Thursday, April 26, 2018

Einstein on Israel | British Weapons in Gaza | Palestine Museum in US | More ..

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Editorial 

The Ghost of Herut: Einstein on Israel, 70 Years Ago


Albert Einstein, along with other Jewish luminaries, including Hannah Arendt, published a letter in the New York Times on December 4, 1948. That was only a few months after Israel had declared its independence and as hundreds of Palestinian villages were being actively demolished after their inhabitants were expelled.
The letter denounced Israel's newly-founded Herut party and its young leader, Menachem Begin.
Herut was carved out of the Irgun terrorist gang, famous for its many massacres against Palestinian Arab communities leading up to the Nakba, the catastrophic ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people from their historic homeland in 1947-48.
In the letter, Einstein, and others described Herut (Freedom) party as a "political party closely akin in its organization, methods, political philosophy and social appeal to Nazi and Fascist parties."
For a letter of this nature to appear a mere few years after the end of World War II and the devastation of the Holocaust is a profound indication of the clear chasm that existed among Jewish intellectuals at the time: the Zionists who supported Israel and its violent birth, and those who took the high moral ground and objected to it.
Sadly, the latter group - although still in existence - had lost the battle.
Herut later merged with other groups to form the Likud Party. Begin received the Nobel Peace Prize and the Likud is now the leading party in Israel's most right-wing government coalition. The 'Nazi and Fascist'-like philosophy of Herut have prevailed, and it now engulfs and defines mainstream society in Israel.
This right-wing tendency is even more pronounced among young Israelis than previous generations.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is the leader of Begin's party, the Likud. His current coalition includes Russian-born Defense Minister, Avigdor Lieberman, founder of the ultra-nationalist party, Yisrael Beiteinu.
In response to ongoing popular protests by besieged Palestinians in Gaza, and in justification of the high number of deaths and injuries inflicted on the unarmed protesters by the Israeli army, Lieberman argued that "there are no innocent people in Gaza."
When the Defense Minister of a country espouses this kind of belief, one can hardly be shocked that Israeli snipers are shooting Palestinian youngsters, while cheering on camera as they hit their target.
This kind of discourse - Fascist par excellence - is by no means a fringe narrative within Israeli society.
Netanyahu's coalition is rife with such morally-objectional characters.
Israeli politician, Ayelet Shaked, has often called for the genocide against Palestinians.
Palestinians "are all enemy combatants, and their blood shall be on all their heads," she wrote in a Facebook post in 2015. "Now this also includes the mothers of the martyrs  ... They should go, as should the physical homes in which they raised the snakes. Otherwise, more little snakes will be raised there."
A few months after the publication of the statement, Netanyahu, in December 2015, appointed her as the country's Justice Minister.
Shaked belongs to the Jewish Home Party, headed by Naftali Bennett. The latter is Israel's Minister of Education and known for similarly violent statements. He was one of the first politicians who came out in defense of Israeli soldiers accused of violating human rights at the Gaza border. Other top Israeli politicians followed suit.
On April 19, Israel celebrated its independence. "The Nazi and Fascist" mentality that defined Herut in 1948 now defines the most powerful ruling class in Israel. Israel's leaders speak openly of genocide and murder, yet they celebrate and promote Israel as if an icon of civilization, democracy and human rights.
Even cultural Zionists of old would have been terribly horrified at the creature that their beloved Israeli has become, seven decades after its birth.
Certainly, the Palestinian people are still fighting for their land, identity, dignity and freedom. But the truth is that Israel's biggest enemy is Israel itself. The country has failed to part ways with its violent politics and ideology of yesteryears. On the contrary, Israel's ideological debate has been settled in favor of perpetual violence, racism and apartheid.
In the supposed 'only democracy in the Middle East', the margin of critique has grown very limited.
It is the likes of Netanyahu, Lieberman, Bennett and Shaked who now represent modern Israel and, behind them, a massive constituency of right-wing religious and ultra-nationalists, who have little regard for Palestinians, for human rights, international law and such seemingly frivolous values as peace and justice.
In 1938, Einstein had contended with the very idea behind the creation of Israel. It runs counter to "the essential nature of Judaism," he said.
A few years later, in 1946, he argued before the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry on the Palestinian issue: "I cannot understand why it [Israel] is needed ... I believe it is bad."
Needless to say, if Einstein was alive today, he would have joined the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) Movement, which aims at holding Israel accountable for its violent and illegal practices against Palestinians.
Equally true, he would have surely been branded anti-Semitic or a 'self-hating Jew' by Israeli leaders and their supporters. Today's Zionists are, indeed, unfazed.
But this painful paradigm must be overturned. Palestinian children are not terrorists and cannot be treated as such. They are not 'little snakes', either. Palestinian mothers should not be killed. The Palestinian people are not 'enemy combatants' to be eradicated. Genocide must not be normalized.
70 years after Israel's independence and Einstein's letter, the country's legacy is still marred with blood and violence. Despite the ongoing party in Tel Aviv, there is no reason to celebrate and every reason to mourn.
Yet, hope is kept alive because the Palestinian people are still resisting; and they need the world to stand in solidarity with them. It is the only way for the ghost of Herut to quit haunting the Palestinians, and for the 'Nazi and Fascist' philosophies to be forever defeated.
- Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and editor of Palestine Chronicle. His latest book is 'The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story' (Pluto Press, London, 2018). Baroud has a Ph.D. in Palestine Studies from the University of Exeter and is a Non-Resident Scholar at Orfalea Center for Global and International Studies, University of California Santa Barbara. His website is: ramzybaroud.net
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Special Report

NGO: Israel Could Be Using British Weapons to Kill Palestinian Protesters in Gaza


British-made weapons could have been used by the Israeli military to suppress ongoing Palestinian protests along the Gaza border, a UK NGO revealed.
A report by The Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT) showed that the scale of arms sales to Israel in recent years has been alarming that it stands to reason to say Israel could be using British sniper rifles and components to kill Palestinian protesters in Gaza.
Britain sold Israel arms worth $445m since the 2014 Gaza war, which included components for drones, combat aircraft and helicopters along with spare parts for sniper rifles. In 2017 arms export licences to Israel soared to £216m from £20m in the wake of the war, according to figures from UK Department for International Trade.
Andrew Smith, a spokesman for CAAT, said:
"There is little doubt that UK equipment has been used against the people of Gaza time and again, but that hasn't stopped successive governments from licensing even more arms to the Israeli military."

Palestinian health statics confirmed at least 40 people have been shot dead by Israeli forces since the start of the Great March of Return demonstrations in late March, which is aimed to last for six weeks ending on the 70th anniversary of Nakba.
The violence prompted Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn to call for a review of arms sales to Israel in a message condemning its "illegal and inhumane" killing and wounding of "yet more unarmed Palestinian protesters".
The rising UK arms exports to Israel also alarmed Labour MP Richard Burden, the chairman of the British-Palestine group in the UK parliament, "given the risk of the weapons being used for internal repression in Gaza".
Burden will press ministers to investigate the possibility of UK arms having been used by the Israeli forces in shooting at people participating in the Gaza border's Great March of Return movement.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn called for the UK government to support calls for an "independent and transparent" UN inquiry into the Israeli shootings and to review the sale of UK-made arms that "could be used in violation of international law".
However, MP Emily Thornberry, the shadow foreign secretary of the Labour party, argued that Israel has a right to defend itself from military assault and "terrorist attacks".
(MEE, PC, Social Media)
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