We Will Not Be Czechoslovakia!
Elyakim Haetzni
October 13, 2001
Sharon's comparison between Israel's position today and the tragic fate of
Czechoslovakia in 1938 - Is it correct? Is it fair?
Czechoslovakia, which was the only democracy in her region, suffered from a strong
belligerent minority group in her midst, over 3 million Germans. To make the
situation even worse this hostile element occupied the Sudeten Mountains, the
backbone of the country, without which the remainder was indefensible. If this was
not enough, these mountains lie directly on the border of Germany, and so the
Sudeten Germans, although a minority in their country, relied on the huge German
"Big Brother" right across the border. Czechoslovakia offered these Germans
Autonomy, which they refused, demanding annexation to Germany. Actually - never
in history had the Sudeten belonged to Germany. Czechoslovakia was a very strong
country, the morale of the people was superb, and they were quite ready to fight the
Germans. Czechsolovakia had a solemn defence treaty with France, behaved
consistently as Frances' staunchest and most loyal ally. But France (and her ally
Britain) betrayed her in the moment of truth.
Israel's democracy vis a vis the Arab dictatorships, Judea-Samaria in comparison to
the Sudeten, "Palestine" never having existed in history, the IDF and the
Czechoslovak army, Israel and the US - the similarity is striking.
After the Munich 1938 betrayal of Czechoslovakia, and surrender of the Sudeten,
there was no physical possibility any more to hold on to the remainder of the country,
the people and the army were demoralized and as a result, in March 1939 the
Germans took Prague without firing a single shot.
Against this background, here are some instructive quotations from Winston
Churchill's Second World War Memoires "The Gathering Storm":
- A leading article in the London "Times" carried this "friendly" advice: "make
Czechoslovakia a more homogeneous state by the cession of that fringe alien
population who are contiguous to the nation to which they are united by race."
Churchill concludes: "This, of course, involved the surrender of the whole
Bohemian fortress line."
- In the British government "some ministers found consolation in such phrases as
'the rights (of the Germans.E.H.) to self-determination', 'the claims of a national
minority to just treatment', and even the mood appeared of 'championing the
small man against the Czech bully'".
In the language of Israel's critics: The German David versus the Czechoslovak
Goliath…
- "The Czechs had a million and a half men armed behind the strongest fortress line
in Europe, and equipped by a highly organized and powerful industrial machine".
- After Germany's defeat, Marshal Keitel (the German chief of Staff) was asked -
"Would the Reich have attacked Czechoslovakia in 1938 if the Western Powers
had stood by Prague?" "Certainly not" was his answer…
And so it was Appeasement, Chamberlains' craven hope to gain "Peace in our time"
by sacrificing Czechoslovakia, which caused the loss of 50-60 million lives in WW2.
...And the Sudeten Germans? After Germany's defeat they were expelled, they lost
all their property and resettled in Germany. But : Unlike the Palestinian refugees they
rebuilt a future for themselves, and unlike the Arabs, the new German democratic
state makes no claims to re-settle them in the Czech Republic, nor claims restitution
of property, admitting the German guilt and the principle of Crime and Punishment, a
notion unheard of in all Arabia.
This is as far as the comparison between Israel 2001 and Czechoslovakia 1938-1945
can carry us.
There is, however, one big difference between Neville Chamberlain and George W.
Bush: The former wanted to avoid war, any war, at all costs, whereas the latter is
ready - even eager - to fight . Only he doesn't want his war to be perceived as
"Zionist" or "Israeli", in one word - as a Jewish war.
And here, Sharon could have drawn a perfect parallel which, too, goes back to the
dark days of Nazi-rule.
Why didn't America take in the St. Louis passenger ship, sent by the Nazi-
government with the express purpose of testing the attitude of the "Free World" vis a
vis the persecution of Jews? Why were the wretched refugees sent back to their cruel
destiny?
Why did the Allies refuse to bomb the railway tracks to Auschwitz?
Why, even when the terrible dimensions of the extermination of the Jews were
already known, did the West keep the gates tight shut, abandoning the Jews to their
fate?
Why, in all the anti-Nazi war propaganda, against the "Kraut" and the "Huns", the
mass murder of the Jewish race was kept out?
There is only one explanation: The British and American authorities knew full well
the anti-Semitic sentiment of their peoples (and their armies), and they believed that
underlining the Jewish aspect of the war would do harm to their war effort.
Conversely, the Nazi-propaganda kept claiming that the allies were spilling their
blood "for the Jews". It is important to note today, that this insane claim did indeed
make an impact.
And - why, of all places was refuge in Palestine, which had been designated to
function as the "Jewish National Home" - denied to the Jews by a British "White
Paper" of 1939, why were refugee ships sent back into the inferno even from the
"National Home"?
Because the British felt the need to appease the Arab world, which was largely
sympathetic to Hitler.
Sharon could have made his point even as to the period before 1938, of the Race
Theory, Mein Kampf, the Concentration Camps, the Nuremberg Laws. Facing all this
the Democratic Powers showed no concern because nobody wanted to be identified as
"being with Jews".
Such was the atmosphere in those times, even in the enlightened parts of Europe, even
in America. The climate changed only retrospectively, better - posthumously, when
humanity was confronted with the ghastly visible results of the West's passive anti-
Jewish attitude. And then it was too late.
It is relatively easy to erect today in Washington and elsewhere Holocaust Museums,
and feel righteous in a virtual yesterday, which today is politically correct. But in the
real yesterday the persecution of the Jews - active or passive - was mainstream
political correctness!
Under the impact of the Holocaust, Jew haters still cannot come out into the open, so
they use synonyms, such as being "anti-Israel", "anti-settlers" etc.
Had the free world, in Hitler's early days, internalized that the Jew was a human
being just like anybody else, also - that evil and injustice done to the Jews many
times only precedes all the others, then Hitler would - and could - have been stopped
in time and 50-60 million human lives spared.
Osama bin Laden is not very original in using for his war against Western Civilization
and Judeo-Christian ethics the Jewish issue as a disguise. Hitler preceded him.
And in this sense, George W. Bush is not original in distancing himself from Israel
and sponsoring an anti-Israeli, pro-Arab "peace"-plan: Roosevelt, Chamberlain,
Churchill and De Gaulle preceded him.
Sharon's reminder of Czechoslovakia's fate was not meant as an affront, but as a
warning, that sacrificing the Jews will appease neither the Arabs nor militant Islam,
and that there was a second part in Bin Laden's declaration, swept under the carpet by
the media : The cleansing of all Arab lands from the infidels. After the Jews - the
Arabian peninsula, to be cleansed of the Americans, and then, maybe, the restoration
of Islam to Granada and Andalusia, to the Balkans, and so on.
We in Israel, if called upon to chose between "politically incorrectness" with today's
US establishment or a second Holocaust Museum, on our ruins and graves - our
choice is clear.
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