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Holocaust remembrance is a boon for Israeli propaganda
(La memoria dell'Olocausto è una manna
per la propaganda israeliana)
By Gideon Levy

Israel's bigwigs attacked at dawn on a wide front. The president in
Germany, the prime minister with a giant entourage in Poland, the
foreign minister in Hungary, his deputy in Slovakia, the culture
minister in France, the information minister at the United Nations, and
even the Likud party's Druze Knesset member, Ayoob Kara, in Italy. They
were all out there to make florid speeches about the Holocaust.
Wednesday was International Holocaust Remembrance Day,
and an Israeli public relations drive like this hasn't been seen for
ages. The timing of the unusual effort - never have so many ministers
deployed across the globe - is not coincidental: When the world is
talking Goldstone, we talk Holocaust, as if out to blur the impression.
When the world talks occupation, we'll talk
Iran
as if we wanted them to forget.
It won't help much. International Holocaust
Remembrance Day has passed, the speeches will soon be forgotten, and the
depressing everyday reality will remain.
Israel
will not come out looking good, even after the PR campaign.
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On the
eve of his departure, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke at Yad
Vashem. "There is evil in the world," he said. "Evil must be stamped out
at the beginning." Some people are "trying to deny the truth." Lofty
words, said by the same person who only the day before, not quite in the
same breath, uttered very different words, words of true evil, evil that
should be extinguished at the start, evil that Israel is trying to hide.
Netanyahu spoke of a new "migration policy," one that
is evil through and through. He malevolently lumped together migrant
workers and wretched refugees - warning that they all endanger
Israel, lower our wages,
harm our security, make us into a third-world country and bring in
drugs. He zealously supported our racist interior minister, Eli Yishai,
who has spoken of the migrants as the spreaders of diseases such as
hepatitis, tuberculosis, AIDS and God knows what else.
No Holocaust speech will erase these words of
incitement and slander against migrants. No remembrance speech will
obliterate the xenophobia that has reared its head in
Israel, not only on the extreme right, as in Europe, but throughout
government.
We have a prime minister who speaks about evil but is
building a fence to prevent war refugees from knocking at
Israel's door. A prime minister who speaks about evil but shares the
crime of the Gaza blockade, now in its fourth year, leaving 1.5 million
people in disgraceful conditions. A prime minister in whose country
settlers perpetrate pogroms against innocent Palestinians under the
slogan "price tag," which also has horrific historical connotations, but
against whom the state does virtually nothing.
This is the prime minister of a state that arrests
hundreds of left-wing protesters against the injustices of the
occupation and the war in
Gaza, while time grants
mass pardons to the right-wingers who demonstrated against the
disengagement. In his speech yesterday, Netanyahu's equating Nazi
Germany with fundamentalist Iran was no more than cheap propaganda. Talk
about "degrading the Holocaust." Iran isn't Germany, Ahmedinejad isn't
Hitler and equating them is no less spurious than equating Israeli
soldiers with Nazis.
The Holocaust must not be forgotten, and there is no
need to compare it with anything.
Israel must take part in
the efforts to keep its memory alive, but in doing so it must show up
with clean hands, clean of evil of their own doing. And it must not
arouse suspicion that it is cynically using the memory of the Holocaust
to obliterate and blur other things. Regrettably, this is not the case.
How beautiful it would have been if on this
international day of remembrance
Israel had taken the
time to examine itself, look inward and ask, for example, how it is that
anti-Semitism has reared its head in the world precisely in the past
year, the year after we dropped white-phosphorous bombs on Gaza. How
beautiful it would have been if on this International Holocaust
Remembrance Day, Netanyahu had declared a new policy for integrating
refugees instead of expulsion, or lifted the Gaza blockade.
A thousand speeches against anti-Semitism will not
extinguish the flames ignited by Operation Cast Lead, flames that
threaten not only
Israel but the entire
Jewish world. As long as Gaza is under blockade and Israel sinks into
its institutionalized xenophobia, Holocaust speeches will remain hollow.
As long as evil is rampant here at home, neither the world nor we will
be able to accept our preaching to others, even if they deserve it.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1145670.html
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