Hebrew University
Hebrew University - Amiram Goldblum's (Dept of
Pharmaceutical Sciences) Role in the "Apartheid" Slander
On the very same day that Ha'aretz
wrote that the poll "was commissioned by the New Israel Fund's
Yisraela Goldblum Fund," the NIF issued a statement saying the
organization "does not stand behind the survey in Ha'aretz and is
not related with it in any way."
That the far-left NIF assumed and
publicly asserted such stance confirms a level of partiality in the
poll surpassing even the infamous Goldstone Report, formulated in
conjunction with and featuring testimony from Israeli NGOs backed by
the NIF, which falsely accused Israel of perpetrating "war crimes"
during its 2008-2009 incursion into Gaza. (Richard Goldstone, who
chaired the UN's "fact-finding mission" into the Gaza War and after
whom the Report was named, repudiated the allegation in a highly
publicized Washington Post op-ed in April 2011).
...
The NIF's decision likely had something to do with the fact that the
Yisraela Goldblum Fund was created by Amiram Goldblum, the more
radical leftist founder of Peace Now, who still runs the foundation
named after his late wife Yisraela, herself a former senior official
at the NIF.
Goldblum's thoughts on Israel were
restated as recently as this past May 5 at a Peace Now event:
"Israel's future regarding elections and demography has already been
predetermined…in the bedroom of the settlers and the
ultra-Orthodox." Goldblum then called on the global left to counter
the growing strength of Israel's right by finding a way to impose
its agenda on the country through foreign political entities.
Perhaps even the NIF realizes that
this kind of racist, seditionist rhetoric precludes someone from
commissioning an objective poll. In fact, it takes a special type of
Israel-hater to disseminate such invective in ignorance of the
forgoing.
...
On the macro level, the survey is yet another example exposing the
depths to which the Israeli left has sunk. First its failed policies
were discredited; then it was abandoned by its base; and now it is
self-destructing.
http://www.jewishtribune.ca/commentary/2012/10/29/israelis-are-not-racists
Israelis are not racists
Charles Bybelezer
OCTOBER 29, 2012
Last week, Israel's Ha'aretz
newspaper ran a front page article claiming that "most Israeli Jews
support an apartheid regime in the country, if the territories are
annexed."
The publication of the piece,
promoting the findings of a recent poll, created a firestorm,
setting abuzz every antisemitic and jihadist website in the Middle
East and even garnering the attention of media overseas, including
the Globe and Mail.
Apparently, it seems not to matter
that the poll is littered with inconsistencies and pejorative
nuances, or that the survey's financiers and promoters are, to
understate the matter, of dubious integrity; so long as any
propaganda, masquerading under the guise of a "study," provides
antisemitic fodder, anti-Israel travellers worldwide will revel in
the opportunity to muddy Israel's name.
That those involved in the poll acted
in bad faith, and that the article in question is profoundly flawed,
is easily deduced through a cursory analysis of Ha'aretz's piece.
The first red flag is that, after Israelis are accused of supporting
the implementation of 'apartheid' in the headline, the following
qualification is buried 16 paragraphs later: "The survey conductors
say perhaps the term 'apartheid' was not clear enough to some
interviewees."
Accordingly, the newspaper, though
obtuse on the applicability of the term 'apartheid,' contends that
most Israelis support apartheid, whereas a small majority believes
that apartheid is already practised to a degree in the country;
this, despite the acknowledgement of 'some' not knowing what
apartheid means and thus what it actually entails. If someone is
unfamiliar with the institutionalized racism against blacks that
existed in South Africa, then obviously they cannot be expected to
discern that no such system, process or attitudes shape or inform
Israeli society or its mindset.
Significantly, there remains the
small matter of the inclusion of the word 'IF' in the context of
annexing 'territories,' itself an ambiguous term which Ha'aretz
insinuates to be a reference to the West Bank, also known as the
'Palestinian territories.' In fact, respondents were never asked
whether they supported the annexation of any predominantly
Palestinian areas in the West Bank, containing some 2.5 million
Arabs over whom the so-called 'apartheid regime' would, presumably,
be implemented. (That poll after poll shows a strong majority of
Israelis opposing any such move no doubt accounted for the
question's omission.) Instead, participants were only asked whether
they would support the incorporation into Israel of an unspecified
number of "settlements," which cover a fraction of the overall
geographical area of the West Bank, are comprised almost entirely of
Jews, and which invariably would remain under Israeli sovereignty in
any future peace deal forged with the Palestinians. Even this
prospect was rejected by a plurality (48%) of those surveyed.
Accordingly, one is hard-pressed to
fathom how Ha'aretz arrived at the conclusion that "most Jews would
support an apartheid regime…if the territories were annexed," given
that a plurality of respondents rejected annexation of any
'territories,' including 'settlements' devoid of Palestinians.
To further expose the journalistic
disingenuousness of Ha'aretz, it is noteworthy to compare the
paper's use of the vague word 'territories' in connection with UN
resolution 242, adopted in the aftermath of the 1967 Six Day War.
The resolution set as a condition for "the establishment of a just
and lasting peace in the Middle East…[the] withdrawal of Israeli
armed forces from territories occupied in the recent conflict."
Specifically omitted from that text, however, was any reference to
"all" or "the" territories captured by Israel in order, thereby, to
recognize under International Law Israel's right to retain – even in
the event a future peace deal calling for limited territorial
withdrawals – land vital to preserving its security. In other words,
the notoriously anti-Israel UN conscientiously used the undefined
term 'territories' with a view to conferring legitimate legal rights
upon Israelis, whereas Ha'aretz did so in order to slander them.
That media worldwide felt no
compunction about uncritically regurgitating Ha'aretz's libel
reaffirms the prevailing anti-Israel bias; that the New Israel Fund
(NIF), which in the past proudly has lent its name to initiatives
defaming the Jewish state, disassociated itself from the survey
reveals the extent of that bias.
On the very same day that Ha'aretz
wrote that the poll "was commissioned by the New Israel Fund's
Yisraela Goldblum Fund," the NIF issued a statement saying the
organization "does not stand behind the survey in Ha'aretz and is
not related with it in any way."
That the far-left NIF assumed and
publicly asserted such stance confirms a level of partiality in the
poll surpassing even the infamous Goldstone Report, formulated in
conjunction with and featuring testimony from Israeli NGOs backed by
the NIF, which falsely accused Israel of perpetrating "war crimes"
during its 2008-2009 incursion into Gaza. (Richard Goldstone, who
chaired the UN's "fact-finding mission" into the Gaza War and after
whom the Report was named, repudiated the allegation in a highly
publicized Washington Post op-ed in April 2011). The full
significance of the organization's denial is best understood in the
context of Wikileaks' release in 2010 of a confidential US
government cable quoting Hedva Radanovitz, the NIF's Associate
Director in Israel, as expressing hope that "in 100 years Israel
would be majority Arab and that the disappearance of a Jewish state
would not be the tragedy that Israelis fear since it would become
more democratic."
The NIF's decision likely had
something to do with the fact that the Yisraela Goldblum Fund was
created by Amiram Goldblum, the more radical leftist founder of
Peace Now, who still runs the foundation named after his late wife
Yisraela, herself a former senior official at the NIF.
Goldblum's thoughts on Israel were
restated as recently as this past May 5 at a Peace Now event:
"Israel's future regarding elections and demography has already been
predetermined…in the bedroom of the settlers and the
ultra-Orthodox." Goldblum then called on the global left to counter
the growing strength of Israel's right by finding a way to impose
its agenda on the country through foreign political entities.
Perhaps even the NIF realizes that
this kind of racist, seditionist rhetoric precludes someone from
commissioning an objective poll. In fact, it takes a special type of
Israel-hater to disseminate such invective in ignorance of the
forgoing.
Enter Gideon Levy. Not only did
Ha'aretz's resident anti-Zionist pen the article presenting the
findings of the survey, Levy also wrote an accompanying opinion
piece, Apartheid without shame or guilt. In his op-ed, he waxed
hysterically: "We're racists, the Israelis are saying, we practise
apartheid and we even want to live in an apartheid state. Yes, this
is Israel."
In a moment of charitable wilfull
blindness in his favour, one could attribute to Levy a desire to
provide analytical commentary on what he deemed to be a reliable
survey – if not for the fact that in May Levy wrote a column
entitled, Israel is the most naive and racist country in the West.
Now ask yourself whether Levy, like Goldblum, is qualified to
critique objectively a study alleging Israeli racism, given that he
already held the position that "Israel is the most naive and racist
country in the West."
As but one example of Levy's bias
extending even beyond the parameters of the poll, consider that in
his op-ed he wrote: "The majority [of Israelis] doesn't want Arabs
to vote for the Knesset, Arab neighbours at home or Arab students at
school. Let our camp be pure – as clean of Arabs as possible and
perhaps even more so." Yet, in fact, no plurality of respondents
answered in the affirmative any of the questions connected to Levy's
assertions – not for banning Arabs from voting for parliament or for
the implementation of segregation in apartment buildings and
schools.
That the editors of Ha'aretz failed
to definitively declare Levy's patent conflict of interest perfectly
encapsulates why the newspaper currently is on life-support. In this
respect, this episode also reflects a shameless attempt by a gasping
newspaper to grasp any straw-man to generate publicity and a few
more subscriptions.
On the macro level, the survey is yet
another example exposing the depths to which the Israeli left has
sunk. First its failed policies were discredited; then it was
abandoned by its base; and now it is self-destructing.
Charles Bybelezer recently moved
to Israel to begin working as a breaking news editor at The
Jerusalem Post.
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