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It was the wrong sort of courage and she was defending the freedom of the wrong people
By Robert Fisk - The Independent - March 11, 2006
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/article350569.ece
You've got to fight. It's the only conclusion I can draw as I see the renewed erosion of our freedom to discuss the
Middle East. The most recent example - and the most shameful - is the cowardly decision of the New York Theatre
Workshop to cancel the Royal Court's splendid production of My Name Is Rachel Corrie.
It's the story - in her own words and emails - of the brave young American woman who travelled to Gaza to protect
innocent Palestinians and who stood in front of an Israeli bulldozer in an attempt to prevent the driver from destroying a
Palestinian home. The bulldozer drove over her and then reversed and crushed her a second time. "My back is broken,"
she said before she died.
An American heroine, Rachel earned no brownie points from the Bush Administration which bangs on about courage
and freedom from oppression every few minutes. Rachel's was the wrong sort of courage and she was defending
the freedom of the wrong people. But when I read that James Nicola, the New York Theatre Workshop's "Artistic Director" - his title really should be in quotation marks - had decided to "postpone" the play "indefinitely" because (reader,
hold your breath) "in our pre-production planning and our talking around and listening in our communities (sic) in New
York, what we heard was that after Ariel Sharon's illness and the election of Hamas. ... we had a very edgy situation",
I didn't know whether to laugh or cry.
So let's confront this tomfoolery. Down in Australia, my old mate Antony
Loewenstein, a journalist and academic, is having an equally vile time. He has completed a critical book on the Israel/Palestine Conflict for Melbourne University Publishing and Jewish communities in Australia are trying to have it censored out of existence before it appears in
August. Last year, Federal Labour MP Michael Danby, who like Loewenstein is Jewish, wrote a letter to the Australian
Jewish News demanding that Lowenstein's publishers should "drop this whole disgusting project". The book, he said,
would be "an attack on the mainstream Australian Jewish Community".
Now the powerful New South Wales Jewish Board of Deputies has weighed in against Loewenstein and efforts are
under way to deprive him of his place on the board of Macquarie University's Centre for Middle East and North African
Studies.
A one-off bit of skulduggery on Israel's behalf? Alas, no. A letter arrived for me last week from Israeli-American
Barbara Goldscheider whose novel "Naqba: The Catastrophe: The Palestinian-Israeli Conflict" has just been published.
She has been attacked, she told me, "Merely because I chose an Arabic title to my novel on the Conflict... My
brother-in-law has broken his relationship with me before he even read the book ... From members of my 'Orthodox'
Jewish Congregation in Bangor (Maine), I received a phone call from an irate 'friend' sputtering ... out: 'Don't you know
the Arabs want to destroy Israel?'"
A talk on her new novel scheduled to take place last month at a conservative synagogue was cancelled "due to the
uproar about my novel". A Boston professor has mercifully written to Goldscheider with what I regard as bloody good
advice. "There's a vicious campaign out there," he said. "Don't cave in."
But what do you do when a publisher - or an "Artistic Director" - caves in? I found out for myself not long ago when
the Military History Society of Ireland asked permission to reprint a paper I had published some years ago on a battle
between the Irish Army's UN battalion in southern Lebanon and Israel's proxy - and brutal - Lebanese Militia, the
so-called "South Lebanon Army", whose psychotic commander was a cashiered Lebanese Army Major called Saad
Haddad.
In the paper, I mentioned how an Israeli Major called Haim extorted money from the inhabitants of the South Lebanese
village of Haris and gave the code name of an Israeli Agent - "Abu Shawki" - who was present at the murder of two
Irish soldiers.
I had published these details many times, both in my own newspaper and in my previous book on the Lebanon War, Pity
the Nation. Major Haddad died of cancer more than 10 years ago. I actually met Haim in the early 1980s as he emerged from a meeting with the mayor of Haris from whom he demanded money to pay Israel's cruel militiamen - the UN was
also present and recorded his threats - while "Abu Shawki", whom the Irish Police would like to interview, later tried to
arrest me in Tyre - and immediately freed me - when I told him I knew that he was a witness to the murder of the two
Irish soldiers.
So what was I supposed to do when I received the following letter from ex-Brigadier General Patrick Purcell of the Irish
Army? "Unfortunately we have been forced to withdraw (your) article in view of a letter from our publisher Irish
Academic Press. It is clear from our contract that (our) Society would be responsible in the event of a libel action." The
enclosed letter from publisher Frank Cass advised that his lawyer had "cautioned" him because I had described Haddad as "psychotic", named the blackmailing Israeli Major and named the Israeli Agent present at the two murders.
It's interesting that Mr Cass's lawyer believes it is possible to libel a man (Haddad) who has been dead for more than a
decade, even more so that he should think that publishing a military code name would prompt this rascal to expose his
real identity in a court of law. As for Major Haim, he remains on UN files as the man who tried - and apparently
succeeded - in forcing the people of southern Lebanon to cough up the cash to pay for their own oppressors.
And the moral of all this? Well obviously, don't contribute articles to the Military History Society of Ireland. But more to
the point, I better remember what I wrote in this newspaper just over six years ago, that "the degree of abuse and outright threats now being directed at anyone ... who dares to criticise Israel ... is fast
reaching McCarthyite proportions. The attempt to force the media to obey Israel's rules is ... international". And growing, I should now add.
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