Sinai Today: Open letter to South Africa Deputy FM
By CHIEF RABBI WARREN GOLDSTEIN
08/16/2012 21:49
For the sake of peace and justice, we need more information, not less; we need more dialogue, not less.
South Africans protest Israel [file] Photo: reuters
Dear Mr. Ebrahim,
You are a minister of the South African government, appointed
to advance the interests of the Republic and the people of South Africa in an
impartial and rational manner. As a citizen and as a national religious leader
of South Africa, I object to the way in which you are abusing your high office
to promote your own personal agenda. You obviously have a “blind spot” when it
comes to Israel; you lose your sense of objectivity and rationality when dealing
with the Jewish state.
Most recently you have used your platform and
title in an active campaign to prevent South Africans – and especially members
of government – from visiting Israel. This is but one example of your irrational
obsession with Israel to the detriment of the proper execution of your
governmental duties. You have acted in breach of your government’s own foreign
policy, in terms of which South Africa and Israel have full diplomatic
relations.
Your actions hark back to apartheid-style control of
information and censorship. Why would you try to prevent South Africans from
traveling to Israel and seeing the situation for themselves? Do you think,
Mr.
Ebrahim, that the South African people are not as clever as you are,
that they cannot think for themselves and that they need to be protected from
the facts? Maybe you are afraid – and rightly so – that if people go to Israel
and see the situation for themselves their perspective will be completely
different. Are you worried that they will see that, in fact, there is no
apartheid in Israel? South Africans visiting Israel will find a multiracial,
multi-ethnic vibrant society where more than 1.5 million Arabs live as full and
equal Israeli citizens, vote as part of a single national voters’ roll and have
full legal rights in all areas of society. Are you concerned that when South
Africans travel on buses, visit parks, malls, hospitals and university campuses,
attend the Israeli parliament and the Supreme Court they will find Jews and
Arabs living and working together in complete equality? They may hear, for
example, that, in fact, it was an Arab judge who convicted former Israeli
president Moshe Katsav on rape charges.
Maybe you are afraid that South
African Christians will find that Israel is the only country in the Middle East
where they can practice their religion freely without fear; that South African
women will find that Israel is the only country in the Middle East where they
can be fully equal citizens; that South African trade unionists will discover
that Israel is the only country in the Middle East where there are legal and
active trade unions which protect workers’ rights; that South African
journalists will see that Israel is the only country in the Middle East where
freedom of expression is properly upheld.
Are you worried that our fellow
South Africans may learn that successive Israeli governments have supported the
establishment of a Palestinian State as part of a negotiated peace agreement?
Are you concerned that South Africans may speak to Ehud Barak, the dovish former
prime minister of Israel who desperately tried at the Camp David and Taba
negotiations to create a Palestinian state, only to be rebuffed by the
Palestinian leadership? Are you concerned that South Africans might hear for
themselves directly from the current Israeli government how it seeks to return
immediately to the negotiating table without preconditions, and that it is the
Palestinian leadership that refuses to do so? Maybe you are worried that our
fellow South Africans may discover that the so-called “separation wall” is
actually a security fence, that prior to its being erected waves of suicide
bombers killed more than 1,300 Israelis and wounded over 10,000, and that since
its erection these attacks have stopped. Maybe you are afraid that South
Africans might speak to members of Hamas, who openly call for the destruction of
the State of Israel and the murder of all Jews in Israel and around the
world.
Mr. Ebrahim, your personal bias against Israel prevents you from
fulfilling your legal and ethical duties as minister of international relations,
who, with impartiality and sound judgment, is supposed to further peace, justice
and South African strategic interests in the world.
Your actions to
discourage South Africans from traveling to Israel are but one manifestation of
your extremist views. In so doing you are jeopardizing South Africa’s
international credibility and strategic interests. It is indeed the ideological
allies of Hamas and Hezbollah – Israel’s sworn enemies – who have also launched
a terror campaign against Christian communities throughout Africa. In recent
months scores of churches have been burnt and hundreds of Christians have been
murdered because of their faith.
Nigeria, one of our key African
partners, has borne the brunt of some of the worst attacks. As a leading African
nation, South Africa must condemn these attacks and express support of and offer
assistance to its fellow African governments in Nigeria, Somalia, Sudan and
elsewhere. To South Africa’s shame, you have remained silent. You have been too
hesitant and weak in condemning Syrian President Assad’s actions which have
resulted in the deaths of more than 20,000 of his citizens and the displacement
of nearly 150,000 refugees.
These are but a few examples of how your
prejudice precludes you from fulfilling your role as a minister of this
government. You seem to forget that your mandate is to serve the interests of
the people and the government of South Africa and not your own personal
allegiances. A judge who is biased or perceived to be so is legally and
ethically required to remove himself from the case, in the interest of
integrity, justice and truth. These same values require that you do the same and
resign. Especially during such turbulent times, how does a minister of
international relations discourage people from traveling and seeing for
themselves? Why do you repeat the sins of the apartheid regime and shun dialogue
with and understanding of the “other”? Peace cannot be achieved by withdrawal
and isolation; as the Book of Psalms (34:15) says: “Seek peace, and pursue
it.”
The dream of peace will only become a reality when people
pro-actively pursue it, and move beyond their prejudices and preconceptions and
truly understand the complex realities of the Middle East in an open-minded and
balanced way. Your actions support the forces of extremism, hatred and violence,
and undermine the forces of tolerance, freedom and peaceful
negotiations.
For the sake of peace and justice, we need more
information, not less; we need more dialogue, not less; we need more connections
with other societies, not less.
You clearly do not believe so, and hence
you are unfit to hold public office. Do the honorable thing:
Resign.
Sincerely,
Chief Rabbi Dr. Warren Goldstein