Jews are victims of the West’s Post-Colonial Ignorance and
Postmodern Political Bigotry
Since the creation of the State of Israel the revanchists have
been assiduously rewriting Jewish history in order to fit that history into a
straight-jacketed narrative that denies Israelis any rights of self-defence. Francesca
Albanese, the Italian doyen of anti-Zionist, pro-genocide Islamism, has said
nothing new when she states that Jews in Israel have no right to self-defence.
Can a person who supports genocide be called a genocidaire? It must also be assumed, given the current
climate of unsheathed hatred, that none of us, labelled as Zionists, have any
human rights according to Albanese and her ilk. As United Nations Special
Rapporteur for the Palestinian Territories she openly supports, and without
reservation, the genocidal Muslim movement, HAMAS, in its war against Judaism.
Since 10/7 the bigots have escalated their rhetorical deceit
to justify mass-rape, torture, and the slaughter of unarmed civilians. And it
seems that so-called progressives have
embraced this narrative. But then, none of this is new, we should not have been
surprised. This narrative of ‘all actions by Palestinians are acceptable’ as demonstrated
by the global (selective) human rights community, and so many more people
besides, is again, not news.
Revanchism – is from the French word “revenge” – and it
means a policy of seeking to retaliate, especially to recover lost territory.
Over many decades we have been negligent in our response,
and this must change.
The peacemakers had to respect the rights of small nations and regions:
“ Peoples and provinces are not to be bartered about from sovereignty to sovereignty.”
“The interests of local populations
trumped those of the Great Powers.”
Any discussion of Jewish rights
inevitably falls short of the truth when it is claimed that Jews were an
insignificant minority in the Holy Land and therefore had (and have) no rights
of self-determination. What is omitted is that for most of the period from at
least, 1,400 BCE, Jews were the majority population within what was the Kingdom
of Israel, the Kingdom of Judah, Judea, and Samaria. That presence in the land
of Israel continued until a two-century hiatus ensued following on from the
invasion of Israel in 632 CE by the Islamic-Arab imperial juggernaut. A Jewish
return to Israel resumed prior to the Crusades. That immigration was fuelled by
a desperate messianic hope for any future other than the present, mired as it
was, in relentless insecurity. The Jewish population rose and fell with the terror
unleashed by successive Christian and Muslim conquerors.
From 1828 onwards Jerusalem had a
Jewish majority (there were more Jews than Christians and more Jews than
Muslims). In 1864 a census undertaken by the British embassy revealed Jerusalem
to be 80% Jewish. And yet, the social media record of this is inexplicably
non-existent. As are falls in the Jewish population, often a collapse, whether
in Jerusalem or elsewhere throughout Israel which curiously, was not
accompanied by a commensurate Christian or Muslim cataclysm and was/is left
unexplained.
To be clear about this: Jews have
been yearning for or actually “returning” to Israel since 597 BCE. The Prophet
Ezekiel, exiled to Babylon, wrote these words: “By the rivers of Babylon, there
we sat down, yea, we wept, when we remembered Zion.” Zion is where the movement and word
“Zionism” originates. Spiritual and religious Zionism has existed for over
2,600 years. Political Zionism did not begin with Theodore Herzl. Rabbi Zvi
Hirsch Kalisher (born 1795) promoted Zionism as did his contemporary, Judah ben
Solomon Chai Alkalai (born 1798). Both promoted a return to the land as part of
a religious-Zionist movement.
The persecution of Jews, “blaming”
that oppression of Jews on Zionism is a lie based on ignorance or more
sinister, on a malevolent form of deceit. Anti-Zionism, the rejection of our return
to Israel is based on a foreign, colonizing (Muslim) ideology. It is buttressed
by a theology that believes all conquered land to be an Islamic inheritance. Accordingly,
to oppose that theology is a blasphemy.
In a world that sanitises hate as long as it springs forth from a theological fountain, domination is basic. In much of the world it is a religious mania; a theology that mandates captured territory to be an eternal patrimony. It is why al Qaeda murdered almost two hundred people when it bombed the Madrid train network in 2004, and why neo-Ottoman Turkey conquered Northern Cyprus and to this day claims that the whole of the Mediterranean Basin belongs to it, contrary to all international maritime laws. It is central to a theological conquest philosophy. It is called Dar al-Harb (in Arabic).
We humans complicate in order to
obfuscate. The Muslim world hates (and fears) Israel because Israel has freed
itself from an Islamist theological prison; one that is suffered by minorities throughout
the Near-East. This intolerance is not because it cries out for justice for the new (Arab) Palestinians but because it demands inequality and usually, it
institutionalises it. But human rights organisation will not issue any reports
on this phenomenon, nor will they accuse any other nation of apartheid. Let us
not forget that the world has conveniently ignored the plight of some forty
million Kurds, persecuted, and denied the most basic right to
self-determination in order to placate todays artificially created Near-Eastern
Arab nation states.
When European empires were
disintegrating into a multiplicity of nation states the lines that were drawn
were not perfect but reflected ethnic identities. None of this redressing of
inequality occurred within the Near-Eastern region, except within historic
Israel.
At the time of the Balfour
Declaration there were exactly five independent Muslim majority states. The
only Muslim-majority regions not to be colonized by the Europeans were Saudi
Arabia, Iran, Turkey, the Sultanate of Oman, and Afghanistan. Turkey was one of
the first colonial powers in Europe with the Ottoman empire having dominion
over a vast region for over 6 centuries (from 1299 – 1922).
If the fascists want to argue that
the First Balfour Declaration (there was a Second Balfour Declaration issued in
1926) is a tragedy for the Middle East, then they need to agree that the Muslim
majority nations that also aspired to and received their independence in the
wake of that first Balfour Declaration are an even greater tragedy. They have
been responsible, independent of any Jewish or Israeli input, of enormous human
misery that many if not most of them have caused for the minorities in their
midst and the conflicts they have created. Conflicts that have killed millions
of people in the decades since they gained their independence.
A single example will suffice. Lebanon
was granted its independence in 1941 (from France). But it is a nation split along
sectarian lines between Christian, Sunni Muslim, Shiite Muslim, and Druze. After
a fifteen-year civil war (1975-1990) that saw one hundred and fifty thousand
people killed (about five percent of the total population) and almost one
million of its citizens displaced, Lebanon has, to this day, not enjoyed peace.
It cannot. Each of the separate religious factions hate and fear each other. At
one point in that war there were twenty-two separate internal armies operating
against each other in constantly shifting alliances. The creation of that one Lebanese
nation was a convenience for France but a disaster for the region.
The latest racist meme against
Israeli independence refers to a 75-year injustice (Israel’s winning of
independence in 1948, against all the odds.) The real injustice is that
according to the logic of that meme, Jews have no right to immigration, we have
no right to flee our homes when we feel threatened, and we certainly have no
right to be “refugees.” We should just
“turn the other cheek,” and have the good grace to die as previous generations
did, in silence. The inhumanity is
breathtaking.
Apparently, human rights only
attach to other people wishing for a better life in the Western World. But not Jews.
There are few nations that have
gained independence from their colonial overlords that have enjoyed everlasting
peace, and they tend to be Western nations. Israel, however, is the only one
that is unforgiven for its birth and survival.
Israel should never forget this
lesson in duplicity, mendacity, hatred and bigotry.