It’s
fashionable to be anti-Israel. Many even believe that it’s important to be anti-Israel.
How else can you advocate for justice?
They say, to
support justice, you must attack Israel.
Once you declare
that you stand for justice, calling Israel a criminal nation is easy. Doesn’t
everyone know that Israel oppresses innocent Arabs?
There’s just
one problem. It’s not true. Israel isn’t the evil one in the Arab-Israel
conflict.
Israel
doesn’t preach hate. It doesn’t call to kill anyone. It doesn’t call people
pigs and apes.
Hamas and
Fatah do.
If you want
to see evil emanating from the Arab-Israel conflict, here’s an article for you from
The Algemeiner. It was written by The Alegmeiner’s
editor-in-chief, Dovid Efune. It was posted August 17, 2014:
“The
Anti-Jewish Riots Have Exposed Hamas”
The editors
at British newspaper The Guardian are beside themselves.
Somebody
forgot to pass on the ‘Anti-Israel Rioting Etiquette Handbook’ to the largely
vicious and thoroughly bigoted hordes who gathered to call for Israel’s demise
in the streets of the world’s major cities over this past month.
Media
reports said that the marches were prompted by Israel’s Operation Protective
Edge in Gaza and sympathy for Palestinian children.
So why is it
that protesters in Paris were chanting “death to the Jews” and “Hitler was
right,” and activists in London proclaimed “Heil Hitler” and “Oh Jew, you will
die”?
Can anyone
explain why Muslims in the Netherlands were referring to “dirty Jews from the
sewers,” or why in New York they shouted “Intifada, intifada!”? And why was
“Hamas, Hamas, Jews to the gas” heard on the streets of Germany?
One group
even sought to boycott McDonalds because “the owner is Jewish” and many of the
rallies featured Swastika banners held high.
Of course
all this left the honchos at The Guardian, and others who are generally
aligned with the anti-Israel cause, feeling rather uncomfortable, and they
quickly moved to disassociate themselves from the hate.
In an
editorial on Friday, The Guardian wrote, “It should not need saying, but
it does: people can be as angry as they like at the Israeli government, but to
attack a synagogue, threaten children at a Jewish school, or throw a brick through
the window of a Jewish grocery store is vile and contemptible racism. It cannot
be excused by reference to Israeli military behaviour. The two are and should
be kept utterly distinct.”
But The
Guardian has completely missed the point.
The sad
truth is that while the situation in Gaza may have been used to ignite the
raging protesters, it is the marches themselves and their message that have
exposed a key motivation in Gaza’s war against Israel.
Hamas has
made no secret of its visceral hatred of Jews, and anti-Jewish animus is
enshrined in the group’s constitution.
The Charter
reads: “The Day of Judgment will not come until Muslims fight the Jews, when
the Jew will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say, ‘O
Muslims, O Abdullah, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.’”
According to
a recent Anti-Defamation League poll, the Palestinian-controlled territories
contain the most anti-Semitic population in the world, with 93% holding
anti-Semitic views.
Away from
Gaza, and Hamas’s iron grip on messaging, which is tailored to garner world
sympathy, downplaying the elements of Hamas’s ideology that are unpalatable to
the West, and highlighting Palestinian suffering, their allies chanting in the
streets have exposed their genocidal aims.
For The
Guardian and other flagships of the progressive left, it doesn’t get much
starker than this.
There is
simply no legitimate case to be made that the tent of modern liberalism can
hold the likes of Hamas and their ideological partners.
To accept
their narrative as legitimate is to implicate Liberals and their ideological
camp in the prejudice.
No amount of
editorial hair splitting will cleanse them of the association.
Martin
Luther King, Jr is said to have quipped, there is no difference between
anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism. They’re the same thing. He said that more than
forty years ago. He was right then—and he’s still right.
When you
claim to seek justice (as the ‘Palestinian cause’ does), you surrender all
claim to justice the moment your defenders cry, ‘Death to the Jews’ or ‘Destroy
Israel’.
That’s
exactly what protesters around the world are doing; and it’s exactly what Hamas
has written into its Charter. Such public hate aimed at destroying Jews means
only one thing: the ‘Palestinian cause’ is not just. Justice never allows for
the extermination of Jews--never.
Evil does.
We saw that
evil in Nazi Germany. We see it again in the ‘Palestinian cause’.
When you support
the ‘Palestinian cause’, you support hate, racism and genocide. You support the
extermination of the Jewish people.
You become a
Nazi.
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