Showing Good Faith In The Arab-Israeli Conflict
Alan Stein
Published November 25, 2007 by The Day of New London
The Arab-Israeli conflict has always attracted a tremendous amount of
attention, to a large degree disproportionate to its true importance
as shown in a recent article by Gunnar Hensohn and Daniel Pipes,
"Arab-Israeli Fatalities Rank 49th," available online at
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/4990. In it they listed 48 conflicts
in the last six decades that have resulted in more casualties. Few of
those have attracted anything close to the attention given the
Arab-Israeli conflict.
Certainly, the Arab-Israeli conflict has been a center of attention in
the New London area, particularly with the Rev. David Good and his
First Congregational Church of Old Lyme organizing numerous missions
to Israel and the disputed territories, hosting visitors from those
areas and running what they call a "Tree of Life Conference" each of
the last three years.
Unfortunately, these activities have been counterproductive,
presenting a distorted, one-sided picture of the conflict perpetuated
by the six-decade-long Arab refusal to accept the existence of Israel.
These unhelpful activities were recently brought by the same people
into the schools of Old Lyme and Old Saybrook under the guise of a
cultural performance by a dance troupe until school officials, spurred
on by parental complaints, appropriately canceled further events.
Indeed, even before the complaints, one concerned principal told the
troupe members to leave after they told students our government was
"evil."
Interviewed about the controversy on WTNH-TV, the Rev. Bruce Shipman
said "it's very important to understand the issues, you know, to hear
both sides of the story."
Shipman is right about the importance of hearing both sides of the
Arab-Israeli conflict; it's too bad neither he nor his colleague David
Good of the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme practices what he
preaches.
In making his statement, Shipman wasn't really trying to get a hearing
for both sides of the Arab-Israeli conflict; rather, he was defending
bringing that particular program to the schools. He was wrong to
defend that political program brought to the schools under false
pretenses, a program in which the Al Ghad "dance" troupe also brought
an offensive message of hate to the classrooms.
Children in public schools should not be subjected to guests telling
them they not only hate Israel but also hate America; children in
public schools should not be subjected to guests, under the guise of
cultural understanding, telling them our American government is evil.
A teenager whose father was murdered by Palestinian Arab terrorists
shouldn't be subjected to guests telling him and his classmates that
if their fathers went into the disputed territories they'd be killed.
I've been to the misleadingly named "Tree of Life Conference on Israel
and Palestine" all three years. Before the first, I saw the terribly
unbalanced list of speakers and suggested the inclusion of at least
some speakers who might present the Israeli viewpoint, but Good
candidly responded that he was not interested in that kind of balance.
That first conference turned out to be so skewed that Mark Rosenbaum
felt compelled to point out that when Israelis and Palestinian Arabs
come together and agree everything is Israel's fault, that's not
"conflict resolution." Rosenbaum is one of the founders of Americans
for Peace Now, a group which is nominally Zionist but generally highly
critical of the Israeli government. That he felt compelled to protest
the bias is itself a strong indictment of the one-sidedness of that
first Tree of Life Conference.
Never since has any participant who might contaminate the anti-Israel
conference with even a hint of balance or reason been invited.
Whatever hopes for reason remained after the 2005 Tree of Life
Conference were dispelled by the 2006 and 2007 iterations, which made
it clear the agenda isn't peace but is the elimination of the world's
only Jewish state.
The theme in 2006 was exemplified by the title of a book written by
Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi, "Original Sins: Reflection of the History of
Zionism and Israel." No longer was it just alleged Israeli behavior
being unfairly criticized; the very existence of the Jewish state was
deemed immoral.
Fast forward to this year. The organizers of this year's conference
scrounged around the world and came up with an obscure extremist from
Holland named Hajo Meyer to claim Israel was worse than the Nazis.
Meyer put forth the proposition, boldly displayed on a slide, "Jews
are not a people."
Supporters of Israel have often been unfairly criticized for allegedly
not recognizing the existence of a "Palestinian people." Israel's
critics have never been shy about falsely accusing Israel and its
supporters of that which they themselves are guilty.
It's unfortunate enough the Tree of Life Conference included none of
the balanced narrative Bruce Shipman asserted was so important.
As a Jew at the conference, I gained some appreciation of what it
would have felt like for an African-American, disguised under a white
sheet, sitting through a meeting of the Ku Klux Klan. Not
surprisingly, when I told some friends about the conference, one of
them said he had images of the Klan floating in his head.
It's not surprising that some students in area schools were unhappy
after the same people brought a "dance troupe" into their school under
false pretenses, driving one of their victims out of the room, being
found banging his head against his locker.
It is certainly the right of the organizers to produce unbalanced
programs, even programs full of messages of hate, but they don't have
the right to subject our children to them in our public schools.
Even outside public schools, efforts to promote peace are preferable
to efforts which impede it; efforts to bring Arabs and Jews together
are preferable to efforts which drive them apart; efforts which
educate are preferable to efforts which misinform.
Let us have other groups put forth balanced programs, free of the hate
with which the Al Ghad "dance" troupe and the "Tree of Life"
conferences have been infused, that do what Shipman rightly asserted
was so important, telling "both sides of the story."
The writer is president of PRIMER-Connecticut, a statewide, media
monitoring organization composed of volunteers devoted to Promoting
Responsibility in Middle East Reporting.