Despite
logistical problems, the 12 January earthquake in Haiti has seen
much of the "international community" pull together to
provide food, doctors and other emergency aid for the already poverty-stricken
country.
But the disaster has also provided apologists for the State of Israel's
human rights abuses an opportunity to try and grab high moral ground.
It was a chance remark by anti-Zionist Jewish comedian Ivor Dembina
that first alerted me to this. "There's this whole email campaign
going out, saying, 'Look at what Israel is doing, this is what we
mean by a disproportionate response,'" he commented while I
was interviewing him on 22 January for an Electronic Intifada article.
The
email that Dembina mentions appears to trace back to Lynn Sharon,
an Israeli citizen who writes occasional short pieces on English-language
websites in Israel and churns out letters to the country's newspapers.
The claims it makes -- that "the Arab and Muslim world"
has donated "nothing" -- are demonstrably false, as reports
of donations and field assistance from Morocco, the United Arab
Emirates, Qatar, Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan and Indonesia show. Even
Palestinians in Gaza, living under Israeli blockade, have collected
donations for Haiti.
Sharon's article also opens with the disingenuous statement that
"Many countries and world leaders have accused Israel of responding
disproportionately to aggression from Hizballah in Lebanon and Hamas
in Gaza." Few "countries and world leaders" have
actually had the courage to stand up and say any such thing, although
many individuals and organizations have. But the odd thing about
this statement is that it was former Israel prime minister Ehud
Olmert who made the phrase "disproportionate response"
so iconic, in an attempt to appear tough in front of hardline Israeli
voters like Sharon herself.
"Disproportionate
response" was, of course, the term Olmert following Israel's
attacks last winter in an attempt to win voter support during last
February's elections. It was a threat to Hamas that any rockets
fired would attract a repeat of the 22 days of death and destruction
that the Israeli military had just inflicted on Gaza. The phrase
"disproportionate response" became a byword for Israel's
insistence that it had a right to choose the scale of its military
actions against civilians, and for those actions to be on a completely
different scale of death and destruction than anything Palestinian
armed groups might inflict.
But the main thrust of Sharon's email, which was forwarded around
many list-serves and which has since been posted on blogs, news
site comment pages and as a "letter" to newspapers around
the world, is that "The US has sent supplies and personnel,
Britain sent 64 firemen and 8 volunteers, France sent troops for
search and rescue. Many large and wealthy nations of the world sent
money. The Arab and Muslim world -- nothing. Israel, a nation of
7.5 million people has sent a team of 220 people that include medical
personnel and has established the largest field hospital in Haiti,
treating up to 5,000 people a day, along with an experienced search
and rescue team and medical supplies."
The email then goes on to lambaste the United Nations, Judge Richard
Goldstone and anyone who criticizes Israel while letting other countries
accused of "crimes against their [sic] minorities," such
as "Sudan, China [and] Russia," off the hook.
According to analysis by foreign correspondent Catherine Philp in The Times of London
on 21 January, the paper was "flooded with identical e-mails."
The round-robin was incorporated into an article by Peggy Shapiro
on the widely-syndicated AmericanThinker site, which added links
to pages intended to support its argument. However, as of 25 January,
the Guardian newspaper's
statistics page it cited lists no aid from Israel, but does include
donations from the United Arab Emirates and Morocco (Canada comes
out way ahead in terms of dollars donated per head of population).
The carbon-copy email appears pasted into the "comment"
field of innumerable stories about help for Haiti, especially ones
reporting aid from Arab countries, such as an extended feature on
CNN's website.
On some Israeli and Zionist websites, the exploitation of the Haiti
tragedy for PR ends goes beyond the false "facts" of Lynn
Sharon's short article. Many cite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu as he conflates the wider Jewish community with the State
of Israel by declaring that "I think that this is in the best
tradition of the Jewish People; this is the true covenant of the
State of Israel and the Jewish People ... despite being a small
country, we have responded with a big heart." Commentators
such as Arlene Kushner, a self-proclaimed "expert on Middle
East affairs," revel in the lack of adequate medical care for
earthquake survivors. "There apparently are some other hospitals
set up, but they are meager facilities," she says, pleased
to be able to claim that Israel had as of 18 January established
the only field hospital, despite the implications for the sick and
injured.
Mainstream reporting has also been touched by the Israeli propaganda. Time magazine,
Sky and Fox News, amongst others, have run footage or features on
the Israeli field hospital's work. This is, of course, as legitimate
a subject as any other part of the relief effort, and the "disproportionate"
coverage could be attributed to the fact that the Israelis genuinely
were one of the first teams on the ground (although not the earliest:
that claim goes to Cuba, the communist state whose medical aid has
been routinely written out of much Western coverage).
The BBC was also notable for its coverage of the massive sums raised
from the British public for the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC),
the coalition of UK nongovernmental organizations which pools resources
to prevent "competitive fundraising" in the event of a
major disaster. This was in marked contrast to the same time last
year, when the BBC determinedly refused to broadcast the DEC's appeal
for money to help the victims of Israel's bombing of Gaza. It was
the first time that the BBC had refused to air a DEC appeal since
1963.
A
few media outlets have pointed out the discrepancies in Zionist
self-congratulation. The
Times, in the same piece
which noted the slew of "identical" emails based on Lynn
Sharon's article, also highlighted the fact that at the same time
that the Israeli role in Haiti was being glorified, "Israel's
image-burnishing efforts there stand in marked contrast to the barriers
it is now throwing up to the same aid organizations it is sweating
alongside in the rubble." Philp was referring to the increasing
denial by Israel of visas for aid and development staff working
in Palestine. The article was also one of the few beyond news agencies
or the pro-Palestinian press to mention comments by Max Gaylard,
UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Palestine, who stated that "We
are deeply concerned about the current health system in Gaza and
in particular its capacity and ability to deliver proper standards
of health care to the people of Gaza ... This adverse situation
is not like Haiti. Haiti has been destroyed by an earthquake. The
circumstances [in Gaza] are entirely man-made and can be fixed accordingly."
It is perhaps appropriate to give Ivor Dembina the closing comment
on this. "It's so cynical," he said of the Zionist email
campaign. "Zionists have realized that hate campaigns against
their critics are becoming ineffective, so they're going for positive
PR, like this whole thing about sending medical aid to Haiti. Obviously
any help Haiti is to be lauded, but it's such a transparent PR exercise
-- if they're so interested in helping people in humanitarian crises
they can go next door and help the people they've dropped bombs
on."
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator
Sarah
Irving is a freelance writer from Manchester, UK. She worked with
the International Solidarity Movement in the West Bank in 2001-02
and with Olive Co-op, promoting fair trade Palestinian products
and solidarity visits, in 2004-06. She now writes full-time on a
range of issues, including Palestine. Here first book, Gaza:
Beneath the Bombs
, co-authored with Sharyn
Lock, was published in January 2010. Click here
to contact the Ms. Irving and The Electronic Intifada.
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