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 4)
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on Jul 07, 2004
A good question to ask is, would Isreal, if left to itself, be attacking anyone? Most of the "occupation" has been the result of attacks. Most "Palestinian relief organizations" have as a basic tenet the belief that Israel should not exist... at all.

I am optimistic, no doubt, but I think that if there had been no terrorist attacks, the Palestinians would have had a homeland decades ago. It's no accident that terrorists attack Israel just before any peace talks. It is a money-making proposition for these organizations, like a cult that is made up of many believers and a few manipulators at the top.

The Palestinians have never had a "land" of their own. They soon would if they would simply reject the methods of the terrorists that supposedly speak for them. I'll say it again, if the nation in question had been an Arab nation instead of Israel, the Palestinians would have been ethnically cleansed a long time ago.

The fact that they exist at all is owed to the tolerance and restraint of the Israeli people.
on Jul 08, 2004
Bakerstreet,
your last post raises some question for me relating to anti-semitism or racism. Your comment of

if the nation in question had been an Arab nation instead of Israel, the Palestinians would have been ethnically cleansed a long time ago


could easily be considered racist as it clearly applies only to one racial group. It generates fear and hatred of that group.

Would you agree this is racism? And if not, then why not?

What I fail to understand is how someone can make such a statement without it being labelled racist, while someone can critise Israel and be accussed of anti-semitism.

Paul.
on Jul 08, 2004
The strategic reasoning behind neither confirm nor deny nuclear weapons is twofold,

make that threefold. israel doesnt want to sign or be bound by the treaty either.


Is Israel to be less trustworthy then other countries that have, or had nuclear weapons like Iran, Libya, and Iraq, whom are all terrorist supporting regimes?

i dont think any nation should have nuclear weapons...including the us. its absolutely outrageous that after nearly 50 years of living with the threat of atomic war hanging over our heads, there was a period of about 10 years when it seemed possible no one would have to endure that again..until our current president--who damn sure knows what that was like cuz hes only a few years older than i am and should have managed to acquire some common sense in 58 years--indicated his willingness to consider preemptive nuclear strikes.

and youre asking me if i think sharon is stable enough to possess nuclear weapons after what he did on september 29, 2000?

let me ask you something. if israel was found itself in in danger of being overrun by an arab coalition that was not in possession of nuclear weapons, would it be justified in nuking its enemies?

on Jul 08, 2004
The Palestinians have never had a "land" of their own

nor did we til 228 years ago and that was only on the east coast.

palestinians are ethnic and linguistic arabs. theyre called palestinians for the same reason the whitehouse is called the whitehouse. because they resided in palestine (and because its white and a house)

the arabs booted the romans out of palestine in 638 ad. except for the period between 1099-1187 when european christians occupied parts of palestine, the country was ruled by arabs in damascus, baghdad and egypt until it became part of the ottoman empire from 1517 to 1917.
on Jul 08, 2004
Solitair - I suggest you look up what happened in Jordan in "Black" September in Jordan, 1970, and then keep in mind that Jordan is by far the arab country where Palestinians have the most freedom and prosperity. It's not that these countries are represive against the Palestinians because they're arab countries, it's because, at this point in time, these countries are represive dictatorships (or represive monarchies) where massacres of thousands occur regularly.

Kingbee:
"israel doesnt want to sign or be bound by the treaty either."

But as you pointed out, neither are Pakistan or India, and they have declared their nuclear weapons.

"let me ask you something. if israel was found itself in in danger of being overrun by an arab coalition that was not in possession of nuclear weapons, would it be justified in nuking its enemies? "

If Israel was about to be destroyed? Absolutely, but then, I supported Mutually Assured Destruction, too. Deterrence is useless if you're not willing to go through with it if necessary.
on Jul 08, 2004
Kingbee,

Palestinian Arabs are no more Palestinian then the Jews who lives there until 1948. The fact that they want to establish an Arab state called Palestine is very interesting. Never has there been an independent state called Palestine. Nor has there even been an independent Arab country on that strip of land either. It was always ruled by outsiders. The word Palestine is Roman, naming what was Judea after the Philistines, who were not Arab. It was renamed after the Jewish revolts against the Romans to disconnect the Jews from the land. More not worthy, and a piece of information that is very interesting, Arabs cannot even pronounce the letter 'P'. For example, there is a place in northern Israel called Banias. It used to be a Roman/Pagan religious site called Panias, but after the Arab invasion in 636, the P was dropped for the B. In fact, in Arabic they don't call it Palestine, but Falistine. Just goes to show the authenticity of their cause. Was there a Palestinian national movement when Jordan was in the West Bank, and Egypt in Gaza? There are 2 answers to that. Those "Palestinians" didn't have a desire for a national cause in those 2 areas before 1967, but in 1964 Yasser Arafat did estalbish al-Fatah (The Conquest) 3 years before Israel took over the West Bank and Gaza after it was faced with destruction. Al-fatah was not established to rid Jordan and Egypt from Palestinian land, but to rid Israel from Israeli land. And that's the history of how the Falestinian movement was created.
on Jul 08, 2004
"What I fail to understand is how someone can make such a statement without it being labelled racist, while someone can critise Israel and be accussed of anti-semitism. "


A) because it is true, all you have to do is look at the Arab world's handling of other ethnic problems. If it generates fear and hatred it is well founded.
You're missing the point of the blog, I think. The point is that people SHOULDN'T be playing the anti-semitism card. Nor do I think that judging Arab nations by their past actions is racist.


"let me ask you something. if israel was found itself in in danger of being overrun by an arab coalition that was not in possession of nuclear weapons, would it be justified in nuking its enemies? "


Yes. What exactly do you think they are for? Paperwieghts? If there was no other way to prevent themselves being overrun, why would they not prevent it? Seems like a silly question.


"the arabs booted the romans out of palestine in 638 ad. except for the period between 1099-1187 when european christians occupied parts of palestine, the country was ruled by arabs in damascus, baghdad and egypt until it became part of the ottoman empire from 1517 to 1917."


and that all adds up to just what I said: That if tomorrow the Palestinian territories are given "nation" status and allowed self-rule, it will be the first time in history.
on Jul 08, 2004
damn straight bakerstreet
on Jul 08, 2004
If Israel was about to be destroyed? not destroyed...the arabs in this hypothetical dont have nuclear weapons...but theyre going to be overrun.
on Jul 08, 2004
" not destroyed...the arabs in this hypothetical dont have nuclear weapons...but theyre going to be overrun."

Should we have used nuked the soviet union if they had only nuked half the country? If they had "only" nuked the UK? If they had just invaded West Berlin?

I'm not about to play that game.

But last I checked, conventional weapons were pretty damned effective at destruction and killing people when you want them to.
on Jul 08, 2004
I guess the only way for Israel to legitimitally have nuclear arms if we give Arab governments them. I think the pressure (if you want to call it that) the UN is putting on Iran completely unfounded. Why should they have them too? This world is so unfair. I can't believe dictatorships can't have nuclear weapons!
on Jul 08, 2004
You effect change on a nation before they attain nuclear weapons. Once they have them there isn't a lot you can do...

Anyway, the whole "nuclear holocaust" stuff is 1970's sci-fi now. A massive ICBM exchange is really only possible now with China, and they have no reason to. If nuclear weapons are going to be used in the next few years they'll be limited in range and low in yield, probably a cruise missile refitted or a guided munitition dropped from a stealth aircraft. Read up on nuclear weapon theory in the last 20 years. It's not the same all-or-nothing strategy it used to be.

I know how many people feel about it, but you don't have weapons that you don't intend to use. If the Iranians truely have a nuclear weapons facilty underneath that huge concrete area they keep showing, you can pretty much bet that Israel is more than willing to use what it takes to destroy it. You don't use a hammer to break eggs, either, so I doubt they would risk the international outrage if it wasn't comepletely necessary.

I think we will see nuclear weapons used in combat in some limited form in the next 20 years. I wouldn't be shocked, or even overly appalled.
on Jul 08, 2004
There is still a threat of nuclear warheads. There is no hard evidence, but going off the US's track record with arms development and the viability of the technology, there is probably at least one "world-destroying" nuke in existence, and Israel is rumoured to possess one as well. Basically this is a nuke sufficiently large that when it goes off Earth will be blown out of orbit, freezing/burning everything. So it is in everyone's best interests to ensure that noone who has this technology does not face any significant threats.

As for seeing nuclear weapons in combat, the recent decision of the US government to research low-yield nuclear weapons for bunker-busting purposes is almost certain to produce these weapons for conventional uses. If wars continue to be more counter-insurgency than set-piece, as they are today, the civilian deathtolls will be enormous, although this may be an intended consequence - what doesn't live can't resist.
on Jul 08, 2004
" There is no hard evidence, but going off the US's track record with arms development and the viability of the technology, there is probably at least one "world-destroying" nuke in existence, and Israel is rumoured to possess one as well. Basically this is a nuke sufficiently large that when it goes off Earth will be blown out of orbit, freezing/burning everything. So it is in everyone's best interests to ensure that noone who has this technology does not face any significant threats."

There's no evidence because no such nuclear weapon exists - outside of movies.

The largest nuclear weapon in the world was Russian, and it didn't have had any such capability: indeed, in was tested decades ago, and we're still here today. Nuclear weapons get less and less efficent the large you go, so you get a *lot* less bang for the buck - hence it makes more sense to use multiple small nukes than one big nuke.

Here's some info on the Russian bomb: http://www.thebulletin.org/research/qanda/bombsize.html
on Jul 08, 2004
O G San, thank you once again for an insightful and thought-provoking post.

This thread has wandered a bit from the original post (in my humble opinion.) The original assertion that "there is a growing tendency among those who are pro-Israeli to label any and all criticism of the Jewish state as anti-semitic" is accurate as is the further statement that "to say that none of the criticism is anti-semitic, or that all of it is anti-semitic, seem equally ludicrous to me." Good points.

Within the Jewish communities of the world, there are great diversities of opinion. I am not disloyal to my race or to my religion if I criticize Ariel Sharon's policies nor is it an affirmation of my race or religion if I support them. Many Israelis disagree with those policies while others support them. The same freedom of expression is the right of every person. So, no one should be labeled as an anti-Semite for disagreement with a political agenda.

As O G San points out, labeling someone an anti-Semite for political disagreement dilutes the meaning of the word. It weakens the case against the true anti-Semite, like the Boy That Cried Wolf. And there are plenty of real anti-Semites still in the world.

But it should also be pointed out that, for Jews, the existence of Israel is inextricably tied to our survival as a race and a religion. The World Zionist Congress was begun after Theodore Herzl witnessed the anti-Semitism that accompanied the trial of Alfred Dreyfus in France. "Herzl concluded that anti-Semitism was a stable and immutable factor in human society." Source http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/Herzl.html Dreyfus, a Jewish officer in the French Army, was wrongly accussed of giving intelligence to the Germans. He was eventually exonerated after spending years in Devil's Island. During his trial, large inarguably anti-Semitic protests took place outside the courtroom.

The first waves of Jewish settlers to return to Israel occurred between 1882 and 1903 as a reaction to the pogroms or riots in Russia. The were government sponsored and sanctioned attacks on a law-abiding population. This time, the Jews were accussed of aiding the Japanese against the Russians. The second wave of returnees also came from Russia, between 1904 and 1914. Again, they were fleeing brutal anti-Semitism. Between 1919 and 1923, emboldened by the Balfour Declaration, Jews came from Russia, Hungary and Poland, all of which were brutalizing their Jewish populations. The fourth Aliyah came primarily from Poland between 1924 and 1929. Again, anti-Semitism was the motivation for people leaving their homes and traveling half-way across the world. The fifth Aliyah, 1929 to 1939, was caused by the ascension of the Nazis in Germany. Almost a quarter of a million Jews went to Israel for their safety. The number was limited by British laws restricting immigration. I assume that there is no need to chronicle what happened to the Jews who were unable to leave Europe. The population of Israel had grown. It is during this time that Arab attacks against Jewish settlers began. For a full chronicle, see http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Immigration/immigtoc.html

From 1939 to 1948, Eastern European Jews were desperate to get to Israel. During the Shoah or Holocaust, getting to Israel was literally a matter of life or death. It has not ended with the establishment of the State of Israel. The Jews of Ethiopia, called Felasha by their Moslem neighbors, were almost exterminated. Jews have been exiled from or brutally mistreated in many of today's modern Islamic countries. If not for the existence of Israel, where would they have gone?

For many Jews, there are only two "safe" places in the world: Israel and the United States. Canada should probably be added to that short list. England expelled its Jews in 1290 and they were not permitted to return until the time of Cromwell. See http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/timelines/britain/mid_eng_jews.shtml France and Poland and other European countries turned their Jewish populations over to the Nazis. There were noteable exceptions, including Schindler and the town of Le Chambon-Sur-Lignon, where today President Jacques Chirac spoke out against "rising intolerance, racism, anti-Semitism" in France. See http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1089257371489

So, for Jews, the issue of Israel is an emotional one. It goes beyond rationality. There is a sense that Israel, because it is a Jewish state, is held to a higher standard of conduct than other countries. While not everyone that disagrees with Israeli policy is an anti-Semite, and some are in fact Jews, it is also true that anti-Semites will always oppose Israel's survival. So, if my esteemed colleague (and I mean that most genuinely) O G San disagrees with Israeli policy, he is by no means an anti-Semite. However, the European Union's report on anti-Semitism in the EU concluded "The main report shows that there has been an increase in antisemitic incidents in five EU countries, (Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands and the UK). These incidents ranged from hate mail to arson." So, anti-Semitism is real, growing and dangerous. It is often tied to anti-Americanism as is commented on on the Christain Action for Israel site (http://christianactionforisrael.org/antiholo/repeating.html) which comments "The same stereotypes of wealth and power that Hitler used against the Jews are also used to condemn the United States."

But being able to distinguish between real anti-Semites and those who exercise their legitimate right to disagree with the policies of a human,not divine, government may be a survival trait too.
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