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Proudly
anti-Israel Jews
We seem to
be hearing more and more from an anything but silent minority of Jews who
disagree with Israel or its policies, want to tell the world and, despite
frequent claims that their views are suppressed, seem to have no problem doing
so.
Recently
130 out of Britain’s roughly 270,000 Jews, some prominent, although generally
not for their activities in the Jewish community, announced the formation of a
group called Independent Jewish Voices, and published a letter in The
Guardian. The Age and Sydney Morning Herald gave this event prominent coverage
on February 6. The letter proclaimed, “We come together in the belief that the
broad spectrum of opinion among the Jewish population of this country is not
reflected by those institutions which claim authority to represent the Jewish
community as a whole.”
Of course,
if the Jewish leadership had to reflect the views of every fringe group instead
of putting forward the views of the vast majority, it would never be able to
say anything coherent.
The
following day, Andra Jackson in the Age reported that prominent local Israel-bashing
Jew Antony Loewenstein was seeking to set up a similar group in Australia. The
group was not named, and it seemed likely that the announcement was a new idea
designed to piggy-back off the publicity the British group received.
On Feb. 6,
the Herald also
carried an article by Loewenstein in which he lauded the British group, and, in
a new angle, blamed Israel’s Jewish supporters for antisemitism. He wrote,
“Uncritical allegiance to Israel by its ‘supporters’ is arguably a greater
cause of anti-Semitism than the dissent they seek to suppress.” Again, it
appears that the only one really trying to prevent debate by delegitimising
opponents is Loewenstein.
Of course,
it appears that for Loewenstein, any time he doesn’t get to say exactly what he
wants, where he wants, or his views get attacked, someone is trying to
‘suppress’ him.
For
example, after Nick Cater, acting editor of the Australian, had pulled a piece Loewenstein had
been commissioned to write for the paper on Jimmy Carter’s controversial,
biased and error-riddled book, Loewenstein had a whiny piece in Crikey on Jan. 31 complaining about it. He
claimed that, “whenever Israel faces its greatest criticism the usual suspects
in the media try and shut down debate,” and asked, “Is a debate about the
Israel-Palestine conflict too hot for The Australian to handle?”
The answer
to this question is clearly in the negative, given The Australian has recently run a number of pieces
critical of Israel and its defenders, including more than one by Loewenstein
himself. In reply, Cater explained, “We set the bar quite high, and on this
occasion, Antony’s piece failed to clear it.”
In
addition, The Australian ran a piece on Feb. 8 by John Mearsheimer disciple Michael Desch that
defended Carter’s book and demonised its critics (see p. 36). Surely
Loewenstein couldn’t have put it better himself.
However,
none of this stopped Loewenstein from appearing on “Sunday Night Safran” on Triple
J on Feb. 18 (where
host John Safran accurately described him as “the man who goes on about how he
is silenced all the time, on all networks and in all newspapers”) and claiming
that Cater had canned his article because he disagreed with the opinion, as
allegedly confirmed by people inside the paper. When Safran mentioned
Loewenstein had said there was a Zionist influence at The Australian, Loewenstein replied, “You’re
denying that are you John?”
Loewenstein
also claimed that both Israel and Diaspora Jews were obsessed with being “lock
step barrel” with the Bush administration, which is why Israel won’t talk to
Syria, and that, “Unfortunately in Israeli leaderships one after the other…at a
governmental level there’s unfortunately a mental block that says we can’t make
peace with our neighbours.” Maybe he forgot the peace with Egypt and with
Jordan and the offers Israeli leaders made to Arafat and Syria, to name but a
few.
Speaking to
Stephen Crittenden on Radio National’s “Religion Report” on Feb. 14, Professor
Alvin Rosenfeld theorised that Jews who proudly proclaim their opposition to
Israel are “a tiny splinter group of far Left Jews, who have problems with
their own Jewish identity, and somehow feel that by dissenting radically from
the State of Israel, they affirm something precious about themselves.”
Professor Rosenfeld could have added that as Jews criticising Israel, many get far more prominence than any non-Jew writing on the same topic, or any Jew with similar talent writing on any other subject, would ever receive.
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Copyright
© AIJAC 2007 |