Israel's "Bigger Holocaust" Threat Against the
Palestinians
High Time for a Worldwide Boycott
By Omar
Barghouti
On
Friday, 29 February 2008, Israel's deputy defense minister Matan Vilnai
threatened Palestinians in Gaza with a "holocaust," telling the Israeli Army
Radio: "The more Qassam fire intensifies and the rockets reach a longer range,
[the Palestinians] will bring upon themselves a bigger holocaust because we will
use all our might to defend ourselves."[1] This date will go down in history as
the beginning of a new phase in the colonial conflict between Israel and the
Palestinians, whereby a senior Israeli leader, a "leftist" for that matter, has
publicly revealed the genocidal plans Israel is considering to implement against
Palestinians under its military occupation, if they do not cease to resist its
dictates. It will also mark the first time since World War II that any state has
relentlessly -- and on live TV -- terrorized a civilian population with acts of
slow, or low-intensity, genocide, with one of its senior government officials
overtly inciting to a full-blown "Holocaust," while the world stood by, watching
in utter apathy, or in glee, as in the case of leading western leaders.
For an Israeli leader
who is Jewish, in particular, to threaten anyone with Holocaust is a sad
irony of history. Are victims of unspeakable crimes invariably doomed to
turn into appalling criminals? Can anything be possibly done to break this
vicious cycle, before the state that claims to represent the main victims of
the Holocaust commits a fresh Holocaust itself?
Before addressing those
questions, however, isn't it exaggerated and pointedly counterproductive,
one may ask, to compare Israel's crimes against the Palestinians, no matter
how brutal and inhumane they have been, to Nazi genocide? Besides, isn't
each crime unique and worthy of attention in its own right as a violation of
human rights, of international law, of universal moral principles? The
answer is yes; each crime is unique, and nothing Israel has done to date
comes even close, in quantity, to Nazi crimes. But when
victims-turned-perpetrators openly admit their intentions to carry out a
unique form of offense that they are most familiar with, and they actually
commit repeated acts that are qualitatively reminiscent of that crime in
their unbridled racism and the ghastly level of disregard for the value and
dignity of the human life of the "other" that is inherent in them, then
their threats ought to be taken seriously. Everyone is called upon to react,
to act in any way to stop this crime-in-progress from reaching its logical
conclusion.
The Ramallah-based
Palestinian Authority, despite its lack of political independence and its
disputed mandate, is called upon to immediately exonerate itself from the
popular accusation of complicity. Azmi Bishara was among the most prominent
of those who issued this harsh indictment, in reaction to the announcement
by the head of the PA in Cairo, just a day before the latest Israeli
massacre in Gaza, that Al-Qaida had infiltrated Gaza, and that the
projectiles fired indiscriminately by the Palestinian resistance at Israeli
towns and settlements provide the excuse for Israel's aggression. The
credibility of this complicity assertion was compelling enough to prompt
Mahmoud Abbas to condemn the Israeli crime in unprecedented austerity and
hyperbole, describing it as "more than a Holocaust." [2]
Arab regimes, especially
Egypt's and Jordan's, as unelected, illegitimate and subservient to the US
as they may be, are still expected to distance themselves from Israel's
lethal war of aggression on Gaza. After all, their continued diplomatic and
commercial ties with Israel, as well as their implicit justification of
Israel's crimes through their repeated and gratuitous vilification of Hamas,
have convincingly labeled them in the eyes of their respective publics, not
to mention the wider Arab public, as accessories in crime.
European governments,
chiefly in France, Britain and Germany, have to also answer to the serious
charge of collusion in Israel's crimes against humanity, prevalent among
wide Palestinian, Arab and Muslim majorities. They have not only stayed
silent in the face of Israel's willful killing [3] of almost 100 innocent
civilians, many of whom are children, in the course of the last few days in
Gaza; they have continued to treat Israel with reverence, celebrating its
so-called 60th anniversary, a gruesome event of ethnic cleansing
and colonial ruin itself, showering it with economic, political and
scientific support that significantly contributes to its impunity.
The US government, on
the other hand, cannot be accused of abetting Israel's acts of genocide in
the same league as all the above sinister accomplices. It is and has always
been a full and proud partner in planning, bankrolling and executing those
crimes against the Palestinians, not to mention its own unmatched criminal
record in Afghanistan, Iraq and, before both, Vietnam. When our own
Nuremberg moment arrives, when Israeli war criminals are finally prosecuted
in an international court, a substantial space in the defense chamber will
have to be reserved for US commanders and political leaders. Without
American partnership, expressed in immeasurable military, economic and
diplomatic aid, Israel could not have committed all its racist and colonial
crimes with such impunity.
Going back to the
question of whether anything should and could be done to stop Israel, the
answer is a certain yes. South African apartheid crimes were challenged not
only by the heroic struggle of the oppressed masses on the ground in South
Africa; they were also fought by worldwide campaigns of boycott, divestment
and sanctions against the regime, with all its complicit economic, academic,
cultural, and athletic institutions. Similarly, international civil society
can, and ought to, apply the same measures of non-violent justice to bring
about Israel's compliance with international law and basic human
rights. Even the threat of sanctions has proven effective enough in the past
to halt Israel's repeated campaigns of death and devastation.
If all those images of
tens of Palestinian children torn to pieces, all those recurrent episodes of
wanton killing and destruction by an occupation army against a predominantly
defenseless civilian population, go unpunished, the world may well witness a
new Holocaust indeed.