SearchRecent comments
Democracy LinksMember's Off-site Blogs |
anti-semitism is an excuse for genocide....Haaretz, Israel’s oldest and most widely known newspaper, has just published a long, roughly 8,000 word feature article, about the work of Lee Mordechai, the Associate Professor of History at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. He has compiled on line a massive report entitled “Bearing Witness to the Israel-Gaza War.” Endless onslaught: Would Israel’s Mordechai be attacked as ‘antisemitic’ in Australia? By Henry Reynolds
The English translation of the text is 124 pages long buttressed by 1400 footnotes referencing thousands of sources, including eye witness reports, video footage, investigatory material, articles and photographs. The impact of the report is overwhelming documenting with impeccable scholarship that Haaretz calls ‘the horrors committed by Israel in Gaza.’ It is all there– the unprecedented, endless onslaught on the densely populated Strip and a population who have no means to defend themselves. Then there is the destruction of almost everything that once supported communal life. Mordechai does not dwell on what terms we can use to define the catastrophe but his vast wave of evidence sweeps away all exculpatory exercises whether personal or official. What can we make of this in Australia? It should remind us how parochial and tepid media debate is here. Reporting is cautious and mealy mouthed or, in the case of News Limited, brazenly pro-Israel. The significance of the recent decisions of The International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court are nowhere fully explained even by the government. How is it then that almost every issue of Haaretz contains criticism of Israel that would be considered anti-Semitic in Australia. Great journalists like Gideon Levy would be attacked for distressing our Jewish community and disturbing social harmony. But above all it calls into serious question how we define anti-semitism and use it to label any criticism of Israel. It will be interesting to see if Mordechai’s report will be mentioned here at all. We can be certain, in advance, that it will not be honoured with an 8,000 word exegesis. This brings into sharp focus the role of Australian universities in current debates. How would a report like Mordechai’s have been received by one of our leading tertiary institutions? All the evidence we have to hand suggests it would not be welcomed by current administrators who have found the pro-Palestine encampments troublesome. There would be incessant media demands for the author’s censure or dismissal. There has, after all, been an ongoing barrage of criticism from the federal opposition, the Murdoch media and the Jewish community. Vice Chancellors have been brought before Parliamentary Committees to respond to accusations of antisemitism. A week ago the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights opened an inquiry to consider the prevalence, nature and experiences of anti-Semitism at universities. Committee deputy chair Henry Pike told Mark Scott, the Vice Chancellor of Sydney University, that it would appear to the average Australian that’ your university isn’t just a sanctuary for anti-Semitism, but is actually an incubator of anti-Semitism in this country.’ Much of the evidence mobilised in this, and related investigations, has come from Jewish students who have complained, widely and loudly, that they feel uncomfortable, even threatened and alienated on campus. Having taught history and politics on Australian campuses for over forty years, I can empathise with their discomfort. But there are several gaping holes in the conceptual pathway. At the very start there is the ubiquitous conflation of criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism. The implication is that any open, public discussion of the situation in Gaza should be taboo because it evokes personal distress, and beyond that, it undermines our social cohesion. In all my years working in universities I never heard it argued that discussion and debate on the campus had to be guided by concern for social harmony. It is hard not to have some sympathy for Jewish students. Any discussion of the Israeli government and the IDF cannot now avoid the precise wording and clear definitions of the two world courts—the ICJ and the ICC. We are talking about war crimes, ethnic cleansing, apartheid and arguably genocide. And then there is Israel’s isolation from the world and its pariah status which was graphically illustrated in the most recent General Assembly vote which resulted in a score of 157 to 8. Apart from the United States and its fringe of dependent micro-states in Micronesia there was one of Latin America’s 33 States and one of Europe’s 44 and altogether roughly 5% of the world’s population. Israel is probably more isolated now than was South Africa at the end of the apartheid era. So what are our Jewish students to do if they continue to support Israel through thick and thin? In an article written in May Jewish elder Mark Leibler demanded that the University leaders must stand up for Jewish students. He declared that he was’ a proud Zionist’ and that was the case with 90% of Jewish Australians. So to protect the Jewish homeland the cry of anti-Semitism works well as an effective distraction and this is clearly the case in contemporary Australia. But if the chain of logic can run unimpeded from opposition to the actions of the Jewish State to anti-Semitism it can, with even greater ease, be reversed moving from support for Israel to complicity with war crimes, ethnic cleansing and apartheid. It is then not surprising that there is such a ranked chorus of voices demanding what is essentially a ban on open, public debate about Gaza and the West Bank in our universities because it so troubles the Jewish cohort. In his May article, Leibler reminisced about his own life as a student at the University of Melbourne and at Yale and referred to his close contemporary connection with the University of Tel Aviv and his current role on the Council of his alma mater. It should come as no surprise then, that he is concerned with discomforted Jewish students. But there was no concern and no mention of their contemporaries in Palestine, all 87,000 of them. They have no universities to go to any more the IDF has destroyed them, all 18 of them, along with all the libraries, most of the books and three quarters of the schools. In his study Mordechai estimated that 100 professors had been killed by the Israelis, at least some of them in targeted murders. Call me old fashioned but I find the current concern for anxious Jewish University students and their worry about anti-Semitism more than a little self- indulgent.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.
SEE ALSO: filii holocaustum....
|
User login |
birthplace of anti-semitism....
- Most anti-Jewish material from Greek and Latin authors is pre-Christian. The main protagonists in the anti-Jewish propaganda came from Alexandria. There also the first anti-Jewish pogrom in history took place in 38 CE.
- The initial indication of a negative attitude toward Jews is found at the beginning of the third century BCE in the writings of an Egyptian priest called Manetho. This Greek-speaking Egyptian devotes a large section of his main work, which deals with the history of Egypt, to the Exodus of the Israelites.
- Alongside the history of anti-Jewish literature there is an outspoken pro-Jewish line. These voices are to be heard all the time side by side-one of admiration and one of scorn and detestation.
- One aspect of the history of Jew-hatred, that is, the twenty-three known centuries of anti-Semitism, is the tenacity of many motifs such as that Jews are dangerous and enemies of humankind. These notions are easily demonstrable as nonsense, yet they have been kept alive among many millions of people all over the world until today. It is apparently impossible to break through these perceptions.
The Egyptian Beginning of Anti-Semitism’s Long History with Prof. Pieter van der Horst“As far as we know Alexandria in Egypt was the birthplace of anti-Semitism’s ideology. There also the first pogrom in history-as we now would call it-took place. In Asia Minor, which is now Turkey, there also were large Jewish communities from the fourth or third century BCE onward. One finds there no endemic hatred of the Jews as in Alexandria.
“The initial indication of a negative attitude toward Jews is found at the beginning of the third century BCE in the writings of an Egyptian priest called Manetho. This Greek-speaking Egyptian devotes a large section of his main work, which deals with the history of Egypt, to the Exodus of the Israelites.”
Prof. Pieter van der Horst studied classical philology and literature. In 1978 he received his PhD in theology from Utrecht University. After his studies he taught there, among other things as professor of Jewish studies. Van der Horst is a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.
“Manetho turns the story of the Exodus upside down. In the Bible it is an act of liberation of the Jewish people by God from Egyptian bondage. In Manetho’s antibiblical history it is an expulsion of the Jews from Egypt at the command of the Egyptian gods, because their country has to be purified of unclean people.
“Manetho tells that when the Egyptians take measures to expel these unclean people, the Jews organize themselves around a priest whose name later turns out to be Moses. They start a regime of terror in which the Egyptian population becomes the victim of brutal violence. Indeed, these people display large-scale sacrilegious behavior by killing, roasting, and eating the Egyptian gods-that is, the sacred animals. Finally the Pharaoh succeeds in expelling them, whereupon they found their own rogue state in and around Jerusalem where they build their temple.”
“This ‘anti-Jewish version of Exodus’ sets the tone for a series of such retellings of the biblical story by subsequent writers in the second and first centuries BCE and later. One can only speculate why this motif begins to circulate at that time. It coincides more or less with the appearance of the Septuaginta, the first Greek translation of the Jewish Bible in Alexandria at the beginning of the third century BCE. We can guess that as the Exodus story became available in Greek, Manetho and other Egyptian intellectuals became familiar with it and were infuriated by Egypt’s negative image in the Book of Exodus.”
When asked whether the biblical story of the Book of Esther including Haman’s attempted genocide of the Jewish people does not precede the Egyptian anti-Semitic writings, Van der Horst replies: “The problem is that the dating of the Book of Esther is very uncertain. The events are supposed to have taken place in the court of the Persian king. Usually scholars, however, date this book only to the second century BCE. Moreover, Haman’s threat could not be carried out.”
Flavius Josephus“Jew-hatred on a growing scale began after the conquest of the Middle East by Alexander the Great in the fourth century BCE. Before that time there were only incidental and individual contacts between members of various nations. The exposure of one nation to another is typical of the Hellenistic era, the period from Alexander onward. Then also, for the first time, other nations come into contact with the Jewish people on a larger scale. From then we see this kind of hatred gradually spreading more and more in Greek and later also in Roman society.
“Manetho’s texts are lost. The major first-century Jewish apologist Flavius Josephus dedicates a book-commonly known as Contra Apionem, Against Apion-to anti-Jewish slander in Greek and Egyptian-Greek literature of the preceding centuries. Josephus’ text deals, among other things, with the climax of this literature by an Alexandrian Greek-speaking Egyptian named Apion who lived in the first half of the first century CE.
“Apion’s writings were so influential that even half a century after his death Josephus still finds it necessary to refute his anti-Jewish slander. In Josephus’ book many anti-Jewish quotations from Manetho’s history have been preserved. He gives the impression that they are literal quotes.
“The same is true of several other anti-Jewish writers from Greco-Roman antiquity including Apion. Most of their works have been lost apart from the quotations by Josephus or the later Christian Church Fathers, especially Eusebius of Caesarea.
“These quotes on Jews have been meticulously collected by the late Prof. Menachem Stern of Hebrew University in three volumes called Greek and Latin Authors on Jews and Judaism. It is a magnificent work about Greek and Roman attitudes toward Jews in antiquity, published by the Israel Academy of Sciences from 1974 to 1984. Sadly, after its completion, Stern was murdered by a Palestinian.”
Positive Witnesses“Besides Josephus, there are only a few references to Jews in the ancient Greek authors who have been preserved. For instance, the Greek historian Diodorus of Sicily quotes another ancient Greek historian, Hecataeus, who expresses great admiration for Moses as a person who excelled in wisdom and courage. He views the beginning of Judaism as hugely promising because of Moses’ wisdom. Hecataeus adds that only in a later stage of history did the Jews introduce laws that created a kind of xenophobic mentality among them. He is thus somewhat critical of later developments but clearly expresses his admiration for Judaism’s founder.
“Some of the earliest Greek observers of Judaism were positive. For instance, two pupils of Aristotle, Theophrastus and Clearchus, make short, extremely favorable remarks about Jews. One calls them a nation of philosophers. He implies that their ideas about God and religion are so lofty and pure that they are examples to be followed. Others hold the same view. Thus in philosophical circles people sometimes expressed admiration for the Jews’ rejection of a plurality of gods. That their single God was not even mentioned by name nor pictured in whatever form made them commendable to philosophical thinkers who tended to develop an abstract concept of a deity.
“Such thinkers found some of their own ideas expressed in the Jews they met. This positive assessment of Judaism as a religion also stemmed from the beginning of the contacts between nations. It never disappeared; in the Roman Empire, in the first four to five centuries CE, we see that in many cities of the ancient world where there are synagogues there also are circles of the so-called God-fearers, gentiles who sympathize with Judaism. For that we have many literary and epigraphic testimonies.
“These gentiles did not become members of the Jewish community but were impressed by the Jewish religion, especially its ethical aspects. They sympathized sometimes very strongly with Jewish ideas and values. This phenomenon in turn inspired a certain Judeophobia among others, which emerges from several ancient documents.
“Some God-fearers supported various Jewish institutions with money and in other ways. Sometimes they attended synagogue services or even observed the Sabbath out of reverence for the Jewish religion, even without becoming members of the Jewish community.
“One finds these sympathizers in many places. For instance, in Turkey a priestess of the emperor cult is mentioned-one couldn’t think of something more un-Jewish than that-who donates a large amount of money to have a synagogue built for her city’s Jewish community. There are many striking examples of sympathy for Judaism on the part of pagans.”
Roman Attitudes“There is no significant difference between Greek and Roman attitudes toward the Jews. When the Romans came into contact with Jews, they also were exposed to the anti-Jewish propaganda of several Greek authors. Often Roman authors just rehashed what they found in Greek writers about Jews, having already been influenced by these perspectives.
“The best-known example is a passage by Tacitus, the famous Roman historian of the second century CE, in Book 5 of his Histories. It is from beginning to end a recapitulation of everything one finds in earlier Greek authors on Jews and Judaism. He relates the anti-Jewish version of the Exodus and adds some very negative remarks about what he calls ‘the Jewish hatred of the human race.’ One also finds such statements in many other ancient Greek and Roman authors. It is often claimed that the Jews keep aloof from non-Jews because they hate them.
“The Jewish way of life that in some ways kept them separate from others was apparently quite often interpreted as xenophobia. It meant to the anti-Jewish authors that the Jews did not want to mix with other nations because they feared or hated, or even despised them. In these stereotypes among Greek and Latin authors, one regularly finds the word ‘unsocial’-in Greek apanthropos-which means ‘turned away from other people.’ Jewish separatism created irritation that in the long run became Jew-hatred among Greeks and Romans.”
The Double Approach“Throughout antiquity, from the moment that Greek and Latin authors began to write about Jews and Judaism, one finds this double approach. Alongside the history of anti-Jewish literature there is an outspoken pro-Jewish line. These voices are to be heard all the time side by side-one of admiration and one of scorn and detestation.
“Most anti-Jewish material from Greek and Latin authors is pre-Christian. Although there also is some anti-Jewish literature from outside Alexandria, it is significant that the main protagonists in the anti-Jewish propaganda came from that town; besides Manetho and Apion there also are others. Also in Alexandria the first anti-Jewish ‘pogrom’-which we can define as an organized and officially tolerated attack on Jews-took place in the year 38 CE.”
Van der Horst says that from a modern perspective there are parallels between the Alexandria “pogrom”-an anachronistic use of a far more recent word-of the year 38 and what happened in the German Kristallnacht in 1938.
The Alexandrian PogromHe explains: “There is only one work referring to this pogrom. It is commonly called In Flaccum and was written by the Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria, who lived from about 25 BCE to 50 CE. He was a witness of the events. That would seem to inspire confidence, but closer analysis of his book raises doubts.
“No one else makes mention of these dramatic events apart from Philo’s somewhat later contemporary Flavius Josephus. He tells us that in the reign of the emperor Gaius (better known as Caligula), after there had been civil strife between the Jewish and Greek inhabitants of Alexandria, both factions sent delegates to the emperor in Rome.1
“Josephus’ casual way of mentioning the event tells us that he had little information about the uprising or did not find it worth devoting any more words to it. On the other hand, he makes clear that what had happened was important enough to justify the sending of contingents to Rome by both parties, a fact that is amply confirmed elsewhere. Philo himself wrote a complete book about it (Legatio ad Gaium) because he had acted as the leader of the Jewish delegation.
“Josephus does confirm the historicity of the event. But his relative neglect of it-eleven words in Josephus compared to over eleven thousand in Philo-makes us wonder whether the large scale of the pogrom as suggested by Philo was somewhat exaggerated.
“Another problem lies in the genre of Philo’s treatise. It is not just a piece of historiography. The best way to demonstrate this is to quote the final sentence of the work: ‘Thus Flaccus [the main culprit] became an indubitable proof that the Jewish people had not been deprived of the help of God.’2 So Philo has a theological message, which usually does not greatly contribute to the objectivity of history writing.”
Flaccus Persecutes the JewsVan der Horst summarizes the contents of In Flaccum: “Flaccus was appointed Roman governor of Egypt and Alexandria by the emperor Tiberius in 32 CE. In the first five years he showed exemplary ability in fulfilling his responsibilities. That began to change, however, when Tiberius was succeeded on the throne by Caligula in 37. Flaccus became depressed because he had supported the rival candidate for this succession and also had played an active role in the prosecution of Caligula’s mother, Agrippina.
“The leaders of the anti-Jewish Greeks in Alexandria then advised him to win the emperor’s favor by supporting them in their planned actions against the Jews in the city as they knew Caligula hated the Jews. Philo speaks explicitly about an endemic Jew-hatred: ‘from the cradle onward, most people in Alexandria are taught that Jews are bad people. Children are instilled with hatred of Jews.’ He may exaggerate somewhat but he would not write such a thing baselessly.
“Bit by bit Flaccus began to persecute the Jews, first by partiality as a judge in lawsuits, later by other measures. The climax came when, in the early summer of 38 CE, Herod Agrippa, the grandson of Herod the Great, visited Alexandria on his way from Rome to his new kingdom in Palestine that he had just received from his friend Caligula.
“Herod Agrippa was enthusiastically welcomed by the Jews but the Greeks reacted furiously and staged a mock ceremony, bringing a local lunatic into the gymnasium, greeting him with royal honors, and hailing him as ‘our Lord.’ Instead of punishing the instigators of this insult to a friend of the emperor, Flaccus turned a blind eye. This encouraged the Greeks to proceed to erect statues of the emperor in synagogues: an act of desecration.”
Flaccus Makes the Jews Foreigners“This was followed by Flaccus issuing a decree to the effect that Jews were from now on to be regarded as foreigners and aliens in the city. This opened the floodgates to massive plundering of Jewish homes and shops and the rounding up of the Jews in one quarter of the city, where already a great number of Jews lived, so that an overcrowded ‘ghetto’ was created where the Jews had to endure terrible conditions.
“Synagogues and homes were sacked and set on fire. Then followed a long series of acts of unchecked savagery by the Greeks when they caught Jews who strayed outside the ghetto in search of help. Jews were set upon by mobs that patrolled the edge of the ghetto. They beat up their victims or burned them to death, or bound them together and dragged them through the market square, kicking them and trampling them until their bodies were mutilated beyond recognition.
“At the end of August, on Caligula’s birthday, a large group of Jews were arrested, marched through the streets to the theater where they were beaten and forced to eat pork. If they refused, they were killed as a form of birthday celebration for the emperor. Many also died of diseases that broke out because of the atrocious conditions in the ghetto. Some weeks later a detachment of troops suddenly arrived from Rome, sent by Caligula, to arrest Flaccus. He was condemned, his property confiscated, and he was sentenced to deportation to the miserable island of Andros in the Aegean Sea.
“Modern scholarship makes widely varying estimates of the number of Jews in ancient Alexandria. Some scholars think there were fewer than fifty thousand Jews in first-century Alexandria, and others speak of more than 150,000. Philo, our only source, says the enemies had destroyed four hundred Jewish houses. We also know for sure that there were more than forty victims because Philo says that forty members of the Jewish senate, the community’s council of elders, were killed in the local theater, and adds that ‘many others’ also were killed.
“Later in Rome, Caligula came to the conclusion that the fate of his many deportees was too mild a punishment and ordered them to be executed. Flaccus was at the top of that list. When soldiers landed on Andros, Flaccus fought back with the only result that, as Philo writes: ‘his body received the same number of wounds as that of the Jews who had been unlawfully murdered by him.’ This sentence also expresses Philo’s theological message.”
Being Different and Mistaken BeliefsVan der Horst summarizes: “The ancient hatred of the Jews derived in part from their being different, as far as the interhuman side of the matter is concerned. A second, at least as important aspect is the negative views of Jewish monotheism. There was admiration for this monotheism in the more educated and philosophical circles, but elsewhere it evoked much anger because it was seen as a haughty exclusivism.
“The Jews said about the pagan gods that they were no gods at all and did not exist, while there was only one God, ours. With the Jews a nation appeared that said all others were wrong and their gods were at best demons. Greeks and Romans regarded this denial of their truths as sheer arrogance. They did not feel themselves taken seriously as believers and this created much resentment.
“Other nations that got acquainted with Greeks and Romans and saw that they had different gods from their own reacted otherwise. They said, for instance, ‘You have different names for the deities but of course your gods and ours must be the same.’ Everywhere in the ancient world people tried to find equations between their own gods and those of the Greeks or the Romans.
“For instance, the Egyptians said, ‘What we call Osiris is your god Dionysos.’ When there were differences in numbers they said something like: ‘You have one god, we have two. But it doesn’t matter.’ This approach avoided tensions.”
Parallels with Today“The fact that the Jews are monotheistic is no longer a real issue these days. Contemporary anti-Semitism by and large comes from Christians and Muslims, who consider themselves monotheists. The Jew-hatred these days stems from different sources than in antiquity.
“There is, however, another parallel with antiquity. The otherness of the Jews played a large role in their image among Greek and Roman circles. That also is the case in our own times. Anti-Semites perceive the Jews as being different, and this leads them to see them as dangerous. This imagined danger leads to hatred of the Jews.
“One horrifying aspect of the history of Jew-hatred, namely, the twenty-three centuries of anti-Semitism that we know of, is the tenacity of so many motifs such as that Jews are dangerous and enemies of humankind. These ideas are and always have been demonstrably false. They are, however, much alive up to the present day. It is apparently impossible to break through these perceptions.
“The image of the Jew as an enemy is grotesque and easily exposed as pure nonsense. Still these images are kept alive among many millions of people all over the world. That this is possible is one of the most frightening aspects of the history of Jew-hatred.”
Interviewed by Manfred Gerstenfeld
* * *
Prof. Pieter van der Horst studied classical philology and literature. In 1978 he received his PhD in theology from Utrecht University. After his studies he taught there, among other things as professor of Jewish studies. His retirement lecture in 2006 on the myth of Jewish cannibalism and the censorship by Utrecht University of a part of the lecture dealing with contemporary Muslim anti-Semitism, led to a major debate in the Dutch national media and academic world that drew international attention. Prof. Van der Horst is a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.
READ MORE:
https://jcpa.org/article/the-egyptian-beginning-of-anti-semitism’s-long-history/
REMEMBER THAT MARTIN LUTHER HATED THE CATHOLICS, THE JEWS AND THE MUSLIMS...... FOR VARIOUS REASONS.
GUS LEONISKY, CARTOONING SINCE 1951, IS A RABID ATHEIST.
READ FROM TOP.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.
jewish rights....
How the Incoming Administration Can Restore Jewish Civil Rights
The government can break the wave of anti-Semitism subsuming American college campuses. But it will take political will.
BY TAL FORTGANG
As the fall semester comes to an end, there has been only modest relief for Jewish college students in America. A series of congressional hearings throughout 2023 and 2024 led some university administrators to prevent demonstrators from taking over public spaces and the like, but institutions of higher learning remain rife with obsessive hatred of Israel. Jewish students feel threatened or targeted; many fear wearing outwardly Jewish symbols or mentioning trips to Israel lest they be ostracized as “Zionists.” Israeli students and faculty are especially likely to be harassed. The state of the campus has led many to despair.
But despair is not warranted. There is in fact a lot that can be done with little more than a change in approach and by making more effective arguments. While the underlying problems that led universities to become hubs for anti-Semitism are complex and longstanding—and may take generations to fix—the federal government already has the requisite legal means to crack down on the ongoing abuses of Jewish students. It can make clear to university administrations that they will be held responsible for allowing the sort of eliminationist anti-Israel climate that has persisted on too many campuses. It can punish institutions that incentivize or ignore anti-Jewish discrimination, including with the radical step of suspending federal funds. Even admissions policies that allow significant numbers of Hamas-sympathizers into universities can come under scrutiny. A range of new policies, if enacted, would strengthen these existing legal tools further. All it will take is political will—and for Jews to make explicit what it is they want, and why that political will is due.
https://mosaicmagazine.com/essay/politics-current-affairs/2024/12/how-the-incoming-administration-can-restore-jewish-civil-rights/
THE FIRST THING THE JEWISH "RIGHTS" LOBBY HAS TO DO IS TO PREVENT NETANYAHU BEHAVING LIKE A LITTLE GENOCIDAL HITLER, STOP HIM FROM GRABBING PALESTINIAN AND SYRIAN LANDS AND PLACE HIM IN PRISON WHERE HE BELONGS FOR THE REST OF HIS LIFE.
READ FROM TOP.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.
athena wilcox.....
Earlier this month, the Sydney Morning Herald published a cartoon by the irrepressible Cathy Wilcox. I gazed at the image for a long time. My first thought was that she’ll pay a price for this, and so might the Herald. And, true to form, there was indeed a strong reaction in some quarters.
The cartoon depicted what looks like Athena, the Greek Goddess of justice holding a set of balanced scales next to the diminutive figure of Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. He’s looking askance, with a thumb pointing dismissively at Athena. His utterance? “Antisemitism”.
The obvious inference is that any criticism of Israel’s actions in respect of Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon and so forth is, in the view of Netanyahu and his supporters, infused with a deep hatred of Jews. While most reasonable people would dismiss such nonsense, this crude correlation remains integral to Israel’s global marketing campaign, the main aim of which is to deflect criticism, push the self-defence narrative, and keep the money and armaments rolling in. It has another purpose: to gain the high moral ground and legitimate the continuing slaughter of countless innocents.
The accusation of antisemitism is the rhetorical equivalent of the Glasgow-kiss: short, sharp and effective. It terrifies some critics of Israel, thus achieving its strategic purpose by keeping them quiet. Reductivist notions of antisemitism have also been adopted by morally conflicted nations, most notably, the US, as well as by organisations like the International Holocaust Remembrance Association.
Astonishingly, a number of Australian universities have accepted the Association’s view that criticism of Israel = antisemitism, fearful perhaps of the consequences of not doing so. In institutions supposedly dedicated to critical thought and of holding truth to power, there can be no more egregious example of anti-intellectualism.
But this is the point of Wilcox’s artwork: it highlights how the smear of antisemitism plays a key strategic role in silencing criticism of Israel. There’s nothing new about this. It’s been going on for years, promoting Israel’s longstanding efforts to manufacture a narrative to justify its ongoing illegal and murderous actions against the Palestinians.
All of which brings me to the arrest warrants issued in late November by the International Criminal Court in respect of Netanyahu and former defence minister, Yoav Gallant. The warrants state that both Netanyahu and Gallant are: “…responsible for the war crimes of starvation as a method of warfare and of intentionally directing an attack against the civilian population; and the crimes against humanity of murder, persecution, and other inhumane acts from at least 8 October 2023 until at least 20 May 2024”.
Given various public statements by both of the accused, the prima facie case against them is strong. Netanyahu’s first response was to describe the charges and the ICC as “antisemitic”. Predictably, despite all the chatter about the rule of law, international law, etc, a gaggle of countries led by the US, have opposed the warrants. More principled nations have remained steadfast in their support of the ICC. As journalist Jonathan Cook notes, this is a decisive moment for the ICC as it seeks to hold the line on legal principle, while withstanding the onslaught against it.
However much Israel’s political leaders might huff and puff in response to numerous reports about Israel’s human rights abuses – Amnesty International’s ‘You Feel Like You Are Subhuman’: Israel’s Genocide Against Palestinians in Gazaprovides the latest salvo – they cannot avoid the historical reckoning that is now taking place. Nor can they easily escape comparisons with murderous regimes that have sought to morally justify their actions against civilian populations.
Predictably, the comparison drawn between Gaza and the liquidation of Jews in Poland during World War Two is greeted with outrage. Last year, when Jewish Russian-American writer Masha Gessen wrote an article on this matter in the New Yorker, they were accused, among other things, of gross antisemitism. The Hannah Arendt prize for Political Thought awarded to them by Heinrich Holl Foundation and government of Bremen was abruptly withdrawn, then reinstated. Gessen argued that the holocaust, horrific in its nature and scale, should not be viewed in isolation from other atrocities that have occurred in many parts of the world, and that despite differences, justice demands that we name actions for what they are. Attempts at moral neutralisation must be exposed.
In the case of Warsaw and other Jewish ghettoes during WW2, the rationale was that walled confinement was necessary to protect Jews and others from contracting and spreading disease. In respect of Gaza, described by Ilan Pappe as the “biggest prison on earth”, the confinement of millions of people has been justified in terms of terrorism prevention. “Both claims”, Gessen says, “propose that an occupying authority can choose to isolate, immiserate — and now, mortally endanger — an entire population of people in the name of protecting its own.”
Gessen further asserts that. “If we take the promise of never again, seriously, we once again have to constantly be asking ourselves, are we laying the foundations for the mass murder of millions of people? Are we employing or as part of the world employing the same kinds of tactics that were employed by the Nazis? I think there’s every reason to say that that is exactly what’s happening.”
It is instructive in this regard to read the infamous Stroop Report, written by SS General Jurgen Stroop in the wake of the destruction of the Jewish ghetto in 1943. Stroop’s cold-heartedness is evident throughout, describing the murder of “Jews and bandits” in the most callous and matter-of fact terms – as if this were just another military campaign. The report is punctuated throughout with references to the discipline and heroism of the murderous forces under Stroop’s command: “The longer the resistance lasted”, he reflected, “the tougher the men of the Waffen SS, Police, and Wehrmacht became; they fulfilled their duty indefatigably in faithful comradeship and stood together as models and examples of soldiers.” Of the Waffen SS, Stroop writes: “…high credit should be given for the pluck, courage, and devotion to duty which they showed”, while the Polish police who assisted in the slaughter demonstrated a “dashing spirit”.
Such descriptions jar against the horrifying realties of the crimes being committed by the occupying forces. There is no hint of moral reflection in the report; no explicit acknowledgement of how those in the “Jewish residential district” had been systematically humiliated, beaten, impoverished and starved.
When we view the slaughter of innocents in Gaza and elsewhere it’s clear that the lessons of the past have not been learnt. Gessen is right. Gaza is a depressing reminder of how one nation’s just cause is another’s genocide. If ever we needed reminding of how the Israeli leadership views Palestinians, consider this remark by Benjamin Netanyahu in response to Australia’s backing of a call for Palestinian statehood: “It’s a shame that the current Australian government wants to award these savages with a state.”
https://johnmenadue.com/history-repeats-in-the-most-chilling-of-ways/
READ FROM TOP.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.
he knew.....
by Tyler
If the late Muammar Gaddafi were to return from his grave, he would immediately recognize the new Libya, although he had never seen it. He predicted almost everything that is happening today in his country as well as in the rest of the world.
«After Palestine, it will be Lebanon, Syria, Egypt… then the Maghreb. The Zionist entity recognizes neither embassies nor friends. Its dream is the greater Israel" ~ Gaddafi – mid 90s
https://en.reseauinternational.net/kadhafi-dans-les-annees-90-apres-la-palestine-ca-sera-le-liban-la-syrie-legypte-puis-le-maghreb/
READ FROM TOP.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.