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Israel's claim to monopoly on
suffering is wearing thin
Rime Allaf, September 2001
Where
in the world does one have to be in order to be indignant at Israel’s
routine treatment of Palestinians (documented daily on every TV
channel) and not raise a storm? Scandinavia is certainly not far
enough. When Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja dared to opine
last week that Israel’s intent was to “suppress, humiliate, subdue and
impoverish the Palestinians” and that “it is quite shocking that they
should continue toward the Palestinians policies similar to those
which they were victims of in the 1930s,” the reaction was quick and
expected, and Israel’s ambassador to Finland considered that the
minister’s statements were based on “an outburst of personal
animosity” (read anti-Semitism).
Elsewhere in Scandinavia, a new ambassador with a rotten past has come
to Denmark, in spite of the Danish Justice Ministry’s reservations,
the Danish people’s disgust and Amnesty International’s protests.
Carmi Gillon, former head of the Israeli General Security Services, is
a self-confessed perpetrator of torture (or what the Israelis call
“moderate physical pressure,” which is how normal people would
describe aerobics). However, he is protected by the Vienna
Convention’s provision for diplomatic immunity (which Israel decided
superseded the UN Convention against Torture, ratified by Denmark in
1987) and can walk the streets of Copenhagen with impunity. In Israel,
the torture of Palestinians is rewarded with a high diplomatic post.
As
usual, with arrogance and a selective observance of international
treaties, Israel bestows upon itself the right to choose which laws to
apply, and which laws to ignore. This prerogative of double standards
also extends to accusations, that of racism in particular: Israel can
accuse others of racism, but cannot be itself accused of the crime.
The gist is clear, and by now we should be accustomed to, if not fed
up with, the intricacies of politically correct statements according
to Israel and company.
The Jewish lobby’s relentless campaigning has successfully
turned a number of notions into absolute tenets, providing the basis
for Israeli rationale: a) no people suffered like the Jews did; b) no
people committed crimes like the Nazis did; c) no people can claim to
have suffered anything like Jews’ suffering at the hands of Nazis.
As a consequence of the above, the world has been led to
believe that anything Israel does pales in comparison, and that it can
never be compared to other criminals. We thus have to accept that the
Jewish people’s suffering justifies any Israeli action, in the same
way one would blame a difficult childhood for any action made in
adulthood, while excusing the behavior. Woe is Israel. Further to
that, the Jewish lobby has smartly turned the tables in Israel’s
favor, disarming the people accusing it of racism by branding them
with the best-known form of racism: anti-Semitism. Try to bring
attention to the Palestinian people’s suffering by accusing its
oppressor and bingo, you’re anti-Semitic, a risk few people in the
world are willing to take. Discredit the accuser, and shift the
attention away from Israel’s status of oppressor to that of victim of
racism. How convenient.
Why would anything be different at the World Conference
Against Racism? This futile meeting is nothing more than a mock stage
for helpless victims of every kind of racial discrimination to
exchange horror stories, and for the superpower and its colonial
friends to act concerned, albeit aloof. Judging by the turnout and
by the preconditions set by Israel’s friends for participation, this
conference could live up to its title. At most, it could be called a
“most-of-the-world” conference against
“racism-as-long-as-it-does-not-include-Zionism;” indeed, the United
States and Israel have withdrawn their delegations.
Mary
Robinson, UN high commissioner for human rights and head of the Durban
conference, has gone out of her way to express her opposition to any
mention of Zionism in the final declaration, and to any direct
criticism of Israel, the same state that has repeatedly violated
countless UN resolutions. Perhaps trying to emulate John F. Kennedy in
Berlin, but ending up supporting the Israeli occupier, Robinson
proclaimed: “I am a Jew.” Of course. Why would anyone want to be a
Palestinian? Why be a victim when you can be the oppressor?
The
United States, and US-wannabes Britain and Canada, have loudly made a
point of their decision not to honor the rest of the world with a
high-level representation at this conference, sending junior
diplomatic staff to attend. George W. Bush warned beforehand that the
United States would not take part if the conference “picks on” Israel,
or denigrates it for its treatment of Palestinians. Other Western
countries were less vocal, but the only European foreign ministers
present are those of Belgium and Germany.
While some condemnations of racism are perfectly acceptable
- although pointless - to the powers that be, others are again
labeled as racism themselves. There are multitudes of people rightly
demanding an end to the abhorrent racism and discrimination they have
been subjected to. Nobody has objected to their claims, and no powers
have made their participation in the conference subject to the removal
of such claims. Except with reference to Israel, of course.
Palestinians cannot even claim that they are subject to racism without
in turn being called anti-Semitic.
Without even going into the irony of Semites being called
anti-Semites by fellow Semites, suffice to say that Israel’s sole
raison d’être is based on racial discrimination, where being Jewish
grants you every right. A so-called democracy that does not even have
a formal constitution or recognized borders, and that states the
holder’s religion on identity cards, Israel openly grants Jews basic
rights which are denied to Palestinians, purely on the basis of their
ethnicity. In Israel, one is either a Jew with infinite privileges
(including the right to emigrate to Israel) or a “miyutim lo yehudim”
(i.e. a non-Jew, with no right of return, no right to own land, and a
long register of prohibitions too numerous to list).
If
this is not discrimination based on the concept of racial superiority,
if this is not racism, if this is not the same type of discrimination
previously practiced in notoriously racist governments such as South
Africa’s apartheid regime and Germany’s Nazi rulers, then perhaps the
latter were not racist after all. But logically, if we accept that a
country confers or denies human rights based on ethnicity, then we
accept that the country is racist. Either all are racist, or none are.
Israel’s existence rests on the foundations of Zionism,
which lays down the principles of a state for a people (Jews) at the
expense of another (Palestinians). Therefore, Zionism is a racist
ideology, and Israel is a racist state. Today, Jews in Israel are the
Aryans of Nazi Germany, and the whites of apartheid. And yet, we are
castigated for voicing these truths, even during a conference convened
precisely for the purpose of discussing racism and discrimination.
America and Israel walked out of the conference because they
claim it degenerated into an Israel-bashing session. In fact, it is
they who made such a big deal of the attempts to condemn Israel before
the conference even started, and it is they who have pushed the other,
equally important racism issues aside, thus hitting several birds with
just one stone and evading the weighty slavery issues.
I am neither surprised nor upset by America’s position over
this conference. Its attitude is perfectly on par with its history of
not only defending Israel, but also of providing it with the means to
do anything it likes. I am not even surprised that Colin Powell,
America’s first black secretary of state, chose to snub the conference
altogether. Either he was never touched by even the slightest racial
slur, or he has forgotten and thus cannot understand what all the fuss
is about. In any case, Israel is way too important for a mere
secretary of state, whatever his race, to risk offending.
What does surprise me, however, is Reverend Jesse Jackson’s
attitude. At first pleased that he and Coretta Scott King (widow of
late civil-rights leader Martin Luther King) would come to Durban
(what better American participants to a conference against racism?), I
now wish he hadn’t come at all. His contribution has been focused on
pressing the Palestinians to support language recognizing that the
Holocaust (insisting on a capital h) was the most murderous crime of
the 20th century, and on eliminating any mention of Zionism or Israel
in the final declaration of the conference. Et tu, Jesse?
Everyone is trying to gratify Israel. Days before the opening of the
conference, Robinson said “there is a clear understanding that the
formulation ‘Zionism equals racism’ has been done away with,” thus
already rejecting an eventual resurgence of the notion. That didn’t
stop non-governmental organizations from reinstating that formula in
their own declaration. The famous UN resolution of 1975, recognizing
that Zionism is a form of racism, was revoked in 1991 in a
one-sentence resolution, a few weeks after the Madrid peace
conference. This was not because the General Assembly deemed that
Israel had suddenly done away with the racism that defined its
founding principles, but rather because the world community gave in to
Zionist pressure, rewarding Israel for seemingly accepting the concept
of land for peace.
Ten years later, Israel’s every caprice continues to be
indulged, while the basest form of racism it openly practices has
reached unprecedented magnitudes. At the same time, other countries
are punished for much lesser crimes, or for even the suspicion of
potential racism. When Jörg Haider’s Freedom Party, which does not
hide its vision of an Austria with fewer immigrants, won the largest
share of votes in the last Austrian elections and thus took part in
the ensuing coalition government, the 14 other members of the European
Union did not hesitate to freeze ties with Vienna.
But when Ariel Sharon, the infamous war criminal, was
elected prime minister of Israel in a landslide victory, the world
congratulated him and allowed him not only to continue, but to
intensify the actions which at the very least would be called racism
in other countries. When it comes to Israel, anything goes, and the
West’s refusal to discuss, let alone admit, that it is indeed a racist
state is not really surprising.
Naturally, by focusing on Israel’s defense in Durban, former colonial
powers (such as Britain) and present ones (such as Israel) are also
trying to evade the thorny issue of apologies, lest they lead to
eventual lawsuits for compensation. Double standards are a wonderful
thing when played well.
Victims of racism all over the world just have to face it:
apologies and compensations are the sole privilege of Israel. Just as
official state racism is. |


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