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صورة العربي في الأدب الصهيوني : أدب الأطفال إنموذجاً ، دراسة تحليلية

المصدر: مجلة مركز الدراسات الفلسطينية
الناشر: جامعة بغداد - مركز الدراسات الفلسطينية
المؤلف الرئيسي: محمود، لؤي شهاب (مؤلف)
المجلد/العدد: ع 15
محكمة: نعم
الدولة: العراق
التاريخ الميلادي: 2012
الشهر: حزيران
الصفحات: 91 - 139
رقم MD: 454969
نوع المحتوى: بحوث ومقالات
قواعد المعلومات: EcoLink
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المستخلص: إن أدب الأطفال الصهيوني الذي يُنمي في نفوس الناشئة اليهود مشاعر القلق والتوتر والخوف من المستقبل المجهول، والذي بات يُعبر عن وجهة نظر أحادية الجانب تتمثل بوجهة نظر المؤسسة العسكرية الإسرائيلية التي تخلو من أي نظرة إنسانية للعربي الفلسطيني، والعربي المسلم حيثما كانوا، وهذا ما اعترفت به (نيلي مندلر) عن طريق تحليلها لسلسلة كتب القراءة والمطالعة المقررة على التلاميذ، إذ قالت: (حيثما تفحصنا وفتشنا كتب قراءات إسرائيل، رأيناها: محشوة بعبارات التحقير للعرب، والأوصاف غير الإنسانية المتوحشة، في حين أن‍ الكتب المرجعية التي تقرّها وزارة المعارف والثقافة الإسرائيلية، والمتداولة بين أيدي المعلمين والمربين هي أشد عنصرية، وأكثر فظاعة مما يستخدم التلاميذ أنفسهم). إن الصورة المشوهة للعربي في تصورات الإسرائيليين بصورة عامة، وأدب الأطفال بصورة خاصة جاءت لتحقيق هدفين رئيسيين، هما: شحن النفسية الإسرائيلية بقدر كبير من الاحتقار للإنسان العربي، وقد حقق هذا الشحن هدفه عن طريق (أدب الأطفال) الذي يتضمن: (الشعر، والقصة القصيرة، والمسرحية)، كما اعترف بذلك صراحة الروائي الإسرائيلي (عاموس عوز) قائلاً: (العربي في الأدب الإسرائيلي بصورة عامة، وأدب الأطفال بصورة خاصة يُعد هزيلاً، وشخصية نمطية دائماً، وهو يُعد أيضاً شخصية يُكن لها الاحتقار). دفع الطفولة الإسرائيلية التي حقنت هي وأدباءها بمشاعر الحقد على العرب واحتقارهم في اتجاهين: (أ‌) الاقتناع بحتمية خوض الحرب تلو الحرب ضد العرب، وارتكاب أبشع الجرائم. (ب‌) المطلوب من الإسرائيلي، وخاصة (الأطفال) السير مدفوعين بمشاعر الحقد والاحتقار ضد (العرب).

Bsychological attitude: a communal "personality." It is formed at its core by the conviction that Israel is a Jewish island, a people under constant siege by hostile goyim. A key ingredient of the Israeli public persona, much \ championed, is that Jews are tough, emotionally hardened, and ruthless, a self-image epitomized in the "sabra" (literally meaning a cactus fruit, but colloquially meaning a Jew born in Israel). In popular Israeli folklore, the Jews of Israel are "thorny and tough on the outside, but soft inside." The sabra image also has deep psychological sources in the nationalist "lessons" learned from the Holocaust, a situation where a perceived lack of Jewish physical force and power in the diaspora (galut) throughout the world inevitably must — sooner or later — lead to disaster at the hands of Gentiles. Zionism, in whatever form, has invariably dovetailed with some of the central tenets of classical religious Judaism, including the old "people apart" syndrome: Jewish alienation from all other peoples. "The civil religion [of Israel]," notes Charles Liebman and Eliezer Dov-Yehiya, "has been most forceful in asserting that Israel is an isolated nation confronting a hostile world ... The growing importance of traditional Judaism and Jewishness is associated with the centrality of the Holocaust as the primary political myth of Israeli society, the symbol of Israel's present condition and the one which provides Israel with legitimacy ... The Holocaust to a great extent fashions 'our national consciousness' and the memory is omnipresent in Israeli society." "Israeli political culture," says Israeli professor Myron Aronoff, "reflects not only the general theme of the few against the many, but a growing emphasis of 'them against us'... The traditional concept of Esau hates Jacob [Gentiles hate Jews] and a nation that dwells alone became explanations of reality and legitimization of Israeli policy." As former lobbyist for Israel Doug Bloomtleld once noted, some Israelis tend to have a "You owe us" and "Screw the world" attitudes. Zev Chafets remembers an Israeli concert he attended in 1969, two years after he moved to Israel from America: "As the show drew to a close, the group swung into an up-temp number. 'Ha'olam Ku'lo heg'denu,' they sang. 'The whole world is against us.' The audience knew the song and joined in on the chorus .'The whole world is against us; never mind, we'll get by; we don't give a damn about them anyway.'" Jewish scholar Daniel Niewyk describes the racist dimension of this Zionist ideology of alienation from others, especially as it developed in Germany: At the heart of the Zionist critique of liberal assimilation lay the conviction that Jews constitute a unique race. It was the belief in insurmountable racial differences that made the inevitability of anti-Semitism credible, just as it rationalizes the view that every effort to assimilate must go aground on the barrier reef of biological determinism ... The maintenance of that [racial] purity was essential to German Zionism, for it acknowledged the essential prerequisite for nationhood to be [in the 1922 words of Zionist Fritz Kahn] "consanguinity of the flesh and solidarity of the soul" together with the "will to establish a closer [Jewish] brotherhood over [and] against all other communities on earth." Amnon Rubenstein notes the disturbing irony expressed in this world view of the Israeli people: "The establishment of Israel was an attempt to make Jews like everybody else. They would now have a state. It has not worked out that way. Israel has made Jews more, not less, exceptional. The pariah people, it seems, have simply succeeded in creating a pariah state." Perhaps, however, this situation is inevitable. Unmentioned by Rubenstein is the religiously-based "nation apart" self-concept always so deeply embedded in Jewish mass psychology, a self-understanding and communal choice that apparently cannot be shaken, even in a secular nationstate context. So we conclude about that's research that's the Socialization of Israelis Childs focused upon two main purposes: First of all make the Israeli child hate and hatred the Arabs, so that's lead them when growing they will fight Arabs with more inclination