Fisking Wallinets


By Advis3r
August 6, 2011
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Mr Wallinets quotes an article by the deplorable David Hearst which he claims Israel lovers will have trouble with because of the "truth" Hearst writes. However Hearst writes far from the truth and the depths of his hatred for the Jewish State leave one somewhat breathless.

This is cross posted at Anne’s Opinions {http://anneinpt.wordpress.com/}

With respect to Israel, the EU Fundamental Rights Agency includes the following in their working definition of anti-Semitism:

“Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g., by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.”

Every time you think the Guardian has reached bottom, it digs and finds an even lower depth of hatred towards Israel. The glee with which their writers speculate about the possible demise of Israel, sorry, Zionism, is completely nauseating. It is a mystery to me that a newspaper which claims to be liberal and pro-democracy could so ardently wish for the destruction of a liberal democratic state and find a plethora of writers to promote their desire.

The article which has so shocked me today is by the execrable David Hearst: “Could Arab staying power ultimately defeat Zionism?”.

By his title alone Hearst displays his ignorance about the history and meaning of Zionism and simply conflates it with the existence of Israel. Zionism is not the State of Israel. Zionism is the political national movement of the Jewish people aspiring to have a homeland of their own, an aspiration that has thank G-d been fulfilled and exists as the State of Israel.

Hearst begins his article with words of praise for “sumud” – the word the Palestinians use for steadfastness, staying put. However he lets his imagination bias run away with him when he uses obfuscation and outright lies instead of just stating the facts.

Staying put against overwhelming odds is regarded as a victory. But it is more than just a word. It’s the look in Rifqua al-Kurd’s eyes as she fights eviction in Sheikh Jarrah, East Jerusalem. She lives out of boxes, because when the police throw her out and the settlers move in she doesn’t want the clothes thrown into the street.

No mention of the fact that whenever Palestinians are evicted from Sheikh Jarrah, it is not done at the whim of those eeevil settlers, but only when and if Israel’s Supreme Court has ruled that the houses in question legally belong to the Jews, and that the Palestinians have effectively been squatting illegally.

Sumud sums up the attitude of the Bedouin struggling to stay in 45 unrecognised villages in the Negev, without a supply of water, electricity or schools. Once the entire Negev was theirs, now only 6% is. Israel wants to put the Bedouin in townships while establishing 130 Jewish villages and agricultural settlements on the land. Talab al-Sana, their MP, says: “They want Jews to be Bedouin and Bedouin to be Ashkenaz [European Jews].”

Again, lies and obfuscation. The Negev was part of Israel since partition in 1947. The Bedouin by definition are nomads and possess no land at all. Under Israeli rule the Bedouin have benefited hugely. To ignore the rights and benefits granted to the Bedouin is breathtaking in its dishonesty.

Sumud crops up in some unexpected places – not only East Jerusalem, the West Bank or Gaza, but in Jaffa, Lod, and in Arab communities all over Israel among people who have nominally the same rights as any other citizen.

So now we come to the real aim of Hearst and his Palestinian followers. By stating that they wish to remain “steadfast” in towns like Jaffa, Lod and other Israeli Arab towns, towns that by any definition and border-drawing are and will always be part of the State of Israel, they are in essence advocating the Palestinian takeover of these towns and the rejection of Israeli ownership of them. This is another way of advocating the “one-state solution”, i.e. the destruction of Israel as the Jewish homeland.

If Israel ends its occupation of the West Bank, and allows it to join with Gaza, the result could be two states – a Palestinian one alongside an Israeli one. But if you accompany that with a civil rights movement inside Israel, the goal could be very different – a secular, democratic state “for all its citizens”, where Jew, Christian and Muslim are equal. A one-state solution in which Jewish citizens lose an inbuilt majority. The end of Zionism, no less.

Here Hearst specifically confirms my words above. But once again he conflates “Zionism” with the State of Israel. He refuses to see that the destruction (G-d forbid) of the State of Israel will not end Zionism. It never ended for the 2,000 years of our Exile and it will not end with the wishes of an antisemitic journalist and his Arab heroes.

Hearst goes on to quote from the discredited anti-Israel “historian” Ilan Pappé:

Trying to be “good Arabs” in Jewish eyes was tantamount to collaboration in Arab ones. But much has changed.

Pappé says: “The people in the West Bank understood what the minorities inside Israel felt like, after years of deriding them for being lesser Palestinians, and that when the main impulse of the power that controls everything in your daily life is expulsionist, staying put is quite an achievement.”

Just the fact that he quotes from Pappé reveals his well-known bias, but the quote itself exposes Pappé’s own prejudice. Calling Israeli actions “expulsionist” is not only false, but quite hilarious when he himself brings the population figures of Israel’s Arab population:

More than 100,000 Arabs stayed on after 1948 and today number more than 1.5 million, roughly a fifth of the population of Israel.

Next in line for Hearst is another inciting “historian”

Sami Abu Shehadeh: …doing his doctoral thesis on Jaffa as the major Arab cultural and economic centre during the mandate period. It had its own Arabic press, eight cinemas, five hospitals and about 120,000 people. After the 1948 war, 3,900 were left.

It is standard practice for historians at Tel Aviv University to explain the time frame of their research and why it ends when it does. Shehadeh stopped his in 1948 because that was when Jaffa stopped existing as a city. “

I’m sure the present day residents of Jaffa, both Arabs and Jewish Israelis, will find that rather puzzling.

The discrimination suffered by his community is extensively documented. Half live below the poverty line, 48% can not build a house for the next 15 years because there no permits or plans. Only 19% of Arab women with Israeli citizenship are in a job, compared with 65% of Jewish women.

Shehadeh is being - surprise – dishonest here. Who is it that is preventing Arab women from working? Is it Israeli discrimination or the backward Arab culture that wants its women to stay at home?

But the terrain of their changing identity and allegiance is not so well mapped. Israel demands expressions of loyalty from them. Loyalty to what, they ask. A democracy or a supremacist state?

The antisemitism displayed in this one last sentence is the real kicker. Israel, a homeland for the Jews, with a sizable non-Jewish minority, including Arab citizens who make up 20% of the total population – and whose leaders [in the Knesset] often declare the destruction of Zionism as their ultimate goal, and yet still possess full legal, political and property rights with full access to an (independent) judiciary. This is a supremacist state?

Methinks the dishonourable professors and their journalist advocate protest too much.

As Cif-Watch points out:

However, Hearst saves his the most appalling, and chilling, passage for last.

“But the terrain of their changing identity and allegiance is not so well mapped. Israel demands expressions of loyalty from them [Arab citizens of Israel]. Loyality to what, they ask. A democracy or a supremacist state?

As Adam Holland pointed out recently:

“The phrase “Jewish supremacism” was coined by David Duke to counter his being labeled a white supremacist. Duke came up with the term in writing (with editorial assistance from David Irving) a book called “My Awakening”, which described Duke’s “Aryan vision for America”.

Joel Kovel joins a chorus of anti-Semites and radical Islamists whose voice grows louder and louder in their unshakable belief that “the world would be a far better place without Zionism”,

And, increasingly prevalent are ‘respectable” commentators like Hearst who, at the very least, seem to view such patently malevolent aims as somehow consistent with the values of peace and justice.

Hearst’s essay at Comment is Free is a disturbing example of the Guardian’s increasing identification with the political aspirations of those not content anymore with the mere delegitimization of Israel – and represents something much darker than a mere obsession with imperfections of the region’s lone democratic holdout.

By employing terms normally reserved for the most hideous movements of the 20th century, those properly assigned to the dustbin of history, and by sanctioning voices opposed to peaceful reconciliation, the Guardian’s commentary on Israel represents nothing short of incitement – not liberal, progressive, or enlightened but, rather, malicious, hateful, intolerant and genuinely dangerous.

When, it seems quite fitting to ask, especially in light of a recent row involving the Jerusalem Post [see http://hurryupharry.org/2011/08/07/guardian-on-jerusalem-post-pot-kettle-black/], will the Guardian apologize to Israel? The words "don't" "hold" and "breath"come immediately to mind.

Wallinets is therefore as disingenuous as the articles he quotes.

COMMENTS

Stanley Walinets

8 August, 2011 - 14:00

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My dear Advisr3 - I wish you would try to keep your hysteria in control long enough to at least spell my name correctly - there's just one 'l' not two.
But that's a trivial point and I won't rub it in. At least I'm not afraid to reveal my name, rather than hide behind anonymity (actually, I acknowledge you're not alone in this... I simply can't understand why this seems to be the fashion among bloggers... perhaps I'm too old for such games...). By the way - what does 'FISKING' mean?

Anyway, time to be serious.
To start with, how dare you so persistently accuse me, and anyone else who disagrees with you, of seeking to 'delegitimise' Israel? Such accusations - indeed, hysterical shrieks, such as 'self-hater' and the rest of them - are just accusations against MANY Jews like me, buzz-words dreamed up by people who simply cannot bear Israel to be criticised. You are obviously quite intelligent. So it is time you considered the possibility that governments CAN make mistakes. Even Israeli governments.

I won't spend time answering ALL your half-truths, manufactured as 'evidence' of 'anti-Semitism' you vociferously attribute to learned people you disagree with (eg, Pappe, Hearst). But here's one or two:

You refer to Hearst's description of "....the look in Rifqua al-Kurd’s eyes as she fights eviction in Sheikh Jarrah, East Jerusalem. She lives out of boxes, because when the police throw her out and the settlers move in she doesn’t want the clothes thrown into the street."
You comment:-

"No mention of the fact that whenever Palestinians are evicted from Sheikh Jarrah, it is not done at the whim of those eeevil settlers, but only when and if Israel’s Supreme Court has ruled that the houses in question legally belong to the Jews, and that the Palestinians have effectively been squatting illegally."

Has it occurred to you that though Israel's Supreme Court has (you say) made that ruling, the facts are that many Palestinians, like Rifqua al-Kurd and their forebears, were living in those houses before the State of Israel was created. It's reasonable to ask therefore if the Supreme Court wasn't being a little biassed in such judgements?

And, since you place such importance on the Israeli courts' authority, what do you make of this, one of Hearst's other examples - which you conveniently don't mention:-

".... the tenacity with which Mohamed Hussain Jibor, a farmer, clings to a rock-strewn patch of land in the South Hebron hills in 38 degrees heat. His water cistern has been destroyed three times this year because he does not have a permit for it, EVEN THOUGH THE COURT ACKNOWLEDGES IT IS HIS LAND....." (my capitals)
In other words, when is an Israeli court ruling to be obeyed, and when is it to be ignored?

Consider also other evidence of Israeli attitudes to the Supreme Court rulings when those rulings aren't what some Israelis want to obey. Here's an instance you might have read in my blog of Jan 3rd, entitled "Us, as experienced by our Occupied neighbours". It concerned those Palestinians persistently demonstrating for their rights in Bil'in, of which you will have heard. One of them wrote:-

"...... In my village, Bil'in, thousands of people marched on the Wall today to take it down. During the demonstration, one protestor, a 36 year old resident of the village, Jawaher Abu-Rahmah, was critically injured by severe tear-gas inhalation. She is currently hospitalized in Ramallah, unresponsive to medical treatment as the doctors are fighting for her life.

"Bil'in has been struggling for almost six years against the Wall that was built ON OUR LANDS (my capitals). The illegality and absurdity of this wall has been recognized worldwide AND EVEN BY THE ISRAELI SUPREME COURT, WHICH RULED IT MUST BE DISMANTLED OVER THREE YEARS AGO.(my capitals) Yet the Wall still stands. We, the people of Bil'in, the people of Palestine, have waited enough. Today was therefore declared by the Bil'in Popular Committee Against the Wall and Settlements as the last day of the Wall. Together with our supporters, we managed to bring a substantial part of the wall down but we still have a long way to go...."

Advis3r - please consider this:-
If Israel keeps on behaving as it does, asserting it can do no wrong, and that it must never be criticised because anyone who criticises it is an anti-semite and a Hollocaust-denier etc etc - if the in my view PERFECTLY LEGITIMATE State of Israel persists in this behaviour, then the growth of anti-Semitism WILL become world-wide. And it will damage us ALL, you and me - notwithstanding the $3bn-plus annual support it currently depends on from the US.

Think about it.


amber

8 August, 2011 - 14:08

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Walinets, anyone who compares Jews to Nazis, as you have done on these blogs, deserves nothing but contempt.

You, Walinets, are a bigot.


Joe Millis

8 August, 2011 - 14:30

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Err...Stanley, there's only one "l" in Holocaust.


amber

8 August, 2011 - 14:46

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millis, that is the least of his problems.


Stanley Walinets

10 August, 2011 - 13:10

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Amber: "Walinets, anyone who compares Jews to Nazis, as you have done on these blogs, deserves nothing but contempt.
You, Walinets, are a bigot."

Dear Amber,
I'll try to explain my position to you. I can only hope you'll be patient enough to read it and try to understand.
I suggest you should read what I write more CAREFULLY. I do not, ever, say Jews are like Nazis. I simply point out, by truthful comparisons, specific activities some Israelis would be ashamed of if they stopped to look at themselves honestly. In doing so, I think they might recognise in those behaviours SOME echoes from the past in Germany's history.
Sometimes - SOMETIMES - Israel behaves in ways it SHOULD be ashamed of, and would be, if only it was prepared to consider such behaviours when faced with them. The problem is, Israel and some supporters like yourself refuse to consider that possibility. ANY criticism is brushed aside as being 'anti-Semitic' or 'delegitimising Israel'. The basis of that defensive attitude is simply "We are Jews, we can do no wrong. We suffered in the Holocaust, therefore we must never be criticised." My aim, in these comparisons, is to shock ourselves into facing the fact that even though we are Jews, even we CAN behave in ways we should be ashamed of.
I hope this helps you to understand what I write. After all, you're not a bigot, are you?
.........................

Err... Joe - shucks, you got me! Sorry. But I can only claim authority on the spelling of my own name.
.................................

I note Advis3r's silence. I'd be interested in his/her response to my last paragraph, August 8th.

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