Another film that I viewed at the Jerusalem Film Festival, this past week, The Soldier’s Opinion, by Assaf Baniff, provides a shocking picture of how the Israeli army regularly violated the privacy of its soldiers, read their letters, analyzed them, and used the material in reports meant for the top brass. Of course, all soldiers knew that their private letters were being opened and checked for security reasons by the military censor, but no one ever imagined that intimate and sensitive letters were being copied and shared with the highers-up on a regular basis.
As the
army was encouraging soldiers to write their inner secrets and feelings, the
censor established entire units of censors. Each military unit had its own
censors (many of whom were young women soldiers) who followed the soldiers in
their unit personally.
Using
the reports written for the top military officers, the film covers about 50 years
of subjects that were outlined and reported on.
It begins with testimony from the battlefield during the War of
Independence, the plunder and looting of Arab homes that was prevalent, and the
cruelty against the local Arab population, all of which is clearly reflected in
many letters by soldiers in the file. But the hatred was not limited towards
Arabs, there were extreme feelings and actions against Jews from Kurdistan and
Morocco who reportedly felt that the Ashkenazi Jews acted arrogantly and
treated them very badly for many years. Following the Six Day War, there were
tons of letters reporting the many moral dilemmas which soldiers faced on a
regular basis in ruling over the indigenous Palestinian population in the West Bank.
This was followed by detailed letters which documented the traumas and deep feelings
of soldiers who felt let down by their leadership, especially in the early
weeks of the Yom Kippur War in 1973, which became known as “the earthquake” in
Israeli society.
Using
interviews with some of the women who served in the censorship units, the film
portrays a feeling of voyeurism on the one hand, and on the other hand it
reveals their feelings that they were reporting on the soldiers’ morale, and protecting
them from dangers such as hazing, rancid food, sleep deprivation and sexual
abuse. They also were required to report on the use of drugs and on incidents
of homosexuality, both of which were handled swiftly by the office of Field
Security.
Literally
millions of letters were read and used in reports that were distributed to the
heads of the IDF and to the political leadership of the state. Some of these
reports supposedly greatly influenced Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
In
1998, the office of the censor was closed down because of the end of letter
writing. Today, the army monitors the
soldiers’ posts on social media but those posts are meant to be public, and to
be read by anyone interested.
The Soldier’s Opinion (documentary, 55 minutes) is a deeply disturbing look at the
almost unbelievable work of the military censor’s office from 1948 to 1998. In today’s more open society, it is
practically inconceivable that the IDF would be able to do such a thing
anymore, without widespread public criticism. But, like many of the sins of the
past—which were kept secret for a long time—this is part of our history. This
courageous film helps us to come to grips with parts of our difficult past.
No comments:
Post a Comment