Published on July 5, 2004 By O G San In International
Three years ago I was lucky enough to spend some time in the West Bank. One day our group visited Balata refugee camp just outside Nablus. We wandered around talking to the people there and witnessing the often wretched conditions in which they lived. At the end we gathered at a community centre to hear a few of the refugees speak of their experience of disposession.

There was no overarching emotion that I remember all the refugees sharing. Some were despairing, others defiant, others angry. But it was the last speaker who will always stay in my memory. The emotion he chose to display was hatred. A man in his sixties, he was old enough to remember a time when there was no such country as Israel and when, as a result, he had a status other than that of refugee.

But rather than tell the story of how he lost his home, as many of the others speakers had done, he decided to tell a rambling anecdote about his father, who had been friends with a Jewish man in the 1930s. Eventually the two had fallen out and the refugee's father had been swindled out of some money as a result. His conclusion to this tale was blunt: "don't trust the Jews." I'll never forget the way he summed up his attitude "When you give the Jew the finger, he takes the hand. When you give him your hand, he takes the arm."

This was, of course, textbook anti-semitism. In fact it was typical of the false reasoning which leads many people to prejudice: taking a negative trait from one person and then ascribing that trait to their entire race. As the old man concluded his little parable some of the Palestinians we were with walked out of the room, partly in protest at the old man's prejudice, partly in despair that hours of hard work by them had been undone by him in a few sentences.

I know first-hand that some people who criticise the state of Israel are anti-semites. Anyone who hates the Jews is very unlikely to be supportive of the self-identified Jewsih state. So to argue that anti-semitism does not lie behind some of the criticism of Israel would be to argue, in effect, that anti-semitism does not exist. Clearly such a claim is absurd.

Nevertheless there is a growing tendency among those who are pro-Israeli to label any and all criticism of the Jewish state as anti-semitic. It's as though some people are unwilling or unable to accept that one can be against both Israel's occupation of Palestinian land and against ani-Jewish prejudice.

As the second intifada has worn on, I've noticed that some of Israel's supporters have played the anti-semitism card more frequently. From being the card of last resort, it is now the card of first resort for some. Indeed, a few even seem to lack any other cards at all.

This is a symptom of a wider problem for Israel - it doesn't really have a case any more. It's brutal colonial policies in the West Bank and Gaza are so blatant that it is hard for all but the most skillful debater to defend them. When all else is equal, few people are inclined to root for Goliath against David. With such a poor case to start with, it's hardly surprising that some of Israel's supporters reach for their ace - the accusation that anyone who criticises Sharon is a Jew-hater.

After all very few of us, at least in the nice, tolerant West, would welcome the accusation that we hate the Jews. It is widely and correctly understood that this is a despicable attitude to hold. Even having to deny the charge is not a pleasant experience. Any time that your name and the word "anti-semite" get into the same sentence, it's bad news - even if the word "not" is in there too. Would you like to open your newspaper and see the headline "(Your Name) Denies Hating Jews"? No, me neither. The whole point is that anti-semitism is so patently abhorrent that having to deny you believe in it should be unnecessary.

Of course, those who use this slur promisciously know this only too well. They know that the accusation will hurt, and they hope that it will also silence. But there is a limit to how long this last desperate line of defence can hold.

Recently, Webster's dictionary changed their definition of the word "anti-semitism" to include criticism of the state of Israel. If the Jewish state's defenders think this is a victory for them, they have gravely miscalculated. Once the definition is widened, the word's impact is inevitably diluted. If anti-semitism means hatred of the Jews, then it is always morally wrong. But if it means hatred of the Jews and/or criticism of the state of Israel then, in some cases it is not wrong. In fact there are many humane and tolerant people who are by this definition "anti-semites".

With the expansion of the definition, the true anti-semites become more respectable through their inclusion in a group which is no longer composed solely of bigots.

And whom, may I ask, will suffer most as a result of this?


Comments (Page 2)
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on Jul 06, 2004
Muggaz,

These brutal methods you speak of. There is no other way for Israel to defend citizens in it's own cities without getting them where they plan attacks, recruit other terrorists, and make the bombs. That is a lot smarter then waiting for the bomber to reach his city of destination and then catching him. When there's a terrorist alert in a city the police and army turn it inside out. It's insane the way people have to live. People become ansy and scared. People have to watch their back because the police are looking for some nut that has a suicide belt. What kind of way is that to live? The reason Palestinian Arabs live the way they do is due to their own behavior not Israel's.
on Jul 06, 2004
I guess it is true what they say: this war will stop once the Arabs love their own children more than they hate Jews.


Why dont you turn that around?

It works both ways as far as I am concerned... The entire population of Palestine is suffering because of the crazy actions of a select few... Do you think sending gunships into the ghettos will inspire the palestinians to cease terrorism? Or do you think it will inspire the arabs to applaud the arrival of tanks in their streets?

We both agree... terrorists are monsters, but with the hostile attitude that is prevailing on both sides, it is accentuated by the brutal force and millitary might of the Israli's, this just inspires fear within the Arab children - and fear is everyones enemy.

BAM!!!
on Jul 06, 2004
when Arabs speak of Jewish atrocities, they are usually referring to Israel's defending itself, not to Jerry Seinfeld's stage act

i was thinking alan king or maybe shecky green.

Through sympathetic pictures in the media Israel will always look bad, but you should look at the stories behind the pictures if you want to make a judgement

first of all, i purposely chose the canadian border as a response to the not-so-logical assertion that separate but equal trumps racism. one can despise and loathe (in fact i dont see another choice) corrupt tyrants like mugabe who seems intent on sucking the life out of zimbabwe regardless of race or color. theres no need to locate or select an asian or white tyrant to balance off the equation.

my problem with ariel sharon's government has nothing at all to do with his geneaology, birthplace or beliefs (however strongly tempted i might be to imagine abraham wishing hed listened a lil more closely to onan). sometime between august and the end of september 2000, sharon saw an opportunity and decided to exploit an unfortunate situation to advance his political career, anticipating using the lifeless bodies of israelis and palestinians as his ladder to the top. it may be true that his palestinian counterparts played into his hand hoping to advance their cause at his expense. but ultimately sharon bears the responsibility because he alone could have stopped it dead by staying home that day.

the real problem isnt religious intolerance. its that too many of us have for too long tolerated too much in the name of religion
on Jul 06, 2004
Like I said, what are Israel's options here? Let their own children have fear everytime they leave the house. Israeli children are subjected to a life that revolves around safety and security that hte rest of the world will never have. Now in parts of Israel bombs come from the air. You speak of Arabs fear as if they are the only one's that are suffering. Israel has it's own population to protect and that is why it has an army and they enter Arab towns. And while entering Arab towns and houses Israel excerisces better human rights then any other country in the world. If Arab children are filled with fear, then why are they the ones confronting the Israeli soldiers with stones all the time? They're let out of school on 'days of rage' that are declared by the PA so they can thrown stones at Israeli soldiers. When I was a child I ran to my mother, I didn't put myself in harms way.
on Jul 06, 2004
"Why dont you turn that around?"

Because it wouldn't be true. Israelis or Jews do not send their children away to be "martyrs" on suicide missions.

If the life of your child is of more value to you than the death of an opponent, you don't send your children to do suicide attacks.

on Jul 06, 2004
And while entering Arab towns and houses Israel excerisces better human rights then any other country in the world


As a proud Australian I take personal offence at this. Our soldiers in East Timor never used bulldozers on civilian housing (whether occupied or not), or drove tanks through suburban streets, causing thousands of dollars of damage both to the road surface and to any powerlines, civilians or other extraneous things which got in their way. The Israeli army has a poor record for human rights, and by claiming it is better than any other you are besmirching the honour of scores of less violent nations.

If Arab children are filled with fear, then why are they the ones confronting the Israeli soldiers with stones all the time?


There are two reactions to fear - fight or flight. When your back is against the wall, and your family has nowhere to run, those two options can quickly appear to only be one. In any event stones are not a particularly dangerous weapon. If the army wasn't there in the first place, those kids wouldn't run into Jewish areas to throw their stones. That's not to say the army has no reason to enter these villages, merely that stone-throwing should be expected - I wouldn't take kindly to US troops from the local base driving tanks through the centre of my town, and it's hardly surprising that Palestinians don't like it either.

I don't have an easy answer for Israelis, but the first thing they should do is stop trying to claim to be the victim - it's been a long time since Israel was hated purely for what it was. Today Israel is hated more for what it does.
on Jul 06, 2004
"When I was a child I ran to my mother, I didn't put myself in harms way."

And neither, I assume, did your parents use you as human shields against the police or army and nor, I perceive, did they convince you that your life must be traded in for a death of an opponent.


on Jul 06, 2004
"The Israeli army has a poor record for human rights"

Evidence?

"When your back is against the wall, and your family has nowhere to run, those two options can quickly appear to only be one."

Don't run. Wait around until the Israelis leave. Don't attack them. What's so damn difficult about that?
on Jul 06, 2004
Maybe we should look at another conflict.

If the British government in the 1970's and 80's had sent helicopter gunships into nationist areas of Derry to fire missiles at apartment blocks known to contain snipers, what would the reaction be? These people hated the government. Many of them supported the terrorists.

One term ... Bloody Sunday
And that was just when a few soldiers under fire lost control ans shot a few civilians. Imagine the unacceptability of having a helicopter gunship fire missiles into a block of flats.

Why is it not acceptable for the British to use helicopter gunships to attack terrorists but it is acceptable for Israel?
Why is it not acceptable for the British to murder innoncent catholics but it is for Israel to murder innoncent arabs?


Paul.
on Jul 06, 2004
Solitair,

killing in defence is not "murder". I will answer your question once you ask using the correct words. I do not want our discussion to start with the assumption that defence is morally wrong PER SE.

on Jul 06, 2004
The Israeli army has a poor record for human rights"

Evidence?


I have not read every report in this list, but a number of UN reports that document HR abuses by Israel can be found in links from this webpage Link

You could also do searches on the Human Rights Watch or Amnesty International webpages, although I can understand if you feel these are untrustworthy and disreputable sites. It might also be worthwhile to look into the impeachment papers from the recent attacks on Ariel Sharon; this I haven't researched so I'm not sure about their availability or reliability, but there are some issues with his involvement in past atrocities, if the stories are to be believed.

Don't run. Wait around until the Israelis leave. Don't attack them. What's so damn difficult about that?


Purely from my experiences of two nearby feuding neighbours, passivity in the face of aggression can be very difficult to maintain. It becomes especially difficult when people's homes are being demolished, or land is being fenced over. Buddhists spend decades trying to maintain such a state of mind. Must we expect this of children and excitable youths?
on Jul 06, 2004
Cactoblaste,

have you actually read the reports that "document HR abuses by Israel"? You will find that they don't. Why they would be classified as HR abuse reports I do not know, but the existence of an Israeli settlement is certainly not a HR abuse; and many of the articles seem to be questions rather than report.

One report (at least) mentions Jenin. I have not compared the dates but I wonder whether it refers to the massacre which we now know didn't actually happen. There is also the point that the UN seem to regard Israel's not allowing "refugees" back as an HR abuse, certainly singling out Israel here since Arab countries certainly do not allow Jewish citizens they expelled in the 1950s back into their land and neither does Poland allow German refugees back into the lands which were once German but lost in a war Germany started.

The German and Jewish refugees have of course been welcomed by their respective nation states and thus didn't become "refugees" forever. If only Arabs had that same decency towards their own nation. If not allowing "refugees" back is an HR abuse I wonder why Israel is singled out here (unless the reason is anti-semitism).

I don't see why an Israeli patrol that is suddenly being attacked should be regarded as the "aggressor". I assume that Arabs can be just as civilized as we are and not attack the Israelis for once. As for the children, I do not expect anything from them, but I do expect their parents to watch over them and tell them to NOT attack Israelis and I expect the terrorists to not use children as human shields.

The children only hate Israel because their parents have told them to. And this would again be a case of hating the Jews more than they love their own children, I'm afraid.


on Jul 06, 2004
Purely from my experiences of two nearby feuding neighbours, passivity in the face of aggression can be very difficult to maintain. It becomes especially difficult when people's homes are being demolished, or land is being fenced over.


I have fueds with my neighbors too, but I don't send my children over there to blow up there kitchen (restraunt), cars (buses), or childrens play rooms (nurseries). I hope you undestand what I just did with your poor analogy. And it is wrong to think that these children in the street that throw stones are the ones who are having their houses destroyed. Buidlings destroyed are used by snipers and terrorsits. In fact, 90% of building structures Palestinian Arab buildinds in the West Bank are built illegally, then they complain when they are destroyed by the army. [

quote]In any event stones are not a particularly dangerous weapon.

I have spoken to an Israeli soldier who served outside Ramallah. Everyday they were confronted by stone throwing youths, of all ages. I mean kids who are as young as 5 and as old as 20. One day they were being attacked with stones and they were bellow a cliff. Boulders starrted falling on them. He said he was never that scared in his life. They quickly drove away jsut in time. Another day he got hit in the leg by a sling shot launched rock. That hurts. He said had it been higher, and hit him in the glasses, he would have glass fragments in both his eyes. Are you going to suggest that all Israeli soldiers not where glasses so kids can launch stones at them? Your statement that throwing stones isn't perticulary dangerous is saying that there is an acceptable level of violence, as long as no one get to hurt, which they do anyway.

on Jul 06, 2004
I consider blowing up people on a bus a crime against human rights.

You can see how their propaganda works, though. A suicide bomber kills dozens of people. The Israeli army goes in to destroy a bomb factory, the pissants in town go out and start throwing rocks and bottles. Soldiers have to defend themselves, a Palestinian or two dies, and then Israel has a human rights crisis. People will say that rocks and bottles aren't weapons, but they are folks that have never been hit with a rock or a bottle.

It's bullshit, frankly. Israel doesn't go into the Palestinian territories until they've been attacked, someone has been kidnapped, etc. If you can show me constistant incursions into the Palestinian territories when there have been no attacks on Israel, I'll be more critical, but as long as the Palestinian territories are pumping out suicide bombers and supporting terror as a form of political change, my opinion is they are getting off easy.

Face it, if Israel were any other Arab country, the Palestinians would have been ethnically cleansed decades ago. If I were an Israeli, when a bomb went off in my neighborhood I would be asking why the response is so light. I would be asking why we weren't fighting Syria and Iran and Lebanon, the nations that hide the elite of these murderous organizations.

The time has come to wipe those who commit terrorist acts from the face of the earth. Period. The "never ending cycle" is a fallacy, unless they can breed really, really fast. They are doing more harm to the Palestinian people than they are to the Israelis. Anyone who cares for them should pray for the destruction of groups like Hamas and Hizbullah.
on Jul 06, 2004
"Nevertheless there is a growing tendency among those who are pro-Israeli to label any and all criticism of the Jewish state as anti-semitic."

You're right that criticism of Israel isn't anti-Semitism. Israel isn't a perfect state just like every other state, and constructive criticism can be an asset, and should be given, just as criticism should be leveled at the US (so long as it isn't the shrill yelling of either extreme.... )

The problem is that many times, it goes far beyond criticism. Calls of "Death to Israel" isn't criticism, ( http://users.lmi.net/zombie/sf_rallies_june_5%2B6_2004/signs/126-2634_IMG.JPG )
nor are unfounded allegations of genocide or equating Israel with Nazis...
( http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/1911609.stm ) or calling Israel a "shitty little country"
( http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/1721172.stm ).

It's also interesting to see how Israel gets excessive attention and protests for anything it does - when other countries are completely ignored. The war between Israel and the Palestinians has resulted in about 3000 Palestinian deaths and 1000 Israeli deaths in the course of four years, historically, a *very* low number, probably lower than the civilian death toll in the Iraq war with all our attempts to prevent civilian casualties (and recognition afterwards that there were far far fewer casualties than anyone had predicted), not to mention other wars where the death tolls were far higher, and yet this conflict appears to get special attention. There is plenty of outrage that Israel is building a security fence - but is there any simmilar outrage when India builds a fence in the disputed Kashmir Region? ( http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/3406997.stm ) Where are the protests for China's occupation of Tibet? Russia's occupation of Chechnya? Syria's occupation of Lebenon? The genocide in the Sudan? Or the hundred and one other incidents of greater magnitude? That Israel gets singled out *every* time while the others are completely ignored, is blatent bias, not legitimate criticism.
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