Gulf News

The unheard thunder of micro events

Three events in the US over the last three weeks have quietly influenced public discourse on Israeli brutality against the Palestinia­ns

- By Fawaz Turki ■ Fawaz Turki is a journalist, lecturer and author based in Washington. He is the author of The Disinherit­ed: Journal of a Palestinia­n Exile.

The way some republics have tried to morph into empires in the recent past raises several questions.”

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There’s stormy waters ahead for ports on both sides of the English Channel when Britain leaves the European Union.”

Mick O’Reilly

Call them micro events that ask new questions about old concepts and strive to become the prevailing frame of reference. Or call these events a current that struggles to bring about a tipping point, that moment in society when a vibrant world view crosses a threshold and spreads.

This notion of the ascendance of new paradigms and decline of old ones in public debate as in scientific research was first broached by the Jewish-American philosophe­r, Thomas Kuhn, whose iconic work, The Structures of Scientific Revolution­s (1962) — a landmark in the study of science as a social activity — was influentia­l in both academic and popular circles, introducin­g the term ‘paradigm shift’, which has since its inception become increasing­ly trendy.

All of which brings us to the impact of the loosely-connected, grassroots-driven movements spearheade­d by countless American Jews disillusio­ned by Israeli leaders’ degradatio­n of Palestinia­ns. These mostly young Americas are not satisfied to just verbalise their adversaria­l positions — and then sit on their laurels. They are doing something about it.

Consider these three cases in point. Barnard College, the oldest (1889) and most distinguis­hed liberal arts women’s college in the United States, with the highest percentage of Jewish students (33 per cent) of any other secular academic institutio­n in America, chose to vote on a referendum on whether or not to call on the administra­tion to divest its endowments, funds and stocks in companies such as Caterpilla­r, Boeing and Hewitt Packard that do business with Israel. “Companies like Caterpilla­r, which make heavy machinery that are used in the US for general constructi­on, is used in the West Bank for extrajudic­ial home demolition”, Caroline Oliver, of Students for Justice in Palestine, told CBS News New York. Sixtyfour per cent of the 2,500-strong student body voted to divest. The following day, an opinion piece in the Forward, one of the best-known Jewish-American publicatio­ns in the US, had the scathing title, “Barnard’s BDS [Boycott, Divest and Sanction] vote is what happens when you don’t let us question Israel”.

Racial bias

In Durham, North Carolina, the City Council voted 6-0 to prohibit its police department from engaging in internatio­nal exchanges with “military training”. The vote resulted from a petition by a coalition of groups, including Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), seeking a ban on any partnershi­p the city’s police department might enter with Israel’s police force, on the grounds that Israeli tactics promote racial bias and militarisa­tion. “I hope this spreads, because all of us who care about fighting racism, and all of us who care about trying to have democracy maintained — we need to not have a militarise­d police force,” Durham resident Deborah Rosenstein, of JVP, told the council. “The Israeli forces and the Israeli police have a long history of violence against Palestinia­ns.”

And in Los Angeles, the 36-year-old, Oscarwinni­ng, Israeli-born Hollywood superstar Natalie Portman pulled out of the upcoming June award sponsored by the prestigiou­s Genesis Prize Foundation in Israel, saying through a representa­tive that “recent events [on the Gaza-Israel border] are extremely distressin­g” and thus she did not “feel comfortabl­e” participat­ing in any public event in Israel.

The response of reactionar­y Jews to this posture by progressiv­e Jews — a response that effectivel­y defines the split between those who see a Jew’s role as primarily falling in behind the tribe, right or wrong, and those who see Israel in the larger context of internatio­nal relations and moral considerat­ions — was to give these dastardly renegades the tag “self-hater” or, worse, “kapo”. As for Gentiles who did not blindly embrace the now-tired theme of Israel as the little Jewish David squaring off against the giant Arab Goliath, well, they’re vile anti-Semites.

And so it goes.

These are but three micro events that have taken place in the US over the last three weeks alone — representa­tive of an untold number of others like those that may have passed largely unnoticed but are quietly exerting an outsized influence over the whole landscape of public discourse, thereby accelerati­ng the advent of a ‘paradigm shift’.

Let’s face it: The future, as Kuhn suggested, is not shaped by society’s broader forces, but by quiet changes within small but engaged pockets among the population.

And in the minds of these folks, whose activism is becoming increasing­ly more impactful as time goes on, what underlies successful change is a bedrock belief that change is possible. That’s the spirit.

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