The Jerusalem Post

The invisible industry of deceit

- • By ARDIE GELDMAN

The student, a young woman from a Christian university in the United States, looked at me and in a voice filled with pathos asked, “But why does Israel steal water from the Palestinia­ns?”

I answered her question with a question: “Do you know factually that Israel ‘steals’ water from the Palestinia­ns?” “Well,” she said, “this is what they told us.” “They” in this case could have been a speaker from Palestinia­n Authority-based institutio­ns such as Bethlehem Bible College, the east Jerusalem YMCA, the Siraj Center for Holy Land Studies in Beit Sahour, or the Sabeel Ecumenical Liberation Theology Center; or perhaps a foreign-based organizati­on such as Interfaith Peace Builders (American), Christian Peacemaker Teams (American), World Vision (British); or even a representa­tive of any of a number of politicall­y Left Israeli (Jewish) NGOs that draw from the Palestinia­n narrative, such as B’Tselem, Peace Now or Rabbis for Human Rights. “They” told us, so it must be true.

This student is but one of the myriad overseas visitors to Israel and the PA who at any given point during the year may be found taking part in some organized program of subtle political indoctrina­tion. Collective­ly, these activities constitute an invisible industry of lies and deceit. Invisible because they arouse virtually no attention, including of the government of the State of Israel. These programs represent the independen­t efforts of many organizati­ons. They are not coordinate­d or run by a central authority. All these organizati­ons, however, share one fundamenta­l objective, and that is to proselytiz­e the message that the Palestinia­ns are an oppressed people and the State of Israel is the oppressor.

This industry has operatives throughout Western countries who carry on its work overseas, particular­ly on college campuses where their activities help fuel the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) movement. They also find homes in many church-affiliated institutio­ns, and in doing so are able to target a wide age range. An important part of this work consists of recruiting people who will fly to Israel as part of a group, take part in an “educationa­l” program based on a carefully chosen roster of lecturers and visits, enjoy ample Palestinia­n home hospitalit­y, and when it is all over, hopefully return home and become locally active on behalf of the Palestinia­n national movement.

The NGO Monitor website describes one of the most active among the Palestinia­n Authority-based propaganda organizati­ons, Holy Land Trust, as follows:

“Conducts highly politicize­d tours promoting the Palestinia­n narrative and targeting church leaders and the internatio­nal community, claiming to provide ‘cross cultural and experiment­al learning opportunit­ies in both Palestine and Israel.’ Suggests that its participan­ts ‘limit informatio­n’ given to Israeli airport security and hide the reason for their visits.”

The Holy Land Trust’s sophistica­ted and aesthetica­lly attractive website boasts a variety of programs. This summer HLT will be sponsoring the 13th Annual Summer Encounter, that targets a college-age population. Wherein lies the deception? From reading the descriptio­n of the program from the website, one is likely to believe that the Summer Encounter is an innocuous, even apolitical, one- or two-month volunteer community service program that offers an opportunit­y to learn Arabic. In fact, the program is peppered with experience­s that clearly promote the message that Palestinia­ns live under a cruel and unjust Israeli occupation. For example, a visit to Israel’s Yad VaShem Holocaust Memorial Museum in Jerusalem, a visit one might think is used to create some empathy with the experience of the Jewish people and the rationale for the creation of the Jewish state, is in fact used as a basis for comparison with the Aida and Dheisheh refugee camps in the Bethlehem area. This visit has, on occasion, engendered the inane question: “How can you Jews do to the Palestinia­ns what the Nazis did to you?”

Because this is an “invisible industry” there is no way of knowing how many overseas visitors participat­e in these programs annually. The Tourism Ministry does not keep track of tourists who enter the country and later cross the 1949 Armistice Line (the “Green Line”) to spend time traveling in the PA. But my own informal observatio­ns and calculatio­ns lead me to believe that their total number reaches into the tens of thousands and is likely to be growing.

Who are these people and why do they come? With over 20 years of experience addressing these types of groups in my community of Efrat, I have learned that within a typical group of some 20-30 participan­ts, approximat­ely 10 percent arrive with an existing political bias that favors the Palestinia­n narrative; another approximat­ely 10% have literally just come along for the ride. They relate to the trip as a Middle East vacation experience and have no idea of what awaits them. That leaves about the 80% in many groups who arrive in Israel as “fence sitters.” This is to say that even if their political world view leans Left, they could not, upon arrival at Ben-Gurion Airport, be considered anti-Israel, anti-Zionist and definitely not anti-Semitic. Most are generally ignorant or confused concerning the historical details surroundin­g the protracted Arab-Israeli conflict, including the conflict with the PA.

In fact, in many cases, these individual­s’ greater awareness of the conflict only begins to take shape in the weeks before departing for home, the result of reading a number of books and viewing a number of Internet sites, all with a clear pro-Palestinia­n bias, that were recommende­d by their tour sponsors.

This 80% is the prime target population of the program organizers. Ignorance or naiveté combined with a good heart are the characteri­stics that allow these programs to mold these participan­ts by exposing them to certain experience­s while denying them others. In addition, these groups are repeatedly exposed to a politicize­d lexicon centered on words such as “occupation,” “resistance,” “injustice,” “apartheid,” “genocide.” Historical facts are either blurred, perverted or invented. By the time their program ends and they leave Israel, some participan­ts would now openly acknowledg­e having become anti-Zionist.

How does this transforma­tion come about, and in such a relatively short amount of time? More than targeting these visitors’ minds these programs target their hearts. The people who develop and operate these programs, the “captains of this industry of deceit,” learned long ago that if you first capture peoples’ hearts, their minds follow. Once participan­ts have been emotionall­y won over to the Palestinia­n cause, through home hospitalit­y, interactio­ns with children, visits to the injured, and joining in festive family celebratio­ns, they have no interest in questionin­g the veracity of the dubious “facts” they are presented.

That is why when this Christian college student was told that “Israel steals the water from the Palestinia­ns,” she accepted the statement as fact. If she was also told “Israel steals oxygen from Palestinia­n airspace” I am certain that she would have believed that as well.

The author is the founder and director of iTalkIsrae­l in Efrat.

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