An Israeli Soldier to American Jews: Wake up!
October 10, 2013, 9:40 am
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As
a young Israeli who had just completed five years of service in the
IDF, I looked forward to my new job educating people in the Pacific
Northwest about Israel. I was shocked, however, by the anti-Israel
bigotry and hostility I encountered, especially in the greater Seattle
area, Oregon, and Berkeley. I had been very liberal, a member of the
leftist Zionist party, Meretz, but the anti-Semitism and hatred for
Israel that I have seen in the U.S. has changed my outlook personally
and politically.
As
part of my work as an educator at StandWithUs, between January and May
of this year, I traveled to college campuses, high schools and
churches, sharing the history of modern Israel. I also shared personal
stories about growing up in the Jewish state, and about my family. I
always spoke about my military service as an officer in an IDF COGAT
unit that attends to the needs of Palestinian civilians who are not
involved in the conflict and promotes Palestinian civil society. Each
time I would speak and take questions for an hour or more. I have shared
my personal story with over 16,000 people at many, many college
campuses and high schools, including UC Berkeley, Stanford, the
University of Washington, Seattle University and many others. Many of
those to whom I spoke were supportive, friendly, and open to hearing
about my Israel. But, sadly, far too many were not.
When I served as a soldier in the West Bank, I
got used to having ugly things said to me, but nothing prepared me for
the misinformation, demonization of Israel, and the gut-wrenching,
anti-Israel, anti-Semitic hostility expressed by many students,
professors, church members, and even some high school students right
here in the Pacific Northwest.
I was further shocked by how unaware the
organized Jewish community is and how little they are actually doing to
counter this rising anti-Semitism, which motivated me to write this
article.
This new form of bigotry against Israel has
been called the “new anti-Semitism,” with “Israel” replacing “Jew” in
traditional anti-Semitic imagery and canards, singling out and
discriminating against the Jewish state, and denying the Jewish people
alone the right to self-determination. The new anti-Semitism is packaged
in the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign (BDS), which claims
to champion Palestinian rights though its real goal is to erode American
support for Israel, discredit Jews who support Israel, and pave the way
for eliminating the Jewish state. One of BDS’ central demands is the
“complete right of return” for all the descendants of the original
Palestinian refugees, subtle language that means the end of Israel as
the Jewish homeland because it would turn Israel into a Palestinian-Arab
majority state.
It is surprising that an extremist group like
BDS is ever taken seriously, but BDS advocates have found receptive
audiences in some circles. Their campaigns are well organized and in
many cases, well financed. They have lobbied universities, corporations,
food co-ops, churches, performing artists, labor unions, and other
organizations to boycott Israel and companies that do business with
Israel. But even if these groups don’t agree to treat Israel as a pariah
state, the BDS activists manage to spread their anti-Israel
misinformation, lies and prejudice simply by forcing a debate based on
their false claims about Israel.
To give you a taste of the viciousness of the
BDS attacks, let me cite just a few of the many shocking experiences I
have had. At a BDS event in Portland, a professor from a Seattle
university told the assembled crowd that the Jews of Israel have no
national rights and should be forced out of the country. When I asked,
“Where do you want them to go?” she calmly answered, “I don’t care. I
don’t care if they don’t have any place else to go. They should not be
there.” When I responded that she was calling for ethnic cleansing, both
she and her supporters denied it. And during a presentation in Seattle,
I spoke about my longing for peace between Israel and the Palestinians.
When I was done, a woman in her 60’s stood up and yelled at me, “You
are worse than the Nazis. You are just like the Nazi youth!” A number of
times I was repeatedly accused of being a killer, though I have never
hurt anyone in my life. On other occasions, anti-Israel activists called
me a rapist. The claims go beyond being absurd – in one case, a
professor asked me if I knew how many Palestinians have been raped by
IDF forces. I answered that as far as I knew, none. She triumphantly
responded that I was right, because, she said, “You IDF soldiers don’t
rape Palestinians because Israelis are so racist and disgusted by them
that you won’t touch them.”
Such irrational accusations are symptomatic of
dangerous anti-Semitism. Yet, alarmingly, most mainstream American Jews
are completely oblivious to this ugly movement and the threat it poses.
They seem to be asleep, unaware that this anti-Jewish bigotry is
peddled on campuses, by speakers in high schools, churches, and
communities, and is often deceptively camouflaged in the rhetoric of
human rights.
The American Jewish community and its leaders
are not providing a united front to combat this latest threat.
Unfortunately, this repeats a pattern of Jewish communal groups failing
to unite in a timely way to counter threats against us individually and
as a community.
Shockingly, a small but very vocal number of
Jews actively support BDS. They often belong to organizations that
prominently include “Jewish” in their names, like Jewish Voice for
Peace, to give cover to BDS and the anti-Semitism that animates it. A
question that we, as a Jewish community must ask ourselves, is whether
it is ever appropriate to include and accept Jews who support BDS and
directly or indirectly advocate the ultimate elimination of the Jewish
State of Israel.
I think it is not.
My experiences in America have changed me. I
never expected to encounter such hatred and lies. I never believed that
such anti-Semitism still existed, especially in the U.S. I never knew
that the battlefield was not just Gaza, the West Bank, and hostile
Middle Eastern countries wanting to destroy Israel and kill our citizens
and soldiers. It is also here in America, where a battle must be waged
against prejudice and lies.
I implore American Jews: do more.
Israel cannot fight this big battle alone. If
you are affiliated with a Jewish organization, let it know you want it
to actively, openly and unequivocally oppose the BDS campaign and those
who support it. Inform yourself, your friends and families, by visiting
websites of organizations like StandWithUs, Jewish Virtual Library,
AIPAC, AJC and others that will update you and provide information about
BDS and anti-Semitism.
I urge the organized Jewish community and its
members to wake up and stand up for the Jewish state of Israel, and for
all it represents, and for all it works to achieve.
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