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Issues
of Our Days
The
Brownshirts of Our Time
By Phyllis Chesler
FrontPageMagazine.com
| November 19, 2003
On
Saturday evening, November 8, 2003, the eve of Kristallnacht, I
addressed a woman's "networking" conference of mainly
African-American and Hispanic-American womanists and feminists at
Barnard College. The conference was described as a grassroots, multi-cultural,
multi-generational and multi-disciplinary organization for women
in the arts. Indeed, the women seemed to range in age from 20-65
and were dressed in corporate business suits, ever-colorful African/ethnic
attire, youthful jeans.
Booths
were arranged in a semi-circle--it was as if the panels and performances
were taking place in an African marketplace. Scented candles, beaded
drums, sleek handbags, photographs, Citi-banking for women consultants,
African skirts, all vied for my attention. In addition to my son,
who had driven me there, and myself, there were a handful of white
people, including a photographer from whom I bought two prints and
a psychologist who identified herself to me as an admirer and as
someone who had suffered a brain injury in an car accident.
The
conference was closed to men--but one of the organizers made a split
second decision to allow my adult son in and seated him by himself
at the very back of the room on a chair set apart. Growing up in
a feminist household, he was used to this. Privately, we both sighed
and wondered when feminist men would finally be welcome at a feminist
conference.
I doubt
that the organizers of this conference knew anything of my background
but they were more than welcoming. They had real class and great
soul. For example, when I'd explained that I was just in the midst
of both a major move into Manhattan and a book tour, one organizer
said: "We understand what it's like when a woman is jammed
up doing too much. We'll love you anyway. You can let us know at
the last minute." She was so damn upbeat and understanding
that I decided I'd come no matter what.
In
retrospect, I realized that I should have known what was coming;
perhaps I chose not to know.
A few
days before the conference I had the following conversation with
one of the organizers. She asked me what my most recent book was
and I told her it was The New Anti-Semitism. I explained that Jew-hatred
was a form of racism--only it was not being treated as such by anti-racist
"politically correct" people. The organizer did not say:
"I don't agree with you" nor did she say: "This won't
play well to our constituency." She only said: "We need
you to explain the ways in which women sabotage each other and remain
divided so that we can understand and overcome it in order to come
together. We need you to talk about your book Woman's Inhumanity
to Woman. Your speech will precede our big Unity panel."
When
I arrived, performers were rapping and singing and dancing and the
energy was fabulous. They were running late and I waited patiently
and happily. I whispered to my son: "There's still a whole
world out there. And in ways, it's quite wonderful. Perhaps I have
become too obsessed with The Jewish Cause, with Israel. Maybe I
need to remember that I am also connected to more than one issue."
I had
been asked to talk about what women can do, psychologically and
ethically, in order to enact sisterhood and to work in productive,
even radical ways. As I spoke, the women in the audience sighed,
cheered, applauded, nodded in agreement, laughed, groaned, nudged
each other--it was a half hour of good vibes.
And
then my first questioner blew it all to Hell. All it took was The
Question and it only required one Questioner. I could not see who
was speaking. A disembodied voice demanded to know where I stood
on the question of the women of Palestine. Her tone was forceful,
hostile, relentless, and prepared. I could have said: "The
organizers have specifically asked me not to address such questions."
I did not say that. I could also have said: "I am concerned
with the women of Palestine but I am also concerned with the women
of Rwanda, Bosnia, Guatemala, who have all been gang-raped by soldiers
who used rape as a weapon of war; I am concerned with the poverty
and homelessness of women right here in America; I am concerned
with the women of Israel who are being blown up in buses, at cafes,
in their own bedrooms." I did not say this.
Instead,
I took a deep breath and said that I did not respect people who
hijacked airplanes or hijacked conferences or who, at this very
moment, were trying to hijack this lecture. I pointed out that the
subject of my talk was not Israel or Palestine. I did not want us
to lose our focus. She grew even more hostile and demanding. "Tell
this audience what you said on WBAI. I heard you on that program."
Clearly, she wanted to "unmask" me before this audience
as a Jew-lover and an Israel-defender.
I took
the question head-on. "If you're really asking about apartheid,
let me talk about it. Contrary to myth and propaganda, Israel is
not an apartheid state. The largest practioner of apartheid in the
world is Islam which practices both gender and religious apartheid.
In terms of gender apartheid, Palestinian women--and all women who
live under Islam--are oppressed by "honor" killings, in
which girls and women who are raped are then killed by family members
for the sake of restoring the family "honor;" forced veiling,
segregation, stonings to death for alleged adultery, seclusion/sequestration,
female genital mutilation, polygamy, outright slavery, sexual slavery.
Women have few civil, legal, or human rights under Islam."
I continued;
"Islam also specializes in religious apartheid as well. All
non-Muslims (Christians, including Maronites and Melkites, Greek
Orthodox, Catholics and Protestants, Jews, Assyrians, Hindus, Zoroastrians,
animists) have historically been viewed and treated as subhumans
who must either convert to Islam or be mercilessly taxed, beaten,
jailed, murdered, or exiled. The latest al-Queda attack in Saudi
Arabia was primarily directed against Lebanese Christians and Americans."
I continued.
"Today, the entire Middle East is judenrein, there are no Jews
left in 22 Arab countries. And, the Arab leadership has backed the
PLO strategy in which the 23rd state remains under constant and
perilous siege. Historically in general, but specifically since
1948-1956, Arab Jews were forced to flee Arab Islamic lands. Most
are living in Israel, the only Middle Eastern state in which Jews
are allowed to live. Jews cannot become citizens of Jordan, Egypt,
or Saudi Arabia, for example and yet no one accuses those nations
of apartheid.
I said
that Israel was not an apartheid state. I talked about real gender
and religious Apartheid, as practiced by Muslims. I told the truth.
Clearly, they had not heard it before. The audience collectively
gasped. Then, people went a little crazy.
Someone
muttered darkly, coarsely, in a near-growl: "What about the
checkpoints? What about the fence?" As if checkpoints and fences
are the same as being killed by your brother or father or, most
recently, in Ramallah, in the Rofayda Qaoud case, by your mother
(!) for the crime of having been raped--in the Qaoud case, both
raped and impregnated by your mother's two sons. I asked the audience
if they thought that being detained at a checkpoint was really the
same as having your clitoris sliced off, the same as being stoned
to death for alleged adultery. The only response I got was from
the first questioner who demanded that I denounce Ariel Sharon--but
not Yasir Arafat--as a murderer.
I absolutely
refused to do so.
The
lightning rod of "Palestine" was enough to turn a very
friendly audience quite hostile and a bit unhinged. Two or three
women proceeded to ask aggressive questions in which they tried
to get me to say that I had somehow "disrespected" poor
women in my remarks; I had said nothing of the sort.
As
I left the podium, a young African-American woman stopped me to
say that I'd "hurt" her by how I had "disrespected"
a "brown" woman. "What brown woman?" I asked.
"Your first questioner was a brown woman" she said "and
so are Palestinian women." I said: "Jewish women, especially
in Israel also come in many colors including brown and black."
She stopped me. "But you're a white Jew." As if this was
proof of a crime.
I did
not bother to tell her that without my glasses I could not see the
face or color of a questioner so far away, that my answer to the
question would have been the same no matter what color the questioner
happened to be.
As
I was trying to leave, one woman, who said her name was "Lupe,"
(she was dressed in a button-festooned serape, and had a cross tattooed
between her eyebrows) loped after me and continued to demand that
I deal with the Palestine question. She kept trying to get at me
physically. One of the organizers kept putting her own body between
Lupe and me. Lupe behaved like a trained operative, her rage was
legitimized, empowered, by her politics.
The
three young African-American women who had invited me were VERY
supportive of me, they hugged me and thanked me for coming and looked
rather embarrassed about what had happened.
What's
important is this: Not one of them tried to stop what was happening,
not one stood up and said: "Something good has just turned
ugly and we must not permit this to happen." Thus, the "good"
people did nothing to disperse the hostility or to address the issues.
Perhaps they were simply unprepared on the issues; perhaps they
agreed with the view that Israel is an apartheid state and that
anyone who would dare defend it was supposed to be treated as a
traitor and enemy. Perhaps they simply lacked the courage to stand
up to the fundamentalists in their midst.
Afterwards,
my son told me that he was on his feet the minute The Questioner
spoke and although I could not see him either, I was glad to know
that he was in the room. Things could easily have turned much uglier.
(By the way: Talk about gender apartheid! The conference confined
him to his men-only single chair section).
It
seemed that The Questioner had at least one, and possibly two henchwoman
with her. Clearly, she wanted to "get" the pro-Israel
white Jew.
I couldn't
help reflecting on my life's work against racism. For example, in
1963, I joined The Northern Student Movement and tutored Harlem
students. This was the Northern branch of the civil rights movement.
In the late 1960s, I was involved with both the Young Lords and
the Black Panthers. I marched outside the Women's House of Detention
when they jailed Angela Davis. I was involved in the Inez Garcia
case and have written extensively about the cases of both Joanne
Little and Yvonne Wanrow, two women of color who, like Garcia, had
killed (white) men in self-defense. In the mid-70s, I interviewed
Jews from India, Iran, Afghanistan, and North Africa, and Jews who
had fled Arab lands about "cultural" or "ethnic"
racism in Israel. By the early 1970s, I also began organizing against
Jew-hatred on the left and among feminists in America. Over the
years, I have lectured on the complexities of both racism and sexism
in the Caribbean, Europe, the Middle East, and in Japan. For nearly
30 years, I taught working-class and students of color at a public
university. I admired and loved them and was sometimes able to help
them in ways that changed their views and their lives.
Here's
what's sad. Clearly, my speech touched hearts and minds; there was
room for common ground and for civilized discourse. But not once
the word "Palestine" was uttered, not when "Palestine"
is seen as a symbol for every downtrodden group of color who are
"resisting" the racist-imperialist American and Zionist
Empires. Once the "Palestine" litmus test of political
respectability was raised, everyone responded on cue, as if programmed
and brainwashed. It immediately became a "white" versus
"brown" thing, an "oppressed" versus an "oppressor"
thing.
These
are the Brownshirts of our time. The fact that they are women of
color, womanists/feminists is all the more chilling and tragic.
And unbelievable. And to me: Practically unbearable.
Afterwards,
my son, ever-wise, said: "Well mom, you have your answer. The
Jew-haters will never allow you into their wider, wonderful world.
You can't go back.
"Phyllis
Chesler, Ph.D, is the author of twelve books, including the international
bestseller WOMEN AND MADNESS. Her most recent book is The
New Anti-Semitism: The Current Crisis and What We Must Do About
It.
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