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July 6, 2015 6:57 am
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Democrats Think Israel is Racist? They’re Probably Right

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avatar by Seth Frantzman

Qalqiliya in the West Bank. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

Qalqiliya in the West Bank. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

A few days after the U.S. was the only country to stand by Israel at the United Nations Human Rights Council, an ostensibly shocking survey was released that showed that large numbers of “highly educated, high income, publicly active U.S. Democrats” have negative views of Israel.

As usual in this contentious period of U.S.-Israel relations, social media websites exploded with discussion. One of the survey’s major findings was that “47% of Democrats agreed Israel [is a racist country], as opposed to 13% of Republicans.”

But the new survey should be taken in stride, if not greeted with a collective shrug of the shoulders.

Here are some reasons:

1) The survey feeds a self-fulfilling prophecy

Frank Luntz, a well known pollster and consultant often linked with Republicansstated “Israel can no longer claim to have the bipartisan support of America.” This fits the narrative that serves several lobbies. One is the center-left lobby in Israel that argues Netanyahu has harmed U.S.-Israel relations. The other lobby argues that Democrats are increasingly anti-Israel and that Jewish Americans should vote Republican. It is a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy. Some people want the Republicans to be seen as more pro-Israel, and Republicans in turn cater to pro-Israel voices; then the issue of Israel seems more partisan, and Democrats are told to be more critical of Israel.

2) The survey is foggy and fuzzy

The survey was not conducted among Democratic members of Congress or mainstream Democrats. It was conducted among “802 members of the opinion elites.” What are opinion elites? Well, they are whatever the surveyor apparently thought they were. Opinion “elites” might be more left of center than normal Democrats, or more attuned to views critical of Israel than the average. Because they are “opinion” oriented, their natural tendency is likely to be sensitive to issues like “racism.” These are the kind of “opinion elites” who probably talk about “white privilege.”

3)  Israelis agree, Israel is a racist country

We don’t really know what it means that Israel is a “racist country.” Do they mean its policies are racist? Its treatment of the Palestinians in the West Bank is racist? Its treatment of minorities, including Jewish minorities, is racist? Its public is racist?

A 2014 survey in Israel found that 95% of Israelis think that at least one group in society suffers from racism. According to the results, “79% replied that Ethiopians suffered from racist attitudes and 68% said they believed the Arab population was subject to racism. More than two-fifths (41.8%) named the ultra-Orthodox population and 34% said Sephardi Jews and immigrants from the former Soviet Union suffered from racism.”

Basically Israelis agree: Israel is racist. Among the Left in Israel, the view that Israel is racist is a normal talking point. One can barely read Haaretz for a day without a discussion about racism in Israel, let along claims Israel is a fascist and apartheid state. Other major Israeli newspapers also routinely discuss racism in Israel. The Ethiopian Jewish protests that exploded this spring revealed that many people in Israel feel they are victims of racism. So why are you afraid that several hundred “opinion elites” among Democrats in the U.S. think Israel is racist, if Israeli think tanks, academics, politicians, NGOs, activists and basically everyone in Israel agrees that there is a racism problem in Israel?

4) Americans think America is a racist country

According to a recent poll around 50% of Americans think that police killings of black men are part of a racist pattern.  66% of white Americans think racism is a problem, whereas 84% of black Americans believe it is according to a 2006 poll. So Americans agree, America is racist. The real question that the Luntz poll should have asked Democrats is how many view America as racist. Why should they view Israel as less racist than America? Should Israel be held to a different standard than they hold their own country?

5) Americans view Israel through a U.S. lens, and they find Israel lacking

The buzzword in debates in the U.S. about Israel in recent years has been whether U.S. Jews who tend to be liberal and progressive and support liberal causes in the U.S., should abandon those liberal values when it comes to Israel.

The various debates about J Street, the New Israel Fund, Peter Beinart, or Open Hillel all boil down to this issue. Open Hillel notes “We recognize that there are many young Jews who believe that their Jewish values bring them to criticize Israeli policies, or find boycotts to be an effective non-violent tool for achieving social change.”

The larger milieu of these Jews, who also tend to be Democrats, is found in a Democratic Party that often looks to pro-Israel liberal Zionist voices to explain Israel. This was at the heart of Michael Oren’s critique of American Jews that earned him the ire of the ADL, and Reform Jewish leaders Eric Yoffie, Rick Jacobs, and Leon Weseltier.

6) Don’t be scared of confronting Israeli racism

Some of the responses to Democrats’ views of Israel have been an outpouring of conspiracy theories and outright angry contempt. “So called Democrats have become the modern day racist extremists”; “we should vote Republican”; “Democrats are becoming anti-Semitic”; “Democrats have been radicalized by President Obama”; “Obama has poisoned their minds over 8 years.” There is no introspection in the reaction, just blame.

Why are people sacred of admitting Israeli racism? Americans have tended to think that the U.S. is a racist country and sought to improve it. The Israeli response tends to be the opposite. Deny there is any racism and attack anyone who says there is. Polls show large numbers of Israelis hold racist views. In one, fully 74% said they didn’t mind separate roads for Jews and Arabs in the West Bank; 59% felt Jews deserve preference for government work, and 49% wanted the state to treat Jews better. Finally, 42% didn’t want Arab neighbors. Polls showed both Jews and Arabs don’t want foreign workers as neighbors.

Racism manifests itself in numerous forms. Hatred is directed at black people in Israel, racism is rampant on the left and right, and politicians on the left, center, and right all express common fears of having more “Arabs” in the Knesset. Institutionalized racism also exists in Israel, from acceptance committees to segregated education. So there is racism. Why not confront it and try to make it better rather than just pretending it doesn’t exist?

7) Are Democrats holding Israel to a different standard than other countries?

One pertinent question, if one is truly concerned about the “Israel is a racist country” answer, is to wonder whether this critical view of Israel is unique. If some Democrats think that Israel and the U.S. are racist, what do they think about other countries? There is no doubt that most other countries have racism problems as well. Just recently, a crowd of Turks attacked Koreans while protesting against China in Istanbul. They randomly assaulted “Asians” because of a racist view that all Asians are the same.

8) Does criticism of Israel necessarily mean a total lack of support?

Surely most American “opinion elites” would agree that Saudi Arabia abuses human rights. But most of them would also agree the U.S. has many mitigating reasons to be allied with Saudi Arabia.

The U.S.-Israel relationship is based on more than whether Israel meets the values embodied in the U.S. Constitution. So maybe Israel is racist. So what? Maybe that doesn’t matter in terms of U.S. overall support for Israel’s qualitative military advantage, which is a cornerstone of policy.

Why do Americans have to have wall-to-tall uncritical support for Israel? Why is it threatening to have even a tiny bit of acknowledgement that Israel is not the most perfect country in the world. Yes, Israel is racist. OK, now let’s move on. Israel needs to fix its racism problem. Israel can still work with America on other issues. America doesn’t have to dictate what to do about racism within the borders of Israel.

If America feels Israeli policy is discriminatory in the West Bank, America is correct. Do Israelis seriously think that that policies in the West Bank are not racist? Maybe the problem is not so much then with some Democrats, but with Israel’s own inability to question its actions and work on improving its policies?

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