
by Yvette Alt Miller
Every Jew needs to stand up for Israel.
I'll never forget the day I read about public whippings in Israel. I was in
England and reading a London newspaper; there was a short article on how people
were henceforth going to be whipped in public in Israel for a new offense:
smoking.
I didn’t bother to search a correction or retraction in the
following days: the damage was done. How many people read that article? A
million? Two? I couldn't go up to each of them and explain that the article was
a complete fabrication: there are no public whippings in Israel (nor any
whippings at all). That smoking is legal in Israel. That it's just not that sort
of place. (Unlike some other Middle East regimes where
public whippings are the norm.)
This sort of defamation of the Jewish state is increasingly
common. Like many people around the world, I've read repeatedly that Israel is
an apartheid state. (For the record, it's not: both Jews and non-Jews are
citizens, have the vote and equal rights, serve in all branches of government,
go to college, live, shop and interact with none of the restrictions that
characterize an apartheid system.)
I've also read that Israel is worse than an apartheid state. (What's worse?)
I've read that Israel engages in genocide and ethnic cleansing (I guess that's
worse.) I've read that Israel is the greatest menace to world peace. (More than
North Korea and Pakistan, who have peddled nuclear bombs to the highest bidder?)
After years of reading slander after slander against Israel
(Including: They shoot little children on the beach!) I wasn't surprised when a
British public opinion poll ranked Israel the world's “ugliest country.” After
all, if a country is so warped – what with the public whippings and ethnic
cleansing and apartheid – its scenery must be rotten too. Once you paint a
picture of a country as awful and cruel, it becomes progressively easier to
believe it is ever more awful and ever more malicious.
Now a
study in Ireland finds that the Irish population has such a poor impression
of Israel that over 22% would deny Irish citizenship to Israelis, and less than
half of all Irish people would be willing to welcome an individual Israeli into
their family.
This bias reflects a climate in which it is becoming possible to
say almost anything about the Jewish state. In 2009, a
Swedish newspaper accused Israelis of killing people in order to harvest
their body parts. That set the stage the following year for the accusation that
the life-saving
Israeli field hospital in the aftermath of the Haiti earthquake was actually
a facility for
harvesting organs. What begins as a fringe position one year becomes
slightly more mainstream the next.
The America-Israel Axis
Through the second half of the 20th century, most Jews around the
world felt that their Jewish identity was closely tied up with the fate of
Israel. Putting coins in the JNF pushka, to enable the planting of trees in
Israel, was a popular Hebrew school activity. When Israel won the 1967 Six Day
War, it touched off a massive reawakening of the long-dormant Jewish identity
and pride for millions of Soviet Jews. And the
raid at
Entebbe on July 4, 1976, achieved the nearly-impossible feat of stealing the
media spotlight from America’s bicentennial celebration.
But today things are different. Polls show that Jewish American
youth are largely apathetic about Israel. On college campuses, anti-Israel
activities are met with resistance by only a tiny percentage of Jewish students.
And one
recent poll of American Jews showed that only 50% of respondents under age
35 would “consider it a personal tragedy” if the State of Israel were to be
annihilated.
All this is a tragic mistake. Accusations that are originally
targeted against Israelis soon migrate to become views of Jews in general.
Thus, in the Irish survey mentioned above, the negative feelings
toward Israel seem to spill over: 11.5% would deny Irish citizenship to all
Jews. And 40% of Irish people (the younger demographic was even worse) would
refuse to welcome a Jew – any Jew – into their family.
These negative feelings do not derive from personal experience.
Out of 4.5 million people in Ireland, there are fewer than 2,000 Jews. Rather,
the poisonous atmosphere – in which no allegation against Israel is too
outlandish and no accusation too bizarre – is having its logical effect. Hatred
toward Israelis is spilling over into hatred against all Jews.
This is born out by studies. One
2009 survey asked Europeans whether their view of Jews was colored by
Israel: nearly a quarter said yes. Large majorities (including three quarters of
respondents in Spain and two thirds of British respondents) said their views of
Jews had become worse because of Israel.
As goes Israel, so goes the Jews.
What can you and I do about it? Here are a few small things, and
if we all do it, they add up and make a real difference:
Visit Israel and get your family and friends to visit. Nothing
can match seeing Israel firsthand etc…And today with social networks and
Twitter, share your trip with the world. Blog about it, capture what you're
experiencing and lets friends experience it vicariously. And once you go home,
share what you've learned about the amazing people and the land, break down
misconceptions and inspire others with the truly amazing story of the Israeli
people.
Get informed. Subscribe to websites like Honesterporting.com
and Camera, Aish.com and
Stand With Us – share
articles and videos that convey the real story going on in Israel.
Speak up. Don't let others say misinformation about Israel. Correct them and
follow up with an article. If you read something negative in the press, write a
letter to the editor, blog about it, don't remain silent.
Imagine someone was spreading lies about your children,
disparaging your home with a smear campaign. Would you remain silent? Could you
remain silent? Israel is our home, her people are our brothers and sisters. By
making the effort to connect to Israel and her people, we will care more and be
far more active in standing up for our homeland.
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