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Stephen
Strikes Back
As
mentioned last month, Prof. Alvin Rosenfeld appeared on Radio National’s “Religion Report” to comment on
the British and Australian “Independent Jewish Voices” groups. As Rosenfeld was
critical of these groups, the following week, on Feb. 21, the program gave
equal time to Tony Lerman, a supporter of the British group. While disagreeing
with those who label Israel’s policies in the West Bank as apartheid, Lerman
claimed, “However, if you look at the segregated roads, if you look at the way
land is being confiscated, if you look at the checkpoints, the fortress-like
settlements, the fence, there are too many parallels for Jews to feel
comfortable.”
Of course, the major important difference is that the South Africans
took their measures purely out of racism, whereas the Israelis act purely out
of security needs that have been forced on them by the Palestinians. So, for
example, none of these measures are applied against Israel’s million plus Arab
citizens.
Lerman also agreed with host Stephen Crittenden that Revisionist
Zionism, which he says has now largely taken over Zionism today, drew on the
ideas of race that produced fascism in Europe.
However,
this was apparently not enough balance for Crittenden, so on March 21, he had
another program on the topic. He explained, in his introduction, “You may also
remember that I interviewed Professor Alvin Rosenfeld from the University of
Indiana, who was scandalised by my use of the term ‘Blut und Boden Zionism’, or ‘blood and soil
Zionism’. He denied that Revisionist Zionism in the ‘20s and ‘30s and its
leader Ze’ev Jabotinsky, had been influenced by fascist ideas about race.”
Crittenden was obviously determined to use (or abuse) his show to have
the final word on this issue, so he searched for someone who shared his views,
and found a beauty; Lenni Brenner. Crittenden described Brenner as an “American
civil rights activist” but could have equally described him as an unrepentant
Marxist crank, infamous for writing books that allege the Zionists conspired
with the Nazis.
Crittenden’s first question was, “But is there any doubt that early
Zionism was shaped by the same ideas about race that shaped Fascism?” Brenner
of course had no doubt at all.
Brenner’s speciality seems to be taking documents from the
Nazi period out of context to prove his theories. For example, he quoted a
letter the Zionist Federation of Germany wrote to the Nazis shortly after the
Nazis assumed power. Of course, in writing to a hostile government, the extent
of whose antisemitism was not fully appreciated, the Federation was quite
sycophantic. To Brenner, however, the Zionists regarded the Nazis as “these
guys who like us [believe in] - ‘blood and soil’…and opposition to mixed
marriage. I mean it was a Zionist dream.”
Similarly, a naïve and widely condemned attempt in 1940 by the tiny and
ultra-extreme Stern Gang in Palestine to co-operate with the Nazis to get Jews
out of Europe to Palestine (at a time when the British were blocking all
immigration and leaving them in Europe to be killed) is regarded by Brenner as
further proof of the pro-Nazi sympathies of Zionism.
Crittenden
then moved on to the present day, suggesting that American Zionists had been
quiet lately, and asking whether it was “because several American Zionists have
been indicted over spying for Israel.” (This is untrue. Two former AIPAC
officials have been charged with “communicating national defence information to
people not entitled to receive it” in a crackdown on verbal government leaks
widely viewed as unprecedented. There has been no allegation of “spying”.)
Brenner replied, “Well, let me put it this way. There’s one American Jew
named Pollard who’s been in jail for about 20 years as an Israeli spy. OK. And
now AIPAC which is the American Israel Political Action Committee, [actually
it’s the American Israel Public Affairs Committee - shows what Brenner knows]
several [actually two] of their leaders are waiting trial on charges of getting
information from the State Department and illegally passing it on to Israel.
And everybody understands that there are Israeli spies all over the American
government, etc. But the Zionist establishment is not silent… They hardly
defended themselves against those charges because the politicians here are in
their pay…”
Crittenden
had asked Tony Lerman about the point where criticism of Israel becomes
antisemitism. Lerman replied that “you can usually tell they’re antisemites by
the language they use: they talk of Jewish power and control and so on.” Given
the above rant there’s no doubt that, by Lerman’s test, Brenner, though born
Jewish, fails.
If there was any doubt that Crittenden was revelling in the offence he knew he was causing, his final statement, “We await your letters,” dispelled it. In 2003, Crittenden was suspended by ABC management for publishing an article without prior permission, which some Muslims found offensive. It will be interesting to see how they respond to this.
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Copyright
© AIJAC 2007 |