Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University – Carlo Strenger (Dept of Psychology) holds
a selective view of freedom of speech: it is good for leftists, but
should be denied to rightists
Carlo Strenger,
psychology TAU, has made a career out of insisting that
Right-wingers exercising freedom of speech cause violence (see
previous
article by Strenger, reported by IsraCampus). But when leftists
are criticized, he insists in Haaretz: "To restate the obvious: In a
democracy, every public statement that does not incite violence or
actively promote hatred is legitimate."
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1160522.html
Muzzling Israel's left only harms its democracy
By Carlo Strenger
2/4/2010
The last year has been very difficult for
Israel internationally. All indicators show that its international
standing is worse than ever; research shows that a number of
delegitimization campaigns are active against the State of Israel.
The question of what to do about this is serious and has been
preoccupying Israel's politicians and diplomats as well as many Jews
around the world who want to be of help.
In this time of rising anxiety Israel's
political echelon has taken a number of steps toward undermining
Israel's sometimes flawed but always vibrant democracy. The
Knesset's shameful passing of Yisrael Beiteinu's so-called Nakba Law
in a first reading is a dangerous precedent: Once freedom of
expression starts to be curtailed, a state enters a slippery slope
and nobody can know where it ends. The Israel Defense Forces'
declaring Bil'in a closed military area is an active step against
political freedom and a way to undercut decisions taken by Israel's
Supreme Court.
This tendency is reflected in developments in
world Jewry. The new pro-Israel, pro-peace lobby J Street has been
critical of many of Israel's actions, particularly settlement
expansion and construction in East Jerusalem. Many reactions have
been dismaying: Instead of engaging with J Street, Israel's
ambassador to the United States chose not to attend its first
convention because he believes that it endangers Israel's interests.
Others again have argued that J Street misrepresents its position by
calling itself pro-Israel and is another instance of Jewish
self-hatred.
This profoundly worrying delegitimization
campaign against Jewish and Israeli liberals is taking many forms: A
number of Web sites track anti-Israeli activities and positions
among Israeli academics. The sites' tone is remarkably reminiscent
of the style of Joseph McCarthy's investigations into "un-American
activities" in the 1950s, a stain in the history of the world's
leading democracy. In some of the cases the coverage is formulated
in inflammatory language, in others it is highly inexact.
A good example is the vicious campaign that has
been launched against Tel Aviv University historian Shlomo Sand, who
wrote a book arguing that Israel needs to move from an ethnocentric
to a liberal model of democracy. Sand has been called anti-Semitic
and a "self-hating Jew" - even though it seems from the utter
inexactness of some of the claims on these Web sites that few of the
delegitimizers have actually read the book. As a result, these
attacks completely miss the simple point that Sand's goal is
precisely to ensure the existence of Israel as a democratic state
with a Jewish majority!
To restate the obvious: In a democracy, every
public statement that does not incite violence or actively promote
hatred is legitimate. The essence of democracy is that the public
domain is open to conflicting opinions. This is why, in a truly
democratic regime, there is always an opposition. Only in
pseudo-democracies like Syria is the president elected unanimously,
and only the government's line is allowed. John Stuart Mill, the
classic theorist of liberal democracy, has argued forcefully that no
democracy can allow itself to shut up dissent, and his argument is
valid to this day.
It is necessary to restate the obvious because
many well-meaning Diaspora Jews feel that the only way to be loyal
to Israel is to support its policies, no matter what they are. They
often take their cues from one-sided, unreliable sources, and have
taken the line that all criticism emanating from Jews, whether in
Israel or the Diaspora, reflects disloyalty to both Jewry and
Israel. Such an approach is both undemocratic and opposed to the
Jewish ethos of incisive and trenchant argument.
It is also profoundly counterproductive: No
group should claim the prerogative of having a monopoly on what it
means to be a good Jew or to act in Israel's interest. Trenchant
argument is of vital importance at all times, but even more so in
this time of crisis. Trying to shut up those who disagree with you
by delegitimizing them is morally wrong, politically dangerous and
inexpedient because it doesn't allow for the critical discussion
sorely needed.
Behind all this highly charged and often
inflammatory rhetoric is a deep sentiment of anxiety. We are all
worried about Israel's standing in the world, and we all care about
its safety. I emphasize "we all": This includes both the right, with
which I disagree but which I don't delegitimize, and the liberal
camp, to which I belong, even though I disagree with the lines of
action and argument of some of its members.
Both sides believe that they have the correct
views about what is good for Israel in the short and long term. But
those on the right who, however well-meaning, try to delegitimize
the liberal camp may end up unintentionally harming one of Israel's
greatest assets: its democracy.
The writer is chair of the Clinical Graduate
Program at Tel Aviv University. His recent paper "Knowledge-Nation
Israel: A New Unifying Vision" has been published by Azure.
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