April 10, 2015
I just listened to an interview with Tuvia Tenenbom, author of Catch a Jew and I Sleep in Hitler’s Room.
Although the interviewer talks far too much — I always wish they would
just shut up and let the subject talk, especially when it’s someone as
engaging as Tenenbom — I strongly recommend it. Be prepared to be upset,
angry or depressed (depending on your personality) by what he reports.
Among the truths that Tenenbom discovered in his travels in Europe
and Israel in the guise of a non-Jewish German journalist were a) many
Europeans are really anti-Jewish and anti-Zionist, b) so are
some Jewish Israelis, and c) they are getting together to work towards
the replacement of Israel by some kind of non-Zionist state in which
Jews will be a minority.
This isn’t news — NGO Monitor
has been documenting the massive flow of Euros to anti-Zionist
organizations run by left-wing Israeli Jews or Arabs for years — but
Tenenbom emphasizes how pervasive the influence is, extending from large
organizations like the Red Cross to small operations like the tour
guide (a self-described ‘ex-Jew’) who brings groups of Europeans to Yad
Vashem, where he explains that this is what the Jews are doing to the
Palestinian Arabs.
It’s hard to see how a tiny country, which doesn’t threaten anyone
and only wants to be left in peace deserves this. But the NGOs are only a
tiny part of it. There is also the phenomenon of the worldwide academic
onslaught on Israel, in which critical standards and honesty are thrown
to the winds in the production of ‘scholarship’ that is no more than
political polemics against Israel and the Jewish people; while, at the
same time the professors replace teaching with indoctrination, and use
university resources for political activity such as promoting
boycott-divestment-sanctions against Israel. Jewish faculty are in the
forefront of the effort.
Tenenbom also notes how many of the Jewish Israelis that gnaw away at
the state that protects them — one of his interviewees is writer Gideon
Levy of Ha’aretz — positively venerate Palestinian Arab Muslim culture.
But, he points out, they don’t know a word of Arabic and haven’t read
the Qur’an. What can they know about Arab culture or Islam?
Tenenbom uses the expression “self-hating Jews” to describe Jews like
Gideon Levy, but I think that’s misleading. They don’t hate themselves —
they see themselves as better than the others, the ones that
have all the ‘Jewish’ characteristics that they hate (religious belief,
for one). They identify with their enemies that want to kill them, even
to the point of adopting their anti-Jewish beliefs, because they
subconsciously think it will protect them.
Upset, angry or depressed yet? I haven’t even mentioned the United
Nations, which spends millions of dollars each year on events, exhibits
and production of materials that present the Arab narrative of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict (in which Israel is entirely at fault), or
the Human Rights Commission which generates more resolutions condemning
Israel than those for all other nations combined.
Then there is the multiplicity of smaller groups, trade unions,
professional organizations, church groups (the Presbyterian Church USA
comes to mind) which allow themselves to be used as vehicles for
delegitimizing the Jewish state.
All this, despite the fact that there is no objective basis for it.
Most anti-Israel arguments revolve around the alleged mistreatment —
even ‘genocide’ — of Palestinian Arabs under Israel’s control. But the
Arab population continues to increase, and its levels of health and
nutrition are among the highest in the Arab world. More than 95% of the
Arabs in Judea and Samaria live in areas controlled by the Palestinian
Authority (and of course 100% of Gazans are ruled by Hamas). Even during
wars, objective analysis has shown that Israel’s actions to reduce
civilian casualties are unmatched by those of any other nation.
At any given time there are numerous wars,
rebellions, insurgencies, occupations, massacres, etc. throughout the
world which receive far less attention in the media and academia despite
hundreds, thousands, or even hundreds of thousands of casualties (the
Boko Haram uprising killed almost 11,000 in 2014 and almost 5,000
already this year). Did you know that the Second Congo War (1998-2003) caused more than 350,000 violent deaths, and 2.7-5.4 million
excess deaths, with low-level violence still continuing to this day?
The Israeli-Arab conflict is comparatively very small potatoes.
And then there are the positives: the remarkable number of scientific
and technological advances by Israelis, the almost full-employment
economy, the democratic political system, the high degree of personal
freedom enjoyed by Jewish and Arab Israelis despite the pressure of wars
and terrorism, the degree of equality for women and gay or otherwise
unconventional people, the production of art, music and literature, and
more.
It’s revealing that the haters object to pro-Israel people mentioning
any of this. One is not allowed to say that Israel is the most (the
only) LGBT-friendly country in the Middle East, because that is
“pinkwashing,” using this undeniable truth to ‘cover up’ the oppression
of Arabs. But if no empirical fact can count against the proposition
that Israel is an oppressor, then that’s a clue that the proposition is
itself not based on empirical facts.
So what is behind the irrational hatred for Israel and the amount of
resources — Western, enlightened resources — devoted to an attempt to
destroy it and to replace it with another unstable, undemocratic, racist
Arab-majority state?
There are lots of reasons. American academic institutions have been
infused with Arab oil money, and Arab countries have supplied many of
them with activist foreign students. The UN is dominated by the
non-aligned movement, which is controlled by the Organization of Islamic
Cooperation, which in turn is led by the Arab League. ‘Progressive’
ideology includes a large serving of guilt for Western colonialism, and
the Arab narrative that presents Israel as a Western colonialist
resonates with the Left.
But I’m afraid that Tenenbom’s experiences in Europe and among
Israel’s academic and media elite are the most important indicator. I
said the hatred is ‘irrational’, and an irrational attitude has an
irrational cause: in this case, pathological Jew-hatred, deeply
implanted in so many Europeans, and paradoxically also in the
best-educated Israelis.
This could be a lesson for those Jews who can’t decide to stay in
Europe or leave. Don’t expect the Europeans to stick up for you if you
stay. They don’t like you.
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