Below is an essay which, after some editing, was published as a guest opinion in the Boulder Weekly here.
Tom
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As I write this I am having trouble staying on top of what is
happening at this or that university campus- it’s wonderful that so much
protesting is going on. Although, as I’ll explain below, I am concerned
about the likely fact that there is at least SOME anti-Semitism among
American progressives supporting the Palestinians, I recently decided
that it is probably a smaller problem than what I thought most of the
last seven months. What prompts me to say that? A 4/23/24 video on CNN’s
web-site (not some far-left web-site) about how the Columbia encampment
included a Passover meal.
I believe that there IS a substantial amount of anti-Semitism in
the sense that these activists are probably not condemning Oct. 7th. I
believe most American progressives supporting the Palestinians don’t
understand that intentionally killing civilians in war is wrong. I
believe that they also don’t understand that Hamas is not a progressive
organization. The military wing of Hamas are religiously fundamentalist
socially conservative mass murderers.
On the other hand, so many Americans, including a dwindling
percentage of the Democratic Party, just don’t understand what the
Palestinians have gone through- as horrible and unjustified as it was,
Oct. 7th did not happen in a vacuum. The Palestinians did experience, to
various degrees depending on what part of Israel/Palestine they live
in, some pretty serious injustice for decades BEFORE Oct. 7th. A very
good source about that is the blog of an expert on the Middle-East who
has written negatively about Oct. 7th but generally supports the
Palestinians. His name is Juan Cole and his blog is at- https://www.juancole.com/ . If you want something less partisan, there’s an online Israeli newspaper called The Times of Israel, at- https://www.timesofisrael.com/ .
The problem of anti-Semitism among progressives might be greatly
exaggerated by allies of Israel, but it is a problem. And I believe that
Oct. 7th was anti-Semitic. You had an organization like Hamas targeting
only Jews and mostly Jewish civilians. I am not sure what has happened
recently in the investigation of the alleged use of rape as a weapon of
war on Oct. 7th, but I read a handful of things in the last several
months, from non-Zionist sources, making me think that it happened (see
“UN: 'Convincing information' sexual violence committed against hostages
in Gaza” BBC 3/52024). Even without this I am comfortable calling Hamas
anti-Semitic, but if there was organized rape of Jewish women, that
says something about the acute HATE that Hamas had for their victims.
I think that a lot of progressive supporters of the Palestinians
need to seriously consider that Hamas doesn’t deserve their support and
they need to take the threat of anti-Semitism more seriously. They need
to understand that it will be easier to refute accusations of
anti-Semitism if they DO condemn Oct. 7th. I think that American
supporters of Israel (although the Jewish zionists are a small part of
the Israel lobby, this is aimed more at them than at the MUCH larger
population of conservative Christian zionists (who are less likely to
care about justice)) need to think more critically about Israel and
consider that it is impossible for a state to be based on religion and
ethnicity and to simultaneously be democratic. There is a lot of
material on my blog about these issues, at- https://theblackandthegreen3.blogspot.com/ .
I am concluding with a quote from the hard-working opponents of
organized hate, right-wing politics and economic injustice at the
Southern Poverty Law Center. In one of the articles in the Fall 2008
issue of their publication, they wrote the following (it’s a statement
by the author of that article):
“College campuses are particularly susceptible to anti-Semitism
that originates in certain sectors of the far left. This source of
anti-Jewish sentiment often begins with condemnation of Israeli policies
and devolves into derogatory statements about all Jewish people. Although
criticism of Israel does not typically amount to anti-Semitism — and
many critics of the Jewish state are unfairly accused of bigotry — in
some cases those who denounce Israel also cross the line into
denigration of Jews as a group.” (My emphasis)
The most important part is the last sentence. Both opponents and supporters of Israel need to think about that seriously.
I could have sworn I read this a while ago. I'm grateful to have someone in my life who cares about both sides living in peace (correct me if I am wrong, as I read this in September)
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