Last night my son reminded me that it was Peace Day yesterday, and my heart sank even lower. How could it be that on the day dedicated to world peace, the U.S. allowed an improperly tried man to be put to death by lethal injection?
Perhaps even worse, how could it be that our President chose this day to appear before the United Nations opposing the Palestinian government’s efforts to negotiate a two-state resolution with Israel?
Obama’s speech was laden with bitter irony for those who could hear between the lines. How could he laud the people of other Middle Eastern states like Egypt, Libya and Yemen for taking matters in their own hands and violently overthrowing oppressive rulers, while at the same time telling the Palestinians that they should wait, be patient and let others decide their fate?
What difference is there, really, between an oppressive dictator like Qaddafi and an oppressive state dictatorship like the one Israel exercises over Palestine? In both cases it’s a matter of people’s basic human rights being violated. In neither case do the people have the “democracy” that Obama praised in his speech yesterday. Why is it OK for the Libyans to rise up and throw out the oppressors, but not for the Palestinians?
Of course, we know the answer. Because American Jews have too much invested in the success of the state of Israel, and are too afraid of the Palestinians to see them as anything other than potential terrorists. Because American Jews wield considerable power in the U.S. government, and their support can make or break a political candidate here at home.
Under these circumstances, I am not proud to be an American of Jewish descent (I can’t call myself a Jew because I have never practiced the religion and am largely unfamiliar with it).
I’m not happy to be a white American either, given the clear racialization of the American criminal justice system, with people of color receiving much harsher treatment, from the police on the streets to the courts and the prisons, than people of European descent.
What do I do with my guilt over the way “my people” are treating others? I can “pass” as a non-Jew and distance myself from that community, but I can’t exactly “pass” as a person of color.
What I have to do, and what all of us who deplore the oppression that was blazoned across the headlines on World Peace Day should do, is to ally myself firmly with those who stand for freedom. In many cases, sad to say, this would mean opposing the policies of the U.S. government and many of its cronies, like the state of Israel.
Dissent from majority opinion has a long and proud history in our country and we should not be afraid to stand up for what we believe, even if we appear to be opposing the powers that be.
Yesterday the Supreme Court of the United States declined to step in and save the life of Troy Davis even though it was plain to hundreds of thousands of onlookers that he did not deserve execution. Yesterday President Obama went on record as opposing the efforts of President Abbas of Palestine to finally take his rightful place among the league of nations at the U.N.
Justices and President, I respectfully disagree with you. A lot of us disagree with you, a lot of the time. You need to start listening to us ordinary folks again, and give us a government we can be proud of.
Otherwise, you might just wake up one morning and find the Arab Spring has come to America–with you, or at least the oppressive establishment you represent–as the targets this time.