Truth and Hypocrisy
No longer can we bury our heads in the sand. We have become a pariah state, likened to South Africa during its years of apartheid. As unfair are the comparisons, the same methods of political, economic and diplomatic isolation that were applied to South Africa are now being slowly but steadily applied to the Jewish state.
Britain’s University and College Union (UCU) voted to boycott Israeli academic institutions, protesting Israel’s policy in the territories. To add insult to injury, the union pledged to arrange for academics from the Palestinian Authority to attend scholastic conferences in the United Kingdom.
South Africa’s trade unions will soon launch a campaign against “the Israeli occupation of Arab lands,” demanding that Pretoria impose a boycott on all Israeli products and sever diplomatic relations. The president of the Congress Trade Union, Willy Madisha, said: “The best way for Israel to comply with United Nations resolutions is to pressure it by a diplomatic boycott such as the one imposed on apartheid South Africa.”
It is relatively easy to deflate the skewed comparisons between Israel and apartheid South Africa. Further, it is a slam-dunk to point to the intellectual dishonesty of such boycotts - be they academic, economic or political.
Our academicians are not kosher, but Palestinian intellectuals are? The Palestinian Authority that sees Hamas and Fatah exchange gunfire in hospitals, throw people off roofs, murder each other in the streets execution-style and burn each others’ houses to the ground, killing all the occupants including innocent children - its scholars are welcomed guests of the UCU?
Does the UCU see no contradiction in opening its university doors to Palestinian academicians whose leadership tramples human rights with impunity? Extending preferential treatment to Palestinian academics makes a mockery of the UCU’s boycott.
Given the UCU’s and South African trade unions’ objection to occupation, why not boycott American professors? After all, the US is occupying Iraq in a manner far more brutal than Israel’s occupation of the West Bank. How many thousands of innocent Iraqis have been killed by indiscriminate carpet bombing? We will never know because of the White House’s total control of press coverage of a war that was waged under false pretenses. (No comparable censorship exists in Israel.)
What about the security wall that the United States is constructing in Baghdad (and along the US border with Mexico), or systematic torture that is virtually US government policy? Oh, I forgot: If the UCU spurned American scholars from participating in conferences at Oxford or Cambridge, it would have to boycott itself because of its country’s willing participation in the war.
China, one of the most authoritarian regimes in the world, is hosting the Olympic Games. One does not hear British and South African unions protesting this absurdity. We could literally take a trip around the globe, particularly to countries on the same continent as South Africa, to single out nations whose repression of their own people far outstrips anything that Israel is doing in the occupied territories.
Israel’s right to defend itself against suicide bombings, kidnappings and constant threats to wipe it off the face of the earth apparently play no part in the decision by the UCU and the South African trade unions to boycott the Jewish state.
And yet, we know in our hearts of hearts that while such boycotts are not justified on the universal plain of comparisons, there are more than a few elements of truth in what these hypocrites claim.
For one segment of the population over whom we have responsibility, we have abrogated any semblance of democracy. It is especially painful that some in South Africa have joined the fray of those who boycott us, because of that country’s moral authority - given how blacks suffered years of unspeakable oppression under white minority rule.
But how would one describe certain things we are doing in the West Bank that have virtually no security value - checkpoints between Palestinian villages and within Palestinians cities; separate roads for Palestinians; thousands of Palestinians arrested under administrative detention; confiscation of Palestinian property for illegal Jewish settlements; a twisted route for Israel’s security barrier that separates Palestinians from their lands and divides villages in half; administrative home demolitions; covert protection for Jewish settlers who harass Palestinians tending their agricultural fields; preventing Israelis who marry Palestinians from living in Israel; banning Palestinians from swimming in natural springs along the Dead Sea?
And yet, despite the above, Israel’s present situation is still not politically analogous to South Africa’s history of discrimination; and so, we confidently argue that “apartheid” is not an appropriate term to apply to what we are doing in the West Bank.
But what term would one choose to define a privileged protectionism for a few thousand Jews in the West Bank over a separate and unequal existence for over two million Palestinians?
The fact that compared to other countries we are a paragon of moral virtue does not obviate another fact: We have shamed ourselves as a Jewish state that sought to educate the world that we would not be a nation like other nations and that the Zionist enterprise would fashion a society based on a prophetic vision of social justice. Instead, we have created a moral morass - and, if it takes the hypocritical self-righteousness of some foreign pseudo-intellectuals and pig-headed unionists to open our eyes and alter this unacceptable reality, then something positive will ultimately be served.
Recent Articles by Rabbi David Forman
- Counterpoint: Rabbis for Human Rights - the 20th anniversary - August 28th, 2008
- Counterpoint: 'Us' and 'them' - July 31st, 2008
- Counterpoint: An exercise in practical stupidity and moral idiocy - July 17th, 2008
- Counterpoint: A letter to a Jewish leader from abroad - July 3rd, 2008
- Counterpoint: What does the religious Right want? - June 19th, 2008
- Counterpoint: Forsaking both soldiers and the downtrodden - June 5th, 2008
- Counterpoint: Pigeonholing rights groups - March 27th, 2008
- Counterpoint: A liberal's lament - July 19th, 2007
- Truth and Hypocrisy - June 22nd, 2007
- Politics Make Strange Bedfellows - April 20th, 2007
- Feed the Hungry - March 2nd, 2007
- Trafficking in Women: A Blight on Jewish Decency - December 29th, 2006
- Rabbis for Human Rights receives Raphael Lemkin Human Rights Award - December 11th, 2006
- Succot has Universal Meaning - October 4th, 2006
- The Binding of Isaac - September 20th, 2006
- Try a Little Common Sense - July 25th, 2006
- Prisoners are no Asset - July 16th, 2006
- End the Degradation: An appeal to Israel's new defense minister - May 18th, 2006
- Yes, Birthright journey cheapens the message of Judaism - May 5th, 2006
- Getting beyond name-calling - March 29th, 2006
- Settlers, hands off the olive trees - December 26th, 2005
- MIAs - a failure of political will - December 11th, 2005
- Let's not turn to anti-Arab racism - November 14th, 2005
- To obey orders, or not - July 24th, 2005
- Forgotten in captivity - February 3rd, 2003
- Let PR constrain policy - August 7th, 2002
- Could the Right be right? - October 16th, 2001
- New intifada breeds depression, with no end in sight - April 13th, 2001
- Rabbi David Forman - May 16th, 2000
Rabbis for Human Rights recommends that you read these articles in Perspectives
- Counterpoint: Rabbis for Human Rights - the 20th anniversary - August 28th, 2008
- Counterpoint: 'Us' and 'them' - July 31st, 2008
- Counterpoint: An exercise in practical stupidity and moral idiocy - July 17th, 2008
- Counterpoint: A letter to a Jewish leader from abroad - July 3rd, 2008
- Counterpoint: What does the religious Right want? - June 19th, 2008
- Counterpoint: Forsaking both soldiers and the downtrodden - June 5th, 2008
- Counterpoint: Pigeonholing rights groups - March 27th, 2008
- Durban 1: What really happened at the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance - March 3rd, 2008
- Response to Haaretz investigation - November 23rd, 2007
- Counterpoint: A liberal's lament - July 19th, 2007
- Truth and Hypocrisy - June 22nd, 2007
- The work that we do is not fun: Tikkun Olam and Human Rights - May 4th, 2007
- Tikkun olam: to make the world a little bit better - May 1st, 2007
- Politics Make Strange Bedfellows - April 20th, 2007
- Feed the Hungry - March 2nd, 2007
- Trafficking in Women: A Blight on Jewish Decency - December 29th, 2006
- Try a Little Common Sense - July 25th, 2006
- Prisoners are no Asset - July 16th, 2006
- Why I Will Demonstrate - June 29th, 2006
- End the Degradation: An appeal to Israel's new defense minister - May 18th, 2006
- Peace and Religion: The greatest gift we can bestow our children from our rich religious teachings - May 12th, 2006
- Pride and Humility: Decry the abuses of power and the injustices of our country - May 12th, 2006
- Yes, Birthright journey cheapens the message of Judaism - May 5th, 2006
- Sit under the vine and fig tree, and not be afraid: South Hebron Hills Tour - April 9th, 2006
- Getting beyond name-calling - March 29th, 2006
- Settlers, hands off the olive trees - December 26th, 2005
- MIAs - a failure of political will - December 11th, 2005
- Let's not turn to anti-Arab racism - November 14th, 2005
- To obey orders, or not - July 24th, 2005
- The rabbi who pricks Israel's conscience - March 25th, 2005
- There Is A Kippah In The Rubble - April 15th, 2003
- Forgotten in captivity - February 3rd, 2003
- Let PR constrain policy - August 7th, 2002
- Could the Right be right? - October 16th, 2001
- New intifada breeds depression, with no end in sight - April 13th, 2001




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