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May. 31st, 2010 04:11 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Why does Israel have to be put on the defensive internationally after its commandos use limited force in response to being attacked with potentially deadly weapons? Would anyone be complaining if the men and women of the US Navy were to use lethal force to defend themselves in the course of interdicting Somali pirates?
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Date: 2010-06-01 07:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-01 07:54 am (UTC)My grandfather, from Budapest, was faced with the choice of settling in Palestine, or being disappeared by the Soviets (this is what happened to all of his high school friends--one of them had a British uncle, so the whole social group got implicated as spies). So he couldn't stay in Eastern Europe at all. He had no family in America, and so couldn't go there. And his home in suburban Budapest had been demolished anyway, so his whole family was homeless, even the ones not being hunted by the Soviets.
My grandmother was liberated from Auschwitz. (Well, not literally, since most people were marched out of Auschwitz a couple months before the camp was liberated; she was liberated from whichever camp it was she was marched to.) Other people had taken her family's house in the meantime. She and her surviving siblings tried to go to Vienna but there were no jobs there, especially not for foreign, homeless, Jewish teenagers, so they went to Prague, where a Jewish Soviet officer warned them that the borders were about to close and they had better not be in Eastern Europe when that happened. Their one American aunt had come back to support the family when the war started, and so was herself stuck in a liberation camp, not in America where she could fill out paperwork so the extended family could immigrate. So... they had two choices: 1) being homeless in France or Italy for a few years until their aunt was set free, sailed back to America, filled out the paperwork, and the US government processed it (one aunt did choose this route; it ended up taking about five years, during which time she and her family lived in a tent in a refugee camp in France, because they weren't allowed to actually settle in Western Europe), or 2) smuggling themselves into Palestine where there was a network in place to help people like them find housing and jobs. That was the Sephardic community that was taking people in.
Anyway, if these things are happening to the Romany, is there any reason to think the Jews would have fared better if they'd stayed in Europe?
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Date: 2010-06-01 08:24 am (UTC)In those countries, I find it hard to imagine that Jews in modern times would be treated any better than the Romany currently are, if they had remained there.
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Date: 2010-06-01 08:39 am (UTC)But even though the Eastern European countries haven't come to grips with their complicity in the Holocaust, and are doing some disturbing things with that history...they in fact aren't physically threatening the Jews who are there. Maybe it would be different if there were more Jews there, or if Israel didn't exist, I don't know...but there is in fact international pressure today for them to not do things that are too blatant. (On the other hand, maybe some of that pressure comes from Israel... Or at least, at one place where we went, the Ninth Fort in Kovno, the story we were told was that the only reason why the Holocaust-related history of the site was represented in the museum is that a high ranking official from the Knesset visited as some point in the mid-1990's, was appalled that that was left out, and threatened to publicize it internationally unless they made changes.)
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Date: 2010-06-01 11:14 pm (UTC)Honestly I think the trouble all starts with the point at which it was decided that because a Jewish state needed to be specifically defined and protected as a Jewish state that there was *no other option* but ethnic cleansing of Palestine. It's the same kneejerk negative reaction I have now to hearing the "But if we even *start* letting the Palestinians back in they'll outbreed us and Israel won't be Jewish anymore!" thing, which is only slightly -- because of the stated intent of preventing a second Holocaust -- less racist than when Americans make the same argument about Mexican immigrants or French make the same argument about North African immigrants.
It is true that if ethnically cleansing a region of Palestine to make sure a specifically ethnically-Jewish state could be founded was taken off the table as an option, then the specific plan of going to Palestine and creating Eretz Yisroel in the Biblically-determined region would become a lot less attractive (because no matter what the option of magically snapping one's fingers and pretending that a region of land was an intrinsically Jewish homeland and had never been and could never be anything else would've been off the table) and other alternatives -- other locations, other ways of legally constituting a Jewish enclave, etc. -- would've seemed more attractive in comparison.
But of course this would never have actually occurred because there was nothing as galvanizing and attractive as the idea of a real Jewish nation-state on the same plane as the ethnic nation-states of Europe and because, depressingly, the idea of ethnic cleansing just didn't seem that bothersome to anybody at that point (either the Zionists themselves or the paternalistic, let's-play-games-with-people's-lives Western diplomats who came up with the plan for how to carve up the Balfour Declaration).
I just think the whole claim that "If we have our own country and our own stockpile of guns no one can hurt us" is a very lame claim. If everyone wants to kill you, you're really screwed no matter what happens -- plenty of people who *have* had their own nation-states have been very badly screwed once everyone wanted to kill them. The problem is really the problem of everyone wanting to kill you in the first place -- and I would argue that Israel has harmed rather than helped that cause (it has not, as far as I can tell, made Europe or America less anti-Semitic but has provided a great excuse for the Middle East rapidly and fervently increasing their levels of anti-Semitism to fever pitch).
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Date: 2010-06-01 11:20 pm (UTC)I would then point out that this was intentional -- that the Balfour Declaration was a cheap and easy way (or so it seemed at the time) for the Allied Powers to wash their hands of the "Jewish problem" in a way that involved minimal costs to themselves (or so it seemed at the time) and scoring maximum political points (or so it seemed at the time).
But it is an awfully cheap and shoddy way to try to help out survivors of the Holocaust and provide insurance against such a thing happening again, compared to what they could have done. Far from being a truly magnanimous act it was a brush-off -- "If we give you this useless land that's of religious and political significance to you we can stop feeling guilty, right? We can walk away".
It's almost exactly the same logic behind the Back-to-Africa movement among white abolitionists in antebellum America, people who wanted to have to stop wringing their hands over the plight of black slaves but who didn't want to deal with the responsibility of letting freed slaves become full and fully protected participants in their own country -- just plunk them back where they "belong", in a "homeland" they've never seen and that is of little intrinsic value, and let them deal with their own problems from then on. Clean hands, problem solved.
And it was nasty, ugly logic when applied to African slaves and it was nasty, ugly logic when applied to the Jews, no matter how much people argue that it was the only "realistic" solution. Hoping that all the Jews will flee to Israel and leave your country so you don't have to deal with it is not nearly as malicious or horrific as actively wishing genocide upon them, but it is, qualitatively, sprung from the same root -- a wish that there weren't any Jews around. (Indeed, in very early talks about what the "Final Solution" should be shipping off the Jews to an island somewhere *was among the possible plans* that Hitler and his cronies discussed, before they decided it was too costly and bore too much risk of the Jews someday coming back, and that they'd been successful enough at exerting their iron will over Europe that they weren't really worried about the bad international PR of actually killing them.)
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Date: 2010-06-01 11:59 pm (UTC)The Jews already in Palestine--the ones who'd been there all along and the ones who'd come a generation earlier under the Balfour Declaration--were the ones who invited the Holocaust victims in, and provided them with housing and jobs. It was emphatically not a project of the Western diplomats--they merely turned a blind eye. It was only once the European Jews were mostly already there, at the end of 1947, that the UN decided to partition the land into Israel and Palestine.