Ben Gurion University
BGU's Sociologist Uri Ram is told off - It’s not about Israel,
stupid
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3457512,00.html
14:04 , 10.09.07
It’s not about Israel, stupid
UK boycott threatened British Jews, liberal
culture before it came close to hurting Israelis
David Hirsh
Uri Ram argued (October 6, 2007) that Israel’s
official spin “diverted attention from the essence (that is, the
occupation) to issues of secondary importance (that is, the
boycott).” He argued that Israelis should not celebrate the defeat
of the campaign to exclude them from British campuses, journals and
conferences, but rather, they should focus on ending the occupation
and coming to a political settlement with Palestine; as though it
was impossible to do both.
Ram used the boycott publicity to underscore
his opposition to Israeli human rights abuses. This is how the
boycotters in Britain hope and believe their boycott would be used.
One of the key supporters in my union of the campaign to exclude
Israelis, gleefully sent Ram’s piece around the internal e-mail list
on Sunday to demonstrate how successfully the boycott campaign
encourages Israelis to act for the best. Mona Baker, who fired
Israelis from her journals because of their nationality, carries a
similar piece by Ram on her pro-boycott website, entitled “It’s not
the boycott stupid, it’s the occupation.”
Uri Ram’s mistake is to assume that the boycott
campaign is really about Israel. But it’s not about Israel, stupid,
nor is it about Palestine; it’s about Britain. Nationalism can be an
insidious temptation and it can narrow our perspective; it has
narrowed Ram’s perspective. He is not considering the effect or the
symbolism of a campaign to exclude a significant proportion of the
world’s Jewish scholars from European universities; he is not
thinking about how the argument to exclude is made in British public
life. Ram seems only concerned with fighting an Israeli battle
against the Israeli government.
I support him in his opposition to the violence
and humiliation which sustain the occupation; I hope, with him, for
a peaceful and just end to the occupation. But he should also
support Jews and anti-racists in our fight against an emerging
anti-Semitic culture in Britain. He should stop thinking that his
own battle against his own government is the only important thing.
Ilan Pappe, another Israel-firster (in the
sense that his only concern is to hurt Israel) runs around Britain
saying that Jews are committing genocide in Gaza, that Jewish
soldiers play football with the heads of Palestinian babies, that
there is no political force in Israel that could end the rule of
terror, and that Israel is unique because it is illegitimate, and is
founded on the original sin of dispossession.
Boycotters push anti-Semitic ways of
thinking
A small but vocal minority of British Jews
kosherizes the campaign to exclude Israelis from the cultural and
economic life of the planet. The boycott movement is largely Jewish
led. These leaders transform the movement for Palestinian liberation
in Britain into a circus in which to perform their own Jewish
identity. They reassure the British intelligentsia that there is no
connection between hatred of Israel (which they share) and the
possible emergence of an anti-Semitic movement. Who can blame the
British if they largely accept these “as a Jew” reassurances?
The atmosphere inside my union is poisonous. A
colleague wrote recently to 700 members of the e-mail list that our
opposition to the boycott was “racist down to its core.” He asked
whether it was the “aim of those supporting Palestinian academics…
to expose this rotten Zionist” – he meant me. This kind of sentiment
and language is currently acceptable within my union and in parts
public discourse. He argued that ordinary trade union issues “cannot
be neatly compartmentalized so that we have separate arrangements
for what is ‘safe’ (and does not threaten Zionism) and ‘not safe’
(in what actively opposes Zionism).”
He implies, even now, that those who deny that
there was a massacre at Jenin are liars for Israel. He claims that
“the whole Israeli education system - from nursery to university -
is embedded in the Israeli obsession with war...” I could give reams
of examples of the demonization of Israel, and of those who oppose
Israel’s exclusion. Most “anti-racists” in my union do not see the
problem with this kind of rhetoric.
The boycotters push anti-Semitic ways of
thinking: Israel was set up by imperialism; Israel is uniquely
racist, illegitimate, apartheid, Nazi; Brits should support Hamas
and Hizbullah against Zionist imperialism; it is “obscene” to argue
that (oppressed) Palestine should negotiate with (oppressor) Israel;
Israelis are the only academics on the planet who should be excluded
from the academic community; those who oppose discussing the rights
and wrongs of excluding Israelis are enemies of free speech; those
who don’t want a “scholarly” debate about whether Israel is
responsible for US policy in Iraq are trying to “gag” brave peace
activists.
I can see how it is tempting for an Israeli
opponent of the occupation, who spends his life fighting the
exclusive nationalism of Israeli governments, to seize a rhetorical
opportunity to score some hits against an Israeli government. But
Uri Ram should widen his horizons and should understand that the
boycott campaign threatened British Jews – students, activists,
lecturers – and it threatened leftist and liberal political culture
in Britain - before it came anywhere near to hurting Israelis.
David Hirsh is editor of
www.EngageOnline.org.uk and a sociology lecturer, Goldsmiths,
University of London
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