Israel’s Sociocide, Genocide, Ecocide in Gaza
EDITORIAL, 16 Oct 2023
#818 | Prof. Johan Galtung – TRANSCEND Media Service
- Sociocide is a new concept that has not found its place in positive international law.
- Genocide, the unspeakable crime of massive killing of members of a genus, a nation, for no other reason than membership.
- Ecocide, the unspeakable crime of killing Mother Earth who nourishes us all, is finding its place via the constitutions of some countries in Latin America.
Sociocide:
The killing of a society’s capacity to survive, to reproduce itself, should become equally prominent a crime against humanity. A society is a self-reproducing social system. So are human beings, with our basic needs for survival, wellness, identity, freedom. Society is also an organism, with a life-span far beyond that of individuals. For humans to survive as humans their basic needs have to be met. For that to happen, the society has to survive. For the society to survive the basic social prerequisites must be met:
- for security, against violence, killing, wounding the members;
- for sustainability economically, against their starvation, illness;
- for identity culturally, a meaning with life, against alienation;
- for autonomy politically, to be a master of their own house.
As society unfolds so do humans, and vice versa. Life breeds life.
This also holds for nomadic societies based on hunter-gatherers. Monasteries are incapable of self-reproduction biologically when based on one gender, but are highly viable societies based on recruitment.
Under modernity identity is carried by the nation, with four characteristics: an idiom, a religion-world view, a history–of the past, present and future–and geographical attachment. Time, Space, with the means to communicate and something to believe in crucial.
Under modernity the state is the key executor of all the above.
Sociocide is the intended wounding-killing of a society by eliminating the prerequisites for a live, vibrant, dynamic society.
Sociocide molests the human members; in the longer run, lethal. Sociocide is what Western, and not only Western, colonialism has done for centuries, denying others their autonomy, imposing their own identity–language and worldview–moving others out of their own historical dialectic and into history as Western periphery, denying them the land they are attached to with their hearts and minds. And their bodies for security and sustenance, for food, water, health.
Israel is a part of that Western tradition, with one exception: the Jewish past, hidden in the fog of myths. But some past it was, and on those lands. So I myself have been and am supporter of a state with Jewish characteristics, not a Jewish state for Jews only, within 1967 borders; having argued strongly in Arab countries. However, I believe neither in a one state, nor in a two states, but in a six states solution: a community modeled on the 1958 European Community, of Israel with the five Arab border states: Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, and Palestine fully recognized according to international law.
But Israeli politics has been and remains in the tradition of Western settler colonialism, bringing in more settlers, deepening the colonialism.
So let us bring in the criteria of sociocide:
Security: The Palestinians are denied the right to have a military; any effort to defend themselves against occupation is to Israel a casus belli. Moreover, to Israel nonviolence as an alternative approach to Palestinian security is met with military means, as a war. And the task of Palestinian police is to protect Israeli settlers against Palestinians, not to protect Palestinians.
Sustenance: Depriving Palestinians of enormous swaths of land through the nakba, erasing an confiscating Palestinian villages, denying them the good soil, the water, with no end in sight.
Idiom, worldview: By and large left untouched but asymmetric: Arabs have to learn Hebrew, not vice versa; no respect for Islam.
Time: Absolutely crucial. Public reference to the nakba becoming illegal deprives Palestinians of a major part of their past; with no monuments, none of their symbols in public space. The present is an unending harassment impairing coherent life. And still worse: futurelessness through massive uncertainty. Israel never declares where those recognized and secure borders are located (Nile to the Euphrates?); being unpredictable the future shrinks to survival.
Space, sacred space, our land, not soil as resource, also shrinks below a minimum, making Palestinians strangers in their own lands.
State. Denial, only a weak “authority”, with no “final state”. Instead exploitation of Palestinians, efforts to colonize their minds as second class citizens, using them only for the most menial tasks, fragmenting them territorially inside-outside Israel, West Bank vs. Gaza, inside the West Bank, also by the Wall, in general marginalized.
Is Gaza the victim of sociocide by Israel? Indeed.
Security, sustenance, time, space, state yes, idiom, worldview #5 out of 7. Not dead, but badly wounded. No healing in sight.
Gaza is alive, but armed attacks on Israel however understandable are counterproductive. Nonviolence conveys the future one wants to see, with care given the Israeli response. Use bi- and multilateral diplomacy, increasing international legitimacy of a Palestinian state, promoting the nation through UNESCO, and the state through the UN.
But above all, working for a positive vision of the future. A live Palestinian state with all prerequisites met is indispensable. But so is an image of a community with Israel, now autistic, possibly in a process of socio-suicide, increasingly isolated. With equitable cooperation, mutual empathy and traumas cleared the South African way.
The USA and Israel were born the same way, as God’s chosen people with promised lands, using sociocide and genocide (the USA). With no policy change they may also decline and fall the same way. Even soon.
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Testimony for Russell Tribunal on Palestine NYC, 7 Oct 2012
Johan Galtung, a professor of peace studies, dr hc mult, is founder of TRANSCEND International and rector of TRANSCEND Peace University. He was awarded among others the 1987 Right Livelihood Award, known as the Alternative Nobel Peace Prize. Galtung has mediated in over 150 conflicts in more than 150 countries, and written more than 170 books on peace and related issues, 96 as the sole author. More than 40 have been translated to other languages, including 50 Years-100 Peace and Conflict Perspectives published by TRANSCEND University Press. His book, Transcend and Transform, was translated to 25 languages. He has published more than 1700 articles and book chapters and over 500 Editorials for TRANSCEND Media Service. More information about Prof. Galtung and all of his publications can be found at transcend.org/galtung.
Tags: Colonialism, Cultural violence, Direct violence, Ecocide, Gaza, Genocide, Israeli Apartheid, Israeli Army, Israeli occupation, Middle East, Nakba, Palestine, Palestine/Israel, Sociocide, State Terrorism, Structural violence, Violent conflict, West Bank, Zionism
This article originally appeared on Transcend Media Service (TMS) on 16 Oct 2023.
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Indeed insightful.
A truly inspiring article for us to read just at this time. But I feel it should be pointed out that this article first appeared on TMS on 8 October 2012 with the title “Sociocide, Palestine and Israel.” No editorial changes are necessary.