Criticising
Israel´s mistakes is acceptable. But questioning whether Israel
is a Jewish state with a racist apartheid system that renders non-Jews
second rate citizens - that is not acceptable. It makes little difference
whether the criticism is based on facts. Few people who cannot claim
Jewish descent would dare to criticize publicly. They are afraid of
being accused of "anti-semitism".
There is much talk of disarming countries with nuclear weapons. Not
the US and its allies, but the so-called 'rogue states', especially
Iran, which doesn´t yet have any weapons. Israel is hardly ever
mentioned as a nuclear power although it has been for a long time.
In spite of its advanced plans to bomb Iran, Israel is not seen as
a threat to the surrounding world. The media regularly criticizes
severely various religions, especially Islam, but never Judaism. Catholic
pressure through lobbying, or the Pope´s speeches on political
issues are discussed and criticized. The fight in South Africa against
the Boers involved a whole world. Not because they were a "race"
with undesirable characteristics, but because they were the social
group who in their own interests formed and administrated a racist
apartheid system. The same sort of criticism was aimed at the followers
of Cecil Rhodes in Rhodesia.
All types of social, ethnic and religious groups defend their own
special interests. It is considered quite legitimate for their spokesmen
to do their best to promote these interests; just as it is quite legitimate
to criticize the same. But the moment Jewish spokesmen and their organisations
are criticised, the legitimacy vanishes into thin air. The mention
of "Jewish power" makes most people´s blood run cold,
but it is quite alright to discuss "gypsy power" or rather
the lack of it. "Jewishness" has become taboo. This applies
particularly to the combination of "Jewish" and of "power"
. All kinds of power can be examined and discussed, questioned or
rejected - but not the Jewish kind which is generally presented as
non-existent.
There is growing anxiety in the Palestinian movement in Sweden about
using "Jewish" as a prefix to the settlements, the state
of Israel or the apartheid system, albeit the use is quite correct.
The settlements for example are "Jewish settlements" simply
because only Jews are allowed to live there. They are not Israeli
because non-Jewish citizens are forbidden access to them. Neither
are they Zionist as many Zionists are not Jews. It has now got to
the stage where a leading spokesmen for the Palestinians in Sweden
denies that Jews and Palestinians have disagreements, despite the
law giving Jews all over the world the right to return to Israel,
thus making them potential enemies of the Palestinians. Having a Jewish
mother gives the right to live in the country taken from the Palestinians.
One would be hard put to find a more fundamental disagreement. The
issue of blood-relationship renders it, moreover, racist.
A reluctance to discuss Judaism´s significance for Zionism in
Israel of today makes it impossible to understand why Israel was not
content with fifty per cent, later eighty per cent, of Palestine.
Or why a social democratic prime minister ordered his soldiers to
break the bones of children throwing stones? And how can one understand
why Jews in Jerusalem throw their garbage onto the roads and back
yards of their Palestinian neighbours, spit at them, or why masked
Jewish settlers during the "cease fire" launched pogroms
on unarmed Palestinian farmers, women and children? Or why the Israeli
"peace movement" and "left" do not question the
Jewish apartheid system? Just and lasting peace can never be achieved
without its transformation. Few people think that all this is a result
of the Jews being an "evil race". But if it cannot be explained
by any other means, the few risk becoming too many. A racially-based
hate of Jews is helped along by the label of "anti-semitism"
pasted on nearly all criticism of Israel, not to mention criticism
of Judaism.
Zionism, through its Jewish organisations, is the dominant interpretation
of Judaism today. This is a renaissance of national Judaism of the
Middle Ages and the judicial system Halakha with its extreme animosity
towards non-jews who were seen rather as subhuman. This revival is
seen as very beneficial by most Jewish organisations worldwide. They
demand of their members positive commitment to the state of Israel.
This is the context in which the behaviour mentioned above can be
understood. Most Jews in the diaspora are, however, "happily"
unaware of this and are being used by their Zionist leaders and rabbis.
Politics and religion have merged in the state of Israel today. A
person speaking out for a secular democracy to replace the Jewish
state, is accused of, in fact, wanting to "drive the Jews into
the sea". Most Jews today identify themselves not with Israel
but with Israel as a Jewish state. This creates a fundamental contradiction
for many Jews: supporting the Jewish apartheid state while promoting
democracy in the countries where they actually live. Denying or whitewashing
Israel´s politics, becomes a way of keeping one´s identity
intact. Violent, groundless attacks with "anti-semitism"
as a weapon is the method used against any attempt to lay bare this
contradiction. A well known example is how Israel´s former ambassador
to Sweden vandalised the art installation Snow White last year.
The risk of being labelled "anti-semitic" if you are not
a Jew or of "self-hatred" if you are, creates self-censorship
among those who are critical of Israel´s policies or dislike
the successful lobbying carried out by Jewish and Christian Zionists,
influencing US foreign policy. The so- called Friends of Israel, most
of them spokesmen for Jewish organisations, have taken it upon themselves
to be the foremost interpreters of the term "anti-semitism".
Few question this role as they run the risk of being tainted themselves
if they do. The term "anti-semitism" is taking on new nuances
all the time. Of late the slightest implication, as in "almost
anti-semitic" or an "anti-semitic point of interest"
has been enough to invoke self-censorship. The mention of these circumstances
is often felt to be "dangerous" as it could lead to the
growth of "anti-semitism". All this in a western world where
islamophobia is a considerably greater problem.
Jews are rightly proud of their success in almost all corners of society.
In art and science and, not least, the media and politics. Israeli
newspapers tell of the successful "likudification" of the
Bush administration and delight in the fact that the Israeli minister
for the diaspora is Bush´s new favourite author and pet in the
White House. Russian oligarchs with Israeli citizenship take breakfast
there. There is a culture of boasting about this among Jews. But should
a critic of Israel point to these exact same circumstances, he would
immediately be accused of spreading "anti-semite theories of
conspiracy" and thus be barred from any further discussion.
The Jews have for many years had total entrepreneurship of "God´s
chosen People" with a "biblical right" to Palestine.
Zionism has been politically successful in reducing the Holocaust
to Nazi war crimes against Jews. By presenting themselves as the major
(the only?) victims in the history of humanity they expect to claim
special moral rights. The method is used favourably to justify and
cover up the genocide of the Palestinians. "Anti-semitism"
is being used to stop criticism of Israel´s way onwards to achieve
the Zionist goal of a Jewish state in the whole of Palestine. Before
this goal can be realised, "peace" must be reached with
the creation of a few Palestinian reservations on ten per cent of
what was originally Palestine, walled-in and gradually wasting away.
We are almost there now.
*****
Lasse Wilhelmson was born in 1941 in Sweden. Part of Wilhelmson's
family fled to Sweden from the Czar's pogroms during the 1880s. Some
members of the family immigrated further to America and Palestine.
Wilhelmson lived in Israel for several years during the early 1960s.
He also published the article "Israel Must Choose the Path of
Democracy" the 16th of September 2003 and "More Than Traditional
Colonialism and Apartheid" the Feb. 16, 2004 in The Palestine
Chronicle. Today he considers himself to be a Swede as well as an
atheist, and all his family is assimilated. He does not accept being
defined as a "religious Jew" just because his mother was
Jewish.