Fima - Amos Oz [73]
delight: the girlfriend's mannerisms had reminded him of die name of the Finnish general who stood between Tamar and the solution to her crossword puzzle. He decided to give her a call, even though it was nearly two in the morning. Or should he call Annette? On third thought he picked up his by now cold tea, sat down at his desk, and in less than half an hour had written a short piece for the weekend supplement on the close connection between the deteriorating situation in the Territories and the creeping insensitivity that manifested itself, for instance, in the treatment of heart patients, many of whom were condemned to death—literally—on account of the unnecessary queues for operations or because of management-employee disagreement on round-the-clock hospital shifts. Or it manifested itself in our indifference to the sufferings of the unemployed, recent immigrants, battered wives. Or in the humiliations we inflicted on the homeless elderly, the mentally handicapped, lonely people who had fallen on hard times. But above all our brutalization manifested itself in the aggressive rudeness that we saw daily in the bureaucracy, in the streets, in bus queues, and most probably also in the privacy of our bedrooms. In Beer Yaakov a man suffering from cancer murdered his wife and children because he could not accept his wife's turning to religion. Four teenagers from good families in Hod Hasharon held a mentally defective cripple captive in a cellar and raped her continually for three days and nights. A furious father ran amok in a school in Afula, injured six teachers and knocked the headmaster unconscious, all because his daughter had failed her advanced-level English exam. In Holon the police caught a gang of hoodlums who had been terrorizing dozens of old-age pensioners and robbing them of their pennies. All that was just in yesterday's paper. Fima concluded his article with a harsh prediction: "Insensitivity, violence, and cruelty flow backward and forward from the state to the Territories and from the Territories to the state, gathering disastrous momentum, redoubling in geometric progression, wreaking havoc on both sides of the Green Line. There is no way out of this vicious circle unless we proceed decisively and without delay to a comprehensive solution of the conflict, along the basic lines that were laid down a hundred and one years ago by Micha Josef Berdyczewski in these simple words: 'Priority to Jews over Judaism, to living people over ancestral heritage.' There is nothing more to add." He had discovered this quotation several years ago in an essay entitled "Demolition and Construction," in an old journal that he found at Yael's father's, and he had copied it out and stuck it on the front of the radio, and was delighted to be able to make use of it at last. On second thought he crossed out "conflict" and "vicious circle." Then he angrily deleted "geometric progression" and "disastrous momentum," but he could not decide what to replace them with. He put it off till the next day. Despite the tea and the heartburn tablets, the nausea had not left him. He really ought to do as Dimi had asked, find a powerful flashlight, go down into the darkness, search for the injured dog, try to save it. If possible.
At half past two he undressed and showered, because he felt disgusting. The torrent of water failed to refresh him. The soap and even the water seemed sticky. He stood grumpily in front of the mirror with no clothes on, shivering with cold and recoiling from the unhealthy pallor of his skin with its feeble growth of dark hair and the ring of fat around his waist. Automatically he began squeezing the red pustules on his chest, until he managed to squirt a few white drops out of his flabby breasts. When he was an adolescent, spots like these began to appear on his cheeks and forehead. Baruch forbade him to squeeze them. Once he said to Fima: "They will vanish overnight when you have a lady friend. If you don't manage to find yourself a lady by your seventeenth birthday, and there are reasons for supposing, my dear, that