donderdag 21 februari 2008

Duitse intellectuelen: "Israëls stichting maakte Palestijnen slachtoffers van Holocaust"

Volgens een groep Duitse intellectuelen is de Holocaust de oorzaak van de creatie van Israel en het al 60 jaar durende lijden van de Palestijnen, en hebben de Duitsers dus net zo goed een verantwoordelijkheid naar de Palestijnen als naar de Joden. En passent wordt ook de oorlog met Libanon erbij gehaald:

"without the Holocaust of the Jews, Israeli policy would not see itself as entitled - or forced to ride over the human rights of the Palestinians and the inhabitants of Lebanon."

Het is - excuseer - baarlijke nonsens, en ook gevaarlijke nonsens. Zonder de Holocaust was Israël wellicht later gesticht, maar hadden er meer Joden gewoond en was het dus sterker geweest. Voor de Holocaust leefden er in Palestina al meer dan 400.000 Joden die een gehele eigen infrastructuiur aan instituties hadden opgericht, en van hun belastinginkomsten financierden de Britten het mandaat. De Yishoev, de Joodse gemeenschap in Palestina, functioneerde in de jaren '30 in feite als een staat-in-een-staat.

Niet de Holocaust is de oorzaak van de Palestijnse nakba, maar hun afwijzing van het VN delingsplan in 1947, nadat men tien jaar eerder een Palestijnse staat op circa 80% van het Mandaatgebied Palestina had afgewezen. Bovendien waren door de vele Arabische opstanden, opgezet door de Moefti Haj Amin-Al Husseini, Joden en Arabieren in Palestina steeds meer tegenover elkaar komen te staan, en richtten de Joden in reactie de Haganah op, dat in 1948 als Joods ondergronds leger functioneerde en in de zomer met de Palmach, Irgun, en Lehi opging in de IDF tijdens de Israëlische Onafhankelijkheidsoorlog. In 1948 verklaarde de Moefti, een nazi-collaborateur, dat men de Joden in Palestina wilde vernietigen in navolging van wat Hitler met de Joden in Europa had gedaan.

Dit soort geschiedvervalsing dreigt steeds meer mainstream te worden. Het draagt uiteraard niet bij aan een oplossing van het conflict, omdat de Palestijnen in hun slachtofferrol worden bevestigd en het vertrouwen tussen Israël en Europa wordt ondermijnd.
 
Het is volgens sommigen wellicht hip, progressief en avantgardistisch om met de Palestijnen te koketteren en bepaalde 'taboes' met betrekking tot Israël te doorbreken. Het levert je in ieder geval een hoop media aandacht op en als je een beetje een naam hebt, blijkbaar ook een trip naar Israël op uitnodiging van een gerenommeerd instituut. Het is niet de eerste keer dat Duitsers de geschiedenis vervalsen.


Ratna
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Last update - 10:43 19/02/2008

German intellectuals: Israel's creation made Palestinians victims of Holocaust
 
 
A group of visiting German intellectuals called on Berlin on Monday to change what they termed its Holocaust-rooted blind support of Israel, saying the creation of the State of Israel turned Palestinians into victims of the Nazi Holocaust as well.

The four, Dr. Reiner Steinweg, Prof. Gert Krell, Prof. Georg Meggle, and Jorg Becker, took part in a debate Monday evening at the Netanya Academic College on the future of German-Israeli relations. They were among 25 signatories to a petition on the issue that was circulated in the German media following the Second Lebanon War.

According to the manifesto, German responsibility toward the Palestinians is "one side of the consequences of the Holocaust which receives far too little attention." The paper goes on to argue that it was the Holocaust which Germany perpetrated that brought about "the suffering that has persisted [in the Middle East] for the last six decades and has at present become unbearable."

This, according to the manifesto titled "Friendship and Criticism," is because "without the Holocaust of the Jews, Israeli policy would not see itself as entitled - or forced to ride over the human rights of the Palestinians and the inhabitants of Lebanon."

Without the Holocaust, the document adds, Israel would not have enjoyed the same material and political support from the U.S. The researchers told Haaretz this also applies to support from Germany.

"So it is not only Israel which can lay claim to special consideration on the part of Germany. As Germans we share not only a responsibility toward Israel's existence, but also for the living conditions of the Palestinian People," the scholars concluded.

The four cosignatories attended the debate at the invitation of former deputy Knesset speaker, Dov Ben-Meir, who organized the event. In December 2006, Ben-Meir wrote what he titled "a friendly response" to the manifesto, which he in turn circulated in the media.

In his response, Ben-Meir said the original manifesto reflected a "simplistic" approach. One of the main reasons for the conflict and the current state of Arabs and Palestinians, Ben-Meir said, was intransigence on their part and their reliance on violence instead of dialogue.

Conceding that Germany's attitude to Israel is part of a Holocaust-based "special relationship," Ben-Meir said at the debate that this relationship - which included huge reparations payments that Germany made to Israel in the 1950s - was primarily a German interest, more than an Israeli one.

"By agreeing to put Germany's Nazi past aside, the Jewish nation has granted Germany an entrance pass into the family of nations after Germany was considered a pariah nation because of its Nazi past," he said.

The debate, which drew a crowd of some 150 people, took place in the framework of a panel discussion. Representing the German scholars were Professor Meggle, who specializes in philosophical anthropology at the University of Leipzig, and Dr. Steinweg, a researcher at the Linz branch of the Austrian Study Centre for Peace and Conflict Resolution.

Steinweg said the group came to clear up misunderstandings about the manifesto, which according to him has been misconstrued as a call to end Germany's longstanding friendship with Israel.

Local panelists included former Israeli ambassador to Germany Shimon Stein, correspondent for Die Zeit, Gisela Dachs and Professor Moshe Zimmermann, Director of the Koebner Minerva Center for German History at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

Zimmermann said the issue of the Holocaust was currently subject to political manipulation both by Israel and in Germany. "The Israelis try to use this issue to paint people who criticize Israel as anti-Semites. At the same time, this manifesto is an attempt to manipulate German feelings of guilt vis-à-vis the Holocaust, by projecting them onto the Palestinians," he argued.

"If the Germans want to feel guilt about the Holocaust, they better stick to the Poles, the Dutch and the Jews. There is no need to go as far as to feel guilty for what happened to the Palestinians," he added.

Commenting on the heated discussion that ensued, Herman Bunz from the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung - the private non-profit German organization which funded the visit by the German scholars - told the panelists, "This is the perfect chance to misunderstand each other, but I would advise you to do the opposite."

"They are a minority, but they educate young German minds and we cannot afford to brush their criticism aside as anti-Semitic. We must confront it," said Ben-Meir.

1 opmerking:

  1. I love Israel it is a beautiful country and the people are very nice.Lucky me.

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