Comfort from distorted history

A couple of articles, from differing perspectives, on how blaming Israel for the plight of the Palestinians hurts the cause of peace. In the Jerusalem Post Mudar Zahran writes:

The demonization of Israel by the global media has greatly harmed the Palestinians’ interests for decades and covered up Arab atrocities against them. Furthermore, demonizing Israel has been well-exploited by several Arab dictatorships to direct citizens’ rage against Israel instead of their regimes and also to justify any atrocities they commit in the name of protecting their nations from “the evil Zionists.”

This game has served some of the most notorious Arab dictatorships, and still does today, as any opposition is immediately labelled “a Zionist plot.”

This model had served Gamal Abdel Nasser in ruling Egypt with an iron fist until he died, and was the main line for Saddam Hussein, who was promoting that “Iraq and Palestine are one identical case” in his last years in power.

The global media must be fair in addressing the Palestinians’ suffering in Arab countries and must stop demonizing Israel. It should start focusing on the broader conditions of the Palestinians in the Middle East region.

(Do you think that Mudar Zahran is someone Thomas Friedman thinks we need to hear more of? My guess is that since Mudar Zahran challenges Friedman’s believe that Israel is mostly at fault for the lack of peace in the Middle East, that the answer is “no.”)

Sol Stern in the City Journal writes about The Naqba Obsession:

In Balata, history has come full circle. During the 1948 war, Palestinian leaders like Haj Amin al-Husseini insisted that the Arab citizens of Haifa and Jaffa had to leave, lest they help legitimize the Jewish state. Now, the descendants of those citizens are locked up in places like Balata and prohibited from resettling in the Palestinian-administered West Bank—again, lest they help legitimize the Jewish state, this time by removing the Palestinians’ chief complaint. Yet there is a certain perverse logic at work here. For if Israel and the Palestinians ever managed to hammer out the draft of a peace treaty, Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority, would have to go to Balata and explain to its residents that their leaders have been lying to them for 60 years and that they are not going back to Jaffa. Which, to state the obvious again, is one of the main reasons that there has been no peace treaty.

(via the Daily Alert Blog Speaking of Sol Stern, if you haven’t read his Israel without apology; you must.)

I suppose that it’s easier to blame Israel because Israelis are different from Arabs, so it’s intelectually easier to subscribe to the view that Israelis are prejudiced against Palestinians and refuse to give them their due. Such a prejudice is fixable by education and enlightenment. On the other hand the the hatred of the Muslim world for Israel, is not something that is so easily fixed. It also is too alien for most of the enlightened West to comprehend. Better then to address the issue that can be fixed and ignore the one that can’t.

Of course that attitude doesn’t solve the problem, it merely exacerbates it.

Crossposted at Soccer Dad.

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I'm a government bureaucrat with delusions of literacy.
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One Response to Comfort from distorted history

  1. Alex Bensky says:

    This would be helpful, Dad, if the Arabs and the rest of the world actually cared about the Palestinians qua Palestinians. But while most people in the west may know nothing of this, the Arabs surely do–I think the number of Palestinians ejected from Kuwait after the first Gulf War was 300,000. No one said anything then. No one says anything now.

    It is obvious to anyone who wants to see that the world in general and the Arabs in particular care about the Palestinians only as sticks to beat Israel and as a supposedly oppressed people whose plight can be a weapon in the campaign to destroy Israel. As actual people no one gives a damn about them and I wonder if subconsciously they don’t realize it.

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