A
Palestinian Perspective on Britain’s ‘Anti-Semitic’
Controversy
By Ramzy
Baroud
May 13,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "PalestineChronicle"
-
There is a
witch-hunt in the British Labour Party. Britain’s
Opposition party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, is being
hounded for not rooting out alleged anti-Semitism in
his party. Those leading the charge are
pro-Israel Zionists and their supporters within
the party, members who are mostly allied with the
former Prime Minister, the largely discredited
pro-war Tony Blair.
The Blairites are quite unhappy that Corbyn, who
won the party’s leadership election last September
with a landslide victory is a non-elitist
politician, with a deep-rooted grassroots activist
past, and, yes,
a strong stance for Palestinian rights.
Corbyn has
been subjected to all sorts of attacks and ridicule
from his own party, many members of which have been
busy plotting to push him out, but remained hesitant
because of his popular appeal. The Labour party had,
in fact, lost much of its credibility since the days
of Blair’s ‘New Labour’ and following the US lead in
waging an immoral and illegal war on Iraq. Blair’s
supporters changed the priorities of the party,
which was ‘Labour’ by name only. Corbyn’s advent
galvanized young people around fresh ideals, and
renewed the shaky faith of the party’s traditional
supporters.
But since
he became a leader, the man’s agenda of
anti-corruption and greater equality in Britain has
been slowed down, or even entirely halted, by some
most bizarre controversies. He was attacked over
such things as his supposed
poor sense of fashion, his
alleged lack of patriotism, and more. The
attacks have been so ridiculous, yet omnipresent,
that they became the subject of popular memes and
much satire.
And when it
all failed, he was hit with another manufactured
controversy, that of alleged anti-Semitism within
his own party. The recent attacks have been the most
organized, yet. They involve Israel
supporters, British politicians, the
media and other sources.
The media
has tried to paint him as an embattled leader who is
not able to control the uncontainable Jewish hate
oozing from his party members.
British Chief Rabbi,
Ephraim Mirvis, known for his strong support of
Israel joined the fray, charging that the lid has
been lifted on bigotry within Labour and that
investigation into anti-Semitism must be more than a
‘sticker plaster.’
The
investigation and the preceding outcry of
anti-Semitism, however, targeted those who were
critical of Israel, not Jews, in general, or
Judaism.
Former London Mayor, Ken Livingstone, who was
suspended from Labour for suggesting links between
the Nazi party and early Zionists, was not making
any reference to Jews per se, and certainly not to
Judaism. Arguably, if he was wrong, then it is a
mere question of history, not race.
In its
coverage of the controversy,
even the BBC, delinks both concepts:
“Anti-Semitism is ‘hostility and prejudice directed
against Jewish people’, while “Zionism refers to the
movement to create a Jewish state in the Middle
East.”
Indeed, the
first is a racist ideology, while the latter is an
entirely political and historical question,
especially since early Zionists were largely
atheists. Israel’s Zionist-Jewish contradiction wasphrased
skillfully by Israeli historian, Ilan Pappe,
when he wrote:
“The
secular Jews who founded the Zionist movement wanted
paradoxically both to secularize Jewish life and to
use the Bible as a justification for colonizing
Palestine; in other words, they did not believe in
God but He, nonetheless, promised them Palestine.”
But the
Rabbi, and many of those who unscrupulously joined
the charge against Labour pretend that Zionism, a
late 19th century political movement is the same as
Judaism, a religion that dates back millennia.
However,
there is nothing new here, and the manufactured
‘controversy’ is hardly limited to Britain or the
Labour Party.
The message
that Israeli hasbara (propaganda) has been steadily
sending to its critics since the establishment of
Israel over the ruins of the Palestinian homeland in
May 1948: if you are critical of Israel, however
slightly, you are a certified anti-Semite. If it
happens that you are Jewish, then you are a
self-hating Jew, and if you are an Arab, you must
abandon the idea that you are, yourself, Semitic and
Arab, by merely opposing Israel’s ethnic-cleansing
of Palestinians who are all anti-Semites, anyway.
I doubt
there is a self-respecting Palestinian intellectual
who has not fended against accusations of being
anti-Semitic for merely advocating Palestinian
rights, and demanding accountability of Israeli
violations of human rights and war crimes.
Many
independent Jewish voices, too, have found
themselves on the defensive, although within a
different category. The classification of a
‘self-hating Jew’ has been ever so popular these
days, especially as many Jewish activists have
righteously joined the Palestinian Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions Movement (BDS). The
once-marginalized voices are now a large and growing
crowd.
Unable to
defend Israeli action based on logical arguments,
international law or common sense, Israel’s
supporters use other means, threats, smears and
vilifications, and also by fabricating non-existing
controversies. And no one is immune.
Daniel
Greenfield engaged in a bizarre diatribe in the
Jewish Press on March 8, in an article entitled: “Bernie
Sanders is NOT a Jew“. In the same familiar
tone of distortion and self-pity, Greenfield
theorized: “While Bernie Sanders invoked his last
few drops of Jewishness and the Holocaust in support
of a Muslim anti-Semite’s cry bullying, he didn’t
feel the need to do so for the Jewish State when it
actually stood on the verge of destruction. Instead,
he had called for denying arms to Israel before the
Yom Kippur War.”
How about
the United Nations, which has failed to enforce a
single resolution of the
dozens of resolutions passed to demand justice
for the Palestinians and accountability from Israel?
It is an
“anti-Semitic circus”
according to Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin
Netanyahu. The novel designation followed the
recent UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC’s)
decision to compile a list of international and
Israeli companies that do business in illegal Jewish
settlements in the Occupied Territories.
Despite the
fact that the UN is yet to reverse the worsening
plight of the Palestinians or advance their cause
beyond symbolic gestures, one rarely hears the
accusation that the UN is anti-Palestinian, or
anti-Arab.
On the
other hand,
for merely censuring Israeli action by words
only, the UN, according to Jennifer Rubin
writing in the Washington Post on February 16,
“tolerates and, by its silence, condones,
anti-Semitism.”
The US
government has blindly and unconditionally given
credence to that notion, marching to the drumbeat of
the Israeli government on every occasion and
boycotting international institutions whenever
Israel raises the frequently false flag of
anti-Semitism.
The matter
is not only pertinent to Israel and Palestine.
Anyone who dares go against Israel’s interest in the
region and around the world is a candidate for the
manipulation of Israeli terminology.
Following
the Iran nuclear deal between Iran and western
powers,
conservative commentator,Debbie
Schlussel, coined new terminology: ‘Jews in the
Name Only’ or JINOs. Those alleged JINOs are the
98 prominent ‘Hollywood Jews’, who backed the
Iran deal in an open letter.
By
completely shutting the door on any form of
criticism of Israel, Zionism, and the censure of its
military behavior in the region coupled with the
daily violence meted out against occupied
Palestinians, Israel has expanded the definition of
anti-Semitism to include whole countries,
governments, international institutions and millions
of independently thinking individuals the world
over.
However,
not even such deliberate distortion should prevent
us from making the differentiation loud and clear:
anti-Jewish racism should be condemned as loudly and
decisively as Islamophobia and any other form of
racial discrimination and bigotry.
However,
criticizing violent political movements and the
behavior of any state that violates international
law and human rights is a moral duty. Israel will
not be the exception.
– Dr.
Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East
for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author of several books and the
founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books include
‘Searching Jenin’, ‘The Second Palestinian Intifada’
and his latest ‘My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza’s Untold Story’. Baroud has a Doctorate of
Philosophy in Palestine Studies from the European
Centre for Palestinian Studies at the University of
Exeter. His website is:
www.ramzybaroud.net.
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