A FLYBY AND A FALLING
OUT
By now I’m sure you are
familiar with “Eli’s Lookout.” The same observation point at
the top of the hill above the kibbutz, I have mentioned in
the past.
When I wrote about it
in 2009, I said,” You won't find "Eli's Lookout" on any
ordinance map. Just the same, if you are looking for a vantage point with a
wonderful view of our part of the Jezreel Valley, often referred to
as the Harod Valley, you can do no better than “Eli's Lookout.”
By sheer dint of
dogged determination and do-it-yourself aptitude, Eli turned a rocky outcrop into a garden
escape ideally suited for a family breakfast, a picnic, for
celebrating a birthday party and of course, as an observation point.
The lookout consists
of pergolas with picnic tables, benches, and cooking utensils, conveniently
connected to gas and electricity. The whole observation point is set among lawns and flower beds.
By the way, Eli is
alive, well and enjoying his own memorial.
Hoping to get a good view of Israel's
traditional Independence Day air parade I walked up the hill with my
daughter Daphna and her husband Mark.
Visibility was good, so while we were waiting
for the planes, I pointed out the many local landmarks and others further
afield. Not knowing exactly when the flyby would come our way, we headed for home at a leisurely pace. We were halfway down the hill when the first planes
flew by. Nearly 100 planes took part in
Israel's 75th anniversary flyby. The squadron-like formation was made up of jet fighters, attack helicopters, UAVs, air-refuelling tankers and cargo planes. British, Italian, American and German planes also joined the celebrations this year.
Apparently, at some
stage in the flyby the large formation divided and veered off in different directions.
We were able to watch only part of the impressive show.
Incidentally, Eli is a
prophet of impending doom regarding the future of this country. He’s not really
despondent, just a cheerful pessimist. Eli’s argument is that in the past,
Jewish autonomous entities were always short-lived. Surrounded by powerful
enemies Israel and Judah were conquered and their people were exiled.
Admittedly, modern Israel is a power to be reckoned with, but in times of crisis
Eli utters his gloomy forecast, usually at breakfast in the kibbutz dining
room. Most of the people at the table have heard it all before, so they don’t
bother to comment. However, once I said that historical predictions hold good for
their times, not for ours.
Our TV prime-time
panels invariably include a gloom-monger or two counterbalanced by an equally verbal
optimist. Of late, some foreign news outlets have commented on Israel’s
predicament.
Here’s an excerpt from
a piece in The Economist - “As
Israel marks its 75th anniversary, take a moment to admire how it has
triumphed against the odds. Before it declared independence in 1948 its own
generals warned that it had only a fifty-fifty chance of survival. Today Israel
is hugely rich, safer than it has been for most of its history, and
democratic—if, that is, you are prepared to exclude the territories it
occupies. It has overcome wars, droughts and poverty with few natural
endowments other than human grit. It is an outlier in the Middle East, a hub of
innovation and a winner from globalisation.
Yet, as we explain, Israel faces a
different set of opportunities and threats in the coming decades. You can get a
taste of this from the turmoil of recent weeks: a constitutional crisis over
judicial independence triggered by the right-wing government of Binyamin
Netanyahu; an eerie power vacuum in the stagnant West Bank; and the rules of
the old American-led order being shredded as Saudi Arabia, Iran and China cut
new deals. In the 20th century the risk of invasion threatened Israel’s
survival. In the 21st the danger is that internal splits sap it of the strength
and agility it needs to thrive.”
Until recently very
large anti judicial overhaul protests filled our city squares, sometimes
blocking main highways. Government supporters mainly employed spoiling tactics.
However, this week there was a change. Times of Israel
political correspondent Carrie
Keller-Lynn reported- “Thursday night’s
200,000-person show of force in support of the government’s plan to
substantively weaken judicial checks on political power underscored the fraying
of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s strongest relationship within his Likud
party — the one with his justice minister and longtime confidant, Yariv Levin.
The once-tight confidants have drifted apart on
the issue of how and to what extent to pursue the judicial
shakeup. The
hardline rally was
pushed by the
justice minister as a message to the prime minister.
In December, Netanyahu agreed to unfetter
Levin’s two-decade-long crusade to radically constrain Israel’s top court and
the country’s judiciary, giving him the justice portfolio with an agreement to
let him blitz through sweeping, structural changes to the justice system.
By March — three months into a major nationwide
protest movement, economic uncertainty and open pressure from Israel’s closest
ally, the US, to roll back Levin’s plan — Netanyahu had declared that he was
entering the arena and taking matters into his own hands.
He echoed this argument to the High Court of
Justice, saying he needed to directly deal with the shakeup — despite this
potentially putting him in a conflict of interest in light of his ongoing
corruption trial — because the issue had reached the level of a ‘national crisis.’
Within the senior ranks of Likud, according to
party sources, this was taken as a sign that Levin’s blitzkrieg approach had
failed.
Thursday night’s demonstration — bolstered by organised
shuttles for religious Zionist and settler supporters of the judicial overhaul
— was a support call organised by
certain sectors of the government as a message to their own coalition
colleagues to continue the legislative push. In other words, it was a very
public demand by Levin and his allies to continue along their desired path.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu — who in late March
decided to pause the reform legislation until the next Knesset session to allow
time for dialogue with the opposition, announcing the suspension hours before
the coalition could have enacted the dramatic law cementing its control over
key judicial appointments — is seemingly trying a different
tack.
The generally tight-lipped Levin released a
rare, personal video message on his social media accounts on Wednesday, making
a direct plea for supporters to attend Thursday’s rally.
“I need you,” he said. “We need everyone to
come to Jerusalem so a clear voice in favour of the reform will be heard.”
Netanyahu, by contrast, was relatively quiet.
While he did not dissuade attendance, the premier — who frequently releases
video messages on social media — didn’t promote it, and only released a lukewarm
thank you tweet to participants as the event was getting underway.”
Ahead of the pro-judicial overhaul
rally, participants were filmed walking on a massive banner with the faces of
Supreme Court Chief Justice Esther Hayut, Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara,
former chief justice Aharon Barak, former attorney general Avichai Mandelblit
and former state attorney Shai Nitzan, alongside slogans vilifying
them.
Protesters opposed to the government’s judicial
overhaul were set to hold demonstrations around the country on Saturday night
for the 17th consecutive week.
Anti-government protest organisers said they planned to come out in
force in response to the rally by proponents of the legislation, and ahead of
the Knesset reconvening next week.
While many political commentators
emphasised the ‘falling out’ aspect of the Netanyahu-Levin partnership, at
least one observer wondered whether Thursday’s rally was a one-time effort
aimed at getting the Judicial Reform back on track, or the first of a series of demonstrations supporting the government.
Take care.
Beni, 29th of April, 2023.