Log in

View Full Version : Criticize Israel? You're an Anti-Semite!



emma_goldman
9th September 2006, 18:57
Published on Friday, September 1, 2006 by the Los Angeles Times
Criticize Israel? You're an Anti-Semite!
by Rosa Brooks

EVER WONDER what it's like to be a pariah?

Publish something sharply critical of Israeli government policies and you'll find out. If you're lucky, you'll merely discover that you've been uninvited to some dinner parties. If you're less lucky, you'll be the subject of an all-out attack by neoconservative pundits and accused of rabid anti-Semitism.

This, at least, is what happened to Ken Roth. Roth — whose father fled Nazi Germany — is executive director of Human Rights Watch, America's largest and most respected human rights organization. (Disclosure: I have worked in the past as a paid consultant for the group.) In July, after the Israeli offensive in Lebanon began, Human Rights Watch did the same thing it has done in Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya, Bosnia, East Timor, Sierra Leone, Congo, Uganda and countless other conflict zones around the globe: It sent researchers to monitor the conflict and report on any abuses committed by either side.

It found plenty. On July 18, Human Rights Watch condemned Hezbollah rocket strikes on civilian areas within Israel, calling the strikes "serious violations of international humanitarian law and probable war crimes." So far, so good. You can't lose when you criticize a terrorist organization.

But Roth and Human Rights Watch didn't stop there. As the conflict's death toll spiraled — with most of the casualties Lebanese civilians — Human Rights Watch also criticized Israel for indiscriminate attacks on civilians. Roth noted that the Israeli military appeared to be "treating southern Lebanon as a free-fire zone," and he observed that the failure to take appropriate measures to distinguish between civilians and combatants constitutes a war crime.

The backlash was prompt. Roth and Human Rights Watch soon found themselves accused of unethical behavior, giving aid and comfort to terrorists and anti-Semitism. The conservative New York Sun attacked Roth (who is Jewish) for having a "clear pro-Hezbollah and anti-Israel bias" and accused him of engaging in "the de-legitimization of Judaism, the basis of much anti-Semitism." Neocon commentator David Horowitz called Roth a "reflexive Israel-basher … who, in his zest to pillory Israel at every turn, is little more than an ally of the barbarians." The New Republic piled on, as did Alan Dershowitz, who claimed Human Rights Watch "cooks the books" to make Israel look bad. And writing in the Jewish Exponent, Jonathan Rosenblum accused Roth of resorting to a "slur about primitive Jewish bloodlust."

Anyone familiar with Human Rights Watch — or with Roth — knows this to be lunacy. Human Rights Watch is nonpartisan — it doesn't "take sides" in conflicts. And the notion that Roth is anti-Semitic verges on the insane.

But what's most troubling about the vitriol directed at Roth and his organization isn't that it's savage, unfounded and fantastical. What's most troubling is that it's typical. Typical, that is, of what anyone rash enough to criticize Israel can expect to encounter. In the United States today, it just isn't possible to have a civil debate about Israel, because any serious criticism of its policies is instantly countered with charges of anti-Semitism. Think Israel's tactics against Hezbollah were too heavy-handed, or that Israel hasn't always been wholly fair to the Palestinians, or that the United States should reconsider its unquestioning financial and military support for Israel? Shhh: Don't voice those sentiments unless you want to be called an anti-Semite — and probably a terrorist sympathizer to boot.

How did adopting a reflexively pro-Israel stance come to be a mandatory aspect of American Jewish identity? Skepticism — a willingness to ask tough questions, a refusal to embrace dogma — has always been central to the Jewish intellectual tradition. Ironically, this tradition remains alive in Israel, where respected public figures routinely criticize the government in far harsher terms than those used by Human Rights Watch.

In a climate in which good-faith criticism of Israel is automatically denounced as anti-Semitic, everyone loses. Israeli policies are a major source of discord in the Islamic world, and anger at Israel usually spills over into anger at the U.S., Israel's biggest backer.

With resentment of Israeli policies fueling terrorism and instability both in the Middle East and around the globe, it's past time for Americans to have a serious national debate about how to bring a just peace to the Middle East. But if criticism of Israel is out of bounds, that debate can't occur — and we'll all pay the price.

Back to Human Rights Watch's critics. Why waste time denouncing imaginary anti-Semitism when there's no shortage of the real thing? From politically motivated arrests of Jews in Iran to assaults on Jewish children in Ukraine, there's plenty of genuine anti-Semitism out there — and Human Rights Watch is usually taking the lead in condemning it. So if you're bothered by anti-Semitism — if you're bothered by ideologies that insist that some human lives have less value than others — you could do a whole lot worse than send a check to Human Rights Watch.

© Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times

Hiroshima-Nagasaki Commemoration Committee, 4806 York Road, Baltimore, MD 21212 Ph: 410-323-7200; Fax: 410-323-7292; Email: [email protected] afsc.org

Ander
9th September 2006, 19:02
Bloody ridiculous. I really just want somebody to call me an anti-Semite after a critical comment about Israel so I can punch them in the fucking face.

emma_goldman
9th September 2006, 19:15
Originally posted by [email protected] 9 2006, 04:03 PM
Bloody ridiculous. I really just want somebody to call me an anti-Semite after a critical comment about Israel so I can punch them in the fucking face.
It happens A LOT. I've been called an Anti-semite many times in "debates". :rolleyes:

TupacAndChe4Eva
9th September 2006, 19:35
Originally posted by emma_goldman+Sep 9 2006, 04:16 PM--> (emma_goldman @ Sep 9 2006, 04:16 PM)
[email protected] 9 2006, 04:03 PM
Bloody ridiculous. I really just want somebody to call me an anti-Semite after a critical comment about Israel so I can punch them in the fucking face.
It happens A LOT. I've been called an Anti-semite many times in "debates". :rolleyes: [/b]
Yeah, it happens a lot to me too.
:angry:

Pirate Utopian
9th September 2006, 19:46
what israel did is no way better, maybe even worse then what hezzbollah did

TC
9th September 2006, 19:53
Uh, what Israel did and does is incomparably magnitudes worse than anything Hizbollah did.

Hizbollah mostly killed soldiers in defense of the people of Lebanon, it killed very few israeli civilians; Israel mostly targets civilians and avoids fighting enemy soldiers (you know, cause they shoot back).

Only 74 Hizbollah soldiers were killed during the lebanon conflict compared to 1,187 civilians murdered by the Israelis.

By comparison, Hizbollah only killed 44 israeli civilians while shelling Israeli reservist bases, it killed 119 Israeli soldiers.

Ander
10th September 2006, 00:44
Originally posted by [email protected] 9 2006, 01:54 PM
By comparison, Hizbollah only killed 44 israeli civilians while shelling Israeli reservist bases, it killed 119 Israeli soldiers.
Not a bad showing at all!

The casualties are only one factor of this conflict. Think of the millions, if not billions, of dollars worth of damage that the country itself suffered due to destroyed infrastructure thanks to Israeli bombs. What about the psychological effects endured by the population of Lebanon?

War is a fucked up business.

Acid
10th September 2006, 00:50
I have been called an anti-semite because I said i was supporting Hezbollah in the fight against Israel. I have decided to leap onto the next person who even dares to call me racist of any sort. To say that a soldier firing openly onto civilian houses with direct orders from the government is a dickhead, is not the same as saying "Kill all Jews."

D_Bokk
10th September 2006, 00:56
I get called an anti-Semite by so-called "communists" on this board for opposing Israel...

To add to this, here is a funny youtube video of an Orthodox Jew being called an anti-Semite by a Zionist who claims to be Jew:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3dSHl3C9kgY

BreadBros
10th September 2006, 02:30
Yes this is a problem in many places, particularly in supposedly liberal circles of academia. Zionism is merely Imperialism hiding behind religion. By the way, that video is sick. The Zionist guy is so fuelled by hatred its frightening.

Spirit of Spartacus
10th September 2006, 06:34
Zionists are the most frustrating people to argue with. I've tried it many times.

RevolutionaryMarxist
10th September 2006, 06:47
Zionists are really annoying, when I debate with them I mostly avoid the individual subject of Israel vs Lebanon/Palestine/Middle East in hopes of perhaps converting without having them immediatly throw up a wall against mr. "Anti-Semite".

Emperor Ronald Reagan
10th September 2006, 09:50
Originally posted by [email protected] 9 2006, 09:57 PM
I get called an anti-Semite by so-called "communists" on this board for opposing Israel...
Same here, comrade.. I think they are pathetic closet Zionists who are just mad that I struck a nerve with them for being an outspoken critic of Zionism.

Zero
10th September 2006, 10:40
The ADL are complete lunatics. They rabidly call everyone who is anti-Israel an anti-semite. But then let Holocaust deniers off the hook. Heck, the ADL even gave the president of Iran a honor!

What a bunch of nutcases.

Darth Revan
11th September 2006, 08:17
Zionism and Judaism aren't the same thing The Torah strictly forbids jews from having their own state. The jewish people are a people in exile

EwokUtopia
11th September 2006, 09:44
To be honest, I do not even associate Israel with Jews. Israel is a nation, it is a political entity, it is not synonymous with the entire Jewish people (I know I shouldnt generalize as there are many Jewish peoples, Ashkenazim, Sephardim, Mihrazim, et all, but lets amalgamate them all into one people, and I do not associate that people with any nation) . Criticism of Israel is directed against Israel, not the ethnicity that makes up whatever majority that nation has, it is not directed against the Israeli people, but the nation itself. Hell, the only real shot at peace comes from the Israeli people, it is their power to cripple their government and end occupation and aparthied, and the only way it can be ended without external force (which is far too dangerous and costly, especially considering we are dealing with a nuclear power here) comes from the willingness of the Israeli masses to live and share with the Palestinians, Druze, Samaritans, Armenians, and all who call Palestine home as a family with common roots shares a house. I do have hope, perhaps a fools hope, but hope nonetheless that within our lifetimes a large and unstopable force of Palestinians united with Jews, be they Israeli or American or European or whatever else, will rise up and end the injustice which stains Palestine's beautiful land. I have never met a Palestinian who wasnt willing to share Palestine with the Israeli people provided they live equally, and this must be the case. Nobody wants to drive the Jews into the sea, nobody wants a repeat of the holocaust, and nobody with two wits in their brain thinks that security for the Israeli people will come about by furthering the oppression and theft of the Palestinians land. Israel itself is probably the greatest threat to the Jews in the world today, the actions of the Israeli government, especially the IDF, but the settlers, the media, and the aparthied policies, as well as international big buisiness have ruined the lives of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, displaced millions more and have nearly completed a new diaspora. These actions have their consequenses (It is still a war while the other side fights back, when the resistance ends, it will cease to be war and turn into pure genocide), and those consequences have been exploited by the Israeli government and media to promote fear and hatred among the Israeli people to fuel their neocolonial racist ideologies and goals. The primary targets of this war have to be ignorance, fear and hatred among the Israeli masses so that one day in the near future they may awake and find their flag useless and their land ample, and their Palestinian cousins not so different. Education is the weapon to be used for this front of the intifada, and the internet is likely the strongest arm to weild it. For instance, we have rappers from Ramallah releasing songs in Hebrew (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIo6lyP9tTE&mode=related&search=) specifically so that Israeli's will see this and question the foundations, principals, and actions of the nation that they have been told is their only shelter from a world that hates them. No, the Israeli people are not to be hated, not in the least. they are to be loved like all peoples of all nationalities, it is Israel itself which must be hated and ultimately abolished. Once the fear inflicted on the Israeli people by their government and media is destroyed, they will realise what harm the nation has done and abolish it along with the Palestinians, or at least this is my greatest hope. Israel is perhaps the worst enemy to free thinking people in the world today, and the Israeli people are perhaps the most lied to and afraid people in the world. Jews, as well as Palestinians, deserve to be liberated from the Israeli yoke. There is enough room for the Jews and the Palestinians to live together, free and equal, in Palestine. If you look in history, after the Catholic Spaniards conquered al-Andalus in by 1492 and expelled all Jews and Muslims (ending a Jewish golden age in Moorish Spain), the many Sephardic Jewish refugees were welcomed as brothers into Palestine. There is enough room for both, and I cant think of any serious Palestinian politician who advocates the expulsion of all Jews from Palestine. Israel is the enemy, the flag, the government, the policies, the aparthied, the walls, and the weapons, not the people, they must be our allies, even if few lack the conviction to realize this, they are our potential best friends in this struggle, and this must never be forgotten.

There is my statement against Israel, if this is Anti-Semitism than you can just slap my face and call me Hitler.