“Peace Studies” Founder and Anti-Semitism (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Alana Goodman 05/01/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/05/01/peace-studies-founder-and-anti-semitisc-ideas/
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Via Haaretz, Norwegian sociologist Johan Galtung, known as
the “father of Peace and Conflict Studies” shares his thoughts on
Jewish control of the media and academia. This guy will no doubt be
written off as a nutjob who’s completely unrepresentative of the
Peace Studies curriculum. And based on his lunatic theory that the
Mossad and Freemasons had a hand in the Anders Breivik terror attack,
and his paranoid calculation that Jews control “96 percent of the
media,” he clearly is unhinged.
But his comments also underscore a major problem with Peace Studies.
Some anti-Semitic ideas, like the one that “Auschwitz had two sides,”
are a natural progression of the discipline:
He pointed out that one of the factors behind the anti-Semitic
sentiment that led to Auschwitz was the fact that Jews held
influential positions in German society.
Galtung also recommended reading “The Protocols of the Elders of
Zion,” – one of the most popular anti-Semitic texts in the world. …
According to Galtung, “terrible Auschwitz,” had two sides as
well. “[It was] not unproblematic that Jews had key niches in a
society humiliated by defeat at Versailles,” wrote Galtung,
referencing Germany following World War I. Galtung continued, “In no
way, absolutely no way, does this justify the atrocities. But it
created anti-Semitism that could have been predicted.”
Peace Studies is based on the premise that all conflicts can be
resolved through peaceful, nonviolent means. It’s the height of moral
relativism, holding that both sides have legitimate grievances and
are rational, that both sides can and should make compromises, and
that both sides have a responsibility to listen and consider each
other’s arguments. Yes, even if the two sides are the Nazis and the
Jews. Follow this argument to the end of its logical chain, and you
get to Galtung’s repulsive idea that German anti-Semitism could have
somehow been an understandable response to Jewish provocations.
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