N. 44, December 2003
Israel, anti-semitism, and
world peace
This past October, the European
Union conducted one of its routine surveys of
what its citizens think of various political
and social issues. The results, in this particular
case, generated an outcry by many conservative
politicians at the way the survey was conducted,
and even at the alleged motivations of carrying
it out to begin with. The problem? One of the
statistics emerging from the EU survey is that
59% of Europeans rank Israel as the number one
threat to global peace.
Israeli politicians have immediately
denounced the survey as an example of anti-semitism,
and many European leaders (mostly on the right
of the political spectrum) have joined the chorus
of outrage. According to the Italian newspaper
La Repubblica, Nathan Sharansky, Minister for
the Hebraic communities of the Diaspora, has
commented that political criticisms of Israel
are a thinly veiled form of anti-semitism, and
that as in the past Jews were considered
like the Devil, responsible for the worlds
evils, so today the civilized world
attributes the worlds problems to the
Jewish state, Israel.
And yet, it is hard to see how
the EUs survey was tendentious
and slanted against Israel. One of the fifteen
questions asked respondents to rank a total
of twelve nations in accordance to the perceived
degree of threat they pose to world peace. The
list of nations inclunded not only Israel, but
Russia, North Korea, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan,
the United States, Pakistan, India, and the
European Union itself. Israel came out ahead
of everybody (especially in the Netherlands,
with a whopping 70%), followed in decreasing
order of perceived threat by North Korea, Iran,
Iraq, Afghanistan, and the United States.
Now, my own rankings would have
been quite different. (If the reader must know,
I would have put Pakistan first, since it is
a non-democratic nuclear power; followed by
North Korea and Iran, because they are run by
nutcases who could potentially develop nuclear
weapons; then would come the United States --
also run by a nutcase with nukes, but at least
it is a democracy; finally, to consider Afghanistan
a threat to world peace is, I think, simply
not to understand what a threat to world peace
is.) Indeed, I dont believe that Israel
is dangerous at the global level, although certainly
it hasnt helped the middle east peace
process of lately. Then again, the latter has
stalled largely because the United States insists
in not behaving as an honest broker: without
US support, Israel would simply have to agree
to whatever peace plan would be put forth by
an American administration or the United Nations
(and, I add, it would be about time, too).
What I think is interesting is
the use of the anti-semitism charge
on the part of the Israeli government to shield
its policy toward the Palestinians from criticism,
a policy that can only be defined as fascist
-- as in consisting of the application of brute
force with complete disregard to human rights
or international law. Most Europeans are not
anti-semite, and they have repeatedly demonstrated
so with continuous aid to Israel for the past
several decades, with countless amends to the
victims of the Holocaust, be that monetary in
nature or more generally through books, articles,
plays, movies, and all sorts of other recognitions
of the horrors of Nazi Germany and fascist Italy.
And so it should have been. But it is a travesty
to use the sympathy generated by the Holocaust
to render a government immune from international
criticism. Israel stands almost alone in the
world (except for the support of the United
States) for good reasons to be found in its
own Holocaust-like behavior toward other religious
or ethnic minorities.
Another twist to the European-Israeli
saga came in November, when Gianfranco Fini,
the head of the Italian neo-fascist party (Alleanza
Nazionale, National Alliance -- have you noticed
how right-wing extremists always play the patriotic
card?) decided to visit Israel and to publicly
denounce Mussolinis errors in supporting
Hitler and establishing racial laws
in the 1930s. It was a rather gutsy thing to
do, even though it came with more than half
a century delay. Well, that got Alessandra Mussolini,
the dictators granddaughter and a major
exponent of Alleanza Nazionale, enraged, accusing
Fini of betrayal of the partys
ideals; she immediately left Alleanza
Nazionale and established a true
fascist party. It seems that an honest neo-fascist
cant afford to have even a minimum of
conscience these days... To complicate things,
of course, Fini was welcome in Israel by what
is in fact a fascist party of its own (with
respect to its treatment of Palestinians), which
makes for an almost unbearable degree of irony
in the whole story.
The point is, however, rather
simple. The Holocaust was, in fact, one of the
most horrific events in human history, and there
is absolutely no justification for it at all.
On the other hand, it was done to people and
by people of another generation, and those of
the current one simply should no longer apologize
for it (since they havent done it) or
use it as a shield to then feel free to commit
human rights abuses of their own.
Europeans are right to be critical
of Israel, not because it actually is a major
threat to world peace, but because it is acting
in an increasingly despondent and despicable
manner against largely defenseless people. This
is so close to what the Jews themselves suffered
at the hand of the Germans, that it is hard
to conceive how they dont see the striking
parallels and immediately stop what they are
doing. A tragedy like the Holocaust generates
an enourmous amount of human sympathy, but sympathy
cannot (and should not) be infinite, and the
current Israeli government is simply squandering
such capital without gaining much for its people.
Doesnt anybody learn anything from history?