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Why is American Jewish support for Israel more fanatical than even anti-Arab
sentiment among Israelis? Edward Said explains
A few weeks ago, a vociferous pro-Israel demonstration was held in Washington at roughly the same moment that the siege of Jenin was taking
place. All of the speakers were prominent public figures, including several
senators, leaders of major Jewish organisations, and other celebrities, each
of whom expressed unfailing solidarity with everything Israel was doing. The
administration was represented by Paul Wolfowitz, number two at the Department of
Defence, an extreme right-wing hawk who has been speaking about "ending" countries like Iraq ever since last September. Also known as
a rigorous hard- line supporter of Israel, in his speech he did what everyone else did -- celebrated Israel and expressed total unconditional
support for it -- but unexpectedly referred in passing to "the sufferings of
the Palestinians." Because of that phrase, he was booed so loudly and so
long that he was unable to continue his speech, leaving the platform in a
kind of disgrace.
The moral of this incident is that public American Jewish support for Israel
today simply does not tolerate any allowance for the existence of an actual
Palestinian people, except in the context of terrorism, violence, evil and
fanaticism. Moreover, this refusal to see, much less hear anything about,
the existence of "another side" far exceeds the fanaticism of anti-Arab sentiment among Israelis, who are of course on the front line of the
struggle in Palestine. To judge by the recent antiwar demonstration of 60,000 people in Tel Aviv, the increasing number of military reservists who
refuse service in the occupied territories, the sustained protest of (admitted only a few) intellectuals and groups, and some of the polls that
show a majority of Israelis willing to withdraw in return for peace with the
Palestinians, there is at least a dynamic of political activity among Israeli Jews. But not so in the United States.
Two weeks ago the weekly magazine New York, which has a circulation of about
a million copies, ran a dossier entitled "Crisis for American Jews," the
theme being that "in New York, as in Israel, [it is] an issue of survival."
I won't try to summarise the main points of this extraordinary claim except
to say that it painted such a picture of anguish about "what is most precious in my life, the state of Israel," according to one of the prominent
New Yorkers quoted in the magazine, that you would think that the existence
of this most prosperous and powerful of all minorities in the United States
was actually being threatened. One of the other people quoted even went as
far as to suggest that American Jews are on the brink of a second holocaust.
Certainly, as the author of one of the articles said, most American Jews
support what Israel did on the West Bank, enthusiastically; one American Jew
said, for instance, that his son is now in the Israeli army and that he is
"armed, dangerous and killing as many Palestinians as possible."
Guilt at being well-off in America plays a role in this kind of delusional
thinking, but mostly it is the result of an extraordinary self-isolation in
fantasy and myth that comes from education and unreflective nationalism of a
kind unique in the world. Ever since the Intifada broke out almost two years
ago, the American media and the major Jewish organisations have been running
all kinds of attacks on Islamic education in the Arab world, Pakistan and
even in the US. These have accused Islamic authorities, as well as Arafat's
Palestinian Authority, of teaching youngsters hatred of America and Israel,
the virtues of suicide bombing, unlimited praise for jihad. Little has been
said, however, of the results of what American Jews have been taught about
the conflict in Palestine: that it was given to Jews by God, that it was
empty, that it was liberated from Britain, that the natives ran away because
their leaders told them to, that in effect the Palestinians don't exist except
recently as terrorists, that all Arabs are anti-Semitic and want to kill Jews.
Nowhere in all this incitement to hatred does the reality of a Palestinian
people exist, and more to the point, there is no connection made between
Palestinian animosity and enmity towards Israel and what Israel has been
doing to Palestinians since 1948. It's as if an entire history of dispossession, the destruction of a
society, the 35 year old occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, to say nothing of massacres, bombardments,
expulsions, land expropriations, killings, sieges, humiliations, years of
collective punishment and assassinations that have gone on for decades were
as nothing, since Israel has been victimised by Palestinian rage, hostility
and gratuitous anti-semitism. It simply does not occur to most American supporters of Israel to see Israel as the actual author of specific actions
done in the name of the Jewish people by the Jewish state, and to connect in
consequence those actions to Palestinian feelings of anger and revenge.
The problem at bottom is that as human beings the Palestinians do not exist,
that is, as human beings with history, traditions, society, sufferings and
ambitions like all other people. Why this should be so for most but by no
means all American Jewish supporters of Israel is something worth looking
into. It goes back to the knowledge that there was an indigenous people in
Palestine -- all the Zionist leaders knew it and spoke about it -- but the
fact as a fact that might prevent colonisation could never be admitted. Hence the collective Zionist practice of either denying the fact or, more
specially in the US where the realities are not so available for actual verification, lying about it by producing a counter-reality. For decades it
has been decreed to schoolchildren there were no Palestinians when the Zionist pioneers arrived and so those miscellaneous people who throw stones
and fight occupation are simply a collection of terrorists who deserve killing.
Palestinians, in short, do not deserve anything like a narrative or collective actuality, and so they must be transmuted and dissolved into
essentially negative images. This is entirely the result of a distorted education, doled out to millions of youngsters who grow up without any
awareness at all that the Palestinian people have been totally dehumanised
to serve a political- ideological end, namely to keep support high for Israel.
What is so astonishing is that notions of co- existence between peoples play
no part in this kind of distortion. Whereas American Jews want to be recognised as Jews and Americans in America, they are unwilling to accord a
similar status as Arabs and Palestinians to another people that has been
oppressed by Israel since the beginning.
Only if one were to live in the US for years would one be aware of the depth
of the problem which far transcends ordinary politics. The intellectual suppression of the Palestinians that has occurred because of Zionist
education has produced an unreflecting, dangerously skewed sense of reality
in which whatever Israel does it does as a victim: according to the various
articles I have mentioned above, American Jews in crisis by extension therefore feel the same thing as the most
right-wing of Israeli Jews, that they are at risk and their survival is at stake. This has nothing to do with
reality obviously enough, but rather with a kind of hallucinatory state that
overrides history and facts with a supremely unthinking narcissism. A recent
defence of what Wolfowitz said in his speech didn't even refer to the Palestinians he was referring to, but defended President Bush's Middle East
policy.
This is de-humanisation on a vast scale, and it is made even worse, one has
to say, by the suicide bombings that have so disfigured and debased the Palestinian
struggle. All liberation movements in history have affirmed that their struggle is about life, not about death. Why should ours be an
exception? The sooner we educate our Zionist enemies and show that our resistance offers co-existence and peace, the less likely will they be able
to kill us at will, and never refer to us except as terrorists. I am not
saying that Sharon and Netanyahu can be changed. I am saying that there is a
Palestinian, yes a Palestinian constituency, as well as an Israeli and American one that needs to be reminded by strategy and tactics that force of
arms and tanks and human bombs and bulldozers are not a solution, but only
create more delusion and distortion, on both sides.
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