It is awards and honorary doctorate season, a time for contemplating who should
– and should not – be honored. In Washington, Cliff May, president of the
Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, is justifiably threatening not to
hold his organization’s annual policy summit at the Newseum, which in honoring
journalists killed in 2012, included two cameramen for Al- Aqsa TV – Hamas TV –
thus saluting terrorists masquerading as journalists.
In Israel, news
that Cherie Blair received an honorary doctorate and that David Landau is
receiving a lifetime journalism award originally alarmed me doubly. After
further research, I applaud Blair’s honor – yet remain appalled by
Landau’s.
Initially, on reading that Ben-Gurion University honored Cherie
Blair, the British attorney and wife of former Prime Minister Tony Blair, I
winced. “There they go again,” I thought, knowing BGU’s occasional blind spot
regarding intellectuals who delegitimize Israel. I remembered that in 2002 Mrs.
Blair rationalized the suicide bombing of Bus 32a at Pat Junction, in which 19
people were murdered, saying: “As long as young people feel they have got no
hope but to blow themselves up, you are never going to make
progress.”
Blair implicitly blamed the Israelis and treated the mass
murder of innocent civilians as a reasonable tactic, not an evil abomination.
This foolishness encouraged others, like David Clark, to claim in The Guardian:
“Only a collective trauma outside our national experience could have brought an
entire people to this point.”
This ethical vertigo
continues.
Rather than criticizing Palestinian political culture – and
Islamism – for producing so many totalitarian perpetrators of such crimes
against humanity, these amoral relativists assume Israel must be committing
particularly heinous crimes to provoke such behavior. Palestinian fanaticism is
seen as our fault, not theirs. This helps explain why some Europeans falsely
compare Israelis to Nazis (especially when you add traditional anti-Semitism,
too).
However, Blair quickly repudiated her remarks. Since then, her
impressive Cherie Blair Foundation for Women (CBFW) has empowered women
entrepreneurs worldwide.
Thanks to CBFW’s northern Israel project, 19
Arab and Jewish women completed a unique three-year BA Economics and Management
program.
Moreover, although Mrs. Blair earned the honor on her own, Tony
Blair has eloquently opposed Israel’s delegitimization, fighting its subtle and
crass forms. At Herzliya in August, 2010, Blair denounced the “conscious or
often unconscious resistance, sometimes bordering on refusal, to accept Israel
has a legitimate point of view.” Blair observed that the harsh, sweeping
language, distorted frameworks, and obsessive, disproportionate attacks against
Israel have prevented many people from “acknowledge[ing] that Israel has a
point” or recognizing the issue’s complexity.
UNFORTUNATELY, DAVID Landau
has been one of the Israeli journalists whose language demonizes Israel and
helps alienate many Diaspora Jews from the Jewish state. This is a man who as
editor-in-chief of Haaretz’s English edition from 1997 to 2004 helped mainstream
the far Left’s tendency to compare Israel’s policies to the nefarious
“apartheid” policies of South Africa and to call Zionism racism. “After all,”
many have said, “such accusations are made regularly in Haaretz.”
This is
a man who, when meeting former US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, used a
vulgar sexual expression to illustrate how happy he would be if Israel were
“raped” by the United States to achieve a Middle East settlement, while calling
Israel a “failed state” that wanted to be brutalized. This is a man who admitted
to soft-pedaling news hostile to Ariel Sharon, including corruption allegations,
to protect Sharon during the Gaza disengagement fight. And this is a man who
recently described Israel as sliding “a long way down the slope that leads to
McCarthyism and racism,” and to a place where “nationalism, xenophobia and
Judaism blur and merge.”
I am proud that Israeli democracy does not jail
reporters for using such sexist and crude language, degenerating into blatant
partisanship, or editorializing against their country so aggressively. We are
free. I appreciate the Jewish penchant for selfcriticism that helps trigger
democracy’s self-corrective mechanisms. But we Jews tend to escalate
constructive self-criticism into destructive self-flagellation, internalizing
our enemy’s criticisms rather than proudly and democratically striving to
fulfill collective dreams.
And I am dismayed that an organization whose
work I esteem, B’nai Brith, would be in the awkward position of giving this
polemicist “a lifetime achievement award... for his contribution to extended
Diaspora reportage during his tenure at” Haaretz, and before that, at The
Jerusalem Post.
I understand that an independent jury of leading Israeli
journalists and academics chose Landau to honor his role in pushing’s Israel’s
infamously insular press to be more worldly, covering the Diaspora as a real,
richly Jewish place rather than simply a site that supports (or does not
support) Israel. But the jury reflected its own Israeli provincialism in failing
to recognize how toxic Landau’s words have been – and how embarrassing such an
award could be for the sponsoring organization, B’nai Brith. This noble,
worldwide Jewish community service organization accurately calls itself “a
national and global leader in the fight against antisemitism and anti-Israel
bias,” and so heroically advances Jewish-Christian relations, organizes missions
to Israel, facilitates humanitarian aid, and mounts educational
programs.
Forgiving Cherie Blair moves us beyond today’s fashionable
“gotcha” journalism, wherein one mistake ends up being defining for life. I
salute her for learning to recognize the Middle East’s complexity – and working
to help out where she can. But in 2010, Tony Blair warned of critics who “wear
Nelson’s eye patch when they lift the telescope of scrutiny to the Israeli case”
and fail to see their biases – or the damage they cause.
David Landau
does not deserve a B’nai Brith lifetime achievement award because he has
repeatedly undermined the Diaspora’s ties with Israel by encouraging this
delegitimizing myopia, no matter how much he expanded his newspapers’ Diaspora
coverage.
The author is professor of history at McGill University and a
Shalom Hartman Engaging Israel Research Fellow in Jerusalem. His latest book,
Moynihan’s Moment: America’s Fight Against Zionism as Racism,
was just
published.
Watch the new Moynihan’s Moment video! www.giltroy.com