With all the hubbub in the Jewish world these days surrounding Israel’s 60th anniversary, it was perhaps inevitable that Israel’s critics would want their own commemoration. As JTA reported yesterday, this week has been branded “Nakba Week” at Columbia University, with a whole host of events planned around what Palestinians see as the “catastrophe” of Israel’s creation.
Several campus groups are participating. Two that are not – surprise! – are Hillel and the Progressive Jewish Alliance, a Hillel subgroup. Apparently, Hillel and PJA declined to co-sponsor an April 14 event that had the word “Nakba” in its description. According to Columbia senior David Judd, who assailed both groups in a piece in the Columbia student newspaper, the Spectator, Hillel cannot acknowledge the Nakba because of its stated commitment to a Jewish democratic Israel.
He writes:
In the case of the April 14 event, I’m told this policy was cited against any Hillel association with the claim that Palestinians suffered a historical wrong in 1948. Whatever happened that year, it cannot be labeled a “catastrophe.” Harm done to Palestinians cannot, apparently, be acknowledged in this framework as an ethical offense. Where it cannot plausibly be denied nor justified, absolute silence on the subject must suffice.
This implication may seem a stretch from the formal wording of Hillel policy—and indeed, it is unlikely that, should Hillel or PJA have cosponsored, either would have suffered any direct sanction. But deriving an imperative from the Hillel formula for the exclusion of Palestinians from ethical consideration does not require too strained a reading.
A stretch indeed.
Judd continues:
A fundamental illiberality to Zionism’s traditional understanding of the essential nature of Israel is made clear by its inability to encompass al-Nakba. We do not normally grant anyone the right to run a nation-state under the control and in the exclusive interest of one race, ethnicity, or religion—a basic principle not of some utopian internationalism but of liberal democracy. This privilege is incompatible with the egalitarian recognition of an intrinsic human dignity.
But isn’t it precisely that concern, that Israel remain a democratic state of all its citizens, precisely what has led a plurality of its citizens to support a two-state solution, an objective Hillel expressly supports? Isn’t it exactly the desire to NOT treat Palestinians as second-class citizens what has led the Israeli government to pursue, as a matter of official policy, the creation of an independent Palestinian state?
Hillel President Emily Steinberger defended her group in another Spectator piece. Her point: branding events with the Nakba label precludes dialogue.
However, events labeled with “Al Nakba” are not models that will successfully engage in dialogue if a discussion of the Arab-Israeli conflict has to be based on the premise that Israel’s creation was a catastrophe. Labeling the week-long initiative with the term makes it very difficult for any supporter of the state of Israel, regardless of his or her opinions of Israeli policies, to engage in this dialogue, since it is predicated on delegitimizing their opinions.
Well, if that’s true, Israel is probably going to have a difficult time ever engaging in dialogue with Palestinians, who more or less have internalized the notion of Nakba is an integral part of their national consciousness.
But what’s really likely to inflame the critics, is Steinberger final line:
“The five-letter word Nakba, like some other inflammatory four-and-five-letter words, is not the beginning of dialogue.”
Besides having some trouble counting, branding a Nakba as a cuss isn’t likely to open much dialogue either. Perhaps that’s not surprising, given that making peace between Israelis and Palestinians is probably easier than making peace between academics.
6 Responses for "No peace at Columbia"
I find it at least odd, if not highly risible that anyone thinks one organization owes another co-sponsorship of any event, much less that it should be the occasion for yet another exercise in Israel bashing.
As for “nakba”, it is another core lie of the Palestinians. Far more Jews lost far more property in being expelled from Arab lands than did the “Palestinians”, even if their claims are accurate (which I dispute). What is more, if the confidence trick pulled off at the UN of defining descendants of Palestinians as “refugees” (no other group has been so defined), then the descendants of Jews exiled from Arab lands must also be counted if the exercise is not to be yet another corrupt example of “al takiyya”.
The only “nakba” for the Palestinians was the Arabs’ refusal to accept UN partition and their subsequent internment of the Palestinians in refugee camps as a “weapon” against Israel.
That the Palestinians have brought this catastrophe on themselves can be seen in that they have never been able to live peacefully even with their fellow-Arabs. They tried to overthrow the government of Kuwait and got kicked out. The tried to overthrow the government of Jordan and got kicked out. They tried to overthrow the government of Lebanon and got kicked out. Now they are after Israel, which is treating them with far more humanitarian consideration than the Arab countries. When you look up the definition of “nakba” in the dictionary, you see a picture of Yasser Arafat.
David Sternlight, Ph.D.
Los Angeles
I guess it’s impossible to use the term Nakba, agreeing that things have not gone well for the Palestinian people who started the 20th century stateless and ended it stateless, but then begin sharing the blame for that Nakba among all those parties (states and their political leaders) who put the resistance to Israel above the welfare of the Palestinian people. Too bad truth must take a back seat to rhetoric that perpetuates the very Nabka that the rhetoric condemns.
I’m sure that Palestinians and other haters of Jews and Israel view the establishment of Israel as a “disaster” for them. Simliarly, SS survivors have probably long thought of VE Day as disasterous; and every year we celebrate Purim, Haman’s descendents must still shudder! I have two words for all of them and they’re not Hag Sameach!
Those who want to use the Muslim agenda are in favor of the destruction of the Jewish state! It is clear and the Muslims tell it to us in word and deed daily.
I say we must tell them the same thing. NO Muslim Palestine! For what people deserve a state that sacrifices their children; teaches hate; destroys the holy places of others and who love death more than life!
What makes one think that the Muslims want a state? They turned it down 60 years ago. They have done nothing to create the institutions and infrastructure of a state. Their own breathren are doing very little to help them. It is really the Europeans and the Americans who bear that burden. It is plain to see who and what they are - they do not hid their hate nor their jealousy.
It is quite clear that the arab world hates Jews more than its own.
One does not raise oneself by putting others down, something that the arab world excels in.
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