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Anti-Semitism and Israel's Inherent
Contradictions
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 6, 2012
In a recent article, columnist Yaniv Halili described British
author Ben White as 'anti-Semitic'. He also denounced Arab Knesset member
Hanin Zoabi for writing a forward to White's latest book, Palestinians in
Israel: Segregation, Discrimination and Democracy. Those of us who
can see through such distorted thinking know that White is a principled
writer who has never displayed a shred of racism in his work. Zoabi is very
well-known civil rights leader with a long-standing reputation of courage
and poise. How could anti-racist endeavors themselves become the
subject of accusation by Halili and others like him? It goes without
saying there should be no room for any racist discourse - Islamophobia,
anti-Semitism, or any other - in the Palestine solidarity movement, which
aims at achieving long-denied justice and rights for the Palestinian people.
A racist discourse is predicated on racial supremacy, which is exactly what
Palestinians are resisting in Israel and the occupied territories.
But the “Jewish and democratic state” of Israel is riddled with so many
contradictions, the kind that no straightforward narrative can possibly
capture. Many scholars and rights groups have discussed the way in
which irreconcilable values defined the very character of Israel from the
onset. According to Adalah (meaning “justice” in Arabic), the legal center
for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, “Israel's Declaration of Independence
(1948) states two principles important for understanding the legal status of
Palestinian citizens of Israel. First, the Declaration refers specifically
to Israel as a ‘Jewish state’ committed to the ‘ingathering of the exiles.’
(Second)…it contains only one reference to the maintenance of complete
equality of political and social rights for all its citizens, irrespective
of race, religion, or sex.” Adalah further asserts that there is a
‘tension’ between the two principles. Perhaps this is the case,
intellectually, but in practice the Israeli political establishment has
resolved the seeming quandary whereby the Jewishness of the state prevails
above every other humanitarian, democratic or legal consideration. Racially
discriminating legislation is being churned out in the Israeli Knesset at an
alarming speed, and new laws are constantly being proposed. These include
“one that would end the status of Arabic as one of Israel's official
languages and another that would punish Israeli citizens, including Arab
Israelis, for refusing to pledge their allegiance to ‘Israel as a Jewish and
democratic state,’” according to columnist Linda Heard (Arab News, Jan 24).
As for Palestinians living in the occupied territories, their legally
enshrined political inferiority has been felt in much harsher and often
bloodier ways than their brethren living in Israel. For nearly four and a
half decades, the Palestinians living in these territories have been losing
their land, livelihood, freedom of movement and even their very lives in the
name of the racial superiority of their occupiers. Jewish settlements are
illegally constructed on Palestinian land to host Jewish settlers, who use
Jewish-only roads to travel between their heavily fortified colonies and the
“Jewish state.” While numerous intellectuals, activists and ordinary members
of Jewish communities around the world have strongly protested Israel’s
treatment of the Palestinians, as well as Israel’s misuse of the Jewish
religion to attain political goals, Israel relies greatly on the support of
Jewish communities, organizations and individuals for vital funds, political
support and lobbying. While many Jews identify with Israel as
a ‘Jewish state’, “younger American Jews are more likely than their parents
to be acquainted with the Palestinians and their story,” reported TIME
magazine on September 29. The TIME story references one such youth,
Benjamin Resnick, 27, who decries the fact that Jewish state and American
liberal democracy represent two views that are ‘irreconcilable’. On the
other hand, he “continues to consider himself a Zionist,” who “quotes the
Torah in support of his view that American Jews should press Israel to end
settlement expansion and help facilitate a Palestinian state.” Even
Resnick’s political dissent is riddled with inconsistencies, where national
identity (as an American) clashes with ideology (Zionism) and religion (the
Torah) is referenced as a means to resolve the discord. The Torah
is put to good use repeatedly among mainstream and ardent Israeli rabbis,
whose edicts to kill Arabs are commonplace in Israeli media (although rarely
discussed in US media). The so-called King’s Torah – which is endorsed by
some prominent Israeli rabbis – has made it permissible to kill Palestinians
of all ages, including those who don’t pose a threat. “You can kill those
who are not supporting or encouraging murder in order to save the lives of
Jews,” it states in the fifth chapter, entitled “Murder of non-Jews in a
time of war.” The BBC elaborates: “At one point it suggests that babies can
justifiably be killed if it is clear they will grow up to pose a threat”
(July 19). This becomes particularly problematic when the lines
between politics, ideology and religion become so conveniently blurred.
Israeli and Jewish leaders borrow from the corresponding text as they find
suitable to achieve policies to further occupation, war and illegal
settlement. Alan Dershowitz, a professor at Harvard Law School, came to
represent the latter model. His style lacks diplomacy and logic; however, it
is effective in some circles because it centers around the idea of smearing
anyone who dares to criticize Israel. The greater tragedy is that Dershowitz
is provided with platforms in mainstream and rightwing Israeli media, thus
giving his smear campaign the means to turn any genuine discussion of Israel
into a controversial hate speech. While critical non-Jews are often
smeared as ‘anti-Semites’, jurist Richard Goldstone, who lead the UN
investigation into the Israeli war on Gaza., was not a mere anti-Semite for
concluding that Israel and Hamas had both potentially committed war crimes
and crimes against humanity. Dershowitz told Israeli Army Radio that
Goldstone is a ‘traitor to the Jewish people’. ‘The Goldstone report is a
defamation written by an evil, evil man,’ Dershowitz said (Haaretz, October
31). While the case for Palestinian rights and statehood can be
clear-cut – not many true-to-self intellectuals could justify ethnic
cleansing, defend Apartheid and rationalize murder – delving into the
political identity of Israel and its ideological and religious supporters
becomes immediately ‘controversial’. The controversy is embedded in the
purposeful intellectual and political elasticity by which Israel defines, or
refuses to define itself. It claims to be Jewish as well as democratic. It
claims to embody religious ideals but also to be secular. It claims to be
liberal, while it is militarily oppressive. It claims to uphold ‘equality’
for all, while it is racially exclusive. And if you dare to
challenge these irreconcilable contradictions, you are termed an anti-Semite
or a traitor - or both. - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
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