By
Tsiporah Grignon
August 14, 2018 "
Information
Clearing House"
-
My
story of growing up Jewish
in Canada is similar to my
peers in America and
England, perhaps in other
western democracies. We were
taught to feel immense pride
in Israel.
That
pride has dissolved for
many. In the words of
psychologist Dr. Gabor Mate:
“The beautiful dream of
Israel has become a
nightmare”
It’s a
sad truth that so many of
the world’s people live in
nightmare conditions. And
because I live a privileged
life, with a warm shelter
and enough food and clean
water, I am motivated to do
something useful with my
life. I used to organize
community events ... now I
organize the community of my
thoughts, about the state of
our world ... and so I
write.
From a
rising awareness of
political realities that
keep all planetary citizens
on edge, I realized it was
time for me to stop avoiding
my Jewish heritage ... for I
had come to the inevitable
conclusion that my Jewish
upbringing has played a key
role in the seemingly
intractable Israel/Palestine
conflict. So I set out to
learn ‘the other narrative’
- through reading books and
articles by Palestinian and
international historians,
journalists, conscious
writers of the political
arts including an Israeli
general’s son, and
eyewitness accounts from
those who live under
terrible living conditions
in Palestine.
First
to understand is that the
focus of this conflict has
been two different groups
wanting to live on the same
piece of real estate. When
Israel became a state in
1948, the land was divided,
and Palestinians were given
specific areas to inhabit -
the West Bank, Gaza and East
Jerusalem. Since that time,
Israel has purposefully
fragmented Palestinian
territory in the West Bank -
taking land that was to be
Palestine through building
Israeli settlements, illegal
according to international
law, which together with
illegal outposts and Jewish
only roads, covers close to
60% of the West Bank. It is
eye-opening to see a map of
land left for Palestinians.
Besides having their land
and water sources stolen,
Palestinian lives are
controlled completely by a
harsh military occupation,
by one of the world’s
mightiest military powers.
To witness what Palestinians
must endure on a daily basis
is heartbreaking. It is
indeed a nightmare. In
today’s world of instant
online media, because any
citizen armed with a cell
phone can document on site
developments, the world can
see what Israeli Defence
Forces (IDF) were ordered by
their military superiors to
do.
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The Lies And
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It is
shocking to see images of
IDF soldiers spraying raw
sewage onto Palestinian
homes in the West Bank. One
can imagine the humiliation
Palestinians feel as they
wait in long lines at
checkpoints on their way to
work or school, caged like
animals, where any soldier
can arbitrarily deny the
Palestinian to pass through
the checkpoint despite
having the correct permit
required by Israeli
occupation policy. And we
can see the anguish of a
Palestinian woman
desperately clinging to a
productive olive tree, in
the wild hope of saving it
from being destroyed by the
IDF.
As global food supply
becomes increasingly
jeopardized due to climate
change, I believe that
purposeful destruction of a
centuries old source of food
is as much a criminal act as
cruelty to sentient beings.
Palestinians in East
Jerusalem must qualify for
legal status in order to
formally work, move freely,
renew drivers’ licences, or
even obtain their children’s
birth certificates which are
needed to register them in
school. Legal status can
also be revoked for any
number of bureaucratic
reasons. Palestinians may
apply to become permanent
residents, to prove they
maintain a “centre of life”
in Jerusalem, but most
reject doing so since it
involves pledging allegiance
to Israel, the occupying
power. According to
international humanitarian
law, an occupying power is
forbidden to compel people
under occupation from
pledging loyalty to it -
however Israel does not
comply to such laws. Its
extensive bureaucratic
system makes it extremely
challenging for Palestinians
to obtain official status as
a Jerusalem citizen.
The
other Palestinian territory
is the 140 square mile Gaza
Strip. Because of an 11 year
blockade by Israel and
enforced by Egypt to the
south - in which
Palestinians are not allowed
to leave and needed goods
are not allowed in - Gaza
has the unsought after
distinction of being called
“the largest open-air
prison” on the planet.
Israel
has assaulted Gaza heavily
three times since the end of
2008, which caused the
deaths of thousands as well
as enormous damage to its
infrastructure and crippling
Gaza’s economy. Severe cuts
to electricity have had a
devastating impact on
medical aid, food and
technology. The water
situation is dire - since
Israel destroyed Gaza’s
sewage infrastructure, raw
sewage flows into the ocean,
polluting their beaches and
leaching into and polluting
almost all of Gaza’s
groundwater, making it
undrinkable. Almost everyone
in Gaza depends on water
delivered by tanker trucks.
Since building materials are
prohibited from being
allowed into Gaza, valuable
infrastructure cannot be
rebuilt. Being a fisherman
in Gaza is now a very
dangerous occupation, for
the IDF routinely fires on
fishing boats, injuring,
arresting and killing
fishermen, as well as
confiscating and even
destroying fishing boats.
How might any of us react to
such an inhumane blockade?
Would we risk our lives to
protest?
That is exactly what
Palestinians in Gaza have
been doing with The Great
March of Return. This
spring, tens of thousands
rose up in mass solidarity,
in an unarmed and
civilian-led protest. As of
this writing, Israeli
snipers have shot and
killed more than 150
Palestinians, and injured
more than 16,000.
Confronting their jailers
has unified the people of
Gaza in the hopes of sending
a clear message to the
international community to
demand an end to the
blockade. Meanwhile, Israel
explains this collective
punishment of Gaza’s 1.8
million Palestinians as
necessary for the security
of the Jews in Israel.
I
cannot accept any
justification for abusive
treatment of human beings. I
am tired of being told the
Israel/Palestine conflict is
complicated. In simple
language, it is one group of
people treating another
group very badly.
Why
would Jews, a group
persecuted for centuries, be
so willing to persecute
others? Are we to carry
hatred in our hearts
forever? I am of a
generation who are the
children of holocaust
survivors. We all grew up
learning about concentration
camps and gas chambers, of
the efficiency of Nazi
cruelty. My father never
spoke about his parents
killed by the Nazis, not
even of any happy childhood
memories - it was too
painful, and I think he felt
guilty for somehow not being
able to save them.
The
obscenity of the Holocaust
for Jews led to the creation
of the mantra, Never Again.
But a mantra is only as good
as our intentions, as noted
by American Jewish historian
Howard Zinn:
“The Jewish Holocaust should
not be encircled by barbed
wire, morally ghettoized,
kept isolated from other
atrocities in history. ...
All who have taken seriously
the admonition “Never Again”
must ask ourselves - as we
observe the horrors around
us in the world - if we have
used that phrase as a
beginning or as an end to
our moral concern. ... To
build a wall around the
uniqueness of the Jewish
Holocaust is to abandon the
idea that humankind is all
one, we are all - of
whatever colour,
nationality, religion -
deserving of equal rights to
life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness. ... My
point is not to diminish the
experience of the Jewish
Holocaust, but to enlarge
upon it. For Jews, it means
to reclaim the tradition of
Jewish universal humanism
against an Israel-centred
nationalism.”
That
is exactly what 47 Holocaust
survivors did after
seeing the carnage of
Operation Protective Edge,
Israel’s massive attack
against Gaza in 2014.
Reclaiming the spirit of
‘never again’, they
published an open letter in
the influential New York
Times calling for “the full
economic, cultural and
academic boycott of Israel”.
Growing up Jewish in North
America
Being
Jewish fundamentally meant
unquestioning support for
Israel. Attendance at
synagogue was far less
important than adherence to
the belief that according to
the Bible, Israel was the
land of the Jews - where any
Jew, from anywhere in the
world who wanted to live
there, would be welcomed.
My
family observed traditional
Jewish life: lighting
Sabbath candles, keeping a
kosher kitchen, attending
synagogue during the most
important Jewish holidays or
for my friends’
bar-mitzvahs. We children
attended classes several
times a week after regular
school to learn the
teachings of Judaism and the
Hebrew language. Like Jewish
children all over North
America, I would collect 10
cent stickers until there
were enough that meant a
tree would be planted in
Israel. This was the 60s,
when we knew that youth from
around the world were
travelling to Israel to work
on a kibbutz, Israel’s
socialist agricultural
communes, along with Israeli
born youth. Everyone was
proud of the kibbutzniks who
“made the desert bloom”.
During
the summer months, many of
us attended Zionist summer
camps which I did for 9
summers. My favourite
activity involved music -
singing Hebrew songs and
doing both Israeli and Arab
ethnic dances. It was at
camp that I first
encountered interpretive
dance, and what we mainly
interpreted was how it
felt to be persecuted.
Our morning ritual was to
gather around the flagpole
as the flag of Israel was
raised, place our right hand
over our hearts, and sing in
Hebrew the words that mean:
“If I forget thee O
Jerusalem, May my right hand
forget its cunning.” I
remember feeling somewhat
uncomfortable repeating such
a fierce statement, for my
humanist nature was
developing without my
conscious awareness.
Unlike others at camp, I
never felt the call to visit
Israel, a place where I knew
that hatred of The Other was
a big part of life.
In
1962, the movie Exodus gave
us sexy movie stars
portraying heroic Jewish
freedom fighters. In
reality, they terrorized
defenceless Arab women and
children to get them to
leave their homes.
The movie’s theme song is
hauntingly beautiful, and
its triumphantly defiant
lyrics hit the perfect
emotional chords to serve
the Zionist agenda: “This
land is mine, God gave this
land to me”.
I must
ask: Why would God tell one
group of believers that a
power spot on planet earth
was theirs, that it
“belonged” to them only?
Did this same God then
forsake those who lost
everything when Israel
became a Jewish homeland?
Does this God actually
choose sides?
“Unthinking respect for
authority is the greatest
enemy of the truth” -
Einstein
My father did not discuss
politics in the family
setting, so I grew up not
asking too many hard
questions about the world.
But in later years, from
observing the military
industrial complex
perpetuating wars, it dawned
on me that my choice to sit
back and not know was a
cop-out. A democracy works
best when citizens take part
in it beyond voting every
few years. I began to relish
deep discussions about
geopolitics with my
politically astute partner.
It was dizzying to deal with
so much information from the
internet. Fortunately, I
received help from my
partner in learning what
information sources
to trust. I
became aware of an army of
alternative information
disseminators who were
willing to dig deeper into
what I call “power gone
bad”, many of them respected
investigative journalists
who had spent their entire
careers questioning
authority and exposing
injustice. It
turns out that discerning
honest information sources
is a constant and formidable
task for all things
political since the rabbit
hole of deceptions is very
deep. As well, I learned
that investigating a news
story has to take into
account the motivations of
every source. In this
regard, one media phenomenon
became apparent - the
hypocrisy of words spoken
that did not match facts on
the ground. That
is the time to ask cui
bono, who
benefits, an invaluable
strategy in a search for
truthful media reporting.
I recognized that cui
bono could also apply to
an examination of extreme
interpretations of religious
beliefs that all too often
lead to violent behaviour.
This led to becoming
involved with an interfaith
group, established by a
Muslim elder deeply
concerned about how the
masses conceived of his
religion after 9/11 - his
desire was to teach that
Islam is a religion of
peace. But although I
appreciated being in the
presence of wise elders in
that group, after a couple
of years I left out of sheer
frustration in never ever
discussing the shadow side
of religion - those fanatic
zealots who believe their
way is the only way, that
others are infidels and
unworthy human beings -
which somehow in a kind of
warped religious zeal
justifies horrendous
violence against a perceived
enemy. Furthermore, if we
are willing to look, there
are violent messages in
certain religious texts
themselves.
This leads me to ask: Why
is it appropriate in modern
times, to live according to
books written centuries ago?
I am aware that for some
people, holy
books are said to be
divinely inspired and imbued
with wisdom, which in theory
would give them a timeless
quality. But the
Old Testament of the ancient
Hebrews is not
a book to suit everyone’s
philosophy of life. My
birth into a Jewish
household does not
automatically mean I agree
with a bible that exalts
patriarchy (power over - the
cause of much suffering),
tribalism (loyalty without
question), and merciless
slaughter at the command of
the Hebrew God. Some of us
are designed to rebel, to
question authority.
The
more I learned about the
history of the establishment
of the state of Israel, the
more I felt betrayed by my
early Jewish conditioning.
Cheerleading for Israel
meant we did not learn about
the Nakba, the expulsion by
Zionist paramilitary groups
of 750,000 Palestinians from
the land they had lived on
for generations. I
have often lamented that as
a child I did not think to
ask what happened to the
people who lived on the land
that became Israel. As an
adult, after
immersing myself in the
study of the
Israel/Palestine conflict, I
now comprehend the
incredibly powerful
influence of Zionist
ideology in the world.
Thus,
through blind support for
Israel, I feel that my
generation became complicit
in perpetuating the
dispossession, persecution
and mass murder of an entire
people. We also missed out
on learning compassion for
The Other.
A
brief primer on Zionism
By the
mid 1800s, there was a rise
of nationalist movements in
Germany and Italy. European
and Russian Jews were
inspired by the idea of
establishing their own
sovereign state as
prophesied in the Bible.
This led to the founding
of Zionism in 1897 by
Theodor Herzl, an
Austro-Hungarian journalist
and political activist. This
new movement renewed the
ancient attachment of the
Jews and of the Jewish
religion to the historical
region of Palestine, where
one of the hills of ancient
Jerusalem was called Zion.
Naturally, Zionism had a
powerful appeal for many
Jews - having a Jewish
homeland meant an end to
centuries of religious
persecution. However, the
Zionist movement also had
its detractors. Rabbis and
others warned that such an
ideology was morally wrong,
that it would lead to
unending conflict, that it
had the potential to become
racist in nature. They were
prescient.
Herzl
died before his vision was
realized. Dr. Chaim Weizmann
became the new leader of the
World Zionist Organization.
Weizmann personally pleaded
with the British government
to give Jews their own home,
however the land Zionists
wanted was in the area
controlled for about 400
years by the Turks, as part
of the Ottoman Empire. This
was when the First World War
was happening, and such
timing led to a surprising
development: the British
government made a promise to
give Palestine to the Jews -
but only if Britain and its
allies won the war. In this
way, Zionists in America
were motivated to use their
considerable influence to
drive Americans into the
war, which proved to be the
decisive factor in the
victory over the Germans and
Turks.
This
special promise was made
public in November 2017 in a
letter from British Foreign
Secretary Lord James Balfour
to Lord Walter Rothschild:
“His Majesty’s Government
view with favour the
establishment in Palestine
of a national home for the
Jewish people”.
Known
as The Balfour Declaration,
this document went on to say“it
being clearly understood
that nothing shall be done
which may prejudice the
civil and religious rights
of existing non-Jewish
communities in Palestine”.
It is important to note
that when this declaration
was issued, Palestine was
populated 93% by Arabs, with
Jews about 7% of the
population. Israeli
historian Ilan Pappe has
said “these 67 words are
still being fought over in
the middle east 100 years
later”.
After
the war, Britain did gain
control of the biblical land
of Israel, then known as
Palestine. Even though the
British helped the Zionist
project survive several
Palestinian uprisings, they
stalled on giving the land
over to a Zionist state. In
March 1939, the British
officially reneged on their
promise, stating that
Britain “was not free to
dispose of Palestine without
regard for the wishes and
interests of the inhabitants
of Palestine.” Zionists
felt betrayed, and carried
out acts of terrorism
against the British
occupation of Palestine -
the most famous being the
bombing of Jerusalem’s King
David Hotel, the
administrative centre of the
British mandate over
Palestine, and the act that
helped accelerate Britain’s
decision to withdraw from
Palestine 2 years later.
After
WWII, the world learned of
the Nazi Holocaust, which
killed 6 million Jews, and 9
million others. Who would
not be emotionally inclined
to give Zionists needed
political support for its
goal of a Jewish state? This
support also included money
to buy weapons to fight and
defeat Arab armies. And so
it was that Zionist
fighters, terrorists by
today’s definition, ousted
the British and held off the
hostile Arab states
surrounding their new
conquest.
But
there was one more item to
deal with - Zionists needed
official recognition for the
new state of Israel. This
task was assigned to the
newly created United Nations
to be resolved.
Response by the United
Nations
It was
not in the UN mandate to
create states. Its General
Assembly had neither the
legal nor the legislative
powers to impose such a
resolution or to convey
title of a territory, only
to recommend resolutions.
Moreover, General Assembly
Resolution 181, which called
for the partition of
British-ruled Palestine into
a Jewish state and an Arab
state, never went to the
Security Council for
approval. Therefore it
remained as a
“recommendation”.
Implementing such an
approval would have required
military force, for there
were 1 million Palestinians
in the part of Palestine
allocated to Zionists in the
partition plan. Despite an
attempt by the United States
to propose that Palestine be
placed under a temporary UN
Trusteeship, plans and calls
for a ceasefire fell on deaf
ears.
With
the Zionist goal so close,
Jewish forces kept up their
attacks on Palestinian
villages to secure more than
their portion of land
allocated in the partition
plan. Meanwhile, American
Zionists lobbied hard for
Harry Truman to be elected
as President, so effectively
that he caved to their
demands and authorized
recognition of Israel on May
14, 1948, the first nation
to do so - a decision not
shared by many of his high
ranking advisors.
The British mandate ended
the next day. Palestine was
not only partitioned - it
was destroyed.
Since then, the United
Nations and other
international organizations
have failed to address
Israel’s criminal actions
and policies.
Settler Colonialism
Before
and after the birth of the
Jewish state of Israel,
Zionist leaders spoke with
confidence about the ongoing
process of settler
colonialism, premised on
occupation and the
elimination of the native
population. Quotes by
Zionist leaders do not mince
words.
From
the founder of Revisionist
Zionism, Zeev Jabotinsky:
“Zionist colonization
must either be terminated or
carried out in defiance
of the will of the native
population”.
From Moshe Dayan, IDF Chief
of Staff, Israeli Minister
of Defence:
“before their eyes we turn
into our homestead the land
and villages in which they
and their forefathers lived
... We are a generation of
settlers, and without the
steel helmet and gun barrel,
we shall not be able to
plant a tree or build a
house.”.
From
the Director of the Jewish
National Fund, Yosef Weitz:
“It is clear that there
is no room for both peoples
together in this country.
There is no other way than
to transfer the Arabs from
here to neighbouring
countries – all of them. Not
one village, not one tribe,
should be left!”
The
word “transfer” was and
continues to be Zionism’s
euphemism for ethnic
cleansing. Such strong
statements make it crystal
clear that from its
beginnings, the leaders of
the new state of Israel
planned to rid their
homeland of Arabs.
Why I
must speak up for
Palestinian human rights
I
cannot in good conscience
stay silent about the
behaviour of a country I was
led to believe was the most
wonderful thing to happen to
Jewish people.
This
conflict continues, with the
continuation of the military
occupation of the West Bank,
strict enforcement of legal
status for Palestinians in
East Jerusalem, and the
blockade of Gaza. For most
Israelis, life is good ...
while only a short distance
away, a people long for
freedom.
Imagine if any of us had to
deal with daily serious
human rights abuses
perpetrated on us,
authorized by law, and
enforced by 18 year old
soldiers with a gun.
Shocking numbers tell the
story of Palestinian losses
and their daily struggles
since the military
occupation began in 1967:
48,000+ homes and
structures demolished; over
a million olive trees
uprooted; 100,000 detained
without trial;
500+checkpoints and
obstacles controlled by a
soldier’s arbitrary
decision; 600,000 Israeli
settlers living in 130
government-approved
settlements on occupied
Palestinian land, and 100
unofficial ones, all in
defiant violation of
international law.
From
British journalist Jonathan
Cook living in Bethlehem:
“Israel is not defending
its borders but the walls of
cages it has built to
safeguard the continuing
theft of Palestinian land
and preserve Jewish
privilege. In the West Bank,
the prison contracts by the
day as Jewish settlers and
the Israeli army steal more
land. In Gaza’s case, the
prison cannot be shrunk any
smaller.”
How
heartbreaking it must be for
Israeli peace and justice
activists to acknowledge
their country’s racist and
cruel nature. Here in
Canada, those of us aware of
Israel’s absolute military
control over the lives of
Palestinians are exasperated
that so many Jews and
elected politicians continue
to make excuses that justify
Israeli atrocities,
conflating criticism of
Israeli government policies
with anti-semitism. I am not
alone in noticing that
continual support for
blatant Zionist bullying
could actually create a
resurgence of anti-semitism.
When
supporters of Israel are
willing to take a deeper
look at Palestinian life
under Israeli occupation,
they will discover a variety
of organizations that
monitor it. Some keep track
of Israel’s control
mechanisms over the
Palestinians, such as
Adameer, a prisoner support
group; The Discriminatory
Laws Database; Rabbis for
Human Rights; and Btselem,
documenting human rights
violations in the occupied
territories to combat denial
amongst the Israeli public.
Actions are also being taken
by courageous young Israelis
willing to upset their
families and even go to jail
for refusing to do their
compulsory military service
in the Occupied Territories.
And IDF veterans unwilling
to ignore their conscience
have created an organization
called Breaking the Silence,
giving us powerful first
person testimonies:
“We endeavour to
stimulate public debate
about the price paid for a
reality in which young
soldiers face a civilian
population on a daily basis,
and are engaged in the
control of that population’s
everyday life. Our work aims
to bring an end to the
Occupation.”
The
one group that as a parent I
feel deeply about is the
Parents Circle Families
Forum, peopled by bereaved
parents, both Israeli and
Arab. All have lost a child
to the insane hatred of this
conflict. And what is a root
cause of their suffering but
none other than religious
belief gone bad.
These people show us that
for some, compassion does
exist for The Other.
One of
the groups involved in this
conflict is the political
party Hamas, acknowledged by
the world as terrorist
militants. In 2006, a year
after Israel withdrew its
settlements and bases from
Gaza, Hamas was elected to
form the government in
Gaza. It must be understood
that Israeli withdrawal did
not change the basic fact
that Gaza remains occupied -
Israel controls Gaza’s land
and sea borders, territorial
waters, natural resources,
airspace, telecommunications
and power supply. To the
world, Hamas is a group
responsible for attacks on
Israeli Jews. To the people
of Gaza, they are the group
that created a necessary and
extensive social welfare
programme. This is not to
say that everything Hamas
does is wise or the best
strategy. But let us
remember that Israel
constantly invokes its right
to self-defence. We must
understand that Palestine
also has the right to self-defence.
Since Gaza is a
territory with no official
army, navy or artillery,
Hamas are the fighters,
unwilling to ignore
mistreatment and
dispossession of the people
they were elected to govern.
Are Palestinians expected to
simply accept their
situation? Do the
protesting Gazans at the
Great March not exemplify
the noble American
expression, “give me liberty
or give me death”?
In December
of 2017, a video went viral
of 16 year old West Bank
Palestinian freedom fighter
Ahed Tamimi who slapped an
IDF soldier outside her
home. She was charged with
assault for actions she took
with her bare hands against
a fully armed and protected
soldier. Ahed has recently
been released from 8 months
in Israeli prison, along
with her mother charged with
incitement for filming the
incident. The village in
which they live has held
non-violent demonstrations
for more than 6 years, to
resist Israel’s occupation
that confiscated village
land, and to protest
settlers who stole their
freshwater spring.
For continuing to exercise
her right to resist, Ahed
Tamimi has become a
symbol of Israel’s
victimization of children -
every year about 750
children are arrested.
Currently over 300
Palestinian children are
held in Israeli prisons,
all, like Ahed, in military
confinement.
Millions around the world
saw this fierce teenage girl
stand up to her oppressors.
The
only democracy in the middle
east is a myth
Democracy means more than
voting in elections. In
essence, in a democracy the
law applies to all equally.
Israel’s control over
Palestinian life
disqualifies it as “ a
beacon of democracy”, a term
that supporters of Israel
love to use.
Recently, the United Nations
commissioned a report to
examine whether the
international criminal law
concept of apartheid applies
to Israel’s policies and
practices towards the
Palestinian people. The
reports authors were chosen
for their respected
credentials in International
Law and political science;
they were careful to confine
their conclusions to the
working definition of
apartheid from the 1973
Convention on the
Suppression and Punishment
of the International Crime
of Apartheid, as well as the
Rome Statute of the
International Criminal
Court.
I felt
compelled to read this
lengthy report that came out
in the spring of 2017. It
very articulately expressed
its conclusion that indeed,
Israel’s policies and
practices towards the
Palestinian people can
rightfully be called
apartheid. Mentioned in the
report is a surprising
admission from Israeli
leaders who for decades
warned their colleagues of
apartheid features of
Israeli policies.
In
2006, American history
professor Tony Judt wrote an
article entitled “The
Country that Wouldn’t Grow
Up.” He commented on the
loss of Israel’s moral
credibility: “...
the claim of being a
vulnerable island of
democracy and decency in a
sea of authoritarianism and
cruelty; an oasis of rights
and freedoms surrounded by a
desert of repression”.
And then he clarified:
“But democrats don’t fence
into Bantustans helpless
people whose land they have
conquered, and free men
don’t ignore international
law and steal other men’s
homes”.
Furthermore, the very recent
passing of the Jewish
nation-state law has
enshrined systematic
discrimination into its
basic laws. Israel has
effectively declared itself
an apartheid state - its
Arab population are
second-class citizens.
Palestinian/American human
rights activist Susan
Abulhawa says Israel
“codified Jewish supremacy
into law”. In response to
this new law, a famous
Israeli performer has used
his celebrity to state
unequivocally that he is
ashamed to be an Israeli.
Gideon
Levy is a truth-telling
Israeli journalist and
regular columnist for
Israel’s newspaper Haaretz.
When I read his articles I
feel his anger and his
sadness at what Israel has
become. For his ability to
cut through pretence and
tell it like it is, he has
been called “the most hated
man in Israel”.
“Israel
has enacted a law saying it
is the nation-state of the
Jewish people. In other
words, anything Israel does
represents the entire Jewish
people. This has a price.
When an Israeli sniper
shoots dead a legless man in
a wheelchair, and a nurse -
the Jewish people is a
partner. Thus Israel’s
policy is inflaming anti-semitism
in the world.”
The
Freedom Flotillas to Gaza
Israelis with a conscience
may also feel ashamed of
Israel’s response to the
Freedom Flotillas. Because
of the worsening situation
in Gaza, several
international boat crews
made three attempts at
bringing humanitarian aid
and medical relief to Gaza.
These boats were all boarded
by IDF navy who forcibly
directed crew members to
Israeli prisons. Sadly, in
May 2010, the Mavi Marmara
was hijacked at sea by a
dozen Israeli attack boats
and several helicopters,
from which IDF soldiers shot
at the crew, killing 10
Turkish activists on board.
Soldiers also stole
thousands of dollars from
their prisoners.
The
most recent flotilla boat,
the Norwegian al-Awda, was
hijacked 60 nautical miles
off the coast of Gaza in
international waters. An
Israeli press statement said
the incident occurred
“without exceptional
incident”. From this I
conclude that the IDF’s
actions were not exceptional
but instead the norm - to
taser and twist arms of the
crew, steal belongings,
punch the captain and
threaten to kill him if he
did not start the engine. A
British doctor on board
reported being prevented for
hours from relieving her
bladder, plus, she was not
allowed to immediately treat
the Canadian First Nations
crew member who was in
obvious pain, who instead
had to wait for an Israeli
doctor who arrived about 10
hours later.
In no
way is this a moral army as
claimed by Israel’s
politicians. To me,
the truly heroic soldiers
are the ones who expose to
the light the dark deeds of
their military service.
Israel continues to live by
“the steel helmet and gun
barrel.” The international
community is speaking out to
condemn these Israeli
actions. Editor of Moment
of Truth: Tackling
Israel-Palestine’s
Toughest Questions, a
compendium of many writers
on the topic, Jamie
Stern-Weiner writes: “The
world is replete with
morally difficult conflicts
and complex ethical
dilemmas. Gaza is not one of
them."
In
closing - A turning point is
upon us
It is
clear to me that in this
conflict, religious
tribalism is so emotionally
charged, that no matter what
facts are presented,
supporters of Israel will
continue to try to excuse
bad behaviour, along with
cries of anti-semitism.
Rabbi Michael Lerner, a
decades long American
political activist, laments
that he is “mourning for
a Judaism being murdered by
Israel.”
The
world is watching. Jewish
people the world over have a
choice to make. This new
Jewish nation-state law
makes official what the real
goal was all along. Some are
saying it undermines peace
in the Middle East, that
it’s a prelude to annexation
of more Palestinian
territory.
I have
long believed that Jewish
people everywhere must
question blind allegiance to
Israel. It is time to
acknowledge what is
undeniably happening ...
that the oppressed have
become the oppressors. Is it
not the Zionist dream that
is the root of all
aggression in this conflict?
The
Canadian government has been
on record as being
uncritically supportive of
Israel for years. Perhaps
that may change because a
delegation of
parliamentarians travelled
to Palestine recently and
saw first hand the living
conditions of Palestinians.
As well, two political
parties made statements of
condemnation after
witnessing the massacre of
protesters during the Great
March of Return. I am not
holding my breath about a
shift in official government
opinion, simply because it
is likely to be shouted down
as anti-semitic by Zionist
organizations.
American Jews must realize
that the United States
supports the Israeli
military machine to the tune
of about 3 billion dollars a
year! It is heartening to
know that many American Jews
are outraged at the
ultra-nationalist and racist
state that Israel has
become.
American Rabbis are speaking
out. Rabbi Alyssa Wise was
denied entry to Israel in
2017 for being part of a
Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions group (BDS).
“I’m heartbroken and
outraged. This is yet
another demonstration that
democracy and tolerance in
Israel only extends to those
who fall in line with its
increasingly repressive
policies against
Palestinians.”
Rabbi Brant Rosen is
troubled by claims of
anti-Semitism in progressive
Jewish circles. “I’ve
long been frustrated at my
liberal Zionist colleagues
who are more than willing to
condemn any number of human
rights abuses around the
world, yet refuse to apply
the same standard when it
comes to Israel.”
A growing number of American
Jewish youth are adamant
that the Judaism advocated
by Israeli Zionists does not
speak for them. Through
their movement
IfNotNow, they are calling
the Occupation “a moral
disaster for those who
support it and administer
it.”
IfNotNow is
currently running a campaign
called “You Never Told Me”,
where they level critique
against Jewish summer camps
and day schools for ignoring
Israel’s occupation, calling
upon these institutions
“to provide Jewish education
that advances freedom and
dignity for all people”.
Another group making waves
in the Jewish community in
the United States is
Birthright, an organization
that for years has offered
young Jews around the world
free trips to Israel. This
past June, five program
participants walked off the
Birthright bus on the last
day of their trip, met up
with Breaking the Silence,
and together went to the
occupied West Bank city of
Hebron where they met
Palestinians.
“We
each came on this trip
separately with hope that —
especially in light of the
recent killings of more than
a 100 protesters in Gaza and
Trump moving the U.S.
embassy to Jerusalem —
Birthright would trust its
participants enough to give
us an honest education. We
came with questions about
what’s happening in the
occupied territories and
wanted to engage with new
perspectives, but what
became clear over the course
of 10 days was that
Birthright did not want to
truthfully engage with our
questions. It’s clear that
young Jews who have critical
questions about Israel are
not welcome on Birthright.
It’s shocking that given all
the recent violence
Birthright would continue to
act as if we can’t handle
the truth.”
This
is aptly demonstrated by
Birthright’s map of
Israel showing no
Palestinian territories
whatsoever, a clear message
of Israel’s intentions to
own all of the land, as
prophesied by the Zionist
leaders quoted earlier.
These five young Jews showed
courage in addressing a
growing disillusionment with
Zionism.
Disillusionment with what
Israel has become is also
being expressed by older
American Jews as well. Early
this year, American
political scientist David
Rothkopf referred to Israel
as a “ thugocracy”. His most
recent article published in
Haaretz is a call to action
- “Why it’s Now Every
American Jew’s Duty to
Oppose Israel’s
Government”: “To
the extent that laws like
the nation-state law remain
the unaltered law of the
land, Israel’s leaders must
be challenged, communities
of conscience everywhere and
all manner of pressure
mobilized against it on
behalf of those denied their
most basic human rights by
the law.”
I am
choosing to join others
calling for an end to the
Occupation and the
Blockade. I believe
stealing land from another
is wrong, anywhere. In this
regard, the
Palestinian perspective is
the same as that of the
First Nations people of our
own country.
We can
become effective in bringing
our voices to bear upon this
issue by supporting the work
of organizations advocating
an end to Israel’s
oppression of Palestinians.
We can boycott goods made in
the occupied territories
labelled ‘made in Israel’-
every purchase is a reminder
of the Palestinian call for
human rights. And we can
sign petitions urging
artists to cancel gigs in
Israel as a statement in
solidarity with Palestinians
and against Israeli
apartheid.
A father in Gaza who
participated in Gaza’s
Great March of Return
wrote an Op Ed in the New
York Times about his
decision to take part in
this historic uprising
despite the dangers. He told
his sons:
“If risking my life means
you and your brothers will
have a chance to thrive, to
have a future with dignity,
to live in peace with all
your neighbours, in your
free country, then this is a
risk I must take.”
We
either work towards a more
loving and compassionate
world, or we perish. More
and more of us are opening
our hearts to the pain of
The Other. The same
psychologist quoted at the
beginning of this essay
wrote of his fear of
“rancour that might arise
between friends” in
discussing this issue. I am
ready to take that risk.
This essay is a way of
coming to terms with my
Jewish roots - to atone for
my complicity in the Zionist
conquest of Palestine - and
to claim my responsibilities
as a Canadian.