Talking to Palestinians Who Won’t Talk Back. By Yair Rosenberg.
Talking to Palestinians Who Won’t Talk Back. By Yair Rosenberg. Tablet, September 4, 2013.
NY Times, MSNBC Whitewash BDS. By Yair Rosenberg. Tablet, February 6, 2013.
Rosenberg:
When I
was an undergraduate, the Harvard College Progressive Jewish Alliance invited
the Palestine Solidarity Committee to the movies–specifically Boston’s Jewish
and Palestine Film Festivals. It was a creative concept for a coexistence
event. The response from the PSC, however, was less inspired. The organization
explained that while PJA was welcome to join them at the Palestine Film
Festival, and that some PSC members might be interested in attending the Jewish
one, under no circumstances could the fact that Palestinians accompanied PJA to
the Jewish Film Festival be advertised. PSC would not officially co-sponsor
such an outing. In other words, the Jewish community was welcome to offer its
empathy and legitimacy to the Palestinian perspective, but the Palestinian
community would not reciprocate. The event did not take place.
This
was not an isolated incident. As hostilities raged in Gaza in early 2009, PJA,
Harvard Students for Israel, the Society of Arab Students, and the Harvard
Islamic Society organized a peace vigil with a simple email: “Join us as we
mourn the loss of human life in the ongoing Arab-Israeli conflict. We pray that
one day we will be able to truly co-exist in peace, security, and health.”
Candles were held aloft while both Jewish and Islamic prayers for peace were
movingly recited in the cold evening air. The only organization that boycotted
the gathering was the Palestine Solidarity Committee. Some months later, one of
their board members published an op-ed arguing that Israel’s ambassador and
former Harvard professor Michael Oren should be barred from campus.
I was
reminded of these stories, and many others, when reading Peter Beinart’s latest
article in the New York Review of Books,
“American Jewish Cocoon.” In it, Beinart rightly calls out American Jews for
historically failing to engage with their Palestinian counterparts. “For the
most part, Palestinians do not speak in American synagogues or write in the
Jewish press.” As a consequence, he says, “the organized American Jewish
community [is] a closed intellectual space, isolated from the experiences and
perspectives of roughly half the people under Israeli control. And the result
is that American Jewish leaders, even those who harbor no animosity toward
Palestinians, know little about the reality of their lives.”
This is
all true, which is why you should read and consider Beinart’s eloquent essay in
full. But it is not the whole truth–and those seeking to resolve the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict need to understand why. Because as it turns out,
more and more Jews are reaching out
to Palestinians, only to find that they no longer have anyone to talk to. As
one officer for OneVoice, the grassroots peace-building movement, has observed,
where once it was difficult to get Jews into a room with Palestinians, now it
has become difficult to find a Palestinian who will share the stage with a
Zionist Jew.
***
On
Tuesday, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas was supposed to share a pre-Rosh
Hashana toast with the over 30 members of the Knesset’s two-state solution
caucus. Abbas had invited the Jewish lawmakers to Ramallah to reciprocate their
hosting him at the Knesset on July 31–only the second time a Palestinian flag
was unfurled at the Israeli parliament. But on Monday, he cancelled the toast, reportedly “because he came under pressure from the anti-normalization movement
in Ramallah.” This, too, was not an isolated incident.
For its
August issue, Forbes ran a cover story entitled “Peace Through Profits? Inside the Secret Tech Ventures that are
Reshaping the Israeli-Arab-Palestinian World.” In the piece, investigative
journalist Richard Behar detailed how Israeli and Palestinian entrepreneurs
have been quietly working together on high-tech projects, effectively forging
the economic infrastructure for coexistence. Its optimism was rare and
refreshing. It was also short-lived. This past Wednesday, Behar published a
follow-up about his story’s reception. “Virtually every Israeli who contacted
me reacted positively,” he wrote. “But the vast majority of Palestinians who
were featured by Forbes reacted with
disappointment, upset, and sometimes fear or fury… Some worry that the story
will harm their businesses by sparking retaliation from Arab extremists. One
says he’s already seeing such a backlash.” A Palestinian CEO even asked Behar
to take down the article, adding, “You should have run it by us first. The
first thing we would have told you is move the word ‘peace’ out of the
article.”
These
examples are just from the last week. Innumerable others–from boycotts of mixed
Israeli-Palestinian soccer teams, to crusades against the Israeli-Palestinian
orchestra founded by Daniel Barenboim and Edward Said, to successful shuttering
of coexistence concerts by threats of violence–can easily be adduced. The
anti-normalization movement–which advocates total boycott of all institutions
and organizations that do not openly disavow Zionism, and works to exact a
social, political, and economic price from those who breach it–grows every day.
A representative manifesto, signed by Palestinian student unions in the
occupied territories and around the world, explicitly condemns the work of
“organizations like Seeds of Peace, One Voice, NIR School, IPCRI, Panorama, and
others specifically target Palestinian youth to engage them in dialog with
Israelis.”
Beinart
is aware of anti-normalization’s perils, but he devotes only two of his essay’s
46 paragraphs to it. Given his target audience–American Jews–this focus on one
side’s sins is understandable. But it has the effect of indicting Jews in the
pages of the NYRB for a lamentable
situation that is not entirely their fault, while casting Palestinian
isolationism as a mere footnote to American Jewry’s malaise. Moreover, such a
narrow frame does not merely elide Palestinians; it also brackets out the many
younger members of the Jewish community who have gone to great lengths to
interact with their Palestinian counterparts–only to be rebuffed by the
acolytes of anti-normalization.
***
“I
recently spoke to a group of Jewish high school students who are being trained
to become advocates for Israel when they go to college,” writes Beinart. “They
were smart, earnest, passionate. When I asked if any had read a book by a
Palestinian, barely any raised their hands.” Open up the New York Times, however, and one will find a very different story.
“Several years ago, six teenagers at the SAR yeshiva high school in Riverdale
came to the principal with a request,” reported the Times in 2009. “They wanted to study Arabic.” The principal said
yes, and today there are over 40 students studying the language. “I feel like
lots of people have misconceptions about Arabs and Palestinians,” one of those
students told the Times, “and if I
speak Arabic I can better understand the culture and understand what is really
going on.”
SAR
High School, which regularly sends graduates to Harvard, Yale and Princeton, is
not alone. Ramaz, the elite Manhattan Modern Orthodox prep school, offers
Arabic as well. “A small but growing number of Jewish day schools across the
United States–including Modern Orthodox, Conservative and community schools,” The Forward noted in 2009, “have started
to teach Arabic.” Why? A student from Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School in
Maryland told The Forward, “One day I
want an Arab to feel like a random American Jewish girl cares about him and his
culture. I know that nothing I could possibly do could change the situation in
the Middle East, but maybe if one Arab could meet a Jewish girl that cares,
that could do something to tip the scale.” This phenomenon is not restricted to
high school. At Harvard, it was a source of constant amusement that the
university’s Arabic language classes were filled with American Jews. One was
more likely to find students hawking Arabic textbooks on the Hillel listserv
than a Jewish Study Bible.
University
campuses are a particular source of concern for Beinart. He spends four
paragraphs critiquing the Israel engagement guidelines of Hillel International,
noting that they are “vague” and arguing that they tend to stifle conversation.
“Those standards make it almost impossible for Jewish campus organizations to
invite a Palestinian speaker,” he writes, adding “even moderate Palestinians
like former prime minister Salam Fayyad, a favorite of America and Israel,
support boycotting goods produced in the settlements,” and would therefore be
unwelcome in Hillel. This was news to me, as I first learned about the idea of
boycotting settlement goods at Harvard Hillel from Palestinian peace activist
Aziz Abu Sarah. Indeed, in practice, the vagueness of Hillel’s non-binding
guidelines has often given individual Hillel directors across the country the
latitude to allow for a wide range of views. Which is why one prominent
settlement boycott activist has become a fixture in campus Hillel houses: Peter Beinart.
In
other words, for every anecdote of American Jewish isolation Beinart provides,
one can easily find a countervailing instance of openness, particularly among
young Jews. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for their prospective
Palestinian partners.
Who are
the faces of Palestine on campus? As Beinart acknowledges in his piece, they
are activists like Ali Abunimah, founder of the Electronic Intifada, who not only vehemently opposes a two-state
solution, but repeatedly claims that “Zionism is anti-Semitism,” and actively
shames those who engage with Zionists. He personally shouted down former
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert at the University of Chicago. And when
Columbia University professor Katherine Franke–who supports Boycotts,
Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against the Jewish state but not
anti-normalization–dared to meet with J Street and other liberal Zionist
activists in an effort to forge common ground, Abunimah’s site publicly
criticized her.
Another
prominent Palestinian intellectual on campus, Joseph Massad, associate
professor Modern Arab Politics and Intellectual History at Columbia University,
has made a career out of scholarship that attempts to equate Zionism with
anti-Semitism, as well as link it with Nazism. And Omar Barghoutti, the master
spokesperson for the BDS and anti-normalization movements, refuses to engage
whatsoever with Zionists, and famously asserted that Israel “was Palestine, and
there is no reason why it should not be renamed Palestine.” These individuals
and their many disciples on campus work assiduously to undermine any prospect
of Jewish Zionist-Palestinian rapprochement: they have shouted down Israel’s
most dovish leader, Ehud Olmert, in multiple forums; assailed Ambassador
Michael Oren and called for him to be banned from campus; and even disrupted
Israeli cultural events abroad with no actual political component. For the
advocates of anti-normalization, it is not enough to reject dialogue with
Zionist groups–such conversation must be actively silenced.
***
Thus,
the tragic irony of the rise of anti-normalization among Palestinians is that
it coincides with the rise of a new generation of American Jews who are most
open to dialogue. Unlike their elders, these young Jews didn’t grow up in the
shadow of war and intifada. They’ve experienced Israel as a secure and powerful
state, and so are themselves secure enough to reach out to their Palestinian
interlocutors. But in a cruel twist of fate, even as many American Jews have
finally emerged from their cocoon, they’ve found that there isn’t anyone
outside who wants to talk to them. Where in the past, many Palestinians were
eager to press their case, years of stagnation and occupation have empowered
the rejectionists, who accept nothing less than the dissolution of Israel.
“When I
was an undergrad student, there were many panels and debates between Israelis
and Palestinians, or their surrogates,” recounts one longtime peace activist in
Haaretz. “But today you can count on
one hand the number of events where Israelis and Palestinians have joint public
events.” While young American Jews are increasingly bringing a positive-sum
outlook to their campus communities, their Palestinian counterparts have
increasingly accepted a zero-sum approach. “As we in the Jewish community finally
come out of our own internal Jewish conversation,” the activist laments, “we
will face a Palestinian community that is only willing to speak to us about a
one-state solution.”
Ultimately,
then, the best metaphor for the sad saga of Jewish-Palestinian dialogue is not
Beinart’s image of a cocoon. Rather, the two communities have been like ships
passing in the night, each just missing the window of opportunity to see and
reach the other. Admittedly, this is not as satisfying a narrative as an
indictment of the American Jewish establishment, or a simple condemnation of
Palestinian extremism. It doesn’t have heroes and villains, or a
straightforward reckoning of right and wrong. But then, few things about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict actually do.