If you are an Israeli, do you feel smug that the neurotic
politics of political correctness and victimology that lately are so
prevalent
in the USA are rare in Israel? Are you pleased to think that most
Israelis are
not obsessed with race the way Americans are?
If so, you will be sorry to hear that the folks that
hijacked
the Women of Wall and other internal Israeli controversies in
order to
depict
Israel as undemocratic or worse have decided to bring the
socio-political pathology
of the US to our country.
The Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC), created and
primarily funded by the American Union for Reform Judaism (URJ) has
proudly
announced the establishment of a “Racism Crisis Center” in Israel.
Did you know there was a crisis of racism here? I didn’t,
and in fact it seems to me that racially-based conflict is much
lower here than
in the US and many other places.
You may be shocked by that statement. Isn’t Israel the conflict
capital of the world? Yes and no.
Yes, the Palestinian Arabs led by Hamas and Fatah want to
kill us and take our land. But this is ideologically and
religiously-based
racism on the Arab side. it’s remarkable how well Jewish Israelis
get along
with the Arabs that they come into contact with who do
not
espouse this
ideology.
Of course there are exceptions. And one can say that given
the violent expressions of hatred by the Palestinian Arabs, it is
surprising
that there aren’t more. There are issues of resource allocation to
Arab municipalities,
but there are also reasons for this having to do with their own
municipal
governance. In some areas – higher education, for example – Arab
citizens arguably
get preferential treatment. And of course Muslims are not required
to do military
service (they are permitted to volunteer). How many countries in the
world can
maintain a population that is 20% Muslim without violent civil
conflict?
Probably only Israel.
And yes, it is true that the police have behaved improperly
toward Ethiopian immigrants. But unlike the persistent black
underclass in the
US, the Ethiopian Jews – who were brought to Israel to save them
from famine
and persecution rather than as slaves – have been undergoing the
usual
processes of acculturation of immigrants, and each generation is
economically
better off and has members in higher and higher status positions.
Discrimination
against them because of skin color exists to some extent, but is
getting rarer
every day. There is not and never has been anything that remotely
resembles the
discrimination against blacks in either the North or South of the
US.
Other immigrants, like Mizrachim and Russians, have had and in
some cases are still having problems integrating into the society.
But these
are
normal immigrant problems which will be solved by the
passage of
time, not examples of endemic racism. These groups are
well-represented in the
Knesset and government, and more and more getting their share of the
economic
and social status pie.
Nevertheless, the director of IRAC, Anat Hoffman, thinks
there is a
crisis that needs to solved – by the introduction
to Israel of
the hierarchy of victimization that has so greatly increased the
divisions in
American society.
In
an email to supporters, she writes,
The Racism Crisis Center is
modeled after the Southern Poverty Law Center, based in
Montgomery, Alabama.
Like the SPLC, IRAC will use litigation to protect the rights of
minorities in
Israel by elevating the voices of victims of racism and
discrimination.
The Racism Crisis Center will
provide support in cases of discrimination, hate speech, and
hate crimes
against minority populations, and collect data on the growing
phenomenon of
racism in Israel. The center provides support to victims of all
backgrounds:
Arab, Ethiopian Jews, Russian Jews, Mizrahi Jews, asylum seekers
and migrant
workers, and provides services in Hebrew, Arabic, Russian,
Amharic and English.
Perhaps Hoffman is not aware of the
criticism
that has been leveled against the SPLC for its bias – it seems
to see “hate
groups” only on the right – its
inflation
of the number of “hate groups,” its use of lawsuits for
intimidation of
impecunious opponents, or for its shameless pursuit of cash. Or
perhaps she is
aware, and she sees all of these things as worth emulating.
One wonders if she will create a list of “hate groups” like
that of the SPLC, and if it will include Hamas, Fatah, the Islamic
Movement,
and similar organizations? Will it list MK Haneen Zouabi as an
extremist? Ayman
Odeh?
The website of the “
crisis
center” provides an emergency hotline telephone number and an
online form
for reporting “hate crimes” and other incidents of racism. In
addition to
making it possible for someone to blacken the reputation of any
individual or
group instantaneously, it will provide a rich source for incidents
that can be
used by IRAC to impress its overseas donors, to produce
“documentation” of its
charge that Israel is being inundated by a “tide of bigotry”
(Hoffman’s phrase),
and maybe even –
as
is the case with the SPLC in the US – to be used to shut down
right-wing
voices. Will the Israeli branch of PayPal close the accounts of
right-wing
groups like Im Tirtzu as happened to the Jihad Watch website in the
US?
Israel’s social problems can’t be solved by trying to fit
them into a conceptual scheme that was developed in a different
society in a
different environment with totally different problems – and which
failed
miserably there, arguably making social divisions and conflicts
worse.
Non-Americans often look at the US with wonderment, unable to
understand the
obsession with race, the accusations of racism flying in all
directions, the “litigizing”
of every imaginable dispute, “intersectionality” and the creation of
a
hierarchy of victimization, and the excesses of political
correctness. And this
is precisely what Anat Hoffman and her bosses at the URJ want to
introduce to
Israel!
The
URJ’s interests are not necessarily aligned with those of the
Jewish state.
It has consistently sided with the Left on the issue of the “peace
process,” in
spite of a total lack of understanding of the security situation
here. It is
closely associated with the Democratic Party in the US, and indeed
couldn’t
even bring itself to oppose Obama’s Iran deal. Many Reform rabbis
are members
of J Street, the
phony
“pro-Israel”
organization that is supported by George Soros and even
elements associated
with Iran, Saudi Arabia and Turkey. The head of the URJ,
Rabbi
Rick Jacobs, was a member of J Street’s Rabbinic Cabinet and a
board member
of the New Israel Fund before taking over the URJ. These are not the
people we need
to help save Israel from herself, either in our dealings with the
Palestinians
or our own social issues.
Despite her American education and connections, Anat Hoffman
was born in Israel and lived most of her life here, so she should
know better. But
apparently she is being paid not to.
We have lots of ideas, but we need more resources to be even more effective. Please
donate today to help get the message out and to help defend Israel.