Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University – Shlomo Sand’s (Dept of History) statements
get more outrageous as his fictional book tour travels to the UK;
the birth of the State of Israel an “act of rape”
Shlomo Sand, a professor of history at
Tel Aviv University, spoke at a number of events in London last week
to sell his book The Invention of the Jewish People, in which
he writes that the Israelites were never exiled from the Promised
Land and therefore have no right to return. … "Sand's agenda is to
sever the historic link between the Jewish people and the Land of
Israel," said Jonathan Hoffman, co-chairman of the Zionist
Federation of Great Britain and Ireland. "To promote that agenda his
book ignores archeological and genetic evidence. At none of his
three London appearances was there a historian or Jewish history
expert on the platform to counter his distortions, evasions and
sensationalism. The result will contribute to anti-Semitic discourse
and incidents in the UK, already at a record level." … A guest on
BBC Radio Four last week, Sand told presenter Andrew Marr that he
compares Israel's birth to "rape." … [Sand] said. "I compare when I
am speaking before Arab students the birth of the Israeli state to
an act of rape. But even the son that was born of the act of rape...
you have to recognize him...”
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1258027296653&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
TAU historian
accused of anti-Semitism
Nov. 15, 2009
JONNY PAUL, Jerusalem Post correspondent , THE JERUSALEM POST
An Israeli academic has been accused of
contributing to anti-Semitic discourse and incidents following his
book tour in London promoting the thesis that Jews never existed as
a people and the Palestinian Arabs are the true heirs of the
biblical Jews.
Shlomo Sand, a professor of history at
Tel Aviv University, spoke at a number of events in London last week
to sell his book The Invention of the Jewish People, in which
he writes that the Israelites were never exiled from the Promised
Land and therefore have no right to return.
Jewish community figures questioned
Sand's work and noted that no opposing view or contextualization was
offered at his events.
"Sand's agenda is to sever the historic
link between the Jewish people and the Land of Israel," said
Jonathan Hoffman, co-chairman of the Zionist Federation of Great
Britain and Ireland. "To promote that agenda his book ignores
archeological and genetic evidence. At none of his three London
appearances was there a historian or Jewish history expert on the
platform to counter his distortions, evasions and sensationalism.
The result will contribute to anti-Semitic discourse and incidents
in the UK, already at a record level."
A guest on BBC Radio Four last week, Sand
told presenter Andrew Marr that he compares Israel's birth to "rape"
"I'm not a Zionist. I don't define myself
as an anti-Zionist... but I'm not a Zionist... I don't put into
question the existence of Israel," he said. "I compare when I am
speaking before Arab students the birth of the Israeli state to an
act of rape. But even the son that was born of the act of rape...
you have to recognize him... the existence of Israel I don't put in
question today, you understand me?"
"Sand's book represents another step
towards the mainstream for replacement ideologies," said Jon
Benjamin, chief executive of the Board of Deputies of British Jews.
"Our history of exile and ghettoization has meant that the Jewish
people are remarkably cohesive, genetically, culturally and
religiously, and through the centuries the countries in which we
have lived have had no compunction in designating us as Jews. It is
Sand's theory that is the upstart, rootless and incredible, not the
history and collective memory of the Jewish people and our
connection to Israel."
The Community Security Trust, a charity
that monitors anti-Semitism in the UK, also questioned how there was
no dissenting voice at any of Sand's appearances.
"The book was featured without dissent on
BBC Radio on November 9, the 61st anniversary of Kristallnacht,"
said Mark Gardiner, the Community Security Trust's director of
communications.
Gardiner said there had also been no
contextualization during the appearances. Evident, he said, when
presenter Andrew Marr summarized the book on the BBC radio show with
Sand saying: "There was a kind of [Zionist] master plan to present
the history of the Jewish people in Europe which emerged in the 19th
century and the modern world has rather swallowed whole... [The book
says] actually the history of the Jewish people is not as you
thought... The Old Testament is very, very inaccurate... Most of the
story of the Jews as presented in the history of the Old Testament
is fictitious, you think..."
Gardiner added: "There are many ways,
often subtle, in which anti-Israel or anti-Zionist debate can have
an anti-Jewish impact. However, a new anti-Zionist book by Tel Aviv
University Prof. Shlomo Sand remolds the paradigm: with notions of
Jewish peoplehood now under attack in the service of anti-Zionism.
"The sense of common lineage, kinship and
peoplehood that Jews around the world share and hold is a
fundamental part of their identity, as perversely demonstrated by
the splenetic accusations of 'self-hater' that are hurled by some
Jews at others who do not toe the majority line. To deny this aspect
of Jewish identity - perhaps more accurately to demand that for
political reasons it be rejected - is surely to deny or reject
something that is essential to our perception of Jewishness itself."
Gardiner said there was nothing wrong
with genuine historical inquiry about Jews or any other facet of
history.
"However, that is neither the core
purpose, nor the core impact of Sand's book. It can be summed up
very simply as: No real Jews = no need for a really Jewish state.
"To add insult to injury, not only are
Sand's conclusions extremely questionable, but even his claims to
originality are significantly overblown. For example, there is
nothing new in his claim that the Old Testament is neither a
revealed text, nor historically perfect. Indeed, there are entire
synagogue movements that are ideologically premised upon those very
doubts. Similarly, there has been much debate and study about the
Khazar kingdom and Jewish lineage: in both Jewish studies
departments and the more deluded end of the far-Right spectrum,"
Gardiner said.
Sand's book also received a critical
review in the Financial Times on Friday.
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