12-04-2012
Revisiting Anti-Zionism and antisemitism
By Abraham H. Foxman
In the ongoing discussion about when criticism of Israel can be labeled as antisemitism, Nathan Sharansky made a seminal pedagogical contribution with his Three Ds. He said that it's antisemitism when Israel is demonized, when Israel is delegitimized and when a double-standard is used to assess Israeli behavior.
Clearly, all three of these factors are part of the excessive and unfair criticism of Israel and at least point the way to a connection between anti-Zionism and antisemitism. At the same time, particularly as one encounters new forms of anti-Israel activity and as the need intensifies to separate out those who may criticize Israel but are susceptible to change from those who are hardcore, there is value in refining Sharansky's useful framework.
Let's go back to the basic question that we so frequently encounter when we meet officials of European governments and raise with them the high levels of antisemitism in their home countries. Invariably, during the discussion, an official will say: Are you suggesting that any criticism of Israel is antisemitism? We are actually quite pleased they are so blunt because we know they often are saying it to each other when not in our presence -- that Jewish representatives raise the issue of antisemitism as a way to stifle legitimate criticism of Israel.
So here's our response, which is a refinement on Sharansky's Three Ds. First, of course, we are not saying that all criticism of Israel is antisemitism. Israel is a country like all others, with good policies and not such good policies, and it would be absurd to suggest that it is beyond criticism. Look at Israel's own press and its criticism. That doesn't mean we have to agree with many criticisms of Israeli policy. But we can't say it is beyond the bounds and it surely isn't antisemitism.
On the other end of the spectrum, however, is criticism or condemnation of Israel that is transparently a cover for antisemitism. A few examples are on order. During the Second Palestinian Intifada, an Italian newspaper published a cartoon depicting an Israeli soldier pointing a rifle at a Palestinian baby. This depiction in itself would have been disturbing and a political distortion but not, on its face, qualifying for the accusation of antisemitism. However, the baby through the visual also clearly represented the baby Jesus, and the caption of the baby speaking to the soldier read, "Oh, you're doing it to me all over again." In other words, the Jews in allegedly killing Palestinians are reliving the alleged crime of murdering Jesus. This was taking a political issue and overlaying it with the classical antisemitic charge of deicide.
In a similar vein was a cartoon in an Arab newspaper several years ago showing then Prime Minister Ariel Sharon drinking a liquid from a glass. It was clear from the red color of the liquid and the caption that he was drinking the blood of Muslims: the old blood libel charge in new garb.
Other manifestations of obvious antisemitism in the guise of anti-Zionism are charges that Zionists control the Middle East or U.S. policy or that Israelis are like the Nazis.
There is, however, a middle category between legitimate criticism and transparent antisemitism. Larry Summers said it well when, as president of Harvard University, proposals reached his desk calling for Harvard to divest from any company doing business with Israel. Summers made clear it would not happen on his watch. He castigated anyone who compared democratic Israel to apartheid South Africa.
He then went on to ask: Are all those who support divestment antisemitic? He said some surely are, but even those who may not be, who may be motivated against Israel because of a distorted idealism or anti-colonialism or anti-American sentiment, are helping to create an environment that makes antisemitism more acceptable and more probable by their excessive attacks and singling out the Jewish state.
That distinction is so important. It points to a way to bring those who may be won over by persuasion by separating them out from hardcore antisemites. It says, you may not come from an antisemitic starting point, but in your one-sided bias against Israel, you are making antisemitism more likely.
In our view, these kinds of distinctions have the dual virtues of being a more accurate description of what's going on (with all the anti-Israel activity in Europe and elsewhere, it's not all derived from antisemitism) and of being more credible to the would-be audience (we're not accusing you of antisemitism but what you're doing is contributing to antisemitism).
One further refinement is in order. And that is how repeated use of anti-Israel language can gradually slide, sometimes not consciously, into antisemitism or the acceptance of antisemitism, even when the individual if challenged would strongly condemn antisemitism.
The truth is French officials went through this early in the Second Intifada. When hundreds of antisemitic incidents surfaced in Paris and elsewhere, French leaders denied what was right before their eyes and refused to label them antisemitism.
They chose, for too long, to see the incidents as part of the Middle East conflict (even though no Jews were attacking Muslims). They had become so accustomed to criticism and condemnation of Israel, from the media, from Muslim circles, from left-wing intellectuals, that when blatant antisemitism was staring them in the face they couldn't or wouldn't see it for what it was. Getting comfortable with constant attacks on Israel makes it far more likely for one to miss or rationalize antisemitism.
Anti-Zionism and antisemitism is a phenomenon that is with us for the foreseeable future. We must continue to expose for what it is. Making appropriate distinctions along the way will help us win more allies and ensure that our voice is credible and one that cannot be ignored.
Abraham H. Foxman, National Director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) since 1987, is world-renowned as a leader in the fight against antisemitism, bigotry and discrimination. He is the author of Jews and Money: The Story of a Stereotype (Palgrave Macmillan, Nov. 2010), The Deadliest Lies: The Israel Lobby and the Myth of Jewish Control, (Palgrave Macmillan, a





