With a new right and hard-right coalition government starting up in Israel, you might think that now would not be the best time to stifle criticism of the country.
For decades, one of Israel’s safeguards against completely collapsing into a thug state has been the Supreme Court and separation of powers. Now Israel Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu’s new partners in government — one-time followers of the Zionist terrorist Meir Kahane — have insisted the new administration push through limits on the court’s purview, at the same time as the hard-right take the police ministry.
This is a recipe for killing and oppression in the occupied territories on a whole new scale. Arguably it represents a totalitarian impulse within Zionism, something former prime minister Yitzhak Shamir expressed openly and explicitly when he led the violent LEHI movement in the 1940s. Shamir became prime minister in the 1980s, and oversaw the government’s sponsorship of the West Bank settlement program. So you could say that current policies, and the onslaught to come, are the continuation of that belief.
But now you might not be able to say it at Melbourne University without getting into trouble — even if you say it, or ask it as a question, in a lecture or tutorial. The university has officially adopted the new International Holocaust Remembrance Association (IHRA) definition of anti-Semitism as policy, the first Australian university to do so.
The core part of the IHRA’s definition is general enough:
Anti-Semitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of anti-Semitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.
But the elaboration immediately gets on to the nitty-gritty:
To guide IHRA in its work, the following examples may serve as illustrations:
- Manifestations might include the targeting of the state of Israel, conceived as a Jewish collectivity. However, criticism of Israel similar to that leveled against any other country cannot be regarded as antisemitic.
Yes, one rather thought such manifestations “might”. The IHRA’s definition has been pushed at Australian universities by the Australian Zionist lobby for the past couple of years, and it’s got its first commitment. Others will follow.
The right to free inquiry?
Now, a university administration has no business adopting official definitions of anything. The university is where the fundamental character of entities is to be debated. But if the university as an entity has a series of prefabricated definitions, what hope for the insistence on the right to free inquiry anywhere else?
But the IHRA definition, as expressed in its examples, goes a lot further, including:
- Denying the fact, scope, mechanisms (e.g. gas chambers) or intentionality of the genocide of the Jewish people at the hands of National Socialist Germany and its supporters and accomplices during World War II (the Holocaust)
- Accusing the Jews as a people, or Israel as a state, of inventing or exaggerating the Holocaust
- Accusing Jewish citizens of being more loyal to Israel, or to the alleged priorities of Jews worldwide, than to the interests of their own nations
- Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g. by claiming that the existence of a state of Israel is a racist endeavour
- Applying double standards by requiring of it a behaviour not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation
- Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.
(NB: numbering is mine. I’ve left out IHRA points that clearly and uncomplicatedly identify anti-Semitism, since they’re not in dispute.)
These points are either reasonably arguable or represent a ridiculous ban on thought. The intentionality of the Holocaust? For decades, it has been debated as to whether the Holocaust as an event was the long-term explicit intent of Hitler and co, or a mix of that and various amoral bureaucratic procedures and attitudes of a total war society. The IHRA note suggests that the latter argument is anti-Semitic.
Israel as a state exaggerating the Holocaust? My God. “There’s no business like Shoah business” is an Israeli political saying that characterises politicians who start resorting to it when they’ve mucked up the economy or something else mundane. Israel’s leaders are not above using the uniqueness of the Holocaust (which is unique in some aspects, but not all) for political gain. Trouble is, they have no word for chutzpah.
Accusing Jewish citizens of being more loyal to Israel? Well, that would be a perfectly rational course of action by Zionist Jews (and Zionist gentiles for that matter). Mossad has used allies like Australia and New Zealand by forging our passports and using them for its assassination squads, thus endangering innocent Australian. Zionist Australian politicians have defended that. Is scrutinising such strategic choices now anti-Semitism?
Number five is a doozy. This is where the IHRA sounds like George Costanza’s father (played by the great Jerry Stiller) in Seinfeld: “Why is it always me! What did I do now? I am not the master of my own house…” Criticism of Israel from within Australia, a country whose progressives have been shellacking it as nothing other than a colonialist genocidal enterprise for a good decade now, hardly seems like holding it to an unfair standard. Maybe 20 years ago. Now it’s the Zionists who seem very much engaged in special pleading.
Comparing Israel with the Nazis? Since Ben Gurion called Jabotinsky “the Jewish Hitler”, there has been no end of such comparisons from within and without Zionism. Hasidic and other Orthodox Jewish groups have long been anti-Zionist, arguing that the political movement of Zionism utterly undermines Judaism’s essence of attending on the arrival of the Messiah, and once that’s gone, Satan, the adversary, takes over — as proof of which they now point to the West Bank.
The Israeli philosopher Yeshayahu Leibowitz secularised this and coined the term “Judeo-Nazis”. Can he be taught at Melbourne University now?
We have to be free to ask the question as to the complex relationship of two late 19th-century national socialist movements, Nazism and Zionism. The West Bank’s arrangement of ever-more powerful and prosperous Zionist settlements fortified from Palestinians ruled by an army, subject to random killings, and kept “far from the roads”, looks a lot like Hitler’s imaginings of how a Nazi-colonised Russia would look like.
A rockier road ahead
Politically, the real target of the IHRA definition, or its elaboration and application, is the anti-Israel “boycott, divestment, sanctions” (BDS) movement, whose growth, especially at financially powerful universities and their student unions, really does keep Israel’s leaders up at night.
The new post-colonial nations of the world are not particularly anti-Zionist these days, as the new nationalism takes over. On the other hand, you don’t have to teach India and China what colonialism is like from the other end. Israel faces a rockier road in an era of post-US hegemony, than hitherto.
It’s not surprising that Melbourne University, “The Shop”, would be the first to sign up to the definition, given the city is the centre of the Australian Zionist lobby and that Melbourne Uni wants to beat Monash in everything. Nor that vice-chancellor Duncan Maskell might not have the greatest understanding of the humanities’ need for unlimited free inquiry, given that his field is salmonella (world expert apparently). The place’s nickname — “The Shop” was for degrees and professionalisation — indicates its deep integration into the Melbourne establishment, reflected in the composition of its board.
But there’s a twist to all this, arising from the university’s lack of interest in protecting free inquiry, in its pursuit of appeasing powers-that-be. It has said that it will also be developing “anti-Islamophobia” guidelines, to match the IHRA “anti-Semitism” guidelines. Great. So then an academic, Zionist or non-Zionist, would not be able to argue or ask whether sections of the Arab world’s anti-Zionism is not simply a displaced politics of ressentiment, arising from the failures within Arab modernisation movements?
Could someone, Marxist or conservative, ask whether Islam, as a fused religious-political movement, represents a totalitarian form of monotheism that made development impossible, and caused them to be subject to and overwhelmed by European powers? Could feminists describe the religion as, on balance, misogynist? And so on.
Do university managements propose to work their way through the liberal pieties and create anti-racism, anti-homophobia, anti-transphobia, and then do the conservative ones with, say, anti-Christianophobe guidelines, until nothing can be said in a lecture or tutorial without the fear of it being reported, and someone having to submit to an automatically generated inquiry process? That is the end of the university, absolutely.
Of course, farce following, or preceding, tragedy Melbourne University’s path to this has been smoothed by the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU), which last year voted up policies officially opposing Zionism and “gender-critical philosophy”, the latter being the argument that embodied sex is realer than psychological or affirmed gender.
These and other resolutions issued from the union’s Smolny leave an increasing number of members asking whether the union would be able to represent them in a dispute over their teaching content properly. Since Melbourne University again has also gestured towards free-speech limits on gender debate on the basis of “harm”, how could a gender-critical academic have any faith whatsoever in their own union? Such situations will multiply. The NTEU has given Melbourne University the prelude it needed for the main act.
There is no instrument in the university’s physics department to measure the unwise decisions of left-wing academics who facilitate such speech and thought bans. Quite aside from the principle itself, do they not understand that the ultimate ban will be on teaching and discussing the politics and legitimacy of organised and violent resistance? If the university is going to take an official position on being mean to Israel or the question of what a woman is, what do you think they will do about arguments about Marxism, guerrilla movements and political terror, civil disobedience, revolutionary war, hacking, etc, etc?
Some of these people think it’s 1973, and the left still runs these joints. If academics want the protection of free thought and inquiry as a right from their employer, they need to uphold it through their union as a principle and example.
Well, give the Zionists their win, for the moment, and greater protection for whatever depredations the IDF and police will perform, unrestrained, on the West Bank. And before the whole process collapses into absurdity.
Will we eventually see a pro-Zionist academic hauled over the coals for criticising BDS, the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement, on the grounds that its argument is “Islamophobic”?
Now that would be chutzpah. If only (*George W Bush voice*) Jewish culture had a word for that.
Maybe this will lead people to be “mean to Israel” simply to assert their right to freedom of speech. Jews have a right to protection from antisemitism but not to have the power to intimidate people into silence about the politics of Israel and the fate of the Palestinian people under assault from the militant right wing Israeli government.
Of course Jews do not have that power, but the University of Melbourne does, for use within its purview, and is ready to use it.
There is a small distinction that might need to be made. Not all Jews approve of what the current Israeli leadership is doing, and not all Israelis are Jews.
The issue is with the current (recent) Israeli governments and an apparent wish to dispossess the Palestinian population. Extremism, no matter its strip is of great concern.
Wha… – “…apparent…“?
Surely, you jest!
Well said. Melbourne University is betraying its fundamental purpose. Or, arguably, it is reverting to earlier form of University that prevailed in the Middle Ages before the enlightenment and idead of a liberal education emerged. Then a University was a religious institution, and all the learning and intellectual activity took place constrained by the authority of the governing religion. Heretical notions were rooted out. The only change between that and Melbourne now is the detail of the prescribed orthodoxy.
I think you’ve missed a very important one:
“Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g., by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.”
Given the explicitly racist nature of the state of Israel and it’s contemporary functioning as (along with Russia) the last of the 19th century style European colonialist/imperialist states, combined with an increasingly Apartheid social, political and physical character, it’s hard to see it as anything other than racist.
Agree entirely about Israel as 19th Century European Colonialism, however, I don’t understand how Russia gets roped in unless it’s allied to a Russophobe agenda. However, if you insist on Russia, then please include the USA – Hawaii, Britain – Falklands Gibraltar, France – Fre4nch Ploynesia etc.
I think Bob’s right, in that Russia is still pursuing 19th century imperialism, conquer territory, enslave and coerce natives, conduct ethnic (tribal) cleansing and so forth. The other Western powers have 19th century legacy colonial possessions that they are transitioning or have transitioned to US style neo-liberal imperialism, ie economic and political dependencies. Different forms of power. Israel is an aggressive settler state despite being (for now at least) more or less democratic. Looks a lot like 19th C Australia though we were part of British imperial project then.
Oh, please AP7, enough of the sheep-like blabber about what you ‘think’ about Russia. Give me some hard-nosed facts, not the US party line…
Ukraine? anyone?
You mean Mother Russia’s southern lands, which is what Ukraine means in Russian.
Ummm … apart from possessing vast colonial territories that stretch as far as the Pacific Ocean (Vladivostok is closer to Sydney than it is to Moscow), it is currently waging a brutal imperial war to re-take formerly occupied Ukraine and seems pretty keen to re-occupy the fairly recently liberated Baltic states. Oh, and then there’s Georgia and the other Caucasian nations, many of which are partly or fully occupied.
Where is there the slightest hint or suggestion that Russia wants to do what you and all the usual suspects claim, the rebirth of the USSR.
Had Zelensky lived up to the Maidan Accords and stopped the Azov attacks of the Donbas there would have been no intervention.
As for the Baltics, the EU is welcome to those basket cases.
Alleluia: welcome to the underdog pack. Then again, Outis, most people DO NOT want to know about the things you mention. It’s proof that if you keep repeating the lie, people will think it must be so.
Hello Vatnik, I didn’t claim they want the rebirth of the USSR. Do you get a stipend or do you just do this for free?
Um, Bob, re-read what you wrote: then, just maybe, you might understand where people like Outis and Roberto and I are coming from – and it ain’t Russia.
So, for free?
Yes, baby, free minds.
Navalny as martyr versus how weve betrayed Assange – whistleblowers , journalists – concerned women having our soaces and pronouns co opted by men mostly who use the excuse of queer self ID – abuse of the most vulnerable and impressionable people and monetizing – it is misogynist and it is run by men for men mostly
I think you can argue that there’s a form in which Israel could exist that is not inherently racist, even if it was still a state whose Jewish majority made it a Jewish home. But the possibility of creating that is pretty much out of reach now.
Agreed. But saying that this particular form is racist is eminently reasonable.
No, it is not reasonable, because race is not the determining factor in gaining and holding power in Israel. Religion is.
Splitting hairs a favourite pastime of yours, is it?
Race is a social construct, racism doubly so. It’s about the systematic differing conception of a group of people based on a set of characteristics. In the case of Israel the myth is based upon religion, not DNA. The effect – of differential treatment based on the myth – is the same as ‘traditional’ racism.
Check out the orthodox attitude to ‘black’ Jews from Ethiopia.
The ultras are also not too keen on the Sephardics.
Race, shmace…
What you present is an assertion about the prejudices of a small, though powerful part of Israel, not the stance of the nation nor of the majority of its citizens.
In fact most Israelis do not agree with the ultra-right views of the Ultra-orthodox, which is why they are a minority.
That must be why Nasty Netty won government – with the help of many parties full of even worse bigots,racists & zealots.
The Jews claimed that the israel part of Palistine is/was their religion’s birth place. It was not their prophet Abrahim (or Abraham) started the monotheistic religion in Iraq, so why did they not try to colonise Iraq?
When I was much younger I had great sympathy for the Jews until I went deeper into their history, it was rather revealing in that they were chaded out of most eastern countries because they tended to take over ateas and kept on taking over more and more until they were, again, chased out as happened in Egypt; because they were taking over too much of the area in which they made their fortunes. Now, here we are again, taking over another’s country, though this time with much more physical and armed force and bringing in jeweish people from around the world to grow the land they are laying claim to. It never changes except the use of force. So, why not Iraq? Because Iraq is and was recognised as a country, whereas Palestine, although been known for centuries, has not.
Now they invade what our universities and their students can think about Jews/Israelis. America is in their pocket, don’t let Australia be next.
Bit of a shallow mish-mash re Abram & origins of the YHWH cult.
May I suggest Sarah The Priestess: The First Matriarch Of Genesis by Savina J. Teubal?
There had to be one. History tells us that the first mono-theistic religion was indeed in Iran – Zoroastrianism.
Is it not possible that Judaism is merely a new approach to Zoroastrianism, just as the Mormons invented their take on it – the church of Jesus Christ of the latter day saints ?
Please refer to the Balfour declaration and the retrospective guilt of the UK and the US governments over the holocaust.
I think you are missing the nature of the Jewish invasion of the old city, whereby, if a Palistinian in the old city goes to hospital, they can be discharged to a vacant lot, being claimed by an Israeli.
It was founded as ‘a state for Jews’ and the early leaders, Ben Gurion, Meier, Rabin were adamantly opposed to it being a Jewish state because that is the very definition of racism.
Tempus fugit…fuggit.
Tempus fug it, same with Truth…
“because that is the very definition of racism”
So from what hat did you pull this ‘definition’ ?
Interestingly, the other official state apartheid also began in 1948, in ZAF.
Israel cannot properly be called a racist state in that Jews come in all “races” and that the main determinant of acceptabilty is religion, not race.
What Israel can justifiably be called is a religiously exclusive state, more similar in that aspect to the Muslim regimes with which it contends, rather than with Hitler’s Germany.
Classic casuistry: want it both ways…
How and where is there ‘casuistry’ in my post ? I am not trying to have it both ways, I am mere;y pointing out the factual error in saying that Israel is racist when it is driven by religion. I tender the definition of racism to enlighten your ignorance –
“racism, also called racialism, the belief that humans may be divided into separate and exclusive biological entities called “races”; that there is a causal link between inherited physical traits and traits of personality, intellect, morality, and other cultural and behavioral features; and that some races are innately superior to others.”
None of what I assert on the subject is supportive of the discriminatory and genocidal policies and intent of this and previous Israeli governments.
You would do well to actually comprehend matters before flying off at tangents.
Thanks Guy.
So, to take just one example, Gideon Levy can live in Israel and write in Haaretz that “Israel is an apartheid state”. He isn’t charged with a crime, Haaretz doesn’t sack him. Yet he now couldn’t come to Melbourne Uni as a guest lecturer and say that.
This is a disgrace, and it is a really big deal, given that, for reasons to which GR alludes, the state of Israel is about to really get cracking on “dealing with” the Palestinians.
An Israeli dissident visited Melbourne not that long ago but the local shall we call them Jewish authorities ensured he was not able to speak at any gathering. He was quoted in The Age as he left: he was scratching his head, I thought Australia was a democracy. I can say anything I like back in Israel…
Exactly. There’s more criticism of Israel in Haaretz alone than there is in the Oz MSM
In other words, bits of Australia are making with the ‘pre-emptive buckle’. ‘Learned helplessness’ in psycho-babble.
I wonder if anybody in Netanyahu’s government has yet proposed a “final solution” to the Palestinian problem?………..
…….it can only be a matter of time.
Yes, the leader of one of zealot religious parties in his cobbled together coalition used precisely that phrase during the last election campaign.
I took no notice of the name but it’s easily googled.
Agree, however is it really about Israel, Palestinians or the Judaic faith whether committed or tied by heritage or more broader strategies and geopolitics? Far more complex….
Why? Australia, esp. LNP, fringe parties & media have been channeling or knocking off US ‘owned’ GOP strategy and tactics over generations e.g. in US platforming Evangelicals as a ‘conservative’ GOP voter cohort while unpalatable financial, industrial and (anti) environment policies via think tanks pass in the background.
These forms of platforming include Trump admin. (followed by Morrison’s) moving Embassies to Jerusalem and more recently the SCOTUS being loaded with conservative and anti-abortion judges, for a lifetime or permanently.
The former tactic uses Israel and Jews (& Palestinians) as a ‘delivery system’ to allow the GOP gain electoral power and also as a provocation; but a very significant stunt nonetheless.
Meanwhile, look at Netanyahu nowadays, he’s neither confident nor ebullient, running out of tricks e.g. the ‘Soros conspiracy’, cooked up to GOP consultants of Jewish heritage, to be used by GOP & Fox ally, the Hungarian government, Erdogan, far right etc. and now Netanyahu’s son in Hungary.
So, I can’t compare the illegal expansion of Israel into Palestinian lands with Nazi Germany’s lebensraum? Is irony to become illegal as well?
Welcome the land of the Woke. Now it’s “thought crime” that’s banned. What’s next? Armbands and Jack boots?
I would say the use of the word Woke disqualifies you. Many of the so called Woke are not Zionists.
Yep, and they’ll be in rainbow colours.
If we allow the misuse of the word “woke” to continue.
At least the “elites” appear to have disappeared.
Yeh, coz the wokesters don’t consider themselves elite.
I wish people would stop adopting the Right’s distortion of the term woke.
I’d be proud to be described as woke by anyone who bothered to think about the actual definition of the word. Being aware of and generally sympathetic to issues pertaining to social justice does not make me a hand wringing PC warrior on the hunt for things to be offended by.
Stop playing into their grubby hands.
It’s the PC Warriors and the permanently offended that are the issue. Why do you think Melbourne Uni introduced the IHRA definitions? Woke, as a concept is fine, however the PC Warriors and permanently offended by everything are a plague on society.
True. Those who live just to be offended, and hunt for any hint that someone has strayed from their version of orthodox belief so they can call for the heretic to be burned; and their equally obnoxious brethren, who without invitation or authorisation presume to get deeply offended not for themselves, but on behalf of others. The truly dedicated combine both behaviours.
Let’s not forget the well documented cases of these threads being retrocleansed, often hours or days after being posted.
Sometimes entire comments have been closed those as if post hoc ergo propter hoc and no-one will notice, except the perennial offence seekers.
Most recent example is JackR’s response over at https://uat.crikey.com.au/2023/01/27/indigenous-voice-to-parliament-australia-referendum/#comment-640213
Try to find it – gornnnn!
Oh really?
Did I miss something? The “Zionist lobby” is woke?
If only the goyim had a word for chutzpah!
“Woke”? Very dated Alt-Right piece of rhetoric, I fear.
Frank Dee, I don’t think you comparing the expansionist Germany under Hitler and the current Alt-Right expansionist Zionist state of Israel is far off the mark, really.
The current government of Israel have a lot in common with the Taliban…………………….
…….is that statement anti-Semitic?
Or the demonstrable truth?
The comment is anti-Zionist, not antisemitic.
By differentiating between the behavior of Israel and the practice of Judaism, there is a parallel between the Taliban and the activities of Israel.
I have often thought that is exactly what it is.