Explaining the conflict between Rep. Tlaib and Israel
The threat and sources of rising anti-Semitism
Why we must stand with the Jewish people as we love everyone God loves
Here’s
the article I wish I were writing today: the daughter of Palestinian
immigrants is elected to the United States Congress, shining a light on
the significance of Palestinian people everywhere. She returns to the
West Bank to visit her elderly grandmother and to inspire the
Palestinians with her example of hard work and success.
But here’s the narrative I am required by the facts to write instead.
The story behind the story
Rashida
Tlaib serves in the US House of Representatives from Michigan’s
Thirteenth District. Before her election to Congress, she was the first
Muslim woman to serve in the Michigan state legislature.
Rep.
Tlaib has been extremely critical of Israel. She has called for an end
to US aid to Israel and expressed support for the Boycott, Divestment
and Sanctions program. This a Palestinian-led campaign promoting
boycotts against Israel, the divesting of investments in the State of
Israel, and sanctions against the Israeli government.
After
dozens of lawmakers participated in a congressional delegation to
Israel, Rep. Tlaib and her colleague and fellow Muslim, Rep. Ilhan Omar,
decided to make their own trip. It was planned by Miftah, a group the Washington Post and the New York Times
described as headed by a longtime peace negotiator and working to
promote global awareness and knowledge of Palestinian realities.
However, as David French notes in the National Review, Miftah is actually an anti-Semitic organization that frequently produces vitriolic, hateful rhetoric.
For instance, it published a neo-Nazi treatise condemning “the
Jew-controlled entertainment media” and claiming that “to permit the
Jews, with their 3,000-year history of nation-wrecking . . . to hold
such power over us is tantamount to race suicide.”
Miftah
honored two female suicide bombers and celebrated a woman who helped
murder thirteen Israeli children during a 1978 military operation. And
it has questioned whether Israel is a proper homeland for the Jewish
people.
Conditions and cartoons
Rep.
Tlaib announced her desire to visit her elderly grandmother in the West
Bank, but the Israeli government, mindful of her repeated criticisms of
their country and policies, denied her entry.
The
next day, Israeli authorities stated that the congresswoman could enter
if she refrained from criticizing their country. She agreed, then
changed her position, claiming that she could not make the trip under
“these oppressive conditions.” She said of her grandmother, “Silencing
me & treating me like a criminal is not what she wants for me.”
Rep.
Tlaib and Rep. Omar, who was also barred for the same reasons from
entering Israel, have also posted two cartoons by an artist who
participated in Iran’s annual Holocaust cartoon contest in 2006. The
artist has often compared Israel to the Nazi regime.
“A shocking spike in anti-Semitism”
This controversy comes at a dangerous time for the Jewish people.
A
Jewish cemetery in Bordeaux, France, was vandalized last May. A recent
survey found that 89 percent of Jews living in Europe feel anti-Semitism
has increased in their country over the last decade. Another report
found that anti-Semitic acts in France increased in 2018 by more than 70
percent compared to the previous year.
The Hudson Institute warns that “America is facing a shocking spike in anti-Semitism and, in addition to traditional sources on the extreme right, this time it includes left-wing progressives and Islamists.”
Explaining anti-Semitism
Whatever
we think of Israel’s relationship with the Palestinians (or any other
political issue), we must be careful to stand diligently and
passionately against hatred of the Jewish people.
Anti-Semitism
is one part racial discrimination, a sin in which people who feel
inferior to others can pretend to be superior on the basis of their
ethnicity or skin color. And it is one part jealousy and resentment: as
people of the Book, the Jews have always been highly literate and have
proven themselves successful in nearly every vocation on earth. (Jews
constitute 2.1 percent of the American population, but they have
received 37 percent of all US Nobel Prizes.)
Anti-Semitism
grieves the heart of the One who said to the Jewish people, “You are
precious in my eyes, and honored, and I love you” (Isaiah 43:4). And who
says to the rest of us, whether Jews or Gentiles, Palestinians or
Americans, “He loved us and sent his Son as a sacrifice to take away our
sins” (1 John 4:10 NLT).
“People need to see Auschwitz”
Whatever people have done, they can still do. What happened to six million Jews in the Holocaust can happen to Jews today.
That’s
why we must “pray for the peace of Jerusalem,” asking that “peace be
within your walls and security within your towers!” (Psalm 122:6–7). And
it’s why we must never forget the past, lest it become the future.
The director of the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum recently responded to the global rise of anti-Semitism: “People need to see Auschwitz. People need to come not only to cry over all of the victims . . . but maybe to feel their own responsibility today.”
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