Published: 17 July 2006
Hugh was so right, tragically
so. Hugh Blaschko was one of the greatest men that ever lived. He and his wife
Mary gave me shelter, became my surrogate family from 1972 to 1978 when I had to
cope with the loss of my old homeland, Uganda. Born in Germany, Hugh was from
one of those cultured, intellectual Jewish Berlin families crushed by Nazism. He
escaped to Britain in the late 1930s to become a world-class scientist. Israel
would bring out the worst in his people, he always said, and I argued with him.
Survivors of the Holocaust, I believed, were on the side of the angels. "No, my
dear," he would respond, "the Jewish state will make us nationalists, and will
one day make us racialists." I am glad he is not alive to see his prophetic
words turned flesh.
As we witness the bombardment by Israel of Lebanon and Gaza - a grotesque
over-reaction - and, as the death toll of Arab civilians mounts, you have to ask
how the Israelis can do what they do. My only answer now is to conclude that it
is racism. No political or territorial struggles can convincingly explain or
excuse the maddened onslaught by the Israeli state.
Hizbollah and Hamas kidnapped some Israeli soldiers, thus setting off the
present crisis. These factions are permanently excited by a state of conflict
with no end. But yet, I cannot accept the Israeli justifications claiming the
right to make rivers of blood and mountains of debris for the kidnap of their
soldiers - soldiers, remember. No ancient fears of annihilation can make
adequate sense of the actions either. After all, Israelis have made a kind of
peace with Europe which burned and gassed millions of Jewish Europeans.
By contrast, the politicians, generals and soldiers on this mission, and their
supporters, are consumed with burning revulsion for all their non-Jewish Semite
neighbours. Serbian killers who turned on Muslims in Bosnia were similarly
hate-filled, as were the Hutus who massacred Tutsis in Rwanda, and the murderous
Muslims who want to destroy every Jew on the planet. In 1935, Goebbels said:
"Many intellectuals are trying to help the Jews with the ancient phrase, 'The
Jew is also a man'. Yes, he is a man, but what sort of man? The flea is also an
animal!" Today, Semites treat the Arab brother as the flea, or the "other". I
have heard and read Zionist fundamentalists panicking over the breeding rates of
Arabs, expressing their disgust for their hygiene, debating their brain sizes,
their inherent barbarism, their genetic inferiority which makes them and their
states forever failures.
The extreme Zionist impulses of Ehud Olmert's government are dishonouring its
own excruciating history. And noxious anti-Arab prejudices are evident too among
a number of Jewish friends of Israel in the United Kingdom, not only firebrand
loyalists, but nice, good, funny people. Speaking on BBC 1's This Week on
Thursday, that national treasure Maureen Lipman responded thus when asked about
the disproportionate reaction of Israel to Hamas and Hizbollah provocations:
"What's proportion got to do with it? It's not about proportion is it? Human
life is not cheap to the Israelis. And human life on the other side is quite
cheap actually because they strap bombs to people and send them to blow
themselves up".
I can understand how with a diminishing world population so long hated and
punished, the death of one Jew feels like the death of a hundred. But that is
not what Lipman is saying. Brutally straight, she sees no equivalence between
the lives of the two tribes. Imagine the reactions if she had said: "All this
gun crime in London, well it is a black thing. Human life is quite cheap for
black people, they go in for shooting each other.".
Hardened Islamicists, loaded with anti-Semitism, hate the Jews they kill,
rejoice in the murders of the dehumanised enemy. I do not hesitate to call them
racists. But hardened Zionists are unmoved by photos of dead infants in Beirut,
tearful young evacuees fleeing that wonderful city because "they" don't feel
pain and death like the rest of us. Alter one word in that plea by Shylock and
ask: "Hath not Arabs eyes? Hath not an Arab hands, organs, dimensions, senses,
affections, passions?"
It would be easy to despair if it wasn't for Jewish people of conscience who can
see how this debases the very essence of Jewishness. A talented professional
classical musician and friend wrote me this e-mail on Saturday after he had been
at a Palestinian Solidarity Society meeting: "I am the son of Holocaust
survivors. I loathe what Israel is doing to Palestine and Palestinians. For that
reason, I have always refused to visit Israel. I am so frustrated by events in
the Lebanon."
He described the large number of Jewish campaigners at the meeting, some wearing
T shirts saying "I'm a Jew but not a Zionist". Various boycotts organised by
academic, artistic and other British Jews take these actions at great cost to
themselves. Rabbi David Goldberg in his recent book, The Divided Self, explores
this strain between militant Israel and the Jewish psyche. He must have brought
down the wrath of the zealous followers of Abraham for his honest warnings:
"Sixty years after the Holocaust, Israel can no longer claim 'special case'
status to justify the repression of Palestinian national aspirations or
'historical right' (whatever that means) to defend retention of biblical
territory captured in war ... since 1967, [Israel] has been a Herrenvolk
democracy, a term used to describe South Africa under apartheid, in which one
group of subjects, the Israeli citizens, enjoys full rights while a
disenfranchised group, the Palestinians, enjoys none of any significance."
Goldberg has here used that other unpalatable word - apartheid - to describe
Israel's arrogance and behaviour. Apartheid in South Africa was built on twin
pillars - a committed belief in racial hierarchies and an equally fervent belief
that whites were gifted preferential treatment by God. The Boers, and whites in
general, claimed to be the chosen ones and regarded black and brown people as
bestial, destined for servility and control.
Israel espouses the same ideology, religious self regard and policies to control
Arabs today. True, the country has many enemies wishing its destruction, but
racism and apartheid are still unacceptable, even more so for a country with
such a history.