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Sunday, November 30, 2003

Roger L. Simon is hoping this second article decrying anti-Semitism printed in The Guardian represents a trend at the paper. I'm not so optimistic, but here's to hoping. This is a good piece, well worth reading, as the author takes on a number of the contradictions in the attempts of anti-Zionists to escape the charge of anti-Semitism. Do read in full.

Anti-Zionism is anti-semitism - Behind much criticism of Israel is a thinly veiled hatred of Jews by Emanuele Ottolenghi

...If Israel's critics are truly opposed to anti-semitism, they should not repeat traditional anti-semitic themes under the anti-Israel banner. When such themes - the Jewish conspiracy to rule the world, linking Jews with money and media, the hooked-nose stingy Jew, the blood libel, disparaging use of Jewish symbols, or traditional Christian anti-Jewish imagery - are used to describe Israel's actions, concern should be voiced. Labour MP Tam Dalyell decried the influence of "a Jewish cabal" on British foreign policy-making; an Italian cartoonist last year depicted the Israeli siege of the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem as an attempt to kill Jesus "again". Is it necessary to evoke the Jewish conspiracy or depict Israelis as Christ-killers to denounce Israeli policies?

The fact that accusations of anti-semitism are dismissed as paranoia, even when anti-semitic imagery is at work, is a subterfuge. Israel deserves to be judged by the same standards adopted for others, not by the standards of utopia. Singling out Israel for an impossibly high standard not applied to any other country begs the question: why such different treatment?...



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