Stop Blaming Israel for Every Grievance in the Middle East. By Yasmin Alibhai-Brown.
Stop blaming Israel for every grievance in the Middle East. By Yasmin Alibhai-Brown. The Independent, May 2, 2011.
Alibhai-Brown:
First
came the Arab spring (followed, in some lands, by the harshest of winters) and
now Hamas and Fatah have signed a deal for unity. Naturally, Israel is as
panicked as are Arab despots by the shifts and quakes, the shaking ground
beneath their boots. Israel depended on an everlasting, adamantine status quo.
Nothing will ever be as it has been. Successive Israeli governments and their
global cheerleaders and backers across the world are guilty of crimes against
the humanity and rights of the Palestinian people, they who were made to pay
for the European Holocaust. Hitler’s unspeakable annihilation project can’t be
laid to rest and shouldn’t. But excruciating historical experiences do not
entitle a nation to grab land, to humiliate, to destroy the livelihoods of
others and to expect no censure; in effect to be above international law.
I am as
pro-Palestinian as the next leftie and try to do my bit; to speak up against
repressive Israeli policies and acts, which is never easy, as many of us have
had to learn. We go to protests against the collective punishments meted out in
Gaza and elsewhere in Palestine and on Arab citizens of Israel; others lobby
influential people; the brave ones go on flotillas, and the less brave but
committed refuse to buy Hass avocadoes and instead purchase olive oil from the
West Bank. All of us need to stop and think, to use this moment of upheaval to
scrutinise ourselves and our habituated responses to the Middle East.
For
many years now, British and American Zionists have complained that progressives
pick on Israel, expect higher standards from that government and most
iniquitously, that any criticism of their land is in effect a lightly disguised
and now approved expression of anti-Semitism. Using a combination of guilt,
suggestion and aggression they have managed to, if not suppress, certainly
inhibit fair and free debates on the Zionist nation. Think of it as global
super injunction. The unreasonable, absolutist supporters of Israel include
some crazies but are mostly highly educated, talented professionals and fierce
advocates of free speech. These days they are heeded less and so are getting
more strident. But what if some of their complaints are valid and justifiable?
Do I dare think that, and then say it? And if I do, is that a betrayal of a
righteous cause?
These
thoughts have been spooling round and round in my head this last month. As
Gaddafi systematically massacres his people and the country descends into civil
war, as armies slaughter civilians in Yemen and Bahrain, now Syria, I ask why
good people have focused only on Palestine/Israel for more than half a century
and not attended to the brutality and oppression endemic in the Islamic states.
Is it OK for dictators to do what they wish within their own borders to crush
democratic demands? I think not, and strongly. No flotillas for their victims?
One fact that is kept tightly sealed and buried is this: More Muslims are
killed by their brethren in religious and power struggles than are killed by
foreign powers and that, as far as I can ascertain is true even after the war
on Iraq. It could be that some of the relentless focus on Israel does indeed
rise out of a deep stream of anti-Semitism. It is also a useful displacement
activity.
Last
week I drove past the Syrian Embassy – where I know and like some individuals –
and there were a handful of protesters outside, looking hopeless and pathetic.
No massive demos pass outside the grand Saudi or Bahraini sites in London
either while boys are being hanged in Bahrain for daring to dissent. Why the
double standards? We have an obligation to judge all governments and rulers by
the same universal values, to listen to Zionists who complain of unfair
treatment and open our minds as we enter a new era in the Middle East.
Reading
nuanced analyses by thoughtful Jewish thinkers has been illuminating. Change is
in the air. On the website of the Union of Jewish Students you can find, for
example, the text of a speech by Mike Davis at the Herzliya conference: “[the
unfolding events] show that the world can change with alarming speed and that
our basic assumptions can be overturned in the blink of an eye. They and the
reactions of the West demonstrate the potency and very real nature of the
security challenges faced by Israel at this juncture in history. . . .” Davis
goes on to tackle the “line between criticism of Israel and delegitimisation.” “Not
every criticism of Israel is delegitimisation. Not even every untrue or unfair
criticism of Israel is delegitimisation. In fact, the link between ‘criticism’
and ‘delegitimisation’ is sometimes overstated, damaging the credibility of our
responses . . . If the Israeli government had internalised and prioritised the
threats to its legitimacy then perhaps it would have understood the need to be
seen to be doing everything possible to break the deadlock. We control the
land. We hold the people. It is up to us. We need to accept that burden.”
We
Muslims need to accept our burdens too. Whilst still holding Israel to account,
we must stop dumping blame on it for all Middle Eastern grievances. The same
happened to South Africa under apartheid. It was necessary for the world to
come together and help topple that loathsome, racist regime. What was never
right was that the worst African dictators were allowed to get away with more
violence and viciousness against their citizens while sounding off about evil
South Africa. It’s always the same. Humans easily excuse themselves and their
own for foul acts they condemn in their enemies.
The
mulishness and narrow-sightedness of the most unrelenting Zionists is today
almost matched by the mulishness and narrow-sightedness of their unrelenting
counterparts, anti-Zionist activists. I am not abandoning my total support for
Palestinian nationhood and right of return, and here renew my vow to that
cause. But that struggle is only one in the big fight for freedom in the Middle
East. It is no longer morally justifiable for activists to target only Israel
and either ignore or find excuses for corrupt, murderous Arab despots. That
kind of selectivity discredits pro-Palestinian campaigners and dishonours the
principles of equality and human rights. It has enabled hideous Arab ruling
clans to carry on disgracefully for too long.