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SOURCE: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.712125
Ben-Gurion in
1951: Only Death Penalty Will Deter Jews From Gratuitous Killing of Arabs
'Until a Jewish soldier is hanged for
murdering Arabs, these acts of murder won’t end,' Israel’s first prime minister
told his stunned cabinet 66 years ago, when Jewish murders of Arabs had become
all too common.
Gidi Weitz Apr 01, 2016 11:48 AM
“I’m not the justice minister, I’m not
the police minister and I don’t know all criminal acts committed here, but as
defense minister I know some of the crimes, and I must say the situation is
frightening in two areas: 1) acts of murder and 2) acts of rape.” So declared
Prime Minister and Defense Minister David Ben-Gurion in 1951 before dropping a
bombshell: “People in the [General] Staff tell me, and it’s my view as well,
that until a Jewish soldier is hanged for murdering Arabs, these acts of murder
won’t end.”
Ben-Gurion was speaking at a cabinet
meeting on abolishing the death penalty. Jewish-Arab tensions were high
following the 1948 War of Independence, and there was also a problem with
infiltrators: Arab refugees seeking to return to the homes and fields they left
during the war. Consequently, Jewish murders of Arabs had proliferated, and
some ministers considered the death penalty necessary to solve this problem.
The cabinet discussion of 66 years ago
is particularly interesting in light of this week’s very different cabinet
discussion about a soldier who killed a wounded Palestinian terrorist in Hebron
after he no longer posed a threat.
“In general, those who have guns use them,”
Ben-Gurion asserted, adding that some Israelis “think Jews are people but Arabs
aren’t, so you can do anything to them. And some think it’s a mitzvah to kill
Arabs, and that everything the government says against murdering Arabs isn’t
serious, that it’s just a pretense that killing Arabs is forbidden, but in
fact, it’s a blessing because there will be fewer Arabs here. As long as they
think that, the murders won’t stop.”
Ben-Gurion said he, too, would prefer fewer Arabs,
but not at the price of murder. “Abolishing the death penalty will increase
bloodshed,” he warned, especially between Jews and Arabs. “Soon, we won’t be
able to show our faces to the world. Jews meet an Arab and murder him.”
The cabinet first discussed abolishing the death
penalty – a legacy of the British Mandate – in July 1949, at the urging of
Justice Minister Pinhas Rosen. Ben-Gurion was dubious even then. He said he
would support the bill, but was almost certain the death penalty would
ultimately be reinstated, because abolishing it “will lead to a proliferation
of murders.” After intense debate, the cabinet agreed to abolish the death
sentence except for treason during a state of emergency.
The bill then went to the Knesset, where the
Constitution Committee held lengthy deliberations. A year later, Rosen
presented the cabinet with a problem: Seven prisoners were on death row, but
their executions were being delayed until the Knesset made up its mind about
the death penalty.
As the cabinet discussed this issue, Ben-Gurion
stunned his colleagues by saying he no longer supported abolishing the death
penalty, primarily due to an increase in killings of Arabs by Jewish soldiers.
Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett, who in 1949 had
supported abolishing the death penalty on the grounds that “Human society must
aspire to a moral level at which it’s forbidden to take human life,” also
unexpectedly reversed himself at this meeting.
“With great regret I’ve become convinced
that abolishing the death penalty is inconceivable,” he announced, noting that
even countries “which are immeasurably more humane than we are – I’ve spent
years there and I live here – maintain the death penalty.”
The main reason for his U-turn, however, was “the
crimes that have happened and are happening week after week, especially in the
army,” including some that weren’t public knowledge. Sociopaths might not be
deterred by the death penalty, Sharett admitted, “but that Jewish chap who
kills two Arabs he met on the road, I’m not willing to say, without trying it
first, that he’s a killer by nature and won’t fear the death penalty.”
Some Jews, Sharett said, think “every Arab is a
dog, a wild dog that it’s a mitzvah to kill.” And “to save them from killing
human beings, it’s a mitzvah to have the death penalty here. As long as we
don’t have it, these murders will continue, and we’ll be held accountable, and
it will create moral corruption here.
“I’ve giving a speech of repentance and
confession here,” he
continued. “I’ve learned from experience that in this
country, the death penalty is necessary... We made a mistake when we stopped
hanging... If all the crimes committed in this country were reported, terror
would grip the public and lynchings would start. I’d shoot a Jewish chap who
wanted to shoot an Arab passerby if that were the way to save him.”
Sharett then described one case in which three
Arabs were killed and a fourth saved only because a Jew threw him into a hut,
and another case in which two Indian Jews were almost killed by fellow Jews who
thought they were Arabs until they shouted “Israel.”
Minister Dov Yosef backed Ben-Gurion and Sharett.
“In principle, I’ve opposed hanging as a penalty all my life, but
unfortunately, in this country and today’s situation,” it’s needed, he said.
Minister Haim-Moshe Shapira concurred, saying he
was especially horrified by group killings. He cited one in which “eight
soldiers were present at the time of the murder. Surely they didn’t all murder,
but they were all present at the time of the crime and not one member of this
group stopped the crime.”
“There have been worse cases,” Ben-Gurion
responded.
Ministers Golda Myerson (later Meir) and David
Remez, in contrast, remained opposed to the death penalty, but agreed that much
more must be done to prevent crimes against Arabs.
In the end, the death penalty was abolished – but
only three years later, in 1954.
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