Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - David Newman (Dean of
Social Sciences and Humanities) Defames London Professor Efraim
Karsh and the Middle East Forum
Dismisses any criticism emanating from the
Jewish Diaspora as “disgraceful” “verbal terrorism”
The use of “Nazi” slur terminology has also
been used as a means of delegitimizing legitimate criticism of
Israel and its policies. Just this past week, an Israeli emigrant to
the UK, Prof. Efraim Karsh of Kings College at the University of
London, used the right-wing, pseudoacademic journal Middle East
Forum to attribute such remarks, falsely, to the writer of this
column.
The article by Karsh is a pathetic attempt to
falsify facts and portray the intellectual Left (sic), be it in
Israel or elsewhere, as rabidly anti-Semitic and thus to shut down
the debate on any form of legitimate debate and discourse concerning
the situation in Israel.
…
And when it emanates from “patriotic supporters” of Israel who sit
in the safety of their Diaspora homes in the USA or London, it is
not only disgraceful, it is outright laughable. It is a form of
verbal terrorism which must not be allowed to take root in the
debate concerning Israel and anti-Semitism. The issue is simply too
serious for that.
[Isracampus comment: The
Middle East Forum is a far more respectable academic institution
than is the Department of Politics at Ben Gurion University, built
by David Newman as a pseudo-academic jihadist camp in which
uniformity of thought has been documented, and Efraim Karsh’s
academic credentials are countless times stronger than David
Newman’s!
As to the “falsely”
attributed “Nazi” slur terminology, Isracampus would like to refresh
Newman's memory. The forgetful Dean has used such
“Nazi” metaphors to delegitimize Israel in the Jerusalem Post as
recently as Nov 2011:
“These may sound like
strong words and I will no doubt be strongly criticized for making
such a comparison, but we would do well to paraphrase the famous
words of Pastor Niemoller, writing in 1946 about Germany of the
1930s and 1940s: “When the government denied the sovereign rights of
the Palestinians, I remained silent; I was not a Palestinian.”
Prof Karsh reports in
correspondence with Isracampus that the above is the quote that
prompted his Middle East Forum expose.]
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=251022
Israel and the European Left
The use of Nazi metaphors is a form of verbal terrorism that
must not be allowed to take root in the debate concerning Israel and
anti-Semitism
By DAVID NEWMAN
26/12/2011
Today, at Ben-Gurion University, Prof. Colin
Shindler, professor of Israel Studies at SOAS (School of Oriental
and African Studies) at the University of London will deliver a
lecture on the topic of his new
book, Israel and the European Left.
Traditional anti-Semitism and anti- Zionism
have come from the far Right in Europe, particularly the fascist and
racist movements, from the Hitlerist supporters of Oswald Mosley
back in the 1930s through to the National Front movements of John
Tyndall in the UK, Marie le Penn in France, and neighboring European
countries.
While these sentiments have never been absent
from some groups, it is fair to say that the period from the 1950s
through to the 1980s were relatively calm, not least because of a
post-World War II revulsion for everything that had occurred in the
name of the Third Reich.
The fascist movements have not disappeared, and
there has even been a renaissance of right-wing hatred, focused more
on anti-immigrant xenophobia than on the Jews, but they are well
monitored by local police and community authorities, and do not pose
a major threat for the Jewish communities in these countries.
But what has emerged during the past two
decades has been an outburst of anti-Israel sentiment associated
with the intellectual Left, those groups who in the past identified
with Israel as an embattled minority and who identified with the
suffering of the Jews during the first generation after the end of
the war.
This has changed dramatically in recent years,
and while the focus is on Israel, as contrasted with the wider
Jewish community, it is not always easy to distinguish or define a
clear borderline between the two.
Shindler’s new book looks at the struggle
between Communism and Zionism from the October Revolution to today.
He attempts to understand the extent to which such antagonism is a
result of opposition to the policies of successive Israeli
governments or due to a resurgence of anti-Semitism.
His answer is much more complex, arguing that
the new generation of the European Left was more
influenced by the decolonization
movement than by wartime experiences, which led it to favor the
Palestinian cause in the post- 1967 period. Thus the Israeli drive
to settle the West Bank after the Six Day War enhanced an already
existing attitude, but did not cause it.
This ties in with another important book which
was published a year ago by leading British lawyer, Anthony Julius,
entitled: Trials of the Diaspora: A History of Anti-Semitism in
England. This magnum opus on the history of anti-Semitism in Britain
goes far back, well beyond the recent activities of the “new”
anti-Semites or those of the mid-20th-century fascist movements.
He traces the roots of anti-Semitism back to
the aristocratic culture of the 18th and 19th centuries (where a
great deal of latent anti-Semitism still has its roots) and
discusses the way that this has played out over the centuries
through popular culture, literature, politics and in other walks of
life.
The major difference between anti- Semitism
then and anti-Semitism of now is, of course, the association with
the State of Israel. It is far too easy to associate all forms of
anti-Israelism with an inbred anti-Semitism. Too easy and too false.
There is real and legitimate criticism of
Israeli government policies in relation to the continuation of
occupation, the construction of settlements and the refusal to move
towards a peace agreement which would grant the Palestinians the
same rights of sovereignty and independence that the Jewish state
enjoys. And, as hard as it is for so many Israelis to accept, there
are many critics of the Israeli government, in fact the majority,
who can in no way be labeled as anti-Semitic and who are adopting
positions which
are shared by at least half of the Israeli population itself.
Equally however, one cannot ignore the fact
that criticism of Israel has provided an opportunity for many latent
anti-Semites, those who felt uncomfortable at expressing their
racist sentiments during the immediate post-War decades, of coming
out of the woodwork
and latching on to popular anti- Israel sentiment as a convenient,
and “more acceptable,” means of expressing their loathsome views.
What is particularly disturbing in this debate,
when it gets completely out of control, is when the protagonists
begin to invoke metaphors relating to the Third Reich and the Nazi
regime to express their sentiments. This has occurred on the extreme
Left, including among some intellectual circles, with comparisons
between the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and the treatment of
Jews during World War II.
Even more disturbing has been use of “Nazi,”
“Judenrat” and “Capo” epithets by some of the more extreme elements
among the settler movement, the hilltop youth and some of their
supporters from outside Israel to describe and curse the Israeli
army, when the latter are sent by the Israeli government to evacuate
illegal settlements.
Anyone using such metaphors, be it from the
Right or the Left, has crossed the line of legitimate discourse,
debate or criticism. The European Left, themselves the past target
of German persecution during that dark period, should know better
than to make such an equation.
The use of such terms by right-wing extremists,
many of whose parents and grandparents were themselves survivors of
the Holocaust period, only serves to besmirch and cheapen the memory
of the Holocaust, especially when they are used against the IDF. It
is little wonder that some of the settlement leaders and rabbis
finally came out with a strong condemnation of such behavior after
last week’s events in the West Bank.
The use of “Nazi” slur terminology has also
been used as a means of delegitimizing legitimate criticism of
Israel and its policies. Just this past week, an Israeli emigrant to
the UK, Prof. Efraim Karsh of Kings College at the University of
London, used the right-wing, pseudoacademic journal Middle East
Forum to attribute such remarks, falsely, to the writer of this
column.
The article by Karsh is a pathetic attempt to
falsify facts and portray the intellectual Left, be it in Israel or
elsewhere, as rabidly anti-Semitic and thus to shut down the debate
on any form of legitimate debate and discourse concerning the
situation in Israel.
It is therefore refreshing to hear serious
scholars such as Shindler and Julius present their findings in a
rational and balanced way, without resorting to the disgraceful
language of the extremist groups. In this highly emotive debate,
there are borders which must not be transgressed, and the use of
Nazi metaphors, regardless of whether they are used by the Right or
the Left, or even the attempt to falsely attribute the use of Nazi
metaphors to critics with whom one does not agree, is well beyond
the pale and effectively removes such people from being part of any
serious debate.
And when it emanates from “patriotic
supporters” of Israel who sit in the safety of their Diaspora homes
in the USA or London, it is not only disgraceful, it is outright
laughable. It is a form of verbal terrorism which must not be
allowed to take root in the debate concerning Israel and
anti-Semitism. The issue is simply too serious for that.
The writer is dean of the Faculty of
Humanities and Social Sciences at Ben-Gurion University. The views
expressed are his alone.
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