Jonathan Kay: The return of the Israel Apartheid Week cult (NATIONAL POST COMMENT) 02/27/12)
Source: http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/02/25/jonathan-kay-the-return-of-the-israel-apartheid-week-cult/
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In Syria, the Assad regime continues to rain artillery on rebel
positions in the city of Homs, killing journalists and innocent
civilians alike. Iran’s mullahs are set to execute a Canadian citizen
for the crime of operating a web site they don’t like. The new Libyan
regime is torturing Gaddafi loyalists. And Egypt’s rulers are
prosecuting NGO leaders on trumped-up charges. And so next week,
Canadian left-wing activists will congregate in Toronto to express
their hatred of … you guessed it: Israel.
The events of March 5-9 will take place as part of the 8th annual
Israel Apartheid Week (IAW), and will feature presentations such
as “Cutting the Ties to Israeli Apartheid: Cultural and Academic
Boycott,” and “Rhymes Of Resistance And The Sounds Of Existence —
with poets Remi Kanazi, Red Slam and Chand-nee.” The IAW website is
full of the usual rhetoric about Israel’s “criminal” actions. There
is not a word of acknowledgement about how utterly ridiculous it is
to run a week-long event vilifying Israel when right next door in
Syria, the government has just exterminated more Arabs than were
killed in both Intifidas, the 2008 Gaza conflict, and the 2006
Lebanon war combined.
The timing of IAW this year truly does represent something of a
farce. The eyes of the entire world are focused on Syria and the
Strait of Hormuz. Even West Bank Palestinians themselves now seem
more concerned with building up their economy than with grand
international gestures aimed at the Jewish state. And in
the “occupied” Golan Heights, Druze Muslims have been stirring — not
against Israel, but against the Assad regime that many once looked to
for “liberation.” In the streets of Cairo, Sana’a and Tunis, no one
is talking about Israel — only about when they will get the democracy
they were promised. Only among cultish, single-minded anti-Israel
activists has the news of the Arab Spring failed to circulate.
The word “cultish” is used here advisedly — because even some veteran
anti-Israel activists are getting tired of the false mantras that
circulate at IAW events. This includes no less an anti-Zionist than
Norman Finkelstein (who has called Israel a “vandal state”
that “relentlessly and brutally and inhumanly keeps these vicious,
murderous wars”). Speaking to an interviewer earlier this month, he
attacked the animating philosophy behind IAW — the movement for
boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel (BDS) — as
a “cult,” and an unsuccessful one at that.
National Post editorial writers have attended BDS events here in
Toronto, and they all contain the same rousing assurances that the
BDS movement will bring Israel to its knees. The self-consciously
enforced spirit of viva la revolución solidarity that permeates these
rallies reminds one of communist rallies in the days before the fall
of the Berlin Wall. Year after year, we hear the same clichés about
how the BDS movement is on the cusp of victory. Yet the Israeli
economy continues to prosper, and the only groups that have fallen
into line with the boycott call are scattered NGOs and low-tier
universities. “All [the BDS] claims about ‘victories’ [against
Israel]: These 10 fingers more than suffice to count their
victories,” Mr. Finkelstein said this month. “It’s a cult. The guru
says: ‘We have all these victories,’ and everyone nods their head.”
Of greater concern to Mr. Finkelstein, a former university professor
and the author of many controversial books, is the sheer dishonesty
that permeates the BDS movement.
“We have to be honest: They [BDS activists] don’t want Israel. They
think they’re being clever. They call it their three tiers. ‘We want
to end of the occupation,’ ‘We want the right of return [for
Palestinian refugees],’ ‘And we want equal rights for Arab citizens.’
But they know the result of implementing all three is — what? You and
I both know: There’s no Israel. [If you ask them about it, they
say] ‘Oh we’re agnostic about Israel.’ No. You’re not agnostic. You
don’t want it [to exist].”
In fairness to the IAW activists who will be assembling on campuses
in coming days, not all of them seek the outright destruction of
Israel — though many certainly do. Some are merely naive
undergraduates who truly do believe in two secure, peaceful states
living side by side. Others are bored veterans of other activist
movements, such as anti-racism and gay rights, looking to the Middle
East to recapture the sense of moral purpose once provided by the
(successful) fight against discrimination here in Canada.
But all of them should understand that IAW and BDS are not what they
seem: As some of Israel’s own fiercest critics themselves now admit,
these are dishonest cults meant to enlist ill-informed activists in a
campaign to destroy the Jewish state. (© 2012 National Post, a
division of Postmedia Network Inc. 02/27/12)
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