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Only for European left intellectuals and journalists:
Explanation of the deepest psychological feelings, by Pilar Rahola, former MP of the Spanish Republican Left
The following material pertaining to the position of some Spanish intellectuals against European Judeophobia. It appears on http://www.afsi.org/MEDIA/europe/Jan03/pilar.htm
The original French version of the following interview of Pilar Rahola, can be found at http://coranet.radicalparty.org/pressreview/print_right.php?func=detail&par=3226
Note: This interview goes a long way in explaining the consistently
anti-Israel stance of most European governments and media outlets.
Pilar Rahola, former member of Parliament of the Spanish Republican Left:
"Judeophobia Explains the Pro-Palestinian Hysteria of the European Left"
Interview with Marc Tobiass, contact@proche-orient.info, 10.2.02
[Unofficial translation from French into English by David A. Harris,
executive director, American Jewish Committee, 11.26.02]
A Catalan from Barcelona, Pilar Rahola is a highly colorful figure on the
Spanish scene. She is known for her feminism, as well as for her frank and
direct manner. A former parliamentarian, Pilar Rahola sat in the national
Legislature in Madrid for eight years, first as part of the republican left,
then as the founder of the Independence Party. However, she decided to leave
political life just over a year ago to devote more time to her other
passions. She has just published "The History of Ada," a metaphor for
abandoned children, those child-slaves or children-soldiers whom one meets
all over the world, that is, when they are not transformed into human bombs.
She has also decided to step forward to denounce the flagrant imbalance in
the handling of information from the Middle East. Her most recent piece, "In
Favor of Israel," is to be published in a book in which 15 Spanish
intellectuals, including Jon Juaristi, president of the Cervantes Institute,
and Gabriel Alviac, a well-known journalist with El Mundo [translator's
note: a Spanish daily newspaper], seek to re-establish the facts.
_________________________________________________
Marc Tobiass (of proche-orient.com) talks with Pilar Rahola.
Marc Tobiass: Why did you feel the need to write "In Favor of Israel," to
participate in the publication of this book?
Pilar Rahola: Since the start of the second intifada, the Spanish press, on
the right as well as the left, has taken a particularly aggressive approach
toward Israel, an approach that leaves out the reasons for Israel's actions
and tends to ignore the Israeli victims in this conflict. In this situation,
a small minority of intellectuals, public personalities -- sensitive to the
Jewish question in general and to Israel in particular -- felt deeply
touched by this problem. Outraged by the return of Judeophobia in Spain, we,
each in our own way, began to write some articles, to use the media to
condemn this situation. And then Oracia Vasquez Real, an important writer in
Spain, suggested that we coordinate our activity, that we collect in one
work the vision of the Middle East conflict held by 15 well-known
intellectuals.
Marc Tobiass: For whom did you write this book, and with what objective?
Pilar Rahola: Fundamentally, this book is addressed to the anti-Jewish
school of thought in Spain. The goal of our book is to launch a debate about
Judeophobia in Spain. We are convinced that the current view of the
conflict, so Manichaean -- with the good, always the Palestinians, and the
evil, always the Israelis -- has deep roots. It comes from an ancient
anti-Jewish feeling that exists in Spain and that also explains the history
of Spain. This feeling softened slightly after the Franco era [translator's
note: post-1975], but today there is a virulent resurgence of this savage
feeling to the point where one can find genuinely anti-Semitic expressions
in the Spanish press. In essence, this is a provocative book in the face of
totally pro-Arab thinking in Spain, that is completely uncritical of the
mistakes of the Arab world in general and of the Palestinians in particular.
We want to counter this flagrant imbalance. ...
Marc Tobiass: This imbalance is not specifically Spanish, nor, for that
matter, is the Judeophobia. You rightly recall in your piece the troubling
remark of Hermann Broch [translator's note: Austrian anti-Nazi novelist,
1886-1951] denouncing the indifference of Europe as the worst of the crimes
in the bloody madness of the Hitler era. ...
Pilar Rahola: Yes, I think that Europe was indifferent on the surface
because it felt guilty within. I believe that this indifference
unquestionably comes from Judeophobia. And in the ultimate paradox, the
Jewish soul is part and parcel of Europe. Europe cannot be explained without
its Jewish soul, but it is also explained by its hatred of the Jews. Thus,
all the repeated attempts of Europe to get rid of its Jewish soul are, in
fact, a kind of suicide.
After the Holocaust, after Auschwitz, that is, after the ultimate stage in
the destruction of the Jewish soul -- a process that lasted for centuries in
Europe -- Europe is shattered, many of its elements are dead, but it also
has a bad conscience; it knows it is guilty. Since then, Europe has looked
for and found in the Palestinian cause the expiation for its guilt. It is
from this that the uncritical and Manichean attitude toward the Palestinian
cause emerges -- it is, primarily, the last heroic (European) adventure.
Further, the more the Jews are presented as being the evil party, the bad
ones, the less difficult it is to carry the responsibility and the guilt.
This is a process of collective psychology. From such a perspective, there
essentially is no difference between France, for example, and Spain ... It
is unbelievable how Europe continues to hate its Jewish soul, even after it
has expelled it!
Marc Tobiass: According to you, it is this Judeophobia that explains the
"pro-Palestinian hysteria" that exists in Europe.
Pilar Rahola: I am sure of it. ... There is undeniably of late a very
serious effort at disinformation about everything to do with the Middle
East. There is a kind of madness that excuses all the crimes, abuses, and
errors of the Palestinian side, and, at the same time, there is an
historical predisposition that condemns any single error of the Israeli side
-- and this to the point where the Palestinian victims are given maximum
attention and the Israeli (victims) are ignored. It is as if the Jewish
victims didn't exist, on the pretext that they were responsible for their
own death!
The worst thing is that there is also a problem of terrorism in Spain, but
when the crimes of ETA [translator's note: the Basque terrorist group] are
mentioned, one speaks of terrorism, while when the crimes of Hamas are
mentioned, one speaks of militants, activists, resistance, struggle. ...
When one mentions the Palestinian victims, one speaks of children,
civilians, innocents, but when one mentions the Israeli victims, one speaks
of people without a name, as if to suggest that they are only soldiers,
members of the army. There is a distortion in the presentation of the
conflict, a dangerous manipulation that feeds the hatred and the
anti-Semitism.
Marc Tobiass: Your remarks add up to an indictment of the European media.
Pilar Rahola: What I want is to launch an appeal to the collective European
way of thinking, and especially to the intellectuals and journalists,
because, from my point of view, they are in the process of creating a
collective reality that is Judeophobic. Today one must prove oneself to be
on the left; it is necessary to be anti-Semitic to have credibility. Things
have reached the point where, for instance, Sharon is always guilty of being
guilty, while Arafat is seen as an honest figure, innocent, a tireless old
resistance fighter, a heroic figure, a kind of Gandhi -- in brief, a person
gussied up in romantic finery, when in reality he is head of an oligarchy
that has so much blood on its hands.
Israel is not (just) a country that is trying, for better or worse, to
survive for 50 years, but it is reduced to one sole image: a country that
occupies the territories and whose vocation is to make life miserable for
the poor Palestinians. The history of the Holy Land is being reinvented.
Everything takes place as if there were instructions: Never recall the
faults and errors of the Palestinians, never recall their alliances with
dangerous countries such as Iraq, in order to heap more shame on the United
States and Israel. The profound reasons for this war are never made clear,
never discussed.
Marc Tobiass: There is a comment in your text that sent shivers down my
spine. You say that Judeophobia is, in the final analysis, the common
denominator between Europe and the Palestinians.
Pilar Rahola: It's true that there are in Europe non-Jews who are sensitive
and respect the Jewish soul, which is also part of the foundation of Europe,
but they constitute a minority. The majority, the unconscious European
collective, does not understand, does not absorb, nor accept, the Jewish
phenomenon. And it is there that the essential meeting point between the
European and the Palestinian takes place. Palestinian identity is not just a
recent phenomenon, but it is, above all, built on hatred of Israel, hatred
of the Jews.
If Europe can be explained by its Jewish component and by its hatred of the
Jews, as if they were two sides of the same coin, Palestinian identity can
essentially be explained only by its anti-Jewish component. It is for this
reason that the Palestinians have such difficulty putting an end to their
violence.
If the Palestinians renounced their hatred of the Jews, they would at the
same time lose a significant part of their identity. To get beyond this
violence, they would have to get beyond the hatred and thus change their
identity. In other words, they would have to reinvent themselves. It is on
the basis of this hatred that the Palestinian meets and agrees with the
European. Often, this takes place with people of the left, which is a
veritable calamity for people like myself, as we are of the left. We are
Europeans, but we do not accept Judeophobia, just as we do not accept the
anti-Zionism that justifies and nourishes the anti-Semitism of the Spanish
left today.
Marc Tobiass: Isn't this legitimization of hate the true obstacle to peace?
Pilar Rahola: Without doubt. I believe that Europe is directly responsible,
and not only for the conflict. In the final analysis, who, if not Europe,
created the Jewish problem in the world? In a certain sense, one can even
say that Europe is the actual founder of the State of Israel. Europe
expelled its Jews -- its Spanish Jews, its Russian Jews, its French Jews,
and its German (Jews). It expelled them from its body, even though these
Jews felt themselves European to the core. ...
Marc Tobiass: You describe yourself as being of the left and, for you, being
a leftist is above all an existential position toward life, toward society.
Yet, you yourself say that when this position turns into ideology, at times
it becomes an excuse for channeling uncritical dogma, a simplistic
Manichaeanism, indeed a racism. You, who were a parliamentarian of the left,
how can you handle this contradiction?
Pilar Rahola: Those on the left in Spain have a real problem. In some
respects we are the heirs of the French Revolution; we have been influenced
by the great ideologues like [Jean-Paul] Sartre and [Albert] Camus, and also
by May 1968. That is to say, the overall thinking of the Spanish left comes
from France. Now, France is fundamentally anti-American ... from which
(comes) our anti-Americanism, that at times borders on the pathological, an
anti-Americanism which is also anti-Semitic. This explains why to a certain
extent the Spanish left is anti-Semitic. Obviously, people like myself have
great difficulty with this state of affairs.
I believe that if the left has failed as a great world ideology, it is
because the left did not succeed in breaking with the worst of its dogmatic
thinking. The left can be very progressive, but it can also be very
dogmatic. Unfortunately, the left became infatuated with such infamous
dictators as Pol Pot, Mao and Stalin, and now it is in love with Arafat. The
left should be critical, and in the first place, self-critical.
Marc Tobiass: And what is the dogma that worries you the most today?
Pilar Rahola: The most absurd thing is to watch leaders of the left today
greet and celebrate Arab leaders, even when they are fundamentalists. For
example, in the debates that followed the attacks of September 11, we heard
an anti-American discourse here, pooh-poohing the victims, something that is
in and of itself terrible! And there were those who tried to downgrade --
with that tawdry Third-Worldism that characterizes some circles of the left
-- the danger embodied in individuals like Bin Laden, who is, in fact, an
authentic fascist. I believe that for the moment the world remains blind to
the biggest totalitarianism of the 21st century, which is Islamic
fundamentalism. Now we must prepare ourselves seriously to face this danger:
For me, this totalitarianism is without any shadow of a doubt comparable to
Stalinism and Nazism, the biggest scourges of the 20th century.
Marc Tobiass: To finish this interview, Pilar Rahola, I would like to cite a
sentence from your text: You say that to be "in favor of Israel" is the most
intelligent, rational, prudent, and honest way to be in favor of Palestine.
Pilar Rahola: First of all, I do not accept the use of defense of the
Palestinian cause as a pretext for a new epidemic of anti-Semitism. If
Europe had had a critical discussion that did not hesitate to condemn the
grave and permanent mistakes of the Palestinian side, if Europe had been
more critical of the Palestinians, we would be closer to a solution today.
But Arafat enjoys support and legitimacy in Europe which allows him to never
miss an opportunity for missing the opportunity of peace. I believe that if
Europe had been more critical toward Arafat, toward the different aspects of
Palestinian violence, if Europe had been tougher in its statements, the
Palestinians would have been compelled to step back from the violence and
the suicide attacks.
A sense of justice calls for the establishment of a Palestinian state next
to the State of Israel, but not in its place. Yet, at its core, Europe is
ill at ease with the existence of Israel, and one can even say that the
existence of this state provokes resentment and anger on the European left.
Even if this is not acknowledged, many Europeans contend that a Palestinian
state must replace the State of Israel.
But for those of us who support Israel, who are in favor of good neighborly
relations -- for coexistence between the State of Israel and a Palestinian
state -- our way of saying YES to a Palestinian state is also a way of
saying YES to the existence of the State of Israel.
****
WHF World Jewry Update -- Educates the WHF community about contemporary
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