Gulf News

Criticism of Israeli policy is not anti-Semitic

Jewish groups employ a well-funded, multi-pronged effort to harass and silence critics of Israel by terming them anti-Semites

- By James

Iwas provoked to write this discussion of what is and what isn’t anti-Semitism by an article in Haaretz on the “controvers­y” created by the awarding of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Chemistry to George P. Smith. According to the reporting, Dr Smith is not only a brilliant scientist whose work has helped lead to the creation of new drugs that can treat cancer and a range of autoimmune diseases, but he is also an outspoken supporter of Palestinia­n rights and a critic of Israeli policies.

The Haaretz piece notes that Dr Smith has long been “a target of pro-Israel groups” and is listed on “the controvers­ial Canary Mission website” — used by supporters of Israel to harass and silence critics.

As I read through the article looking for evidence of Smith’s sins, I found quotes saying that he “wished ‘not for Israel’s Jewish population to be expelled’ but ‘an end to the discrimina­tory regime in Palestine’”. At another point, Haaretz quotes from an oped written by Smith condemning Israeli policies in Gaza which he concludes by expressing his support for the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement (BDS) calling it “Palestinia­n civil society’s call for the global community of conscience to ostracise Israeli businesses and institutio­ns until Israel repudiates [their violence against Palestinia­ns] and the Palestinia­n people, including the exiles, achieve full equality with the Jews in their shared homeland”.

I read all of this in the context of this worrisome campaign that is unfolding in the United States to silence critics of Israel or the exclusivis­t vision of Political Zionism. It is a well-funded multiprong­ed effort, one component of which is the shadowy Canary Mission website that publishes the names, photos, and background­s of pro-Palestinia­n students and professors — terming them anti-Semites or supporters of terrorism. It does so with the expressed purpose of harming their careers. The Canary Mission list is also used to taint and smear these activists to intimidate politician­s from engaging with them.While the Canary Mission has done its best to keep its operations, leadership and funding secret, recent articles published in the Jewish press have revealed that the project has been financiall­y supported by some mainstream American Jewish philanthro­pic entities.

In addition to the Canary Mission, there is the campaign that seeks to criminalis­e support for BDS or to penalise supporters of the movement to hold Israel accountabl­e for its systematic violations of Palestinia­n rights. This effort is massively funded by the likes of Sheldon Adelson and we now learn, also from a recent expose in a prominent American Jewish newspaper, by millions of dollars funnelled to the campaign from the government of Israel.

Then there is legislatio­n currently pending in Congress designed to make boycotting Israel a crime, complement­ing the 25 states that have already passed laws denying salaries, contracts, or benefits to individual­s who support BDS.

Finally, in a replay of the effort that pressed the United Kingdom’s Labour Party to define criticism of Israel as anti-Semitic, Trump’s appointmen­t to lead the Civil Rights Office at the US Department of Education has made clear his intent to investigat­e anti-Israel activism on college campuses as forms of antiSemiti­sm. And there is legislatio­n pending in Congress — the anti-Semitism Awareness Act. Both this bill and the action by Kenneth Marcus at the Education Department seek to extend the definition of anti-Semitism to include criticism of Israel.

Enormous suffering in human history

In reflecting on these developmen­ts, there are several observatio­ns that should be made: Anti-Semitism is real, ugly, and dangerous; criticism of Israel is not anti-Semitism; and the effort to conflate the two not only silences needed debate, it distracts from the effort to root out real anti-Semitism, a scourge that has created great pain and enormous suffering in human history.

This idea that criticism of Israel is anti-Semitic (what is now called “the new anti-Semitism”) is decades old. It has received a push, in recent years, by the campaign to add to the definition of anti-Semitism any criticism that singles Israel out and doesn’t apply the same standard to other countries. While it’s proponents claim that it targets only those who single out Israel for criticism, what they really seek to do is single out Israel as the one country that can’t be criticised.

It is also important to note that there is evidence that in, too many instances, the struggle to combat real anti-Semitism takes a back seat to the effort to shield Israel. For example, while some pro-Israel groups targeted Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour Party charging him with tolerating anti-Semitism, they ignored the virulent anti-Semites operating on the rightwing of UK politics. This led many Labourites to conclude that the real target was Corbyn’s unrelentin­g support for Palestinia­n rights. Much the same could be implied from Benjamin Netanyahu’s embrace of far-right anti-Semitic European leaders, because they were strong supporters of his government.

The bottom line is that this entire effort is designed not to combat anti-Semitism, but to silence criticism. And in the process of doing so enormous damage is done to: Legitimate, welldeserv­ed and necessary criticism of Israeli policies; the reputation­s of individual­s like Dr Smith and student activists who speak out because they are outraged by the injustices visited upon Palestinia­ns; and the struggle against the scourge of real anti-Semitism.

■ Dr James J. Zogby is the president of Arab American Institute, a non-profit, non-partisan national leadership organisati­on.

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