Carlo Strenger : Israel’s right-wingers have problems with facts
Israel’s right-wingers never stop providing spectacular 
examples of the all-too-human tendency to avoid facts that contradict 
their worldview. Two weeks ago I showed how the Anti-Defamation League’s
 anti-Semitism survey demonstrates the falsity of Netanyahu & Co.’s 
favorite theory that anti-Semitism is the source of Israeli criticism. 
The ADL’s study shows the opposite: European criticism of Israel’s 
occupation is negatively correlated with anti-Semitic attitudes, i.e. 
that countries like Sweden and Britain, which are almost devoid of such 
attitudes, criticize Israel most strongly, whereas countries that 
Netanyahu & Co. consider as friends harbor high levels of 
anti-Semitism.
      
      
The
 ADL’s survey produced one result that, while not unexpected, certainly 
requires further thought and analysis: Arab countries have by far the 
highest rate, 74% of the population, of anti-Semitic attitudes. There 
seems to be a high correlation with Islam, because Malaysia, the country
 with the largest Muslim population on the planet, has a very high 
percentage, 61% (unfortunately there are no data for Pakistan). Within 
the Arab world Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza lead with a fairly
 staggering percentage of 93%.
      
      
A
 recent Haaretz editorial blasted Netanyahu for using these figures to 
argue that the Palestinian Authority is a hotbed of anti-Semitism that 
distorts and blindly attacks both Jews in general and Israel in 
particular. The editorial claims that the high incidence of 
anti-Semitism should be explained by 47 years of occupation, and that 
the government should act to lower this anti-Semitism rather than using 
it as a pretext to avoid reaching an agreement with the Palestinians.
      
      
While
 the editorial makes an important point, it does not address the much 
more complicated question why the rest of the Arab world has such 
incredibly high proportions of anti-Semitic attitudes. Simply making 
Israel’s occupation of the West Bank responsible for this will not do. 
This requires much more complex analyses taking into account a multitude
 of factors, primarily the Arab world’s abysmal failure to adapt to 
modernity that Bernard Lewis pointed out long ago, and the failure of 
the Islamic world to develop viable political programs, as French 
sociologist Olivier Roy has shown in a series of books.
      
      
I
 therefore definitely think that the Haaretz editorial is not faultless.
 But Aryeh Eldad has graded the editorial with an F for logic on the 
following grounds: He claims that the editorial simply does not take 
into account 3,500 years of Jew-hatred. Eldad asks whether the Egyptian 
pharaohs’ injunction to kill all Jewish first-born and Haman’s 
anti-Semitic manifesto that there is a people that keeps to itself and 
doesn’t respect the kingdom’s custom and should therefore be eradicated 
are also due to Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory, before 
continuing to quote other examples.
      
      
Prof.
 Eldad is professor of medicine, and I am told he has been a 
conscientious physician, researcher and teacher (to the best of my 
knowledge he is not currently practicing). I am sure that in medical 
research and treating patients, he made sure to follow scientific 
methodology carefully.
      
      
If
 he grades Haaretz with an F for logic, it is certainly justified to 
have a look at the cogency of his own argument. Has he checked whether 
the incidence of hatred toward Jews along history was higher than toward
 other minorities in similar conditions? He might do well to look at 
Yuri Slezkine’s “The Jewish Century” and he will see that there is a 
powerful argument to the contrary.
      
      
Furthermore
 Prof. Eldad’s opening salvo suffers from a very simple problem. There 
is virtual unanimity among historians and archaeologists that the Jews 
were never enslaved in Egypt and the Exodus never took place. The story 
emerged most likely about 700 years later when the relevant portions of 
the Bible were written.
      
      
Prof.
 Eldad might do well to read Finkelstein and Silberman’s “The Bible 
Unearthed” and Richard Elliott Friedman’s “Who Wrote the Bible” for 
starters. Eldad doesn’t have to swallow these researchers’ conclusions, 
but he might do well to have a look at the vast literature they quote, 
and at this occasion he will find out that the overwhelming majority of 
scholars believe that the Book of Esther is a historical novella rather 
than a historical account.
      
      
Could
 Eldad therefore explain why he grades Haaretz with an F for logic when 
he doesn’t follow the most basic rules of ascertaining his facts before 
making use of them?
      
      
I
 do not take Jew-hatred in its many forms, including modern 
anti-Semitism (the term dates from the last third of the 19th century) 
lightly. And I find it deeply disturbing that the Islamic world has such
 horrendously high figures of anti-Jewish beliefs and attitudes. Trying 
to understand this phenomenon requires serious research combining a 
variety of disciplines. Developing policies to counteract the surge in 
anti-Semitism in the Islamic world requires looking at the facts 
carefully, weighing the evidence and making use of the most 
sophisticated armamentarium of extant theoretical approaches. I suggest 
Scott Atran’s “Talking to the Enemy” as an excellent starting point.
      
      
As
 to Prof. Eldad, I would suggest that he use his scientific training to 
make sure that his political commentary be informed by the absolute 
minimum of intellectual integrity. Before grading Haaretz with an F for 
logic, he should make sure that he doesn’t commit blunders unacceptable 
from a first-year student in any discipline, and that do certainly not 
befit a man of learning − even if he comes from Israel’s extreme right. 
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