The
recent exchange of the bodies of two Israeli soldiers for five living
Hezbollah (and much else) has produced outrage in some sections of the
Israeli press. Admittedly, it lays Israel open to further blackmail from
Hezbollah who, glowing with high-minded idealism, long to capture and
murder as many Israeli soldiers as they can. But the press is wrong.
Last time, we saw how important it was for ancient Athenian families
that their dead be properly buried and their graves tended. This was
felt to be even truer of its soldiers who died in battle, whom Athenians
deemed worthy of hero-cult. Breaking with the normal Greek custom of
burial on the field of battle, they demanded that the ashes of the dead
be repatriated and buried in a special location in ‘the finest
suburb of Athens’ (those killed at Marathon were the only exception).
Everyone – foreigners included – was welcome to join their
chariot-borne cortege (chariots being an aristocratic touch), and their
bones were on display for two days (not the usual one). Further, the
best man in the state was chosen to speak the funeral oration. That was
democracy at work.
The ceremony was an annual one, and in his famous ‘Funeral Speech’ (431
BC) Pericles talks not about the dead so much as about the greatness
of Athens and its uniqueness in the world, which could never have been
achieved unless men with ‘courage, sense of duty and keen feeling
of honour in action’ had been prepared to die for it. For Pericles,
all worth was concentrated in the city-state and its institutions. Only
if that city-state was worthy of them was the price it exacted justifiable:
and, he argued, it was.
Athenians boasted that, among Greeks, ‘they alone know how to honour
valour’. They did so as a democratic state, whose survival (as
that of every people in the ancient world) depended solely on the ability
of its men to fight and win. If Pericles’ funeral oration is relevant
to any state today, it is surely Israel, itself a form of democracy,
convinced of its social and cultural uniqueness, with amazing achievements
to boast of, but under even greater daily threat of destruction. Is Israel,
as Pericles claimed of Athens, worthy of its dead? Or could it not care
less about them? If so, who will be prepared to die for it?
|
A&M Archive
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007 |