in and they were happy because not everyone was excited about allowing them into their living rooms. They explained themselves pretty well, until they said that the East Bank of the Jordan is also ours. That is where they lost me, because I understood that nothing will satisfy them. Even if all the Arabs get up and leave, they will still want more. That is what I call extreme," he declared.
"I am loyal to the entire Land of Israel and its borders as they are delineated in the Bible," I answered him. "I do not think that we have to initiate wars today to conquer the East Bank of the Jordan, but it must be clear that this is our Land. In the event that parts of that territory fall into our hands in a war of self-defense, we must declare sovereignty over them, just as we did in the Golan Heights. Israel should enact a Law of Return for land. That, by the way, will bring peace, because the Arabs will have what to lose from wars."
"I think that it was right to retreat from Gush Katif, but that we should have responded with more force the moment that they started to shoot," the man continued.
"What is your dream?" I tried to get him onto a more substantive track. "What are you ultimately trying to achieve?"
"I don't believe that we will have peace with them, but we can achieve some sort of calm if in addition to retreat we also display determination," he added.
"In other words, your dream is calm, or some sort of peace," I said to him. "So why not in Australia? Or New Zealand?"
"No, no," said the man. "I believe that this is my place because of our history, and I have no intention of giving that up. But what do I need Shechem for? Do you want to tell me that you want to return to Gaza? I prefer to leave the places that have Arabs."
(Read full story)
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