State Department Calls Palestinian Authority ‘Antisemitic’
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by Rafael Medoff / JNS.org
JNS.org – For the first time, the US State Department has explicitly accused the Palestinian Authority (PA) of promoting antisemitism, a signal Jewish groups are hoping will lead to change in US policy.
According to a newly released State Department annual report on international religious freedom, official PA media “carried religiously intolerant material,” citing Palestinian television programs that called Jews “evil” or “denied a historical Jewish presence in Jerusalem.”
Previously, US officials labeled the PA denial of Jewish ties to Jerusalem as “material criticizing the Israeli occupation,” but stopped short of calling it antisemitism. Arab media channels that carried the antisemitic content were “nonofficial PA and nonmainstream,” according to last year’s report.
The Obama administration no longer claims that the PA is working “to control and eliminate” expressions of antisemitism in its media outlets. Officials dropped an assertion made in previous years that the PA acted to “prevent preaching” of “sermons with intolerant or antisemitic messages.”
For years, Israeli leaders have accused the PA and its leader, Mahmoud Abbas, of inciting violence and antisemitism. Last year amid increasing terror attacks on Israelis, Abbas called for Jerusalem’s holy sites to be cleansed of Jews.
“Every drop of blood spilled in Jerusalem is pure, every shahid [martyr] will reach paradise, and every injured person will be rewarded by God…The Al-Aqsa mosque is ours. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is ours as well. They (Jews) have no right to desecrate the mosque with their dirty feet, we won’t allow them to do that,” Abbas said in a Sept. 2015 address on Palestinian Authority TV.
With the US on the record calling the PA activity antisemitism, it could be a step closer to a change in US policy towards the PA, which is overdue, Nathan Diament, executive director of the Orthodox Union’s Advocacy Center in Washington, DC, told JNS.org.
In 2015, the House of Representatives unanimously adopted a resolution condemning the Palestinian Authority for “promoting anti-Semitic and anti-Israel rhetoric in its official statements, media, and textbooks.” The measure was authored by Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.) and Ted Deutch (D-Fla.).
Deutch believes that many of the Palestinian terrorist attacks against Israelis during the past year “stemmed directly” from the kinds of antisemitic statements cited in the new State Department report. “I recently raised this directly with a high level PA official in a recent visit to Ramallah,” Deutch told JNS.org. He declined to provide additional details of that conversation.
With the findings of the report, several Jewish organizations are hoping it will spur action on Capitol Hill. “The question is whether Congress will finally move beyond condemnations and seek to make US aid to the PA conditional on ending antisemitism in the PA media,” said Sarah Stern, president of the Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET), a pro-Israel group based in Washington. “It will be harder for the Obama administration to oppose such a step now that the State Department is on record acknowledging the PA’s antisemitism.”
Some liberal Jewish groups, however, argue that Israel’s policies are to blame for Palestinian antisemitism. Paul Scham, co-president of Partners for Progressive Israel, told JNS.org that “while there have certainly been expressions of antisemitism on the part of Palestinians, and perhaps on the part of PA officials…such antisemitism is overwhelmingly based on the daily experiences of Palestinians with Israeli Jews in conditions of occupation by Israel and powerlessness for Palestinians.”
Though Scham says “we neither excuse nor justify any expressions of antisemitism and condemn them,” he believes Palestinian antisemitism “will die down” only with a two-state solution.
Meanwhile, others would like to see the US hold the Palestinian Authority accountable, not reward it. Future US and international aid to the PA “should be linked to zero tolerance for antisemitism,” said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center. “If not, the PA will continue [its antisemitism] with impunity. If there are no consequences for such actions, they will only continue and mushroom.”
Zsuzsanna Ozsvath, director of the Holocaust Studies program at the University of Texas at Dallas, says when a regime sponsors antisemitism, a very dangerous line is crossed. “It’s important that the State Department has officially confirmed that the PA is doing,” she told JNS.org. “Hopefully people will now take it more seriously. We’ve learned from history what happens when such regimes are not taken seriously.”
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