Reprove Your Kinsman

by: Leslie Thatcher, t r u t h o u t | Book Review

Reprove Your Kinsman
Norman Finkelstein's "This Time We Went Too Far." (Photo: OR Books)

"This Time We Went Too Far
Truth and Consequences of the Gaza Invasion"
Norman G. Finkelstein
OR Books

New York, 2010

Reprove your kinsman but incur no guilt because of him. -Leviticus 17.

Norman Finkelstein's "The Holocaust Industry: Reflections on the Exploitation of Jewish Suffering" provided a transgressive thrill that has not worn off after a decade, and the intervening and deliciously outrageous fictional assertion of a similar principle in Tova Reich's "My Holocaust." The ideas that I as a nonscholar had found astringently liberating from a kind of creeping corruption in American Jewish culture and that premier Holocaust historian Raul Hilberg endorsed were anathema to what Peter Beinart in his essential article on its failure calls "The American Jewish Establishment." Finkelstein has been accused of being a self-hating Jew and a sloppy academic, while the fact that both his parents were death camp survivors, far from being perceived as support for the authority of his views, has been used as an opportunity to sneer at his pretension in making reference to them. However much he has been repudiated like some latter day Joseph for his obnoxious truth telling, Finkelstein continues, most recently in "This Time We Went Too Far," to challenge the American Jewish Establishment and the state of Israel.

Classed by Eric Alterman as a "committed anti-Zionist" along with Noam Chomsky and Naomi Klein, in "This Time We Went Too Far," Finkelstein certainly betrays some skepticism about the project of a "Jewish state," quoting former Israeli Supreme Court President Aharon Barak: "We have still not worked out properly the interrelationship between the Jewishness of the state and the fact that it is a state of all its citizens." (p. 47) Yet, just as Finkelstein sees Israel's incontrovertible excesses in "Operation Cast Lead" as opening a new space for self-examination and self-correction - the rather inspiring theme of the Gideon Levy Haaretz editorial the book's title quotes from - I see "This Time We Went Too Far" as Finkelstein's own bid for reconciliation with the people Israel and the fact of the state of Israel, a reproof all the more sharp and comprehensive for being fraternal, an intervention for a violent family member whose loss of control threatens himself first.

A short volume, "This Time We Went too far" begins with a thumbnail summary of the history of the state of Israel and its relationship to the Gaza strip. It then provides the first deconstruction of what Finkelstein calls "Israel's alibi of self-defense" (p. 25). He squarely assigns to Israel the provocation that led to the assault and consistently attributes the most cynical of motives to Israeli government policies. He starkly contrasts the disproportion between the Israelis and the Gazans in both firepower and civilian casualties before and during the assault.

In his second chapter, "Their Fear and Ours," Finkelstein more extensively examines the motivation for the assault and its antecedents in previous Israeli campaigns against Gaza and Lebanon. He determines that "the main motives for the Gaza invasion were ... first ... the need to restore Israel's 'deterrence capacity,' and, second, ... the need to counter the threat posed by a new Palestinian 'peace offensive.'"

"Whitewash" - the third chapter - reviews the American and Israeli media coverage of "Operation Cast Lead" with an eye to obvious contradictions such as the claim "that Israel took every precaution not to damage civilian objects" when, in fact, 58,000 homes, 280 schools, 1,500 factories and workshops, several buildings housing media, water and sewage facilities, 80 percent of agricultural crops and nearly one-fifth of cultivated land were damaged or destroyed (p. 60) as well as 45 mosques (p. 63). Again, the thrust of Finkelstein's argument was that the disproportionate destruction was as deliberate as the documented use of white phosphorous as an incendiary weapon - and that it was both militarily and politically useless - if not counterproductive: "'It is very dangerous for the Israel Defense Forces to believe it won a war when there was no war,' a respected Israeli strategic analyst warned."(p. 74) "Israel could not restore its deterrence by inflicting a military defeat because Hamas was manifestly not a military power."(p. 79)

Chapter 4: "Of Human Shields and Hasbara," compares Israeli hasbara (propaganda) to the testimony of IDF soldiers who took part in the operation and the conclusions of Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the Goldstone Report, which tellingly concluded that "the repeated failure to distinguish between combatants and civilians appears ... to have been the result of deliberate guidance issued to soldiers ..." (p. 91) Finkelstein resolutely rejects arguments that disculpate the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) and Israeli government on the grounds that religious extremists were somehow responsible for the operation's abuses, "the criminal thrust of Operation Cast Lead - deploying as one soldier after another testified, 'insane' amounts of firepower - was the brainchild of Defense Minister Ehud Barak and his secular cohorts ..." (p. 93) He also concludes that if anyone used human shields during the operation, it was the IDF. Finkelstein makes determinations on the basis of what seems overwhelmingly compelling evidence, and implicitly addresses one of the thorniest aspects of all discussions of the Israel-Palestine situation: the existence of not only at least two sets of goals, motives and histories, but also of different sets of "facts."

"Inside Gaza" briefly recounts Finkelstein's own trip to Gaza six months after Operation Cast Lead (arriving via Egypt because this academic has been prohibited from entering Israel for ten years, as an alleged "security risk") and his contacts with Hamas officials. He acknowledges that "Hamas sought to emulate Hezbollah's victory in 2006," but seemed hopeful that "after the massacre it perhaps sunk in that Israel cannot be defeated by shooting firecrackers and Roman candles at it." (p. 101) In a paragraph that will surely inflame the passions of his detractors, he acknowledges a certain emotional solidarity with the young Hamas militants who guarded his party during their stay in Gaza.

Finkelstein completes the book with a chapter reviewing the evidence for a shift in public opinion, including the "break-up of hitherto blanket Jewish support for Israeli wars," and providing further deconstruction of Israel apologists. The epilogue is largely devoted to the Goldstone Report and its reception in Israel and elsewhere and about which he concludes,

"It can fairly be said that the Goldstone Report marked the end of one era and the emergence of another: the end of the apologetic Jewish liberalism that denies or extenuates Israel's crimes and the emergence of a Jewish liberalism that returns to its classical calling that, if only as an ideal imperfectly realized, nonetheless holds all malefactors, Jew or non-Jew, accountable when they have strayed from the path of justice." (p. 141)

And while Alan Dershowitz might disagree with me that "This Time We Went Too Far" pretty much passes the Dershowitz litmus test for legitimate anti-Israel criticism, that ideal of Jewish liberalism seems to me to be Finkelstein's project in the book under review. As part of a final peroration arguing for inclusion of those I would characterize as the "new liberal Zionists" in the struggle for justice for Palestinians, Finkelstein asserts, "It should not be lost from sight that the ultimate goal is - or ought to be - a settlement enabling both parties, everyone to live proud, productive, and peaceful lives."(p. 145) "The prize to which our eyes should be riveted is human rights, human dignity, and human equality."

I suspect this book, along with the Goldstone Report preceding it, have been influential in precisely the ways Finkelstein describes and subscribes to, in contributing to an ongoing, widespread and radical rethinking of the liberal Zionist idea. Is a "Jewish" democratic state an oxymoron? I certainly continue to hope not, but the recent deadly episode with the MV Mavi Mamara, the invasions of Lebanon and Gaza, the settlements policy, attacks against Israel's once-famous press freedom and the outrageous conversion bill recently before the Knesset, suggest that, in practice, the state of Israel is moving ever further from that ideal. Those for whom allegiance to their group - however defined - is more important than justice, will never understand individuals like Finkelstein: individuals for whom their group's adherence to its own strictest and most elevated standards of virtue is the over-riding concern. These individuals' aspiration is to act as agents of transformation and purification for their own group - and by extension, for us all.

Creative Commons License
This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





     

»



Leslie Thatcher is Truthout's literary editor, French translator and sometime book reviewer.


Comments

This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.



"Whoever exalts race, or

"Whoever exalts race, or "the people"... above their standard value and divinizes them to an idolatrous level, distorts and perverts an order of the world planned and created by God... None but superficial minds could stumble into concepts of a national God, of a national religion or attempt to lock God, the Creater of the Universe within the frontiers of a single people, or race..." From Brennende Sorge (1936) Pius XI.

What Pius said to the Germans applies as well to Zionists.



Well well well... for a

Well well well... for a minute there I was about to cancel the messages I receive from Truthout if I had detected a hint of criticism of Finkelstein. Luckily the writer agreed with the basic theory that Israel cannot be at once Jewish and 'democratic'!
It is too bad that time is slowly (sorry, quickly!) running out of the two-state solution, because there will be no territory on which Palestinians can establish their state, whatever shape that might take!
Truly, does anyone believe that there will be a Palestinian state anymore? Please let us know how, when and where this will be established if the likes of Tony Blair and the quartet pretend thy are working for it?



Of course a "Jewish

Of course a "Jewish democratic state" is an oxymoron. Israel is clearly an ethnocracy.



Israel and the United States

Israel and the United States have a complicated relationship. The United States needs Israel to do things that even our government doesn't dare do openly, such as arm terrorists (Iran-Contra) or support brutal dictatorships we can no longer officially support (South African Apartheid).

And Israel needs the United States because not too many countries offer that sort of lucrative employment. And of course the U.S. has to support Israel because Israel can prove that it was just following orders from the U.S.

I wrote about it this week in an article entitled, "Israel is a Money Launderer for the United States," at fubarandgrill.org

Perhaps I should have called it, "Israel is a Hitman for the United States." But I wasn't fully aware of the extent of the problem when I wrote it, and I'm probably not now either. How many of our covert resource wars in Africa and elsewhere are being carried out by our Israeli proxies?



EXCELLENT ARTICLE people

EXCELLENT ARTICLE
people should rent the movie american radical
whixxxxh really shows finkelstein for who he is!!!



Finkelstein is a hack. His

Finkelstein is a hack. His arguments are incredibly biased. He places no blame on Palestinians or Arab groups at all. His thrust is simply to de-legitimize Israel without looking at the broader context that they [Israel] face constant danger from intolerant regimes and terrorists.



Israel, the Hebrew/Jewish

Israel, the Hebrew/Jewish and democratic state. Fact not fiction as the Finkelstein of the sorts or the world would make one believe.

Just go to Israel to learn that Israel in action, today, is a cosmopolitan society per se. Indeed it is democratic as perfect as perfection can be and moreover, she is equally democratic to any other democracy on this planet if not more. JUST GO THERE to see for yourself.

I regret to say that not until the world becomes one country for all that ISRAEL MUST REMAIN A JEWISH STATE JUST AS CHINA IS FOR THE CHINESE AND ICELAND FOR THE ICELANDERS ETC.

THE JEWISH PEOPLE like other people, MUST HAVE A HOME ESPECIALLY IN THEIR historical, ANCESTRAL, AND LEGAL HOME, TO CALL IT their HOME.

THE non Jews in Israel do enjoy equal rights and they are Israelis, Hebrew speaking. Israel is a colorful country with equal and human rights for all. In her 62 YEARS Isarel has achieved the unimaginable in terms of helping the world for the better. Just go there...

PEACE FOR THE JEWS, PEACE FOR ALL.

And this shameless Norman Finkelstien not only suffers of what is known a second Holocaust Syndrome but also suffers of Freudian Projection. It was he who exploited the Holocaust to further his own selfish sick mind. He was a nobody until this psychopathic or rather pathetic book. Indeed he drew attention (which NF lacked as a child) to himself but it ended up boomeranging in his face because rational people were and are able to discern between fraud and honesty, reality and factual truth. At best Mr. Finkelstein is misguided and at worse he is evil, sadly to say.

THE JEWS CAN NEVER EXPLOIT THE HOLOCAUST ENOUGH!!! The world shall for ever owe all holocaust victims for their silence in the face of the Nazi evil.



rac@17:36 provides a perfect

rac@17:36 provides a perfect example of Jewish exceptionalism. While other people have experienced genocide (Kurds, Rwandans, Roms, Basques, to name a few more recent examples), Jews are somehow unique in their suffering. "They can never exploit the holocaust enough." In a democracy, all citizens are treated equally, but Israel is organized around a religion, therefore some Israeli citizens (i.e, Jews) are more equal than others (i.e., non-Jews). Take the case of Israeli Arabs, who's ancestors may have lived on that land for hundreds of years, being forced out of their homes in occupied east Jerusalem to make way for Jewish colonizers, who may be recent immigrants. The Chinese population is composed of many different ethnic backgrounds, likewise Iceland, Finland, Chile, Burkina Fosso, Australia, etc; their citizens don't all have to subscribe to a common religion to be full members of their national identity. If citizenship coalesces around religious identity, how can that state be called democratic? Palestine may at one time have been an ancestral home for the Jewish people, but there were other people inhabiting the area before and, perhaps more to the point, after them. Palestine has, for many hundreds of years, been inhabited by Arabs, and any Jewish claim to special appropriation of said land is conveniently recorded in a book (the Bible) of Jewish authorship. "Shameless" Norman Finklestein has the temerity to speak up for an indigenous population that is being marginalized by Iaraeli "democracy".
To hold Israel to the standards of int'l law and Geneva Conventions is neither anti-semitic nor anti-Israel.



I am certain that this book

I am certain that this book won't get the attention it deserves-next to none.



purses knock off purses

cheap knock off purse knockoff purses for promotion code imitation purses online



Bryan F. Lechner

Flip flops in the sale made cost from Dollar200 plus the conclude is endless



keratin hair Extensions

Would you be fascinated by exchanging links?



louis vuitton handbags online shopping

for shop lv online online shopping OlzpKnbM http://www.louis-vuittononline-shop.com/