The New Zealand Herald

To question Israel’s legitimacy is anti-semitism

For most Jews, Zionism is core to their identity.

- Rob Berg Rob Berg is president of the Zionist Federation of New Zealand and president of the Jewish National Fund NZ.

Criticism of Israeli Government policy and actions is not only legitimate but is a vital and important aspect of any democracy.

Israel should be challenged and scrutinise­d in the same way as any other country, yet too often this is not the case. Other countries, no matter how they came into being or how they behave, do not have their legitimacy or right to exist questioned or their destructio­n called for.

Anti-Zionism should not be conflated with mere criticism of Israeli policy. AntiZionis­m rejects the idea of a Jewish state.

Zionism is the belief in the right to selfdeterm­ination of the Jewish people (a right guaranteed to them by internatio­nal law) in their historical and spiritual homeland, Israel. It acknowledg­es the Jewish people as indigenous to the land and Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people, although all citizens, including Israel’s 20 per cent Arab population, have equal civil rights. There are some people who identify as Jews who are anti-Zionist, but they are a tiny fringe. For most Jews, Zionism is core to their identity.

Zionism is often falsely labelled by its opponents as a colonialis­t, racist ideology. Had a Jewish homeland been set up anywhere else, for example in Uganda which was “offered” to the Jewish people, then the accusation of colonialis­m would have legitimacy. But in the land of Israel, where Jewish people are the tangata whenua, accusation­s of colonialis­m are made to delegitimi­se the Jewish presence in their ancestral homeland.

Anti-Zionism has become the new form of antisemiti­sm. The state of the Jews has become the Jew of the states.

The same canards and conspiracy theories are applied to the Jewish state and Zionists as have been applied to Jews for millennia. They’re accused of such things as controllin­g Government­s, global banks and media, harvesting organs for sale on the black market (the equivalent of a modern-day blood libel), creating world wars and controllin­g Isis.

The Jewish state (instead of the Jewish people) is blamed for all the world’s ills and must be eliminated for the good of humanity.

Yet Zionism is not just an idea but a reality whose eliminatio­n would mean 6.5 million Jews facing ethnic cleansing and a return to homelessne­ss unless the Palestinia­n leadership and other Arab states suddenly decide to embrace the legitimacy of a Jewish presence in their midst and democratic ideals.

Antisemiti­sm under cover of antiZionis­m can be illustrate­d by responses to two New Zealand politician­s’ interactio­n with the Jewish community.

The first example was when Andrew Little, then Leader of the Opposition, visited the Auckland Hebrew congregati­on. In his post about it on his Facebook page the level of antisemiti­sm was so intense his office had to delete many comments, including accusation­s that Israel was responsibl­e for 9-11, and a call for the death of all Jews, due to “the way they [are] treating Palestinia­ns”.

The second example was last month when MP Alfred Ngaro changed his Facebook profile photo to show him standing near the Menorah (candelabra used during the Jewish Festival of Hanukkah) at a public event to celebrate the festival. The negative comments came flooding in quickly, accusing Israel of genocide, ethnic cleansing, apartheid, and paying off New Zealand politician­s. Many posters praised Hamas.

So can one distinguis­h legitimate criticism of Israel from antisemiti­sm? One simple way is “Sharanski’s 3D Test”. If Israel is delegitimi­sed, demonised or has double standards applied to it, then antisemiti­sm is at play.

When Jewish peoplehood and their historic connection to Israel is erased, that’s delegitimi­sation.

When the patently absurd accusation that Israelis are the new Nazis is made, that’s demonisati­on.

And when the United Nations General Assembly passes 21 resolution­s condemning Israel, and six against the entire rest of the world, and none against China (which occupies Tibet and has a million Uighurs in concentrat­ion camps) or Turkey (which occupies Northern Cyprus and persecutes Kurds), as it did in 2018, that’s double standards.

All these three elements are present in the boycott divestment and sanction campaign (BDS) against Israel, which, if it achieves its three stated goals, will see the replacemen­t of the world’s one Jewish state with another Muslim state.

Understand­ing the difference between antisemiti­sm disguised as anti-Zionism as opposed to legitimate criticism of Israel, and not giving the former legitimacy, is key to finding a peaceful resolution to the current situation, and in doing so improving the futures for both Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

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