Loving Israel by hating Obama
By Bradley Burston
Ha'aretz (Israel)
June 9, 2009
I've got a home in that rock, just beyond the mountaintop -
God gave Noah the rainbow sign
No more water -- but the fire next time.
(Traditional spiritual of African-American slaves)
It's become a fashion, here and abroad: Jews who are convinced that they love Israel more than the rest of us - and certainly better than the rest of us - have told anyone who would listen, that one way to express love of the Jewish state, is to revile Barack Obama.
This month, as the American president visited the Middle East, the fashion turned ugly. On the Sabbath, Israeli television viewers were treated to the recorded-on-a-weekday observations of Arele, a resident of the West Bank settlement of Karnei Shomron, grinning as he watched the progress of an arson fire burning Palestinian land near the Gilad Farm, an icon of the outlaw outpost movement.
Asked by Israel Channel Two Television reporter Shai Gal what would happen if Israeli forces tried to evacuate Havat Gilad, Arele replied, "At most, they'll demolish one measly shack, so they'll have something to show -- that Kushon [a Hebrew slur equivalent to the "N" word] in the United States, in order to have an Etnan [the biblical term for a fee paid to a prostitute] to give him -- if you [secular] guys know what an Etnan is."
According to Arele, the fire, in this instance a form of pre-emptive revenge, was the price tag Palestinians would be forced to pay each time Obama pressed Israel to "touch any settlement of any kind, any place in Judea and Samaria."
For sheer racism and Obama-hate masquerading as love of Israel, however, nothing comes close to the filth documented on a new short film titled "Feeling the hate in Jerusalem on the Eve of Obama's Cairo Address."
The 3-minute video, by American journalist-filmmaker Max Blumenthal and American oleh [immigrant to Israel] Joseph Dana, became an overnight internet sensation. It shows a succession of U.S. Jewish visitors to Israel, most of them college-age and plainly and proudly drunk, toasting each other in a Jerusalem bar as they vie for the twin crowns of lover of Israel and loather of Obama.
"He's a Muslim for sure, and who even knows if he was born in the United States," says a young woman who identifies herself as a political science major. "We haven't even seen his birth certificate yet. Bullshit -- he's not from the U.S. He's like a terrorist.
Another of the young American Jews calls Obama "just another N----- from the town."
Understandably, Jews abroad have voiced fears that the unapologetic racism in this ostensibly ultra-Zionist criticism of Obama could foster anti-Semitism, further strain black-Jewish relations, and add fuel to anti-Israel fires.
All this comes at a time when confusing hatred of the Other with support for Israel, has come into decidedly wider fashion. In historically liberal Minnesota, Chabad Rabbi Manis Friedman contributed the following to an "Ask the Rabbis" discussion conducted by the North American Jewish magazine Moment, which asked the question "How should Jews treat their Arab neighbors?"
"I don't believe in western morality, i.e. don't kill civilians or children, don't destroy holy sites, don't fight during holiday seasons, don't bomb cemeteries, don't shoot until they shoot first because it is immoral," Rabbi Friedman began.
"The only way to fight a moral war is the Jewish way: Destroy their holy sites. Kill men, women and children (and cattle)," he continued.
A storm of criticism ensued. Rabbi Friedman later issued a clarification, stating that it was "obvious, I thought, that any neighbor of the Jewish people should be treated, as the Torah commands us, with respect and compassion."
Seldom has this concept been less obvious. We live at a time when an avowed Kahanist is a serving MK, when overtly anti-Arab Knesset bills blacken Israel's name the world over, and Jewish talkbackers and bloggers think nothing of denigrating Islam and African-Americans in the name of some cockeyed personal battle against world anti-Semitism.
The haters of Obama, the haters of Arabs, and the outpost gunslingers should bear in mind what happened at the end of that Channel Two report on the Gilad Farm activists: not long after they started the fire on their neighbors' field, smoke and flame were licking at the walls and windows of their own houses.
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