Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University – David
Newman’s (Dept of Political Science) tirade continues to provoke
responses; NGO-Monitor.org
Executive Director Prof. Gerald Steinberg shows Newman where he was
wrong
To see the full original article,
go here
Beyond the
Left-Right diatribe
By GERALD
STEINBERG
Apr 26, 2009
David Newman's
attack ("Bashing the Academic Left," April 14) against me, NGO
Monitor, the anti-boycott international advisory board (IAB),
Scholars for Peace in the Middle East and various other targets
illustrates the dangers of ideological filters. According to Newman,
our activities are aimed at "bashing the academic Left" in Israel -
as if university professors and others included in this category
(such as journalists and powerful NGO officials claiming to promote
human rights) were an endangered species whose survival required
suppression of inconvenient research and information.
He even invoked
the hoary memory of "McCarthyism" - named for the leader of the
anti-communist witch-hunts of the 1950s in the US (that, not
coincidentally, also had anti-Semitic dimensions). And he omits the
role of "the academic Left" in targeting its enemies on the Right
and, more widely, of a wider indulgence in gratuitous
Israel-bashing.
His allegations
are wrong on many counts, beginning with the over emphasis on
ideology. David Newman is a Zionist, and a staunch member of the
Israeli academic Left, but he defines critics and nonbelievers,
including myself, as heretics and members of the opposite camp. This
is a major error and contributes to the distorted claims in his
article.
In contrast to
Newman, I have no patience for or interest in the anachronistic wars
between the Left and Right, particularly in the Israeli context.
Ideology is a one-dimensional filter that prevents us from a
realistic understanding of the issues and responses to threats. In
trying to force complex situations to fit simplistic theories,
adherents of political religions and false gods on both fringes -
Left and Right - have more in common than they care to admit.
Fascism and communism sought to box human behavior into
one-dimensional models, and both failed, but only after their
impassioned adherents did considerable damage. Ideologues, like
other fanatics, tend to be intolerant of outsiders and skeptics,
perhaps explaining why anti-Semitism is found at both ends of the
spectrum.
NEWMAN VENTS
entirely misdirected outrage against NGO Monitor's analysis of
massive funding provided by foreign governments such as the European
Commission and its member states for Israeli and Palestinian
political groups. He falsely asserts that this research, which I
lead, "has set as its task to delegitimize almost any NGO that so
much as dares to support the peace process and/or receives funding
from the European Union."
In the first
place, it is hard to understand how an academic can condemn research
that seeks to reveal and understand a highly secretive process by
which public funds are transferred into private hands by the EU or
any other governmental organization. If EU officials would practice
the transparency that they preach to others, and explain why many
politicized NGOs critical of Israel are supported from among the
many worthy applicants, my research (and possible legal action to
obtain documents that should be public) would be unnecessary.
In addition,
Newman seems to be objecting to the facts showing that many of the
NGOs funded by the EU's "Partnership for Peace" framework actually
fuel the conflict. (Newman has received EU funding for some of his
own projects, perhaps making it difficult for him to play the role
of an unbiased observer.) NGO Monitor's analysis of the 2007 PfP
awards highlights a number of projects and organizations that
clearly promote anti-Israel boycotts and demonization.
For example, the
"Applied Research Institute - Jerusalem" has been generously funded
by the EU since 2000, including the latest grant of 374,174 euros.
This money is used for a project on "Monitoring Israeli Colonizing
Activities in the Palestinian West Bank and Gaza." ARIJ, like a
number of other recipients of European funds, promotes the
Palestinian narrative and erases the context of incitement and
rejectionism that long preceded the 1967 war. ARIJ accuses Israel of
"racism" and of "seeking to loot as much as possible of the
Palestinian lands to fulfill its never ending colonial and
expansionist desires..."
As a research
organization, NGO Monitor is asking the EU to show the contribution
to advancing peace and tolerance in the "everyday lives and welfare"
of Israelis and Palestinians, as stipulated by the EC guidelines.
Any evaluations that may have been produced are closely guarded
secrets, and this is one of many examples.
Furthermore, as
recipients of this largesse from foreign governments, the "Left," to
use Newman's definition, is clearly not on the endangered species
list. Rather, as a result of this EC support, the winners in this
hidden popularity contest enjoy a privileged position in Israeli
society, with massive resources to hire lawyers, file an infinite
number of motions against the policies of the elected government,
place advertisements in newspapers promoting their ideology, and
hold rallies and conferences. The facts - always an inconvenient
obstacle for ideologues - show that no EC or foreign government NGO
support goes to what might be called "rightist" or even impartial
organizations. Indeed, NGOs and "civil society" organizations tend
to reflect "leftist" ideology, and this systematic built-in bias is
reflected in EC funding.
Research regarding
such political activities is entirely legitimate, and I look forward
to continuing the ongoing debate with Newman. But it is time to
retire inappropriate emotionally-laden terms like "McCarthyism" and
stick to the facts.
The writer is
the executive director of NGO Monitor and chairman of the Department
of Political Science at Bar-Ilan University.
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