Israel
a key source of global rise in anti-Semitism
From Antony Loewenstein blog 15 August 2014
A wave of animosity is washing over world public opinion.
In contrast to the complacent, blind, smug Israeli public opinion, people
abroad saw the pictures in Gaza
and were aghast. No conscientious person could have remained unaffected. The
shock was translated into hatred toward the state that did all that, and in
extreme cases the hatred also awakened anti-Semitism from its lair. Yes, there
is anti-Semitism in the world, even in the 21st century, and Israel
has fueled it. Israel
provided it with abundant excuses for hatred.
But not every anti-Israeli sentiment is anti-Semitism. The
opposite is true – most of the criticism of Israel is
still substantive and moral. Anti-Semitism, racist as any national hatred,
popped up on the sidelines of this criticism – and Israel is
indirectly responsible for its appearance.
But Israel
and the Diaspora Jewish establishment automatically tag any criticism as
anti-Semitic. It’s an old trick – the burden of guilt is shifted from those who
perpetrated the Gaza
horrors to those who are tainted with so-called anti-Semitism. It’s not us,
it’s you, anti-Semitic world. No matter what Israel
does, the whole world is against it.
This is nonsense, of course. Just as not every policeman
who gives a Jewish driver a traffic ticket
is an anti-Semite, as the Jewish organizations try to put it, and not every
robbery of a rabbi is a hate crime, so not every criticism of Israel is
motivated by hatred of Jews.
These organizations have become the lightning rods of the
criticism of Israel
and they have brought it on themselves. This is the price of their blind
support of Israel ,
their noisy propaganda campaigns in Israel ’s
name, their turning of every Jewish community center into a PR agency for Israel ,
and their unanimous support for everything Israel
does. We’re all one people, they say. In that case, if every Jew who dares to
censure Israel ,
even when it’s involved in brutal conduct, is a self-hating Jew – then everyone
bears responsibility.
Quite a few Jews abroad sent me frightened messages during
the war, pleading me to stop writing my articles, cease my criticism, because
the anti-Semites use them. I replied to all of them that all my articles together
haven’t affected Israel ’s
status as much as one news report from Gaza . I
also know many who still harbor sympathy for Israel
precisely because of the remnants here of a free society, one that allows
criticism.
In any case, the address for the Jews’ fear should be the
State of Israel. Many Jews now feel afraid. Part of the fear may be
exaggerated, part of it is justified. It seems to me that being a Muslim in Europe is
still harder than being a Jew. But in Paris ,
Jews don’t dare wear a kippa, in Belgium a
woman wasn’t allowed into a store because she was Jewish and a French
journalist who visited Algiers
last week told me that the hatred for Israel
and the Jews in France
has reached an all-time high.
The address for all the complaints is Israel ,
because Israel is
the one to blame for Gaza .
Whoever is afraid for the Jews’ fate, whoever is shocked
by the anti-Semitic incidents, should have thought about it before taking Israel to
another runaway war. The world isn’t always against Israel .
Suffice it to remember Israel ’s
status during the Oslo
period, when the entire world cheered it, including parts of the Arab world.
This world will be happy to embrace Israel
again, if this country only changes its bullying, domineering behavior.
Gevalt, anti-Semitism? Maybe. But Israel is
supplying the fuse.
No comments:
Post a Comment