By

amitai.alex

Opinion

The End of Blind Support – Towards a New Form of Israel Advocacy.

April 14, 2010 16:33
14 min read

“Being critical of Israeli policy is perfectly legitimate and not anti-Semitic. I myself am a critic of Israel. I didn’t agree with Oslo, Camp David, Taba, The Road Map, Annapolis, the disengagement from Gaza, the withdrawal from Sinai, the Peace treaty with Jordan and think that we should have done more in the Second Lebanon war and in Operation Cast lead.”

Being critical of Israel has been something, which at times has led to what I can only describe as some very naïve and ignorant, ardent supporters of Israel calling me a self-hating Jew.

In fact, one need not be critical of Israel to have ones views questioned. I recall my room-mate in Israel questioning why I had a book on my shelf titled “Occupied territories, the untold story of Israel’s settlements” by Gershom Gorenberg, for he objected to the term ‘occupation’ to describe what he believed were more correctly to be referred to as ‘disputed territories.’ As well as taking a look at the back cover of “The Invention of the Jewish People” by Shlomo Sand and instantly accusing it of being anti-Semitic, without having read the book. At no point did it occur to him that just because I read a book does not mean that I agree with its content. This highlights a problem that people face at certain phases when involved in a protracted conflict, that one is not willing to hear or absorb information that is contrary to what they want to accept or believe.

I read the works of both those who are alleged to be pro-Israel and those whose views they write critically about, primarily because most people I know (sympathetic Jewish supporters of Israel) will get their information on the Arab Israeli conflict from books such as ‘The Case for Israel’ by Alan Dershowitz, or ‘Myths and Facts about the Middle East’ by Mitchell Bard and many other books which are written in such a way that a beginner or lay person can understand such a complicated and multi-faceted conflict and to read one sides perspective, and of course the side that is advocating the opinion one wishes to believe is nothing short of ignorance. For one to form a seriously informed opinion one must hear what others have to say and not only what they have been told that others claim, who have a vested interest in discrediting their claims in order to advance their own agenda.

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