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From:
Bill Bartlett <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The philosophy, work & influences of Noam Chomsky
Date:
Thu, 9 May 2002 14:13:33 -0700
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/comment/0,10551,712266,00.html

This slur of anti-semitism is used to defend repression

Ending Israel's occupation will benefit Jews and Muslims in
Europe

Seumas Milne
Thursday May 9, 2002
The Guardian

Since the French revolution, the fates of the Jewish people and the left have
been closely intertwined. The left's appeal to social justice and universal
rights created a natural bond with a people long persecuted and excluded by
the Christian European establishment.

From the time of Marx, Jews played a central role across all shades of the
left. They were heavily represented among the leaders of the Russian
revolution - hence Hitler's denunciation of communism as a
"Judaeo-Bolshevik conspiracy" - and the left-led underground resistance to
the Nazis. It was the Red Army which liberated the Auschwitz death camp. In
Britain, it was the left which fought to defend the Jewish East End of London
from fascists in the 1930s. In the Arab world, Jews were crucial to the
building of political parties of the left. And despite the changed class balance
of many Jewish communities, Jews remain disproportionately active in
progressive political movements - including Palestinian solidarity groups -
throughout the world.

But now the left stands accused of anti-semitism because of its opposition to
Israel's military occupation and continuing dispossession of the
Palestinians. As the Palestinian intifada and Israeli repression rage on,
rightwing commentators and religious leaders have claimed the left is guilty
of "anti-Jewish prejudice", double standards towards Israel and even apeing
the anti-semitic "blood libels" of the Middle Ages with the ferocity of its
charges of Israeli massacres. Britain's chief rabbi, Jonathan Sacks, has
widened the attack to the media and equated any questioning of Israel's
legitimacy with "calling into question the Jewish people's right to exist
collectively". In the US, the denunciation of the left over Israel has been
extended to include the whole mainstream European political system.

There is little question that there has been a growth of overt anti-semitism
in Europe, especially since the collapse of European communism more than a
decade ago. That trend has quickened since the start of the second intifada and
Ariel Sharon's election as Israel's prime minister. In Britain, physical
attacks on Jews have increased significantly - even if they remain far fewer
than assaults on black, Asian and Muslim people - and now a London
synagogue has been desecrated. With the far right on the march across the
continent, it is hardly surprising that a community barely a couple of
generations away from the most devastating genocide in human history feels
beleaguered - a perception heightened by atrocities against civilians in
Israel, such as Tuesday's suicide attack in Rishon Letzion.

No doubt some on the left have wrongly taken the comparative wealth and
position of Britain's Jewish community as a sign that the social cancer of
anti-semitism is somehow less dangerous than other forms of racism. The
graveyards of Europe are a permanent reminder that it is not. The left is
certainly not immune from racist currents in society; and it needs
aggressively to police the line between anti-Zionism and anti-semitism,
taking into account Jewish sensitivities in the way it campaigns for justice
in the Middle East.

But none of that excuses the smear that left or liberal support for
Palestinian rights is somehow connected to resurgent anti-Jewish racism -
an absurd slur which is itself being used as an apologia for Israel's brutal
war of subjugation in the occupied territories. All the evidence is that it is
the far right, the traditional fount of anti-semitic poison, which has been
overwhelmingly responsible for attacks on both Muslim and Jewish targets
in Europe. Violence from the Islamist fringe no doubt also poses a threat, but
not even in the wildest rantings of Israel's cheerleaders has it been
suggested that any group on the left could have had anything to do with, say,
the trashing of the Finsbury Park synagogue. Nor is it hostile media
coverage that is fuelling criticism of Israel, but what is actually taking
place on the ground in Bethlehem, Nablus and Ramallah.

The reality is that, contrary to the claims of the supporters of Israel's
35-year-old occupation, its existence as a state is not remotely in danger.
Nor by any stretch of the imagination does it "stand alone", as some have
insisted. Its security is guaranteed by the most powerful state in the world.

There is, however, a very real and present threat to the Palestinians, their
national rights and even their very presence in what is left to them of
Palestine. Evidence of serious Israeli breaches of the Geneva convention -
war crimes - across the West Bank has been collected by human rights
organisations in recent weeks. But Israel has been able to swat away the
Jenin investigation team, ordered in by the UN security council, with
impunity. To refuse to acknowledge these brute facts of power and injustice
is itself a reflection of anti-Arab racism and Islamophobia, both currently
more violently represented on Europe's streets and more acceptable in its
polite society than anti-semitism. For the left to ignore such oppression
would be a betrayal. As the Zapatista leader Marcos has it, he is "a Jew in
Germany, a Palestinian in Israel".

Last week, Dick Armey, the Republican leader in the US House of
Representatives and a key Bush ally, called for Israel to annex the occupied
territories and expel the Palestinian inhabitants. In other words, he was
proposing the ethnic cleansing of the Arab population. His remarks aroused
little comment, but coming at a time when 40% of the Israeli public, as well
as cabinet ministers, openly support such a "transfer", it can only be taken
as encouragement by the most extreme elements in the Israeli
establishment. Ethnic cleansing is not of course a new departure for Israel,
whose forces twice organised large-scale expulsions of Palestinians, in
1948 and 1967 - as documented in the records and memoirs of Israeli
leaders of the time - to secure a commanding Jewish majority in the
territory under its control. But the refugees created in the process remain
at the heart of the conflict. It was the tragedy of the Zionist project that
Jewish self-determination could only be achieved at another people's
expense.

A two-state settlement is now the only possible way to secure peace in the
forseeable future. But for such a settlement to stick there will have to be
some reversal of that historic ethnic cleansing. Those who insist there can
be no questioning of the legitimacy of the state in its current form - with
discriminatory laws giving a "right of return" to Jews from anywhere in
the world, while denying it to Palestinians expelled by force - are scarcely
taking a stand against racism, but rather the opposite. They are also doing no
favours to Israelis. The latest suicide bombings have demonstrated the
failure of Sharon's strategy for dismantling the infrastructure of terror.
What is needed instead is a strategy to dismantle the infrastructure of
occupation. Not only would that open the way to peace in the Middle East. It
could also create the conditions for Muslims and Jews in Europe to realise
their common interests.

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