Apartheid: The Big Lie (GateStone Institute) By: Michael Curtis 05/21/12)
Source: http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3070/israel-apartheid
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Unlike Muslim countries, Israel has no state religion, but rather
contains some 15 recognized religions, There are no segregated roads
as there are in Saudi Arabia. If Jews and Arabs do live in different
areas in the country it is not through state-imposed segregation,
enforced by legal means. Discrimination does not exist on the basis
of race, religion or sex, and all groups have equal protection under
the law.
The time is now long overdue to recognize that Adolph Hitler´s
contribution to political wisdom -- the Big Lie -- has reappeared in
the Palestinian narrative of the state of Israel as an "apartheid
state." "[T]he broad masses of a nation," Hitler wrote in Mein
Kampf, "will more readily fall victim to the big lie than to the
small lie." The constant repetition of the Big Lie, he explained,
made it acceptable, especially when it could be manipulated to appear
to have a certain credibility. The world is all too familiar with the
success of Hitler´s Big Lie narrative that the Jews were
internationally powerful, responsible for World War I -- and, in his
view, for most of the problems of the world.
This new Big Lie about Israel being an "apartheid state" that has
been trumpeted by the Palestinian narrative of Middle Eastern history
and politics has, in recent years, been accepted not only been
accepted by "the broad masses," but also by more educated and
supposedly politically sophisticated individuals in the media, the
churches, and academia.
The official definition of the crime of "apartheid" was first
formulated in the International Convention on the Suppression and
Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid, adopted by the United Nations
General Assembly on November 30, 1973. The definition was "inhumane
acts committed for the purpose of establishing and maintaining
domination by one racial group…over another racial group…and
systematically oppressing them." A later version of the definition
was included in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court,
of July 17, 1998 which came into force in July 2002. The definition
became inhumane acts concerning an identifiable group on political,
racial, national, ethnic, cultural, religious grounds "committed in
the context of an institutionalized regime of systematic oppression
and domination by one racial group over any racial group or groups
and committed with the intention of maintaining that regime."
The change in legal terminology is important for political reasons.
Israelis and Palestinians can be considered as "identifiable groups"
and therefore the provisions of international law in the 1973
Convention and the 1998 Statute can be applied to them, thus opening
the opportunity for a legal charge of the crime of apartheid against
Israel.
Yet this legal issue has little to do with the real life political
attempt to bring the charge against Israel. That action began in the
1970s when the Soviet Union, for its own political purposes,
organized a coalition with Arab states and other willing countries in
what was then considered the group of "non-aligned" countries of the
world. The greatest success of the coalition was to obtain an
overwhelming majority, 72-35-32, for the infamous UN General Assembly
Resolution 3379 of November 10, 1975 which defined Zionism as a form
of racism and racial discrimination, and years later repealed only
after great efforts by American diplomats, including, finally, the US
Ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton.
Similar declarations followed. The most forthright was the
Declaration of the first Durban conference (The UN World Conference
against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related
Intolerance) in September 2001 that "We declare Israel as a racist,
Apartheid state in which Israel´s brand of Apartheid as a crime
against humanity has been characterized by separation and
segregation, dispassion, restricted land access,
denationalization, ´bantustanization´ and inhumane acts." Since then
an "Israel Apartheid Week" has become an annual event on many college
campuses in the United States and elsewhere.
The declaration of Durban 1, which reads as an indictment, was
certainly applicable to the old, unlamented South Africa where blacks
were indeed segregated in many ways by legal and other restrictions,
and were treated as inferior human beings; but it has no application
to the state and society of Israel. Within the state of Israel,
Israeli Arabs, 20% of the population, have equal political and social
rights as Jews; full citizenship; members of the Israeli Parliament,
called the Knesset; a seat on the Supreme Court; diplomatic
representation at the most senior levels, a free press in Arabic,
which is, along with Hebrew, an official language; the capacity to
move freely; equal opportunity to enter universities, to be employed,
and to enter freely into marital relations with fellow Arabs or with
Jews. If Jews and Arabs do live in different areas of the country it
is not through a state-imposed segregation, enforced by legal means,
but by choice. There are no segregated roads, as there are in Saudi
Arabia, and there are no segregated schools, housing, drinking
fountains, buses or any officially imposed limits whatsoever.
Discrimination does not exist on the basis of race, religion, or sex;
and all groups have legal protection of the law. Unlike Muslim
countries Israel has no state religion, but rather contains some 15
recognized religions. Israel, unlike the old South Africa, is a
multiracial society.
In the absence of a peace settlement between the parties that will
determine the boundaries of territories currently dispute, both the
Palestinian Authority and Israel control parts of the West Bank.
Measures such as roadblocks, checkpoints and a fence have been
imposed not for the purposes of segregation, but for security and for
self-defense. Although it is true that these security measures cause
inconveniences and some hardship, they have been created to prevent
terrorist attacks, not to impose discrimination by an oppressive
regime. It is a tribute to the nature of democracy in Israel that its
Supreme Court on a number of occasions has ordered the state to make
changes in the fence route, often by a small amount, when the fence
seemed to be imposing hardship on the Palestinians.
The world is all too well aware of the disputes between Israel and
Palestinians, especially on the complex issues of settlements,
refugees, and Jerusalem, but to accuse Israel of being "apartheid" is
not only false, it is unhelpful and counterproductive for any hope
for a peaceful settlement .
The unjustifiable, misguided, and extensively expressed "moral
outrage" over the Big Lie directed against Israel can partly be
explained by ignorance of the reality of political and social
conditions in Israel and in the territories. For all the problems
encountered by a state created by Jews, and with 21 Arab and Muslim
neighbors openly threatening to destroy it -- sometimes, as with
Iran, to the illegal point of publicly advocating genocide -- it is a
remarkable success story -- unlike the failures of every surrounding
Arab and Muslim state except those benefitting from enormous oil
resources.
One must conclude that the enemies of Israel, or inflexibly biased
critics, are maliciously demonizing it with repetition of the
word "apartheid" in the hope of goading the international community
into denying Israel´s legitimacy as a state, in an effort to destroy
it. Regrettably, one must also conclude that the perceptions of
Israel have been colored for many people, now including Muslims, by
an antisemitism which has become increasingly conspicuous both by
rhetoric and physical assaults on Jews and Jewish institutions.
Critics of Israel may understandingly claim the mantle of compassion
and express empathy for the Palestinians whom they consider the
weaker party in the enduring conflict with Israel. They may argue the
case against what they consider oppressive behavior by Israeli
authorities, and point to instances of injustice. Yet at the same
time they ignore not only the repressive and corrupt governance of
the Palestinian Authority to its own citizens, but also the
principles of liberty and equality inherent in the state of Israel,
and above all the need for all nations to take appropriate measures
to defend themselves against those in hostile environments who are
eager to destroy them.
Those individuals, groups, and organizations making use of the
word "apartheid" are appealing to the emotions of those who
rightfully find the concept deplorable, but by doing so they are
polarizing political positions and unjustly oversimplifying a complex
situation, in which one side, Israel´s, has so often offered
reasonable compromises for peace, and the other side, the
Palestinians, backed by many of the 21 Arab and Muslim countries has
refused to enter into any real meaningful negotiations.
Michael Curtis is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Political
Science at Rutgers University and author of Should Israel Exist? A
Sovereign Nation under attack by the International Community.
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