I
begin this commentary by looking up the word terrorism.
One
dictionary defines terrorism as �The unlawful use or
threatened use of force or violence by a person or an organized
group against people or property with the intention of intimidating
or coercing societies or governments, often for ideological or political
reasons.�
Similarly,
the U.S. military
says terrorism is �The calculated use of unlawful violence or threat
of unlawful violence to inculcate fear; intended to coerce or to
intimidate governments or societies in the pursuit of goals that
are generally political, religious, or ideological.�
Practically
speaking, however, terrorism is defined differently in everyday
American life.� Terrorism is synonymous with Muslim and Arab extremism,
and affiliated persons, organizations and nations. The threats
they pose are either real, perceived, or purely conjured up.
The terrorist-as-enemy-of-America is like the bogeyman of Red Scare
fame, ubiquitous yet elusive, and you can�t quite put your finger
on them because they�re tricky. The definition of terrorism
itself can serve as a political weapon�a form of terrorism itself,
dare I say. Call someone a terrorist, or a communist or socialist
or supporter thereof, and you delegitimize everything that person
has to say. You marginalize everything that person represents.
In
these days of extremism at home, we cling to a narrow, selective
definition of terrorism, while ignoring blatant forms of terrorism
in our own midst. In doing so, we can�t see the forest for
the trees.
A
progressive voice for peace, Rabbi Michael Lerner, was almost certainly
a victim of terrorism on the night of May 2 and early morning of
May 3. Right-wing Zionists attacked his home and threatened
his life. The attackers attached posters to his door and property
with a strong glue. And the posters attacked Lerner personally,
as well as liberals and progressives as being supporters of terrorism
and �Islamo-fascism.� They posted a bumper sticker which read
�fight terror--support Israel� next to a caricature of Judge Goldstone,
the South African jurist who issued a UN report on Israeli human rights violations
during the military campaign in Gaza. The Goldstone report called
on Israel to do an independent investigation into Operation Cast
Lead, and punish those elements of the IDF who were responsible.
The report was denounced by rightists in the U.S. and Israel as
�anti-Semitic� and �pro-terror.�
The
crime against Rabbi Lerner came after a week of Lerner and his staff
at Tikkun magazine receiving hate mail. These acts stemmed from
Tikkun�s announcement that if South African Zionists made
good on their threat to prevent Judge Goldstone from attending his
grandson�s bar mitzvah, Lerner would hold the bar mitzvah in the
Bay Area instead. Tikkun is presenting an award to
Goldstone next year for his commitment to human rights in Israel,
and apparently some people don�t like that.
Although
Lerner has received death threats and hate mail over the years,
this recent attack is troubling because they targeted his home.
�By linking Lerner to alleged terrorism, they provide for themselves
and other extremists a �right-wing justification� to use violence
against Lerner, even though Lerner has been a prominent advocate
of non-violence�, Tikkun said in an official statement.
Lerner speaks out against violence everywhere around the world,
including Palestinian acts against Israelis. But when he and
groups such as J Street advocate a pro-peace solution, they
are branded as anti-Israel. This comes as a group of over
3,000
European Jews signed a petition criticizing Israeli settlement policies,
and warning of the dangers of systematic support for the Israeli
government.
Turning
the page a bit, we are witnessing state-sponsored terrorism within
our borders, most prominently coming from the state of Arizona.
Arizona�s legislature passed--and the governor signed into law--a
bill which makes it a crime under state law to be in the U.S.
illegally. The law allows police to stop anyone with
a �reasonable suspicion� of being undocumented, and demand
proof of citizenship. Those who cannot produce the documentation
face arrest, a $2,500 fine, and 6 months in jail.
I
submit that Arizona's anti-immigrant law is nothing more than
Juan Crow racism, a codification of xenophobia, specifically
designed to intimidate Latinos regardless of their citizenship status.
Although its proponents will tell us it does not racially profile,
the law is part of the mix that makes people with Spanish surnames
feel unwelcome and unsafe, in an environment of heightened anti-Latino violence and discrimination. After all, the Federation
for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), a hate group with ties to the eugenics movement and
white supremacists, assisted in drafting the bill. An honest, vigorous
debate on immigration and border security is one thing.� Bad people
passing a law with cruel intentions is another.
But
Arizona did not stop there. They are banning ethnic studies in the schools, characterizing such
programs as �ethnic chauvinism� and �high treason.� Under
the policy, schools will lose state funding if they offer courses
that �promote the overthrow of the U.S. government, promote resentment
of a particular race or class of people, are designed primarily
for students of a particular ethnic group or advocate ethnic solidarity
instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals.� And the
Arizona Department of Education is removing teachers with heavy accents.
Ethnic
Studies were part of the civil rights movement-- born
in the late 1960s and early 1970s at a time of increased cultural
awareness among people of color-- to counter a Eurocentric perspective
of history. State governments in Arizona and Texas feed into white
extremist antipathy towards diversity by denigrating and eliminating
people of color in their school curricula, �taking the country back�
so to speak, via the textbooks.
A vibrant
democracy should allow for differences of opinion, free from demonization
and threats of violence against those who disagree. We
may differences of opinion with people, even within our own family,
but we don't resort to terrorist attacks against them.
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate
based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, theGrio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He also blogs atdavidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily
Kos, and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love. |