A RESPONSE TO MICHAEL DOUGLAS: CRITICIZING ISRAEL ISN’T ANTI-SEMITISM


By Gil Maguire

Michael Douglas, in his op-ed piece in last Sunday’s LA Times, “Finding Judaism, facing anti-Semitism”, tells a compelling story about his young son encountering an anti-Semite at a hotel pool in southern Europe who shouted insults at him because he was wearing a Star of David.    While everyone can agree it’s important to stand up against anti-Semitism, it’s also important to reject false claims of anti-Semitism used as an ad hominem sword to protect Israel and the actions of its government from criticism.  Where real anti-Semitism is present, as in the despicable incident involving Douglas’s young son, it needs to be named and shamed and hopefully soon eradicated.   Where it’s not, where it’s used as a tactic to protect Israel from valid criticism, we need to reject it and avoid the slippery slope that reduces claims of anti-Semitism to little more than political theater.

Douglas goes down that slippery slope when he says,

“A second root cause of anti-Semitism derives from an irrational and misplaced hatred of Israel.  Far too many people see Israel as an apartheid state and blame the people of an entire religion for what, in truth, are internal national policy decisions.”

First, it’s not anti-Semitic to criticize Israel and its government for its policies or actions any more than it’s anti-Russian to criticize Putin’s government for its interference in the Ukraine.  Criticism of Israel doesn’t necessarily indicate an anti-Semitic motive or hatred of all Jews.  Certainly, some who criticize Israel are anti-Semites (David Duke comes to mind), but again, that doesn’t mean all criticism of Israel is anti-Semitism.

Israel can’t be held immune to criticism simply because it is Israel and most of its citizens are Jewish.  Tarring all who criticize Israel with the anti-Semitic brush is its own form of bigotry, and placing any individual or country above criticism sets a dangerous precedent.

Second, Douglas says too many people see Israel as an apartheid state and blame all Jews for what are really internal national policy decisions.  Certainly the charge of apartheid within Israel’s pre-1967 borders is unwarranted since all Israeli citizens, both Jews and Arabs, have civil rights, including the right to vote.  However, there are some 50 laws in Israel that discriminate against its Arab-Israeli citizens in favor of Jews.

The real problem lies in Greater Israel, specifically in the Palestinian territories Israel captured and occupied in 1967.  There the apartheid charge has a great deal of validity.  In the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, there are 4.5 million Palestinian Arabs who have lived under Israeli military control and occupation without civil rights or the right to vote for almost half a century.

At most these Palestinians have very limited voting rights within the truncated areas of the occupied territories.  They vote for local leaders who have virtually no control over Israel’s hegemony in the occupied territories.  They live under a harsh military occupation and have no say whatsoever in the national policy or leadership of the Greater Israel that totally controls their borders, their travel, their natural resources, in short, their entire lives.  Self-rule and voting rights for the Palestinians of the occupied territories is little different than that of the Bantustans of apartheid South Africa.

In 2012, Stephen Roberts, the former chancellor of Brown University and a Jewish-American and major life-long supporter of Israel, concluded, after a humanitarian aid trip to East Jerusalem and the West Bank, that “… Israel has created a system of apartheid on steroids.”  Depriving 4.5 million people, primarily Muslims, of their most basic civil rights for half a century certainly looks like apartheid.  Moreover, under those circumstances, Palestinian resistance and hatred of Israel seems understandable.

Third, Douglas criticizes those who label Israel’s actions as apartheid for interfering in what he sees as merely Israel’s “internal national policy decisions”.  In other words, whatever the Israeli government decides is above criticism because it’s really just making decisions involving internal matters of national policy.   Douglas is on shaky ground here.  Would he apply that standard to those who criticized the internal national policy decisions of Nazi Germany, of the Rwandan government during the genocide of the Tutsi, of the Khmer Rouge government in Cambodia, or of the South African apartheid regime?

No country, including Israel can be held immune from valid criticism.  Douglas would do well to think about one looming fact: In this week’s election in Israel, the so-called “only democracy in the Middle East”, 35 percent of the population of Israel and its occupied territories, the non-Jewish population of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, weren’t allowed to vote even though they’ve been under Israel control and occupation for nearly half a century.  That’s 4.5 million people that have been waiting to for their freedom and basic human civil rights for now 48 years.  They live, unfortunately, in what most Israelis see as Greater Israel which includes Judea, Samaria, and Jerusalem, the Eretz Yisrael of their Old Testament dreams.  Does Douglas really believe a 2000 year old claim based on the Old Testament should be allowed to trump the basic human rights of 4.5 million indigenous Palestinians?

Douglas and his wife, Catherine Zeta-Jones, should be admired for having given back by being leaders in a wide variety of worthwhile progressive causes.  As a Jew, he should be concerned about stopping the scourge of anti-Semitism, as should we all, but as a Jewish progressive he should also be concerned about the current direction of Zionism, particularly the Zionism practiced by the hard-right Likud party and its now reelected leader, Benjamin Netanyahu.  The question he should ask is whether Israeli Zionism, as practiced today, is consistent with Jewish values, and American values.

I would hope that Douglas, as a newfound Jew, would avoid the trap of equating Zionism with Judaism.  Zionism is a very modern and recent offshoot of Judaism, one of the world’s oldest and most noble religions.   Whether this offshoot, in its present form, is consistent with the values and precepts of Judaism is a question for Douglas to answer.  I would hope he would follow the example of Brown University Chancellor Stephen Roberts’ and take his wife and son on an investigative journey to the occupied Palestinian territories, and then come to his own conclusions and give us a 2015 update.

Gil Maguire is a retired civil rights attorney and writer of both fiction and non-fiction.  He lives in Oxnard.   His blog, Irish Moses, is named in honor of his father, Robert F. Maguire, who was awarded the Medal of Valor by the Simon Wiesenthal Center in 2004 for “his heroic efforts that helped to rescue tens of thousands of Jews” during 1948-49 after the founding of the State of Israel.

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3 Responses to A RESPONSE TO MICHAEL DOUGLAS: CRITICIZING ISRAEL ISN’T ANTI-SEMITISM

  1. abubenadhem says:

    As-salaam aleikum, Gil Maguire. This “Response to Michael Douglas,” like your book, is a well-written, important truth about a political “icon” that is a very flawed, if not altogether false, focus of general American (U.S.) veneration. If only books and articles like yours got more than a tiny fraction of attention of the incessant, overwhelming Israeli “story.” We hope and speak out for peace and justice; but, as the Jewish scripture declared millenia ago, ” ‘Peace, peace,’ they say, when there is no peace.” (Jeremiah 6:14). The Jews of today have managed to escape their role among European gentiles as an inferior and despised people, and they have manged to substitute Palestinians in their former place. May the Creator and Judge of All Life bring justice, because we humans seem incapable of it.

  2. Anonymous says:

    Firstly , kudos to Gil Mcguire’s deft dismantling of Michael Douglas’s defense of Israel’s war crimes against Palestinians , and for the , ” Heads Up ” on how Israeli apologists for those atrocities , will use the teflon – shield – accusation of , ” Antisemitism ! ” to block any valid moral judgements and criticism of Israeli government actions that would fail the moral teachings of Jewish lore , as of all the major religions , and many atheists , as well . The GOLDEN RULE was probably a secular sentiment long before claim by a sect . Secondly , the foregoing was succinctly , and admirably stated by Abubenadhem’s reply to Mcguire’s article , ” I myself am pro-Jewish , but anti-Israel ” . And he helpfully referred readers to , ‘ an inspiring recent book of testimonies from 40 Jews who became severe critics of Israel : ” Reclaiming Judaism From Zionism : Stories of Personal Transformation ” by Carolyn Karcher . DZ

  3. abubenadhem says:

    According to Wikipedia and the Encyclopedia Brittanica, Friedrich Willhelm Adolph Marr (1819-1904) first used the term “anti-semitism” (“Antisemitismus”) in 1881 (or 1879). It is a poor term as well as an unworthy sentiment and a deplorable behavior, all of which should be abandoned. As for language, we should replace the inaccurate and unclear “antisemitism” with more specific terms such as anti-Jew, anti-Arab, anti-Israel and anti-Muslim. “Antisemitism” may logically refer to either of the first two antipathies; and the latter two attitudes, opposition to the State of Israel or to all those who believe in or practice the religion of Islam are NOT the same as the first two terms. Please help me to consign “antisemitism” to the language junkyard and replace it with the other four terms.

    I myself am pro-Jewish but anti-Israel; and I have many good reasons for both sentiments. Let me recommend an inspiring recent book of testimonies from 40 Jews who became severe critics of Israel: “Reclaiming Judaism from Zionism: Stories of Personal Transformation” by Carolyn Karcher.

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