Iam writing from
Vancouver, the first leg of my North American speaking tour. My
first stop is the University of British Columbia. Its student
body, like much of Canada, is a rainbow of striking diversity.
The cultural environment on campus is a proud blend of pluralism
and politeness, acceptance and curiosity, a thirst for knowledge
and academic achievement.
Along with Dr. Sami Adwan, a colleague from Bethlehem
University, I addressed an audience of more than 700 – members
of the academic community and local Jews and Arabs. Our subject:
building peace between Israelis and Palestinians.
I had the opportunity afterward to speak with most of the Jews
and Israelis in the audience. They were all very thankful to
hear a proud Israeli who is optimistic about the country’s
future and the chances for peace. Most of what I heard was a
deep sense of embarrassment from what they read about Israel.
They explained how they feel increasingly alienated from the
behavior of the government.
They cannot understand its refusal to freeze settlement building
to enable negotiations. They feel deep shame about the rabbis’
letter, and dread the thought of how it is perceived by their
friends and neighbors. They are profoundly disturbed by what
appears to be a witch-hunt against those political and
human-rights groups that do not support the policies of the
Netanyahu government. They express a sincere sense of fear that
the day is coming when they too will have to cease their
support.
A rabbi who took me for dinner after the event told me there is
growing alienation from Israel in the Jewish community. Jews in
Canada suffer from a lack of organizational structure in which
they can express their love and support, while also asserting
their dissatisfaction with its government and policies.
The choice here is to either join the ‘Israel right or wrong
'camp or to join those who side with the boycott, divestment and
sanctions. Active members of the community who do not join the
Israel right or wrong camp are automatically labeled anti-
Israel or self-hating Jews – far from the truth.
The local Hillel has dismissed the tradition of Hillel, which
encouraged openness, learning, inquiry and pluralism in favor of
leading the campaign to purge the Jewish community of those
critical of Israel. In this way, the Jewish establishment here
is apparently a mirror image of the establishment in Israel.
It’s a sad day when criticism loses its legitimacy in Jewish
society.
IN ISRAEL and in many Diaspora Jewish communities, we are
already on the slippery slope of xenophobia, racism and
witch-hunts against human-rights and peace activists. The
general demise of the rule of law and liberal democracy, lead by
Israel Beiteinu, Shas, the silence of Jabotinskyites like Bennie
Begin and Dan Meridor and the tacit support of the ultimate
populist Binyamin Netanyahu, is causing Israel to become a
pariah state not only in the minds of non-Jews but also in the
eyes of many Jews.
Because of what I heard here, I’ve decided to return to North
America in March to attend the second annual conference of J
Street in Washington.
Canada has no J Street, and it is sadly absent. J Street is the
soulmate of progressive democratic Israelis. It represents
American Jews who are Zionists, proud of their Jewishness, true
lovers of Zion who are fighting for Israel’s soul and know, like
me, that its uniqueness and true potential will emerge only once
we make peace with our neighbors. J Street, like the peace
movement in Israel, human rights organizations and liberal
democratic values are under attack on both sides of the ocean.
AS I was writing these words, I received the following e-mail:
“It is Israel, not the ‘Palestinians’ who should take unilateral
action before it is too late: Annex Judea and Samaria
immediately, and begin negotiations with Jordan about a
long-term solution. I am convinced that many Arab dwellers in
Judea and Samaria would acquiesce, maybe even endorse such a
solution... Incentives, financial and others, could be offered
to Judean and Samarian Arabs who would move to Jordan, while
similar incentives could be offered to Jews all over the world
who wish to settle in the territories. This should alleviate the
demographic worries of some Israelis.”
It amazes me that there are people who actually believe this.
The author claims: “I proudly include myself among the few
experts who truly comprehend the interminable conflict in all
its aspects– culturally, historically, geographically, legally
and politically.”
It is clear to me that this person has never spoken with a
Palestinian or a Jordanian; this person is completely detached
from reality, like many of those who think time is on our side
and that we don’t have to work round-the-clock to save the
two-state solution.
Each additional country that grants recognition to the
Palestinian state should be a wake-up call.
Instead, some of our politicians prefer to amuse themselves with
their own wit in talking about a “Facebook state of Palestine.”
The Palestinian state is already much more than virtual. It is
emerging with each passing day, with a sense of purpose and a
compelling logic of rationality and justice, with a force of
immediacy that even Avigdor Lieberman will not be able to stop.
Perhaps the view from the Canadian Rockies that I see from my
dormitory window enables me to see the future more coherently
than it can be seen from the window of the Prime Minister’s
Office in Jerusalem. What I see on the horizon is a road that
splits with one path leading toward the sun, the other toward
doom and destruction. We are 100 meters from that junction. Time
to make the right turn.
The writer is co-CEO of the
Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information
(www.ipcri.org) and is in the process of founding the Center for
Israeli Progress (http://israeli-progress.org).