WAR TRAUMA & FORGETTING
Our memories are often suppressed by trauma, a word derived from "Traumatiko", a wound or mental shock. Examples of traumatic events are people being compelled to leave their homes due to war, disease, drought, famine or similar events. Recent sociological studies on the after-effects of war reveal feelings of apathy, resignation and hopelessness brought on by being forced to leave one's ancestral territory.
Kelly Borhaug, author of "Moral Injury and War Culture", quotes Hannah Arendt's famous phrase on "the banality of evil" in reference to the Holocaust. The "evil" referred to was a "failure to think" [through the consequences of their actions]. Evil has many guises, as Borhaug notes, and is "most pernicious and dangerous when it is routinized and normalized".
Bombing civilians makes the victims "hopeless and willing to leave", which facilitates dispossession and depopulation. According to the Israeli historian Illan Pappe, an Israeli historian recently wrote in his book: "Ethnic Cleansing", the aggressor nation masks their intent by dehumanizing the displaced in order to excuse themselves from the consequences of their actions. He also noted that the term "Zionism" is often confused with Judaism, but they are not the same. Zionism, including Christian Zionism, is an ideology, whereas Judaism is a religion.
In Aristotle's Politics, "wealth is the guiding principle of oligarchy" and "freedom the guiding principle of democracy". But when "freedom" is only freedom for those who are within the tribe it becomes "ethnocracy", which concerns a nation favoring only one group, which is particularly true in Israel.
When one ethnic group is favored then empathy for others is in short supply. According to the 17th-century Scottish philosopher, John Hume, the highest sensibility that humans should strive for is empathy, Genuine empathy is not just a convenient word, it represents an identification with the suffering of others. When civilian populations are slaughtered in Gaza by incessant bombing, the devastating results are experienced by thousands of women and children, some now buried under the rubble of collapsed buildings. Such circumstances are so painful to contemplate that euphemisms are adopted to find blame with the victims. A former Prime Minister of Israel, Golda Meir, once said "we can never forgive the Arabs for forcing us to kill their children"; this tribal attitude asserts that only those who are within the group deserve to be protected, whereas those who are outside the group must be treated harshly.
Such tribal attitudes toward the Palestinians in Gaza has resulted in mass death in gruesome circumstances with the end result being starvation and disease. The enormity of the suffering numbs the mind, and the complicity of U.S. politicians betrays the reality that our leaders have become emotionally disconnected and unable to fully comprehend the devastating effects of suffering taking place on a daily basis.
In her book on trauma, Borhaug quoted the Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh, who spoke to veterans: "We know that war is not only in us, it is in everyone, veterans and non-veterans alike. We must share our insights [from the tragedies of war], not out of anger but out of love." Buddhists understand that suffering has causal factors that inevitably result in consequences to the victims, but also to those who cause suffering, since they too will inevitably suffer the results of their actions.
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