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"Never Again" Means Stopping Genocide Today, Not Just Remembering |
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by Adam LeBor, June 26, 2008 |
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From: Adam LeBor
To: Shmuel Rosner
Dear Shmuel,
Thanks for your perceptive letter, and I think you are right to move the debate along to explore Jewish responsibility for stopping genocide, if indeed Jews have such a responsibility. But before we go there, let me share with you the latest news from the United Nations, which only confirms my increasing belief that the organization is in a terminal political decline.
Each year the General Assembly, which opens in September, elects a president and twenty-one vice-presidents. The General Assembly is dominated by the G77 group, non-aligned states from the developing world, including many Arab and Islamic nations, which accounts for its obsession with Israel, but let's leave that for the moment. The 2008 President of the General Assembly is Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann, of Nicaragua. Señor d'Escoto Brockmann, a Catholic priest, is a former Sandinista foreign minister. He does not much like the United States and swiftly condemned what he called acts of aggression in Iraq and Afghanistan. So far, so familiar.
Now comes the list
of twenty one vice-presidents. Vice-President of the General
Devastation In Myanmar: The Junta blocked UN aid to its own citizens Assembly
is mainly an honorary position, but still counts for something in the
carefully delineated diplomatic hierarchy of the United Nations. The
VPs include Egypt, Russia and Afghanistan, as well as the United
States and the United Kingdom. And Burma. Yes, Burma. Cyclone-ravaged
Burma, which is ruled by a junta so paranoid and downright evil that
it deliberately obstructed the flow of UN aid to its own
citizens. Burma, which promised Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon
that aid would flow freely after his visit, and then immediately
reneged on that promise. Burma, whose intransigence forced the World
Food Programme, the UN's food agency, to suspend further supplies
while the junta simply confiscated its aid and equipment. Burma,
which obstructed and delayed visas for UN aid workers. Apart perhaps
from North Korea, no other UN government has shown such contempt,
even murderous disregard for its own citizens. No matter, for in the
Alice-in-Wonderland world of the UN General Assembly, Burma's
anti-western credentials make it an honored member.
And this same moral blindness has shaped the United Nations' response to Darfur. I was amazed and depressed to learn, while researching Complicity with Evil, how much reflexive anti-Westernism still shapes international diplomacy there. Colonialism in Africa and Asia ended decades ago, but still shapes the mentality of governments from Jakarta to Algiers. Sudan's greatest defenders at the United Nations are the Arab, Islamic and African blocs, and of course, China, which buys Sudan's oil and so keeps the government in power and funds the genocide. Time and time again, since the crisis in Darfur erupted in spring 2003, Sudan's allies have blocked or watered down attempts by the United States, Britain and France to exert diplomatic pressure on Sudan. (It's fascinating to compare the response of the Arab and Islamic countries at the UN to Bosnia and Darfur. They pressed the West hard to intervene in Bosnia, where Bosnian Muslims were being killed by Serb and Croat Christians. They now try and stymie any attempts to intervene, even diplomatically, where black Muslims are being killed by their own Muslim government.)
So, to a large extent, as you rightly say, it has been left to Darfur lobbying groups, which have a substantial Jewish presence, to take the lead. You ask if Jews have a special responsibility over Darfur? In absolute terms, no. Darfur is the world's responsibility, a moral incumbency no more or less on Jews than anyone else. But perhaps that is mere sophistry. You write that we should feel proud that: "Jews, who suffered the most from genocide feel compelled to raise their voices against such actions in every part of the world. They feel they have the moral authority, and the obligation to do so. And they do." I absolutely agree. While objectively speaking, Jews do not have a special responsibility to combat genocide, they believe they do, and act on it, which should indeed make us proud. (Although it's notable that in my homeland of Britain, Darfur has never become a hot-button issue, neither among Jews nor the wider population.)
I thought your second point was especially interesting: that American Jews got tired of investing all their political capital in supporting Israel. Especially, in my opinion, when it has become impossible to justify Israel's actions in the Occupied Territories, and the endless, creeping wave of settlements and annexations. It seems to me, Shmuel, that you are right, that there is a drift, even a movement away from the Israel-right-or-wrong school of thought and towards a more independent position, which can only be healthy in the long run. But here's an idea: maybe Jews support the 'Save Darfur' campaigns for another reason, so that they can argue that however bad things are in Palestine, they are nowhere near as bad as what is happening in Darfur. Which is true.
You ask what
happens when the preservation of Israel contradicts stopping
genocide.
Yad Vashem: "Never Again" means more than remembering the six million I don't see a contradiction here, at least in today's
world. Such a dilemma, thankfully, has not arisen. But I do think,
that Israel, whose coming into existence was to some extent
accelerated by the Holocaust, has a special responsibility to act
humanely and with compassion towards refugees. I am critical of the
way, for example, that foreign dignitaries are taken to Yad Vashem by
Israeli government ministers. It's good that Yad Vashem exists, but
it should be independent of politics. These visits seem to me an
almost cynical attempt to draw a historical continuum between the
Holocaust and the need to support Israeli government policies. And
considering Israel's patchy record in dealing with refugees from a
current genocide, Darfur, such visits could even be distasteful.
Consider the Prevention of Infiltration Act, which has already passed
a preliminary reading in the Knesset.
It allows the expulsion of refugees without judicial process, and seven year prison sentences for refugees from Sudan. It even allows for 'hot returns,' meaning that Israeli soldiers would force the refugees back over the border into Egypt, to face imprisonment or execution. Israeli soldiers have repeatedly witnessed and testified to how Egyptian troops deal with fleeing Sudanese: they shoot them.
Shmuel, we've covered a lot of ground in this enjoyable and thoughtful exchange, despite its depressing subject matter. But I leave you with this thought about Jews and Genocide. The Holocaust was the determining event in modern Jewish history, and has greatly shaped Israeli identity. But if 'Never Again' means anything, it means not just memorialising the six million, but also trying to stop present day genocides, or at least helping their victims. And that's true in Jerusalem as much as Washington DC.
Yours,
Adam
RandallJones
Adam LeBor,
Can you investigate and do an anlysis of these articles by Keith Harmon Snow about
Darfur http://www.blackagendareport.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=447&Itemid=1
and the Congo
http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_keith_ha_080207_the_gertler_steinmet.htm
Alamity
"Never again" should also mean stopping genocide denial, which, by the way, many major Jewish organizations (such as the ADL, AJC and others) regularly do, on behalf of Turkish genocidaires. It is no secret that these Jewish organizations, both, openly and covertly have been raping the memory of the Armenian genocide victims for years for amoral political expediency.
FYI, there are only a handful of Armenian genocide survivors left in the world today; they soon will die knowing full well that these hypocritical Jewish "never again-ers" vicariously celebrated the "success of the Armenian genocide" by prostituting their lobbying skills in Washington to stop and derail all efforts of Armenian genocide acknowledgment.
Let us be careful what we wish for...The continuation of thoughtless lyp-syncing to "never again" rendition without regard to its moral lyrics, would have us singing " do us again, one more time." -- music to Ahmadinejad's ears.
Anonymous
Sorry folks, but at this point this has become an empty phrase for those observing the words and actions of major Jewish organizations in the US. Over and over again, they not only support genocide denial, but act as though they have something in common w/ the deniers, such as the ultranationalists in Turkey who vehemently deny that Armenians were actively killed during the waning days of the Ottoman Empire. That kind of cozy chumminess strikes many as rather odd....maybe someone can explain to all of us how and why every major AIPAC affiliate organization finds it more appropriate to sleaze the Armenian genocide while embracing the worst characters in Turkish political world. Friendship w/ Israel is not a valid reason folks....if you're going to run around the world screaming about the evils and immorality of Holocaust denial, at least be consistent, especially as it regards the mother of all 20th C genocides - the one that gave Hitler a blueprint for success. If you can't do that, you've lost all moral standing and credibility. There should be no double standards regarding government sponsored mass murder, yet that's exactly what most Jewish organizations and the state of Israel have espoused when it comes to the Armenians. It's truly sad, baffling and as heinous as genocide itself.
Phantom
Well put anon.
Peace Love Unity
Thank You Adam! Nicely said!
Anonymous
this is a thoughtful piece but the national Jewish community still needs to deal with its views of the past---no matter what good it is doing in darfur. ADL is the most cynical--manipulating the Armenian genocide for its own gain - shame shame. Jewcy used to care about this---but doesnt seem to anymore. and AJC and the other national organizations that our parents generation built--all in the tank with turkish denial. as if this doesnt affect anyone or anything. Hello, Joey? Hello? Still there? The Jewish and ADL denial is....you have your work cut out for you if you do re-engage with it--even my young friends are staying on the fence on this one. shame shame.