BOOK: “Out of the frame. The struggle for academic freedom in Israel” by Ilan Pappe 7Feb11 February 9, 2011
Reviewed by Dr Ludwig Watzal -Â World News -Â 7 February 2011
In this intellectual autobiography, Ilan PappĂ©, Professor in the Institute for Arab and Islamic Studies at the University of Exeter, tells his story of conversion from an Israeli Zionist to an anti-Zionist. For him, it was an act of liberation or even a kind of revelation which religious people sometimes experience. The author does not recall the precise moment of his awakening, but there was a moment when the un-Jewishness and immorality of the Zionist project became clear to him. He still does equate Jewishness and morality, not as superior to any other position, but rather as a comfortable heritage to which he belongs and on which he can rely on when making moral judgments. In his own words: â(F)rom this perspective, the Zionist project abused this kind of Judaism and this kind of morality. Worst of all was the Zionist and later Israeli abuse of the Holocaust memory to justify the dispossession of Palestine that disconcerted and outraged me. The abuse is obvious and yet so many today can still not see it. It was this departure point human and Jewish that recently led so many Jews to oppose crimes and policies done in the name of the state.â
In this book, PappĂ© tries to decipher the riddle of Zionist ideology that was once seen by him as the âultimate expression of pristine humanity, but when abandoned, as a racist and quite evil philosophy of morality and lifeâ. The author grew up in a typical Zionist-controlled environment until he left in 1981 for the United Kingdom to start his doctoral studies at Oxford University. At that time, he associated with a left-wing Zionist party. Two events caused the first fissures in PappéŽs Zionist-edifice: the Israeli invasion in Lebanon in 1981, and an invitation he received from the Israeli Embassy to deliver a speech at a pro-Israeli rally in the north of Britain. PappĂ© was picked by the embassy because they feared it was too dangerous to send an official representative after the assassination attempt on Ambassador Shlomo Argon. This explanation struck PappĂ© because it was not only the willingness to sacrifice him, should there be another terrorist attack, but also the presumption that he had no reservations about the attack on Lebanon. From here, he embarked on a journey with no return. This âdivorceâ did not mean that the author severs all ties with his country or his many friends in Israel. But to preserve a positive side of Jewish life in Israel, according to him, not only Palestinians would be better off with a ânon-Zionist regimeâ, but so would most of the Israelis.
For an Israeli, to end by viewing Zionism as a colonial movement and not as a kind of liberation movement for the Jewish people, as Zionists claim, that person has to liberate himself from Zionism as an ideology. To equate Zionism, a late form of Jewish nationalism, with colonialism is a view not allowed in Israeli academic discourse; it is branded a gross ideological distortion of the so-called historical truth, writes PappĂ©. But the Zionist actually described their enterprise in colonialist terminology, and they were proud of it. They thus set up âthe Jewish Colonization Associationâ, âthe Society for the Colonization of the Land of Israelâ, âthe Palestine Jewish Colonization Associationâ, and âthe Jewish Colonial Trustâ. The Twelfth Zionist Congress set up a âColonization Departmentâ. Chaim Weizman compared the Zionist movement with the French colonization of Tunisia. Beyond that, they deployed the full battery of colonialist racist attitudes (a bulwark against Asia, and an advance post of civilization against barbarism, as Herzl sold its project to the Western imperialist powers), professing an overt disdain for the indigenous Arab population. All these early clichĂ©s are still rampant in Israeli society (Ehud Barak: Israel, as a âvilla in the jungleâ). In his diary, the âfather of Zionismâ, Theodor Herzl, wrote that the indigenous inhabitants of the land should be âdiscreetly and circumspectlyâ expelled. In public, however, he declared the wish to advance the interests of the ânative populationâ. PappĂ© mentions HerzlÂŽs invention of the Zionist discourse, and that âone of his more important legacies was double-talkâ. There has been essentially no change in Zionist colonial intentions, as the quotation of Israel Galili in Haaretz, April 18, 1972, illustrates: “Our right in Gaza is exactly like our right in Tel Aviv. We are colonizing Gaza exactly in the same manner in which we colonized Yafa. Those who doubt our right in Gaza should doubt our right in Tel Aviv as well.”
PappéŽs autobiography is closely linked to the history of his country and colonized Palestine. To view Zionism as a colonial movement cause him deep trouble. Unlike his colleague Benny Morris, who made a U-turn after the so-called peace talks at Camp David failed and joined the Zionist consensus again. PappĂ© stuck to his scholarly principles. The author mentions a meeting between Israeli and Palestinians historians in Paris in which they clashed about issues such the equation between Zionism and colonialism and the designation of the Naqba as an âethnic cleansingâ operation. At the forefront of this clash were Benny Morris and Itamar Rabinovitch. These Israeli historians, according to PappĂ©, doubted the ability of the Palestinians to posses the expertise or historical documents necessary for writing their own history. This would mean that, at least in that case, only the colonizer has the ability to write the history of the colonized.
In the chapter entitled âArming of the Zionist Mindâ, the author describes the role of the media in the militarization of Israeli society. With the exceptions of a few journalists, the whole media conglomerate is described as a willing mouthpiece of the army, security establishment, and for Zionist ideology. âThe media could serve as the IDFÂŽs (Israeli Defense Forces) spokesman, but not as its watchdog; very rarely was the armyÂŽs immunity from outside supervision questioned or challenged.â The military way of thinking infiltrates peu Ă peu all walks of Israeli society. The close relationship between the army and the academic elite corrupted traditional university ethos and strengthened the armyÂŽs ideological grip over academic freedom, so PappĂ©. The closed mind of many media people was also seen in the academia. The poster child of this was Benny Morris when he, as a ânew historianâ subscribed in 2004 to the view âthat the expulsion was inevitable and should have been more comprehensive, it helped to legitimize any Israeli plans for further ethnic cleansingâ.
What the author writes about the mobbing and the denunciation he was subjected to by his former colleagues at Haifa University, in the wake of the so-called Katz affair, can only be described as shameful. In his thesis, Katz documented the Tantura massacre alleged committed by an Israeli elite unit at Tantura in 1948. Although Katz did not write his thesis under PappéŽs supervision, PappĂ© defended him. As a result, a gauntlet started at the university. Social and academic contacts were cut off. The âsystemâ isolated PappĂ© totally. An âintellectual and historiographical dialogue with my own society became impossibleâ. Emotional compensation for this personal vilification received the author from the Palestinian community in Israel. He even moved from Haifa to Kiryat Tivon where he established a sort of âhome universityâ where he taught his fellow countryman about the Nakba and the crimes committed in the course of the establishment of the State of Israel on the indigenous population.
When he was publically accused by a TV-moderator as a âtraitorâ, and an ex-minister of justice called him âan agent of Hezbollahâ (sic!), it was time for PappĂ© to look for a safe haven. The author mentions the crimes against the Palestinian and the Lebanese people which were committed between from 2000 until 2006, reaching its climax with the massacre on the civilian population of Gaza in 2008/09 shortly before the turn of the US-Presidency from George W. Bush to Barack H. Obama. In this massacre 1 400 people were killed, most of them civilians. The Western political elite called this massacre legitimate self-defense.
In the epilogue âDisarm Israelâ PappĂ© shows how insane Israeli society has become. âIt seems that people like me represent the new anti-Semitism, which had, like the old one, a strong self-hating component in it.â For this distorted attitude, the author found a very appropriate explanation: âIt was my Jewish origins that did not allow me to tolerate anymore the lie and pushed me to take an active part in unmasking it.â For PappĂ© Zionism began as a ânoble responseâ to an âacute real problem of Jewish existence in Europeâ. But this noble impulse was gone the moment Palestine was chosen for the Zionist enterprise. âIt was not about rescuing people anymore, it was focused on colonization and dispossession.â According to the author, Israel became an army with a state. The âdisarmamentâ of this modern Sparta has to start with its ideological disarmament. This ideological disarmament should avoid unnecessary demonization, and has to distinguish between the state and the people. The tough dialogue must be initiated with the representatives of the state and a society that wish to be part of the âcivilizedâ world, âwhile remaining racist and supremacistâ. Can there be a âdialogueâ between oppressors and oppressed? If one is an optimist like Ilan PappĂ©, this aim could be achieved via the non-violent Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign that are currently being pursued world-wide by civilian society.
In sum: An intellectual and political sophisticated autobiography.
Dr. Ludwig Watzal lives as a journalist in Bonn, Germany. He can be reached: lwatzal@aol.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Ilan Pappé, Out of the Frame. The Struggle for Academic Freedom in Israel, Pluto Press, London-New York 2010, 246 pp, L 13.
Thank You.