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Israel uses "anti-Semitism" to justify its existence

by Omayma Abdel-Latif
The Israeli press uses racist terms against Arabs including outright calls for genocide, but this is completely ignored by the Western press.
http://www.ahram.org.eg/weekly/2002/598/eg5.htm

"May the holy name visit retribution on the Arabs' heads,
cause their seeds to be lost and annihilate them, cause them to
be vanquished and cause them to be cast from the world. It is
forbidden to be merciful to them. You must give them missiles,
with relish. Annihilate them, the evil ones." Those words were
spoken by the leader of Israel's Shas Party, Rabbi Ouvadia
Ben Yousef. Such a striking case of overtly racist comments
comes to mind in the lead up to a lawsuit charging that an
Egyptian newspaper was guilty of "perverse racism" in its
coverage of Israeli crimes against Palestinians.

Tomorrow, a Paris court will look into a case initiated against Ibrahim Nafie,
editor-in-chief of Cairo's Al-Ahram newspaper, chairman of the board of the daily's
mother organisation (which also publishes Al-Ahram Weekly) and chairman of the press
syndicate. The case was launched by the Paris-based Jewish group, the International
League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism. Nafie is charged with inciting hatred against
Jews by publishing an article entitled "A Jewish pie from Arab blood" on 10 October
2001 by journalist Adel Hamouda. The French Jewish group deemed the article
anti-Semitic. Nafie's summons by the French court has drawn angry responses from
across the Arab world and this week witnessed a show of support from the Press
Syndicate, the Bar Association and human rights organisations who vowed "to stand by
him [Nafie] so as not to be intimidated by such attempts to silence criticism of Israel".

Observers told Al-Ahram Weekly that the case was "politically motivated" since it comes
at a time when both the Arabs and Israelis are engaged in a war of words and imagery to
win international support for their position with respect to the Palestinian Intifada. This
competition over public opinion is particularly strong in Europe, which the International
League Against Racism and Anti- Semitism claims is sympathetic to the Palestinians'
plight. That the Arab press, in general, and the Egyptian press, in particular, is anti-
Semitic is almost an article of faith for the Jewish lobby in Europe and the United States.
Portrayal of the Arab media as replete with anti-Jewish rhetoric and racist incitement has
been part of the Israeli campaign to defame Arab journalism in the West.

Emad Gad, editor-in-chief of Mokhtarat Israelia [Israeli Selections] -- a monthly
journal published by the Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies -- and an
expert on Israeli affairs, said the case against Nafie was merely a continuation of Israel's
relentless efforts to win sympathy by invoking the charge of anti-Semitism. "They [the
Israelis] exploit historic events that have resonance for Europeans. They think that by
accusing the Arabs of anti-Semitism, they will undermine criticism against Israel in Europe
and create sympathy for their side," he said.

Gad's argument seems to hold water within a European context, since previous attempts
to silence critics of Israeli policies have borne fruit. A Western journalist told the Weekly,
"Many journalists back down from criticising Israel because to do so would put their
careers in jeopardy."

In explaining the reason behind pro-Israeli groups' constant accusations of anti-Semitism
against their critics, Britain's Channel Four correspondent Lindsey Hilsum, herself a Jew,
wrote in the London-based New Statesman magazine on 13 May 2002, "The moment
Europe's Jews say the threat [of anti-Semitism in Europe] has diminished or disappeared,
Israelis fear the reason for their state is undermined. They need anti- Semitism." "Israeli
politicians," added Hilsum, "want that collective guilt to define European attitudes to the
Middle East today. But pretending Europe has not changed in 60 years does not give
Israel licence to do what it likes in the Palestinian territories it occupies."

The case of the French Jewish group serves as an example of how Israel uses
anti-Semitism as part of a strategy to ensure its survival. One observer said that the case
initiated against Nafie in France could be interpreted within the context of the Israeli
government's campaign that targets France's Jewish community, estimated at 600,000,
making it the third largest community outside Israel after Russia and the US. Spokesmen
for the Israeli government have made repeated calls for France's Jews to emigrate. In
February, Sharon himself said Israel was preparing for an exodus of French Jews due to
"a dangerous wave of anti-Semitism". On 10 April, the Israeli government said the
emigration of France's entire Jewish community had become a "necessity" and announced
the setting up of an inter-ministerial committee on the issue. Following Jean-Marie Le
Pen's success in the first round of France's presidential elections, Israeli Deputy Prime
Minister Elie Yisha, who heads the ultra-Orthodox Shas Party, called on French Jews to
emigrate to Israel, insisting that the "Jews of Europe, and the Jews of France, in
particular, cannot remain indifferent in the face of growing anti- Semitic attacks, which the
French authorities seem unable to stop".

But in the view of some Western journalists, and a few Arab critics, the Arab press does
play into the hands of Zionist groups since they sometimes permit the use of a discourse
cluttered with indiscriminate slurs against Jews that range from marked insensitivity to
crude racism. Such a discourse amounts to what one British journalist of Jewish
background described as "European Christian anti-Semitism which fills the pages of Arab
newspapers". In response to this claim, Egyptian journalists who spoke to the Weekly
referred to "the context" into which this so-called anti- Semitic language emerged in the
Arab press.

"It did not happen in a vacuum," said Gad. "Since the Intifada, both the Arabs and the
Israelis have been engaged in this 'tit for tat' war of words which has sometimes slipped
into racist remarks on the Arab side," Gad said. He pointed out what he described as
"the conspicuous absence" of any reference in the Western media of what he called "the
other anti-Semitism" that is taking place in Israel against the Arabs -- both Muslims and
Christians. "The ubiquity of Israeli incitement against Arabs and Muslims is barely
commented upon in the Western press," Gad told the Weekly. "It is always underplayed
-- if it is mentioned at all. One can rightly claim that they [the Israelis] also resort to
incitement but this is hardly mentioned in the Western press," said Gad, who pointed to a
thick file of newspaper clippings and statements by Israeli politicians and writings by
rabbis that he says are full of extremely racist and anti-Arab rhetoric.

According to Salaheddin Hafez, the secretary- general of the Arab Journalists
Federation, Nafie's case sets a precedent that will throw the door open for similar cases
to be initiated by Zionist organisations. In a pre-emptive move, an Egyptian journalist
lodged a complaint this week with the Paris- based Reporters Without Borders
Organisation (RSF), urging it to look into what he described as the relentless attempts by
Jewish groups based in Europe to silence any criticism directed against Israel in the Arab
press by accusing it of being anti- Semitic. In response to the complaint which spoke of
the intimidation that Arab journalists are subjected to by pro-Israeli groups, Virigine
Locussol, who is in charge of the Egyptian affairs section of the RSF, said "it is a very big
problem in France, too." Locussol mentioned the case of the French Journalist Daniel
Merme of Radio France International who was also accused of anti-Semitism because
"he aired a programme from Gaza in which Palestinians talked about the situation under
the Israeli occupation," Locussol told the Weekly by telephone.

The RSF itself came under attack when the organisation included the Israeli Chief of Staff
Shaul Mofaz (during the period November 2001 until July 2002 on its list of "predators",
or the enemies of journalists, which is posted on its Web site. RSF removed Mofaz from
the list when he retired, but added Ariel Sharon. "When we were in Gaza a few months
ago, we were denied press accreditation. So if you criticise the Israeli army, you are
dubbed anti-Semitic," Locussol said.

Locussol and others criticise the Arab press for exaggeration. "It is a pity that sometimes
they publish articles which exaggerate. I would tell them, you don't need to exaggerate.
The facts are already horrible." But Locussol had a warning for the Israelis, too. "If any of
the critics of Israel are dubbed as anti-Semitic, it is something terrible for the memory of
the Jewish people who died because of anti-Semitism. They render this term banal and
use it to put pressure on others," Locussol added.

http://www.ahram.org.eg/weekly/2002/598/eg5.htm
by x
Several years ago Muslims in France celebrated when ex-movie star Brigot Bardot was fined by the French government for saying she felt that the killing of goats on Ramadan was inhumane. Typical- someone criticizes Muslims and they must be punished, someone criticizes Jews and their right to do so must be withheld. Funny noone on IMC protested that decision, pro-Musli bias?
by M.
..of terrorist appologists and their moronic supporters. Islam=facism
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