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Hebrew University
Yet another Israel-basher from the Hebrew University
Professor (emeritus) Gideon Shimoni (Dept of Contemporary Jewry)
denounces Israel as an Apartheid Regime (sort of)
There is, however, a
sense in which the South African case is instructively comparable to
that of Israel. It relates to the reality of Israel's decades long
occupation regime over the post-war militarily occupied territory
known as the West Bank, or in Jewish tradition as Judea and Samaria.
No military occupation can be morally benign and this one is
undeniably no exception.
...It is in this respect alone that use of the South African analogy
to critique Israel is justified, and importantly so.
....Thus it is that the everyday reality of governance, work,
protest and suppression in the occupied territory looks a lot like
South Africa under apartheid.
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=209086&R=R7
The apartheid
analogy: Lessons for Israel
While Israel's democratic
constitution is certainly flawed, only hostile prejudice explains
the ever-growing trend of comparing it with apartheid South Africa.
By GIDEON SHIMONI
20/02/2011
"Apartheid," today's
prime stigmatic code-word for racist evil, has become a potent
weapon for delegitimizing and demonizing Israel, especially since it
evokes the precedent of powerful external pressure in the form of
boycott and sanctions as was applied against the apartheid regime in
South Africa. Hence, in the propaganda war against Israel an
equation is fabricated insidiously between the present State of
Israel and the former apartheid state of South Africa.
This must be exposed
as a malicious slander, and utterly refuted. It is also a crass
abuse of the valuable lessons that might be learned from the odious
apartheid experience of South Africa. There is no objective basis
whatsoever for attributing to Israel the ideology, policies and
praxis that were known as apartheid in South Africa. The historical
context of white-black relations which spawned apartheid differs
fundamentally from that in which conflict developed between Zionist
Jews and Palestinian Arabs.
The essence of
Israel's conflict situation has always been a clash of nationalisms;
ultimately over the question of who should have primacy in gaining
national self-determination in a contested territory. By contrast,
the South African conflict evolved out of a centuries-long, near
absolute domination exercised by a self-defined racial minority (the
whites) over an externally-defined racial majority of the
population, which was denied equal civic rights, above all the
primary democratic right, enjoyed exclusively by the whites, to
elect and be elected to the legislature and government of the state.
The Afrikaans term "apartheid" originated during the 1940s to
describe an ideological conception and political program that
justified, systematized, reinforced and expanded this pre-existent
system of racial discrimination and separation.
What justified the
utter excoriation of apartheid? From a moral point of view, it must
be stressed that what was so abhorrent about apartheid as to justify
sanctions and boycotts of South Africa, was neither its undemocratic
nature nor the severe repression of all resistance, the likes of
which could be found abundantly in many other countries plagued by
severe ethnic conflict. Rather, valid world condemnation targeted
two indefensible wrongs: firstly, the legalized racist basis of
apartheid's enforced inequalities; secondly the adamant refusal of
the apartheid regime to cease its unilateral dictates and accept the
option of negotiation. Of course, an essential condition for such
negotiation was not only the willingness of the dominator to
dismantle the apartheid regime but also the willingness of the
dominated majority not to resort to reverse domination. When the
statesmanship of both Frederik Willem de Klerk and Nelson Mandela
ensured that these conditions were satisfied, condemnations of the
South African state and boycotts and sanctions against it rightly
ceased.
Manifestly, neither
of the above-mentioned wrongs applies in the case of Israel.
Israel's democratic praxis certainly has faults and moral failings.
But apartheid they are not. Any conscionable person, who has lived
(as I have) in both apartheid South Africa and Israel, knows this.
Only hostile prejudice or rank ignorance can explain the charge that
in Israel, as in apartheid South Africa, it is skin color or any
statutory race classification that determines every aspect of one's
human and civic rights from birth to death: whether one has the
right to vote and be elected or not, live or work in one place or
other, study in one institution or other, have one occupation or
other, be treated in one hospital or other, eat in one restaurant or
another, go to the theater, sit on a particular park bench or ride
in a particular bus.
As for refusal to
negotiate a settlement, no Israeli government, not even the present
hyper-nationalist one headed by Binyamin Netanyahu, has refused this
option. Self-evidently, the boycott campaign is aimed less at ending
the occupation than at ending the State of Israel itself.
There is, however, a
sense in which the South African case is instructively comparable to
that of Israel. It relates to the reality of Israel's decades long
occupation regime over the post-war militarily occupied territory
known as the West Bank, or in Jewish tradition as Judea and Samaria.
No military occupation can be morally benign and this one is
undeniably no exception. Manifestly, its paramount tasks are not
only to administer the region but especially to protect the Jewish
settler population as well as the security of Israel proper. It
fosters Jewish settlement while subjecting the Palestinian majority
to a wide range of administrative and legal discrimination and
hardship, including the severely damaging effects of sections of the
security barrier, and limitations on freedom of movement and housing
development. Arbitrary military suppression of resistance is
ameliorated or stemmed only by the Israeli political system's
inbuilt democratic inhibitions, especially interventions by Israel's
Supreme Court, and monitoring by Israeli human rights associations.
Thus it is that the
everyday reality of governance, work, protest and suppression in the
occupied territory looks a lot like South Africa under apartheid,
especially when depicted on TV screens, mostly tendentiously and
devoid of context. Yet, no matter how morally deplorable, this is
not apartheid: it simply is not the same phenomenon. If one is to
draw lessons, Israel's occupation regime is equally comparable to
the situation in any number of other cases of post-war occupation or
ethnic domination in deeply divided and conflict-ridden countries,
not least of all in the Arab world.
If, however, one does
choose to make South Africa the comparative model, it is important
to know that, in the course of the apartheid regime's evolvement,
the strategic goal of white ethnic supremacy acquired a rationale
that professed to be independent of racist premises. Its proponents
were a stratum of Afrikaner intelligentsia and clergy (known at the
time as verligtes, meaning "enlightened ones") who spoke of
"separate development" and sought to undo the racist underpinning of
apartheid policy by discarding its "petty apartheid" manifestations,
such as legalized prohibition of any inter-race intimacy and racial
separation of public amenities. The revised rationale was
survivalist; born of the whites' conviction that this was a zero-sum
game; a case of dominate or be dominated!
The most notable
measure of this "reformed apartheid" praxis was the ruthless
enforcement of the homelands ("Bantustans") policy. Only in their
own homelands were voting rights to be granted to the blacks,
including those domiciled in white areas. This ensured continued
white supremacy. Another measure was the 1983 tri-parliamentary
constitutional reform aimed at co-opting those racially
classified as Coloured and Asian (Indian). They were to have
their own separate legislative assemblies, calculatedly subordinate
to the purely white parliament. Eventually, when the bleak
realization dawned that, apart from moral considerations, even this
modified strategy was not viable, the path of negotiation was
adopted, culminating in the dismantling of the entire edifice of
white supremacy.
Herein alone lies the
relevance of comparison with Israel, for it must be acknowledged
that there is a large political and civic sector of Israel which,
for reasons of fundamentalist religious faith or zero-sum
survivalist strategy, is obdurately intent on perpetuating and
buttressing this occupation regime as a permanent de facto
annexation. This sector is assertively represented by several
ultra-nationalist and national-orthodox religious parties in the
present government. Theirs is manifestly a policy and vision that
replicates the theory and praxis of the reformed phase of South
Africa's apartheid policy, which was adopted as a survivalist
strategy but ultimately abandoned out of enlightened realism, if not
moral compunction. Characteristically, they too cast about for
spurious arrangements calculated to ensure Jewish control and
privilege – for example non-sovereign cantonized autonomy, devoid of
Israeli political rights, or relegation of citizenship and electoral
rights to the adjacent Kingdom of Jordan.
It is in this respect
alone that use of the South African analogy to critique Israel is
justified, and importantly so. Never as grist to the mill of those
who labor to delegitimize and demonize Israel by falsely labeling it
an apartheid state and subjecting it to sanctions and boycotts, but
certainly as a warning cry lest perpetuation of the occupation
regime cause Israel to replicate South African reform-phase
apartheid; a strategy which proved to be not only morally
reprehensible but also realistically untenable.
The writer is
Professor Emeritus of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, whose
published works include
Community and Conscience: The Jews in Apartheid South Africa.
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