HARRETZ (2016): American Jewish Establishment Stifles Free Speech to Silence Zionism’s Critics
Peter Beinart / HARRETZ
[Editor’s note: As Cynthia McKinney explained to Marzieh Hasmhimi on Press TV in 2011 (the video of which has been suppressed), new members of Congress are asked to sign a pledge to put the interests of Israel ahead of those of the United States, where those who decline find themselvesconfronted with a well-financed alternative candidate next time around or that their district has been redrawn and they no longer have a seat. She was able to overcome those obstacles, but even as notable a member as Dennis Kuchinich was not. When two distinguished social scientists from Harvard and the University of Chicago published their copiously documented analysis of the enormous influence exercised by Israel over the US government, The Israel Lobby (2008), they, like Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) today, were savagely attacked. As even Noam Chomsky recently observed in relation to the Mueller Investigation, a foreign nation does attempt to influence the outcome of our elections: it isn’t Russia, but Israel.]
With every passing year, the American Jewish establishment poses a greater threat to free speech in the United States.
The reason is simple. With every passing year,
Israeli control of the West Bank grows more permanent. And so, with
every passing year, more American progressives question Zionism.
After all, if Jewish statehood permanently
condemns millions of West Bank Palestinians to live as non-citizens,
under military law, without free movement or the right to vote for the
government that controls their lives, it’s hardly surprising that
Americans who loathe discrimination and cherish equality would grow
uncomfortable with the concept.
And the more those Americans voice this
discomfort, the more establishment American Jewish organizations work to
classify anti-Zionism as anti-Semitism, punishable by law.
The latest example is The Anti-Semitism Awareness Act,
which the Senate passed unanimously on December 2. The Act – pushed by
AIPAC, the Anti-Defamation League and the Jewish Federations of America
– instructs the Department of Education’s Civil Rights office to follow “the definition of anti-Semitism set forth by the Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat anti-Semitism of the Department of State in the Fact Sheet issued on June 8, 2010.”
Sounds innocuous enough. Until you look at what the Fact Sheet says. Following the definition hatched by Soviet dissident turned Israeli right-winger Natan Sharansky, the Fact Sheet defines anti-Semitism as, among other things, “Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, and denying Israel the right to exist.”
This is nuts. Across the world, numerous peoples
desire “self-determination.” Kurds have been seeking their own state
since the late nineteenth century, roughly the same period when Jews
hatched Zionism.
So have Basques. Sikhs have been agitating for
their own country, in Punjab, since India’s creation. The Igbos of
eastern Nigeria actually created one, Biafra, for three years between
1967 and 1970.
There are reasonable arguments in favor of these
efforts at self-determination. There are also reasonable arguments in
favor of requiring Kurds, Basques, Sikhs and Igbo to live in
multi-ethnic countries based upon a national identity that supersedes
their own.
Either way, bigotry has nothing to do with it. If
opposing a people’s desire for self-determination makes you bigoted
against that group, then a lot of American Jewish leaders should report
themselves to the Department of Education’s Civil Rights office right
now.
After all, Palestinians want their own state.
Many American Jewish leaders oppose it. Why aren’t those leaders bigots
under the very principle they’re trying to write into law?
The truth is that political Zionism – the belief
that Jews enjoy the greatest safety and self-expression in their own
state – has always been controversial even among Jews. In the early
twentieth century, many Orthodox Jews called Zionism a violation of
Jewish law.
Many American Reform Jews argued that Jews were a
faith, not a people, and thus had no homeland other than the United
States. Other prominent Jewish thinkers – including Judah Magnes, who
founded Hebrew University,
Henrietta Szold, who founded Hadassah and the
philosophers Hannah Arendt and Martin Buber – argued that a Jewish state
would dispossess Palestinians and bring war. They argued for a
binational state instead. That didn’t make them anti-Semites.
As the twentieth century progressed, these
arguments against Zionism faded. The Holocaust buttressed the case for a
country of Jewish refuge. Israel became an established fact, and in
many ways an extraordinary success.
Then, in 1993, PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat
declared that “The PLO recognizes the right of the State of Israel to
exist in peace and security.” In 2002, the Arab League offered to “sign a
peace agreement with Israel” if it returned to the 1967 lines and found
a “just” and “agreed upon” solution to the Palestinian refugees.
Once even Palestinian and Arab leaders publicly
declared that they could accept a Jewish state alongside a Palestinian
one, the historic debate over Zionism dwindled.
It is returning in the twenty-first century
because a Palestinian state was never born. (A failure for which both
sides deserve blame). That failure, combined with decades of Israeli
settlement growth, has convinced many progressives that a Palestinian
state is now impossible.
Thus, they argue, the only way West Bank
Palestinians can win their rights is in one state – including the West
Bank, the Gaza Strip and Israel proper – that does not privilege Jews.
This is not my view. Despite everything, I still
consider the two state solution more realistic than the binational
alternative. But you don’t have to be an anti-Semite to disagree.
Anti-Zionism never died; there have always been
people – Jewish and non-Jewish – who oppose any kind of Jewish state
within any borders. But anti-Zionism is growing because deepening
Israeli control of the West Bank makes it harder to reconcile Zionism
with basic Palestinian human rights.
Faced with the growing number of Americans who
deny that Zionism is compatible with liberal democracy, establishment
American Jewish groups could try to make Zionism more compatible with
liberal democracy. They could publicly challenge Israel’s undemocratic
occupation of the West Bank. But that would require confronting Benjamin
Netanyahu, and many of their own donors.
So they’ve chosen an easier path: get the
Department of Education to define anti-Zionism as anti-Semitism and thus
threaten the campus activists who are challenging Jewish statehood with
legal sanction. The Senate bill claims that “Nothing in this actshall
be construed to diminish or infringe upon any right protected by the
First Amendment.”
But that’s exactly what the bill does. In the words of Michael Macleod-Ball, chief of staff of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Washington, DC legislative office,
it “opens the door to considering anti-Israel political statements and
activities as possible grounds for civil rights investigations.”
It’s an old story: When people in power fear a
debate, they try to criminalize it. It won’t work. If Zionism means
permanent control of millions of Palestinians who lack basic rights,
Zionists will gradually lose the contest of ideas in the United States.
And the American Jewish establishment – which chose silencing Zionism’s
opponents over fighting for a Zionism they could honestly defend – will
bear some of the blame.
Peter Beinart
Haaretz Columnist
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