Introduction to the Special Issue: Palestine—Perspectives on Decolonisation
Salim Vally (University of Johannesburg) and Haidar Eid (Al-Aqsa University, Gaza)
After 20 months of calculated and unrelenting horror aimed at the starving and terrorized population of Gaza, the Israeli/US/UK/EU genocide is being ratchetted-up. As we go to press the official casualty count — 60,000 deaths from traumatic injury — is an immense undercount. It excludes the thousands buried under the rubble and deaths resulting from preventable disease, manufactured famine, malnutrition, the lack of water, inadequate sanitation and the availability of chronic medication. Sadistically, the Israeli Occupation Force and the US have orchestrated ‘death traps’ using food as bait to lure hungry people to areas where scores are routinely and casually murdered, as if the hideous massacres over the past 650 days have not been enough — each new atrocity vying with the previous one in a macabre pattern of inhumanity and brutality.
Jewish historical sources are not just dialectical — they also include some racist examples, something difficult for most Jews to admit and accept. In this, Judaism acts like other monotheistic faiths, also adding a derogatory classification, somewhat reminiscent of the figure of the pagan in the other monotheisms: the Gentile — the non-Jew, or Goy in Hebrew. This is the topic of a monograph examining the historical uses and abuses of the term (Ophir and Rosen-Zvi 2018). The meaning of Goy changes substantially over time. This neutral concept in the Bible, meaning nation, becomes the linguistic marker for the non-Jewish other, the locus of much derogatory sentiments and expressions.While Goy is used in the European diaspora, it finally flowers in Zionist readings of Jewish history, representing a deep-seated hatred of the non-Jewish other.
"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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