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"TREATMENT OF ISRAEL STRIKES AN ALIEN NOTE",
by Alan Dershowitz, Harvard law professor
National Post of Canada - http://www.nationalpost.com
If a visitor from a far away galaxy were to land at an American or
Canadian university and peruse some of the petitions that were circulating
around the campus, he would probably come away with the conclusion that
the Earth is a peaceful and fair planet with only one villainous nation
determined to destroy the peace and to violate human rights.
That nation would not be Iraq, Libya, Serbia, Russia or Iran. It would be
Israel.
There are currently petitions circulating on most North American
university campuses that would seek to have universities terminate all
investments in companies that do business in or with Israel. There are
also petitions asking individual faculty members to boycott scientists and
scholars who happen to be Israeli Jews, regardless of their personal views
on the Arab-Israeli conflict. There have been efforts, some successful, to
prevent Israeli speakers from appearing on college campuses, as recently
occurred at Concordia University. There are no comparable petitions
seeking any action against other countries that enslave minorities,
imprison dissidents, murder political opponents and torture suspected
terrorists. Nor are there any comparable efforts to silence speakers from
other countries.
The intergalactic visitor would wonder what this pariah nation, Israel,
must have done to deserve this unique form of economic capital punishment.
If he then went to the library and began to read books and articles about
this planet, he would discover that Israel was a vibrant democracy, with
freedom of speech, press and religion, that was surrounded by a group of
tyrannical and undemocratic regimes, many of which are actively seeking
its destruction.
He would learn that in Egypt, homosexuals are routinely imprisoned and
threatened with execution; that in Jordan suspected terrorists and other
opponents of the government are tortured, and that if individualized
torture does not work, their relatives are called in and threatened with
torture as well; that in Saudi Arabia, women who engage in sex outside of
marriage are beheaded; that in Iraq, political opponents are routinely
murdered en masse and no dissent is permitted; that in Iran members of
religious minorities, such as Baha'is and Jews, are imprisoned and
sometimes executed; that in all of these surrounding nations, anti-Semitic
material is frequently broadcast on state-sponsored television and radio
programs; in Saudi Arabia apartheid is practised against non-Muslims, with
signs indicating that Muslims must go to certain areas and non-Muslims to
others; that China has occupied Tibet for half a century; that in several
African countries women are stoned to death for violating sexual mores;
that slavery still exists in some parts of the world; and that genocide
has been committed by a number of countries in recent memory.
Our curious visitor would wonder why there are no petitions circulating
with regard to these human rights violators. Is Israel's occupation of the
West Bank and Gaza -- an occupation it has offered to end in exchange for
peace -- worse than the Chinese occupation of Tibet? Are the tactics used
to combat terrorism by Israel worse than those used by the Russians
against Chechen terrorists? Are Arab and Muslim states more democratic
than Israel? Is there any comparable institution in any Arab or Muslim
state to the Israeli Supreme Court, which frequently rules in favour of
Palestinian claims against the Israeli government and military?
Does the absence of the death penalty in Israel alone, among Middle East
nations, make it more barbaric than the countries which behead, hang and
shoot political dissidents? Is Israel's settlement policy, which 78% of
Israelis want to end in exchange for peace, worse than the Chinese attempt
at cultural genocide in Tibet? Is Israel's policy of full equality for
openly gay soldiers and members of the Knesset somehow worse than the
policy of Muslim states to persecute those who have a different sexual
orientation than the majority? Is Israel's commitment to equality for
women worse than the gender apartheid practised in Saudi Arabia?
Our visitor would be perplexed to hear the excuses made by university
professors and students for why they are prepared to delegitimate Israel
while remaining silent about the far worse abuses committed by other
countries. If he were to ask a student about the abuses committed by other
countries, he would be told (as I have been): "You're changing the
subject. We're talking about Israel now."
This reminds me of an incident from the 1920s involving then-Harvard
president A. Lawrence Lowell. Lowell decided that the number of Jews
admitted to Harvard should be reduced because "Jews cheat." When a
distinguished alumnus, Judge Learned Hand, pointed out that Protestants
also cheat, Lowell responded, "You're changing the subject; we're talking
about Jews."
It is not surprising, therefore, that as responsible and cautious a writer
as Andrew Sullivan, formerly editor of The New Republic and now a writer
for The New York Times Magazine, has concluded that "fanatical
anti-Semitism, as bad or even worse than Hitler's, is now a cultural norm
across much of the Middle East and beyond. It's the acrid glue that unites
Saddam, Arafat, al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, Iran and the Saudis. They all hate
the Jews and want to see them destroyed."
Our intergalactic traveller, after learning all of these facts, would
wonder what kind of a planet he had landed on. Do we have everything
backwards? Do we know the difference between right and wrong? Do our
universities teach the truth?
These are questions that need asking, lest we become the kind of world the
visitor would have experienced had he arrived in Europe during the late
1930s and early 1940s.
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