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THE KNESSET LESSON - A Comic Piece in the Tradition of 'Theatre of the Absurd'.

Barry Silverberg -

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Following is a satirical look at politics today in Israel, it is written by: Barry Silverberg. It may sound and look very confusing, and the reason is, because the whole system is in fact confusing and far from any real picture of western world kind of democracy. The feeling in the land is "who is on first" and "who is on second" kind of feeling. The majority of the people in Israel voted for a party which in various ways stands with and for the land of Israel. Yet it is more than possible that a very different kind of government will ultimately rule. After reading this please do continue to hold up this nation in prayer, because in the end it could be very far from being comical.
 
Teacher:   Good morning.  Your parents. . .  invited me today. . . to give you a private lesson in Israeli  . . .         citizenship.
 
Pupil:   Yeah, we made Aliah  from Vancouver last month and I ‘m missing a lot of material in Ezrahoot, though I did try to follow the news before we came.
 
Teacher:  Not to worry.  Today we’ll talk about,  ‘how the Israeli electoral system works.”
 
Pupil:        That’s great.  I’m really confused by what I read in the papers and blogs.
 
Teacher:  Let’s start with the results of last week’s . . . elections.
 
Pupil:       OK.  Who got the most votes?
 
Teacher:  Tsippi Livni, head of the Kadima (=forward) party, with 28 seats.
 
Pupil:        So Ms. Livni won, right?
 
Teacher:   No, she lost.  It doesn’t look like she’ll be able to get enough partners to form a majority government.
 
Pupil:        What about Bibi Netanyahu?
 
Teacher:  He got 27 seats.  As the leader of the right, he may form a coalition of 65 right wing party seats.
 
Pupil:        Then he won, I guess.
 
Teacher:  No, Avigdor Lieberman (Israel is Our Home) won.
 
Pupil:       How many seats did he get?
 
Teacher 15.
 
Pupil:      So how did he win?
 
Teacher:  That’s the way politics in Israel works.
 
Pupil:      It’s confusing with three major parties!
 
Teacher:  What, three?  Who told you three?  There’s also the labour party.  They once were the largest party in Israel, and ruled for the first 30 years.  Today they have 11 seats.
 
Pupil:  Four parties?  How do you ever get anyth-
 
Teacher:  Stop interrupting me!  Four?  Who told you four?  There’s also Shas:
 
Pupil:        What’s Shas?
 
Teacher:  Ultra orthodox Moroccans.  They appeared on the scene some twenty years ago and they have around 12 seats today.
 
Pupil:  How bewildering.  What are  the main issues that divide the parties?
 
Teacher:  The crucial issue is the ‘territories’ that Israel gained during the war in 1967.  If you believe that these areas are an integral part of Israel and that Jews should continue to live there, you are on the ‘right.’  If you believe that Israel should withdraw from these territories,  or make some kind of compromise, then you are on the ‘left.’
 
Pupil:  I read that Bibi supported the retreat from Gaza and the expulsion of   10,000 Jews .  His party must be really far left.  Right?
 
Teacher:  Right.  I mean, no, he ’s on the right.   His Licud party has always been right.
 
Pupil:       What about Lieberman?
 
Teacher:  He says that there’s too much power in the hands of rabbis.  He wants secular marriage and religious freedom.
 
Pupil:    So he’s the extreme left.  Right?
 
Teacher:  Wrong!  Wrong!  Wrong  again!   He’s way  right.  Extreme left is “Meretz”.  Their slogan is “We won’t  compromise.”
 
Pupil:  That makes them radical right, right?
 
Teacher: You have snow for brains, I see.  Wrong; LEFT!  They refuse all compromise , unless, of course, it is with Arabs.   Some of them actually believe that the Jewish state should not exist.
 
Pupil:  I’m getting dizzy.  So, all 120 Knesset seats will be taken by these six parties.  That’s really a lot.
 
Teacher:  You’re kidding me, right?  What, six?  Who told you six?  You’ve forgotten National Religious parties: The Jewish Home party, for Jewish settlement of Judah and Samaria, and the National Union, who are really really absolutely for Jewish settlement of Judah and Samaria.  Then there are also ultra orthodox Ashkenazim.  Some of them   actually believe that the Jewish state should not exist.
 
Pupil:  Like Meretz, correct?
 
Teacher: Corr- what, are you crazy?  Stop blathering and let me finish:  There are also three parties exclusively for Arabs.
 
Pupil:  Let me guess:  Some of the Arabs   actually believe that the Jewish state should not exist.
 
Teacher: Now you’re catching on.
 
Pupil:  I can’t catch on to anything.  I’ve had it! This is too much for me!  No country has twelve separate parties!
 
Teacher: What twelve?  Who told you twelve?  Where are you going?  We’ve just started.  There’s the male rights party, so all those divorced men whose wives got custody can take their kids out of the house.  There’s the pensioner’s party, to help the elderly get more often out of the house.  There’s the handicapped party, who want to get out of the house and have a place to go, and there’s  For the Kids’ Sake, which is trying to put kids taken out of their non functional households back into the house.   Of course you can’t overlook “Hadash.”
 
Pupil:  (glazed eyes):  That means ‘new.’
 
Teacher:  Very good.  They want a new system:  Communism.
 
Then we have ‘The Strong Israel party.  They promise to fight organized crime.  Unfortunately, Kadima is  organized crime.   There’s also Tsomet--
 
Pupil:  STOP! STOP!
 
Teacher:  Very good.  Stop for the Tsomet party.  The name means ‘intersection.’
 
Pupil:  NO!  STOP STOP!!  I can’t take any more.
 
Teacher: You must listen!  What about ‘Leader?’ -- to curb the monopoly of the banks?
 
The ‘Light’ Party?  The ‘Responsibility Party?’ the ‘Noodleman Renewal Russian Party?’
 
Pupil:  (writhing on floor): No, this cannot be real.  Make it stop!
 
Teacher:  The Green Party to save the environment.
 
Pupil:  ( weaker) Nooooooooooooooooo.
 
Teacher:  The Leftist Religious Green Party, who are in favor of territorial compromise as long as we first separate the territory into glass, plastic and organic.
 
Pupil:   Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!
 
Teacher:  The Green Leaf party fighting to legalize cannabis.
 
Pupil:  Nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!
 
Teacher:  And most important, The Green Leaf Senior/ Holocaust Survivor Merger Party, who will fight for the right to smoke their old cannabis and get more reparations at the same time.
 
Pupil: ( is now lying motionless on the floor).
 
Teacher:  What’s the matter with him.  We’ve only gone through the first 28!
 
Twenty -eight?  Who told you twenty-eight!  Hey, get up!  There’s a lot more to do!
 
. . .            . . .               . . .        (sighs). . .What do you expect a Canadian kid to know about democracy!
 
 
 
Note:  The above is based on a true political system.  In the Israeli elections held on Feb 10, there were THIRTY SEVEN separate lists!  While the above sketch is not conclusive, not one party mentioned above is made up; no matter how much they  look it.
 
 
Barry Silverberg
 
February, 2009
Kiriat Shmona, Polling Station 37, Poll 12.
 
From  Matthew Browne    thywordistruth@optusnet.com.au