Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University – Neve Gordon (Dept of
Political Science) Outed Along with Other Jewish Anti-Semites
Among its many critics, there is a startling
number of Jews who calumniate Israel and, in some cases, champion
those threatening its existence.
Noam Chomsky heads this list, but he is hardly
alone. Norman Finkelstein, Ilan Pappe, Richard Falk, Tony Judt,
Howard Zinn, Eric Hobsbawm and many other Jews have joined in this
project. Neve Gordon, head of the Department of Politics and
Government at Ben-Gurion University, claims that "Israel resembles
Nazi Germany."
Gabriel Schoenfeld's explanation of this in The
Return of Anti-Semitism is straightforward: amid a rising tide of
anti-Semitism, Jewish enemies of Israel are out to save their own
skins, aiming "to deflect the poisonous arrows coming at their
fellow Jews."
In The Oslo Syndrome: Delusions of a People
Under Siege Kenneth Levin asks: "Why are Jews so self-destructive?
So suicidal?" He argues that constant oppression can lead to a
variant of the Stockholm Syndrome: "empathy for and emotional
bonding with the aggressor." The logic of this "embrace by members
of an abused community of the indictments of their abusers" is that
this allows the possibility of "salvation [through] self-reform and
concessions."
http://www.isracampus.t15.org/BGU - Neve Gordon - Outed - jpost
120822 - source.htm
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=282076
Israel and the Jewish Left
Jewish support for the enemies of Israel represents the triumph
of leftism over Jewishness.
By DAVID RUBINSTEIN
21/08/2012
Among its many critics, there is a startling
number of Jews who calumniate Israel and, in some cases, champion
those threatening its existence.
Noam Chomsky heads this list, but he is hardly
alone. Norman Finkelstein, Ilan Pappe, Richard Falk, Tony Judt,
Howard Zinn, Eric Hobsbawm and many other Jews have joined in this
project. Neve Gordon, head of the Department of Politics and
Government at Ben-Gurion University, claims that "Israel resembles
Nazi Germany."
Gabriel Schoenfeld's explanation of this in The
Return of Anti-Semitism is straightforward: amid a rising tide of
anti-Semitism, Jewish enemies of Israel are out to save their own
skins, aiming "to deflect the poisonous arrows coming at their
fellow Jews."
In The Oslo Syndrome: Delusions of a People
Under Siege Kenneth Levin asks: "Why are Jews so
self-destructive? So suicidal?" He argues that constant oppression
can lead to a variant of the Stockholm Syndrome: "empathy for and
emotional bonding with the aggressor." The logic of this "embrace by
members of an abused community of the indictments of their abusers"
is that this allows the possibility of "salvation [through]
self-reform and concessions."
In Jews and Power Ruth Wisse argues that
self-blame is a Jewish tradition: "the very nature of Talmudic
debate turns the political focus inward, away from the enemy and
towards its own constituency." She describes a Jewish tendency to
respond to military defeat as "a consequence of God's
dissatisfactions with his people."
In The War Against the Jews Lucy Dawidowicz
cites Orthodox rabbis who saw the Holocaust as God's punishment and
called for repentance – teshuva – not resistance, in the belief that
"because of our sins we have been punished."
In addition to these psychological and cultural
factors, it is essential to recognize that hostility to Israel and
support for Islamic radicalism is mainly a phenomenon of the hard
left. Hugo Chavez, Fidel Castro and Daniel Ortega have pledged
solidarity with radical Islam, the latter proclaiming that "the
revolutions of Iran and Nicaragua are almost twin revolutions."
THIS SENTIMENT can be found on the
social-democratic left. Yasser Arafat was embraced by Austria's
Social-Democratic Chancellor Bruno Kreisky and West Germany's Willy
Brandt. Ken Livingston, former Labour Mayor of London, has defended
Palestinian terrorism: "in an unfair balance that's what people do."
Those who are surprised by these examples, in
the belief that secular leftists and fascist theocrats are natural
enemies, do not know the long history of to-ing and fro-ing between
socialism and fascism. Benito Mussolini, Oswald Moseley (head of the
British Union of Fascism), and Vidkun Quisling began their political
lives as socialists.
According to Tom Weber's Hitler's First War,
Hitler flirted with German communists in the 1920s and this affinity
endured. French historian Francois Furet cites Hitler's assertion
that "there is more that binds us to Bolshevism than separates us
from it... the petit bourgeois Social Democrat and the trade-union
boss will never make a National Socialist, but the Communist always
will."
This sentiment was reciprocated by the German
Communist Party which "sought to dissociate the Nazi voters from the
leaders of the movement so as to regain them for the Communist
Revolution." The Hitler-Stalin pact was not an anomaly.
The collaboration between the radical left and
the radical right has included radical Islam. Amin al-Husseini,
despite his virulent anti-Semitism, was supported by the Palestine
Communist Party until he joined the Nazi cause. The Muslim
Brotherhood was funded by the Nazis. Arafat was sponsored by the
Soviets and the Iranian Communist Party supported the Khomeini
revolution that soon devoured it.
This intertwining of communists, fascists and
Islamists explains why "in Germany, neo-Nazis and radical leftists
wearing kaffiyas march together in anti-American demonstrations and
chant the same slogans against globalization and waving the same
Hezbollah flags."
Redmond O'Neill, a senior aide to "Red Ken"
Livingstone, suggested that: "Muslims and the left must and can come
together because we have the same enemies – imperialism,
colonialism, and racism."
This outreach has been reciprocated.
Recommending the writings of Noam Chomsky, Osama bin Laden has said:
"The interests of Muslims and the interests of the socialists
coincide in the war against the crusaders."
Paul Berman argues in Terror and Liberalism
that the radical left and right are drawn together by millennialism,
the belief that that "the war of Armageddon – the all-exterminating
bloodbath" is the path to utopia. The holy warriors of radical Islam
strike a chord with these impulses.
Anti-Semitism – "the socialism of fools" – also
draws elements of the radical left to Islamofascism.
Racial and religious anti-Semitism is anathema
to the left. But Islamic radicalism offers a new wineskin for some
very old wine.
The radical left and right also share disdain
for the materialism and competitive individualism of capitalist
society. Echoing the left, Hitler decried America's "grasping
materialism and indifference to any of the loftiest expressions of
the human spirit."
Sayeed Qutb, a theorist of the Muslim
Brotherhood, was similarly appalled by America's "mixture of
materialism, lust, and egoistic individualism" and denounced "the
maldistribution of capitalist societies." Articulating themes that
the left calls alienation, he decried "the miserable split between
material excellence and spiritual fulfillment."
IF WE add to these affinities the aim to
empower a privileged elite – the vanguard of the proletariat, the
Aryan race, or Islamist theocrats – the left-Islamist alliance is
not the anomaly it appears; they are brothers under their rhetorical
skin.
Mussolini et al. moved from socialism to
fascism and Chomsky has moved from support for Pol Pot to advocating
for Hassan Nasrallah, head of Hezbollah. Carlos the Jackal,
imprisoned for political murders as a Marxist, became a Muslim in
prison in the belief that revolutionary Islam "attacks the ruling
classes in order to achieve a more equitable redistribution of
wealth."
The legacy of oppression and the tradition of
self-blame described by Levin and Wisse have eroded the barrier that
being Jewish ought to have created against joining their comrades in
assaulting the Jewish state. In some cases, like Chomsky's
collaboration with holocaust deniers, what Schoenfeld describes as
"the murky waters of the psychosocial" must play a role.
But the core of Jewish animus towards Israel
emerges from the left. As much as the fear of anti-Semitism adduced
by Schoenfeld, Jewish enemies of Israel fear the opprobrium of their
comrades. As Robert Wistrich has put it, on the left:
"Israel-bashing is clearly the contemporary key to acceptance."
The peculiarities of Jewish history and culture
have combined with the left's attraction to totalitarianism – left
or right, secular or sacred – that has now been stripped of the
veneer of progressive values. Jewish support for the enemies of
Israel represents the triumph of leftism over Jewishness.
The author is professor emeritus at the
Department of Sociology, University of Illinois at Chicago.
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