by Isi Leibler
I must confess to a  rising sense of frustration and rage when observing the increasing  number of ill-informed and fallacious critiques of Israel by liberal  Diaspora Jews.
I am not referring to  the loathsome so-called anti-Zionist Jews who call for boycotts of  Israel. Nor even to jaundiced far-left Jewish groups like J Street,  which inflict considerable damage on the Jewish state by calling on the  U.S. government to pressure Israel, or orchestrate petitions such as  those recently circulated among liberal Jewish clergy demanding that  Israel cancel plans for residential construction in Jerusalem's Jewish  suburbs and the E1 area.
I refer to those Jews  who, when it was fashionable, were enthusiastic supporters of Israel.  But the estrangement of many of their liberal non-Jewish friends from  the Jewish state encouraged them to also assume politically correct  attitudes, even adopting an "anti-Zionist chic." Some were swept up in  the tide of postmodernism with its oft-espoused view that Israel was  born in sin and represents one of the last bastions of colonialism.
This was an  evolutionary process that began with the progressive application of  moral equivalence to Israelis and Arabs and climaxed with Benjamin  Netanyahu's election and demonization as an extremist nationalist. At  this point, these Jewish liberals began chanting the mindless mantra  that Israel had become obsessed with maintaining "the occupation."
They adopted the Arab  narrative that settlements represent the greatest obstacle to peace,  dismissing the fact that settlements comprise only 2 percent of  territory over the Green Line and that since Oslo, every territorial  concession from Israel has merely emboldened Palestinian radicals and  resulted in intensified terror.
As a rule, these  liberal Jewish critics ignored the facts that the Palestinian Authority,  no less than Hamas, consistently refused to make reciprocal  compromises, and that the conflict was not over territorial compromise  but over ongoing Jewish sovereignty in the region. They also played down  the ongoing missile attacks and vicious incitement and anti-Semitism  infusing all levels of Palestinian society.
Israel is now more  isolated than it has been at any time since its creation. We are  surrounded by anti-Semitic Islamic regimes bent on our destruction, and  Iran is on course to becoming a nuclear power. Most European countries,  whose soil was drenched in Jewish blood, are again standing on the  sidelines as they did before and during the Shoah when Jews were being  slaughtered. Surely, at such a time, even liberal Diaspora Jews could be  expected to unite in support of the Jewish state. Alas, increasing  numbers of them are distancing themselves further from Israel.
A recent example was  the condemnation by the North American Board of the Union of Reform  Judaism of housing construction in the exclusively Jewish suburbs of  east Jerusalem and E1. This undermined a central Israeli policy,  endorsed by the vast majority of Israelis.
Were the Reform Jewish  leaders not aware that this area had always been designated to remain  within Israel and that the Bush administration even acknowledged this in  a letter to then Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in the wake of the  unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and the forcible uprooting of  Jewish settlements?
Were they unaware that  the uproar instigated by the Palestinians over residential construction  is a ploy to undermine our vital interests in areas which until now were  never in dispute? That they are seeking to impose upon us, as an  opening benchmark to negotiations, indefensible borders based on the  1949 armistice lines? That this formula would deem the Temple Mount and  the Old City of Jerusalem occupied territories?
Or the subsequent  extraordinary outburst by the progressive rabbis of Bnai Yeshurun, one  of New York's most prominent temples, who proclaimed that "the vote at  the United Nations was a great moment for us as citizens of the world  ... an opportunity to celebrate the process that allows a nation to come  forward and ask for recognition." This, in the immediate wake of the  U.N. speech by PA head Mahmoud Abbas, who accused Israel of killing  innocent Palestinians during the Gaza war and indulging in ethnic  cleansing.
Aside from also  endorsing the 1949 lines as future borders for Israel, were these rabbis  not aware that Abbas was calling for reunification with Hamas, whose  leader had just proclaimed that "Palestine is ours from the river to the  sea and from the south to the north ... there is no legitimacy for  Israel. ... We will free Jerusalem inch by inch, stone by stone. Israel  has no right to be in Jerusalem."
The extent of the  breakdown among Jewish liberals was highlighted when even David  Breakstone, vice chairman of the World Zionist Organization and a  devoted Zionist, recently provided a kosher certificate to Peter  Beinart, one of Israel's most biased and hostile Jewish Diaspora  critics.
Breakstone stressed  that while strongly disagreeing with Beinart's call to boycott Israeli  settlement products, he was attracted to him because he was a committed  Jew, sent his children to Jewish day schools and provided a service to  Zionism by criticizing our failure to sufficiently promote peace and  uphold the ethical high ground because we maintain the "occupation."
Few would dispute our  obligation to be self-critical and expose injustices in our midst. But  this is not what Beinart and other liberal Jews like New York Times  columnist Tom Friedman promote. They produce distorted one-sided  evaluations demonizing Israel as the principal obstacle to peace. They  promote anti-Israeli politicians like Chuck Hagel and accuse Jewish  leaders of promoting McCarthyism. They call on the U.S. and other  governments to exert pressure and force Israel to conform.
How can Breakstone possibly describe such people as "champions of good old-fashioned Zionism"?
There is also an  increasing tendency among Jewish liberals to hijack the memory of  assassinated Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin as a means of discrediting  Netanyahu. This is outrageous. Rabin, whom I knew and admired, was a  genuine patriot. His "gamble for peace" proved disastrous. But at no  stage did he even come close to promoting the views attributed to him  today by liberals.
He was adamantly  committed to the unity of Jerusalem and initiated the E1 project. He  would never have contemplated delaying its construction or freezing  residential building in Jewish Jerusalem. It is unconscionable to  shamelessly exploit his name to promote views he himself bitterly  opposed.
The reality is that Netanyahu has made more concessions and is far more accommodating to the Palestinians than Rabin was.
One would wish to  believe that much of the condemnation of Israel by liberal Jews,  compounded by purportedly being grounded on Jewish values, is not  malicious but based on ignorance. The blame for such behavior could then  be directed solely toward Israel's failure to convey the reality of our  situation.
Yet sadly, one becomes  increasingly convinced that many Jewish liberals have closed minds and  do not wish to be enlightened, because their principal motivation is to  demonstrate to their "progressive" friends that they are more  open-minded, universalist and tolerant than their "bigoted" Israeli  kinsmen.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=3257
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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