Israeli Academic Extremism
Ronen Shoval, Chairman of "Im
Tirtzu", defends Knesset probe for NGOs
Chairman of Im Tirtzu Defends Knesset Demand
for Transparency in Funding Far Leftist Anti-Israel NGOs
During the past year, the vast majority of the public became
convinced that the organizations that call themselves human rights
groups actually belong to the extreme left and seek to force their
radical values on others through foreign funding. The vast majority
of the public does not believe the lies that are being spread
against the IDF fighters, and knows that Israel makes every effort
to avoid harming innocent people. Most of the public knows that
Israel is a democratic and open state. They do not buy the lie that
all of us are backward, violent and racist, just because a
negligible minority decided it has a monopoly over enlightenment,
democracy and human rights.
… Since Israel is a democracy, and since transparency is a
condition for democracy, we are entitled to know who is funding and
fueling the campaign of hatred against us. Which special interests
are meddling in Israeli democracy and bestowing great power -
sometimes disproportionate, sometimes undemocratic - in the hands of
a radical minority? In another few months, we shall get the answers
to which we are entitled.
http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/probing-israel-s-leftist-ngos-is-democracy-at-its-best-1.336142
Probing Israel's leftist NGOs is democracy
at its best
The majority of the public has become convinced that human
rights groups are extreme and seek to force their radical values on
others.
By Ronen Shoval
Published 10.01.11
In the past year, a vigorous public debate has been waged in
Israel between dozens of heavily funded organizations that call
themselves human rights groups and several other organizations
claiming that those groups have cynically exploited the human rights
discourse as a propaganda tool for defaming the Israel Defense
Forces and isolating Israel.
On the one side are organizations that charge Israel with
carrying out war crimes, including those involved in hounding senior
Israeli officials abroad or in calling for the boycott and
divestment of Israel. These organizations believe that Israel is an
anti-democratic, militaristic and racist regime.
On the other side are organizations that believe that Israel has
a democratic, moral and tolerant society that is fighting physically
and ideologically for its very right to exist as the national home
of the Jewish people. These organizations see Israel as a
magnificent democracy that is dealing with gigantic threats while
maintaining democratic norms at the highest possible level. They
organizations believe that Israel has fallen victim to a mendacious
campaign aimed at accusing it of crimes it did not perpetrate, and
thus at justifying a policy that would negate its right and ability
to protect itself.
The public debate that has taken place in Israel over the past
year has underscored the fact that Israel is a democratic state of
the highest order. There were reports, ads, hundreds of articles and
endless interviews, along with demonstrations and various steps
aimed at explaining and convincing. At times this debate was to the
point and at other times it was demagogic. It was visceral, scathing
and sometimes fiery. Just like in a democratic country.
A revolution took place in Israel this year, after many years in
which only those attacking Israel (a small percentage of the
population) were represented in the public discourse, including in
the media and among the intelligentsia. This was the first year in
which Israeli democracy succeeded in creating two camps and two
voices - two ideologies, as is customary in a democracy, and in
Judaism. Not a single viewpoint, as is customary in communist
countries. Two interpretations of the term "liberalism," not just
one, as is customary at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute.
During the past year, the vast majority of the public became
convinced that the organizations that call themselves human rights
groups actually belong to the extreme left and seek to force their
radical values on others through foreign funding. The vast majority
of the public does not believe the lies that are being spread
against the IDF fighters, and knows that Israel makes every effort
to avoid harming innocent people. Most of the public knows that
Israel is a democratic and open state. They do not buy the lie that
all of us are backward, violent and racist, just because a
negligible minority decided it has a monopoly over enlightenment,
democracy and human rights.
The Israeli public is wise and capable of understanding a complex
reality, as well as media manipulations, even though the "human
rights groups" - which revolve around arrogance, hypocrisy and
disrespect for human beings, for the people and their elected
representatives - think otherwise. The people are critical and have
finely honed senses, and can therefore easily identify who seeks to
defame them and who is furthering their rights.
Since Israel is a democracy, and since transparency is a
condition for democracy, we are entitled to know who is funding and
fueling the campaign of hatred against us. Which special interests
are meddling in Israeli democracy and bestowing great power -
sometimes disproportionate, sometimes undemocratic - in the hands of
a radical minority? In another few months, we shall get the answers
to which we are entitled.
The writer is the chairman of the movement Im Tirtzu.
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