July 05, 2023:
Information Clearing House
--For most of the past
75 years in the United States, the days around
May 15 have seen celebrations of the anniversary
of Israel’s creation. Pro-Israel marches,
gushing articles breathlessly perpetuating myths
about Israel’s “miraculous” creation and
development, and, perhaps, an occasional mention
of those Palestinians casting a shadow on it
all, with their unreasonable hatred of the
state.
It has been different recently, and
especially so this year. Israel’s creation is
still being celebrated in many corners, but the
commemoration of the Nakba, the ongoing
dispossession of and denial of rights to the
Palestinian people, is getting more attention
and consideration. This fact has not gone
unnoticed by supporters of Israel.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
In a sign of the changing times, Jeremy
Ben-Ami, president of the liberal Zionist group
J Street, sent out a letter he titled “Marking
the ‘Nakba.’” It’s far from a radical
letter, but the mere fact that Ben-Ami would
acknowledge the Nakba and call on his fellow
supporters of Israel to do the same represents a
shift in the discourse, one that the more
staunchly pro-apartheid groups such as
AIPAC blasted.
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s attempt to
prevent Rep. Rashida Tlaib, the only
Palestinian-American woman in Congress, from
holding an event marking the 75th
anniversary of the Nakba failed, when Bernie
Sanders, a Jewish senator, stepped in to allow a
solemn and meaningful remembrance to move
forward. How did the Anti-Defamation League (ADL),
AIPAC, and Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI)
respond? Sadly, just as one would expect, with
extremist statements of anti-Palestinian hate.
“It is disgraceful that @SenSanders allowed
this event by @RepRashida to be held in our
nation’s Capitol,”
tweeted Jonathan Greenblatt, president and
CEO of the ADL. “Real conversations are needed
around a path to peace, but not with groups &
individuals who espouse antisemitism. We call on
the Senate to condemn this event.”
While Greenblatt knows how to craft his
message, the venomous hate here is still
obvious. We can start with the fact that the
Nakba, the seminal event in modern Palestinian
history, is seen only in terms of its
implications for Israel. This calls for some
unpacking.
Nakba
denial and anti-Palestinian hate
In response to the United States calling the
United Nations’ Nakba Day recognition a
reflection of “anti-Israel bias,”
I asked, “Would the US call recognition of
the horrors of slavery anti-American? Would it
call a Holocaust commemoration anti-German?
There is no difference.”
This is not merely scoring points. It’s a
question that Jews answer in many of our
traditions. For example, the holiday of Tisha
B’Av commemorates several tragedies in Jewish
history every year. These events included, among
others, the razing of both Temples, one by the
Babylonians and one by the Romans; the beginning
of the First Crusade; and expulsions from
England, France, and Spain. It would be
outrageous and absurd if anyone claimed that
Tisha B’Av was anti-Iraqi, or anti-Italian,
British, French, or Spanish.
That’s what Greenblatt was alleging about the
Nakba, seeing it only in terms of what it
implies for Israel. Imagine the outcry if a
similar attitude was taken about the Native
American Day of Mourning, observed every year on
the fourth Thursday in November—Thanksgiving
Day.
Meanwhile, DMFI was even more absolute and
stark in their venomous hate speech. They
tweeted a
presentation about the Nakba, which opened
by stating, “Those who seek to commemorate
Israel’s founding and establishment as a
‘Nakba’…are not only distorting history, but
perpetuating a narrative that intentionally
seeks to delegitimize the only Jewish state.”
Again, there’s a lot more here. DMFI’s
presentation is the usual; mix of
decontextualization, half-truths, and outright
falsehoods that characterize a narrative so
detached from reality that Israel’s own records
and even very mainstream Zionist Israeli
scholars contradict virtually all of it.
But it is the view that the Nakba, a purely
Palestinian experience, needs to be seen through
the lens of Israel that is so profoundly
hateful. These same people would never tolerate
Israel’s creation being seen exclusively through
a Palestinian lens. But more than that, the
Nakba, being so central to Palestinian identity,
history, and national consciousness, is a
Palestinian experience that Israel’s supporters
are trying to strip away.
This was never clearer than in a tweet by
Emily Schneider, a reporter for the Israeli news
site, Ynet. She tweeted, “The real ‘Nakba
survivors’ are the Jews whom the Arabs tried to
commit a genocide against in 1948.”
It was a stunning statement. It was a
complete erasure of the Palestinian narrative
and the Palestinians themselves. And it once
again co-opts the Nakba for Israeli purposes.
It’s true there were violent upheavals
against Jews in many Arab countries during and
after the 1948 war (some of which were fomented
by Zionist/Israeli agents, as in
Iraq and
Egypt, but anti-Jewish hostility in the wake
of the dispossession of the Palestinians was at
least as big a factor), and these were a
significant factor in the exodus of Jews from
the Arab world in the late 1940s and 1950s.
But to compare this to the Nakba is the
height of disingenuity. As Prof. Philip Mendes
put it back in 2002 when comparing the
exodus of Jews from the Arab world and the
Nakba, while it is important to note that
anti-Jewish hostility was a factor in the
former, it is “…insensitive for Israel to use
the experience of the Jewish refugees as a
justification for its treatment of the
Palestinian refugees. The latter group also have
a justifiable claim for financial compensation.”
And, one must add, they also have a justified
and legal claim to return, regardless of the
fact that, as Mendes also noted, “most of the
Jewish refugees had little or no desire to
return to their former homes in Baghdad or
elsewhere.”
Nakba
denial, Islamophobia, and anti-Arab hate in U.S.
policy
Schneider’s job title is, by her account,
“journalist.” Yet here she is denying the Nakba,
an event which Israel’s own records—as has been
extensively documented by Israeli historians and
researchers—show that the Nakba was very much
real and, while the
flight of Palestinians might have exceeded
Zionist expectations,
it was very much intentional.
This is the purest and most vicious kind of
anti-Palestinian hate, a type of anti-Arab
bigotry inextricably bound with Islamophobia,
and it is rampant in American discourse. As
Yehuda Shaul of Breaking the Silence
pointed out, “Unlike [House Speaker Kevin]
McCarthy, leaders from the Likud don’t deny the
Nakba – in fact, they fully acknowledge it &
threaten Palestinians with another one.”
Anti-Arab/Palestinian racism and
Islamophobia, though far from being the sole
reasons for exceptional US policy on Palestine,
are significant factors in forming that policy.
They reinforce the stereotypes of the “Muslim
other” that effectively deprive Palestinians and
their supporters of full participation in public
debates about foreign relations and human
rights.
That bigotry is not what causes the U.S. to
support Israel. There are strong strategic,
economic, and political
reasons for that support. But none of those
reasons explain U.S. support for the
dispossession of the Palestinians. Indeed, many
of those same interests would be far better
served by an alliance with an Israel that was
not constantly undermining American credibility
on international rules and consistent diplomacy
and alienating so much, not only of the Arab
world but the Global South more broadly.
The stark bigotry of pro-Israel groups like
the ADL, AIPAC, DMFI, and many others finds a
connection with the innate bigotry of American
policymakers in both major U.S. parties. Thus,
the United States does not need to be pushed to
support the harshest oppression of Palestinians.
The sympatico of bigotry is key to the
success of Israel’s lobby in the U.S.
Without that bigotry, we would see a U.S.
policy that surely would not go so far as to
demand a full right of return for Palestinian
refugees but would certainly have long ago
pressed for an end to Israel’s occupation in a
serious way. It would still invest heavily in
Israel’s security and its military hegemony in
the Middle East, but it would actually use that
same investment as leverage to press Israel to
grant Palestinians their rights, whether in a
single democratic state or a separate
Palestinian one. It would understand and press
for Palestinian security as hard as it does
Israeli.
A U.S. which did not harbor this intense
bigotry against the Palestinians would not adopt
such policies out of kindness or a sense of
justice. It would do so because it is profoundly
in American interests, even in a thoroughly
imperialist/capitalist sense of that word, to
promote a democratic Israel and full rights for
Palestinians, either in that democratic Israel
or beside it.
That’s why Nakba denial is so important for
Israel and its supporters. Just as the Nakba is
at the heart of Palestinian national existence,
the denial of the Nakba is at the heart of the
racist ideology that has so successfully warped
U.S. policy and pressed Europe and other Western
countries like Australia and Canada to follow
the U.S. lead on Palestine.
Acknowledging the Nakba ultimately leads
either to support the Palestinian cause or, as
it does for the Israeli right, to outright
support ethnic cleansing, apartheid, and even
genocide. That’s why these groups, founded and
fed by bigotry, are desperate to deny it. It’s
not just an image issue, it is the very
foundation of the Israel right-or-wrong
ideology.