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Hypocrisy!
By
David A. Harris
Executive Director
American Jewish
Committee
January 26, 2009
Dear Ms. Trine
Lilleng,
You were an
unknown Norwegian
diplomat till this
month.
No longer.
As first secretary
in the Norwegian
Embassy in Saudi
Arabia, you
recently sent out
an email on your
office account in
which you
declared: "The
grandchildren of
Holocaust
survivors from
World War II are
doing to the
Palestinians
exactly what was
done to them by
Nazi Germany."
Accompanying your
text were photos,
with an emphasis
on children,
seeking to
juxtapose the
Holocaust with the
recent Israeli
military operation
in Gaza.
Clearly, you are
miscast in your
role as a
diplomat, all the
more so of a
nation that has
sought to play a
mediating role in
the Arab-Israeli
conflict.
In fact, you're
desperately in
need of some
education.
Let's begin with
your current
posting. You've
been in Riyadh sin
ce 2007.
If you're so
anguished by human
rights violations,
perhaps you could
have begun by
devoting some of
your attention -
and email blasts -
to what surrounds
you.
Or were your eyes
diplomatically
shut?
Have you failed to
notice the many
legal executions,
including
beheadings, going
on in your
assigned country?
Have you ignored
the often abysmal
treatment of
foreign workers,
many from Asia,
who also happen to
be
disproportionately
counted among the
victims of Saudi
capital
punishment?
Have you neglected
the gender
apartheid that
surrounds you? Did
you ever look out
of your car to
notice that Saudi
women are
proscribed from
driving, and
that's hardly the
worst of it?
Have you checked
the skyline of
Riyadh or Jeddah
lately to count
the number of
church spires or
other non-Muslim
houses of worship?
Okay, you were
AWOL on those
issues. Maybe you
just didn't want
to offend your
hosts by speaking
the truth, or
maybe you're
suffering from
that diplomatic
disease known as "localitis"
or "clientitis."
But surely a woman
like you, with
such capacity for
empathy for those
in far-away
places, and
especially for
children in
danger, couldn't
remain silent
about other human
rights
transgressions,
could she?
After all, could
an individual so
deeply moved by
the plight of
Palestinians in
Gaza remain silent
about what a
New York Times
columnist earlier
this month
described as "hell
on earth" -
Zimbabwe? Could a
person so
anguished by the
fate of
Palestinian
children stay mum
about a country
where a girl's
life expectancy at
birth is 34, much
less than half
that of her
Norwegian
counterpart, and
where the health
care sector has
vaporized, all
thanks to the
one-man rule of
Robert Mugabe?
Could such a
dedicated humanist
possibly avert her
eyes from the
deadliest conflict
since the Second
World War, which
has killed over
five million
people, many of
them children, in
the Congo in the
past decade - not
to mention the
documented and
widespread use of
torture, rape, and
arbitrary
detention?
An observer of
such acute
sensitivity could
hardly hold her
tongue while
Afghan girls
attempting to go
to school have
been doused with
acid by those who
wish to deny young
women access to
education,
reminiscent of the
five years of
Taliban rule,
could she?
In neighboring
Pakistan, where
you served in the
Norwegian embassy
for three years,
the beleaguered
human rights
community must
have been
fortunate to have
such an
impassioned voice
for all that's
wrong in this
failing state. Or
was that voice,
perhaps, on mute?
The children of
Sderot, the
Israeli town near
the Gaza border,
have been in
desperate need of
just such a
spokesperson as
you for the past
eight years.
After all, their
town has been in
the crosshairs of
literally
thousands of
missiles and
mortars fired from
Gaza. Those
Israeli children
live with all the
signs of trauma,
knowing that, w
ith only 15
seconds warning,
they could be hit
at any time in
their schools,
their parks, or
their beds. Yet,
during my visit
there last week,
for some reason,
those children and
their parents had
yet to hear you
speak out for
them. What a pity!
And the children
of Iran could use
your help as well.
According to human
rights groups,
Iran has no
compunction about
executing children
or those who were
children when
their crimes were
allegedly
committed.
Oh, and by the
way, your
compassionate help
would also
undoubtedly be
welcomed by others
under the gun in
Iran, including
women's rights
activists, union
organizers,
student
protesters,
independent
journalists,
reformist
politicians, and
religious
minorities. And
let's not forget,
once again, the
children of
Israel, who,
according to the
Iranian president,
don't have a right
to live.
But wait! A Google
search about you
reveals nothing,
not a single word,
regarding your
views on Zimbabwe,
Congo,
Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Sderot,
or Iran. Or, for
that matter,
Burma, Darfur,
Syria. Shall I go
on?
Only Israel, faced
with those who
wish to destroy
it, manages to
prompt your
impassioned
correspondence and
righteous
indignation. Why?
No less, your
stunning lack of
education extends
beyond the
contemporary world
to 20th century
history,
specifically the
Holocaust.
Your invocation of
the Holocaust to
describe what's
taken place in
Gaza is, frankly,
nothing short of
obscene.
Your claim that
the grandchildren
of the survivors
are doi ng to the
Palestinians
exactly what was
done to them goes
beyond any norm of
decency, much less
honesty.
Approve or
disapprove of the
Israeli military
operation, but
there is no basis
whatsoever for
such a comparison.
When Israel
entered Gaza in a
war of
self-defense in
1967, the
population was
360,000. After
Israel withdrew
totally from Gaza
in 2005, it was
estimated at 1.4
million.
Would that the
Jewish population
under Nazi rule
had quadrupled!
When Israel
entered Gaza in
1967, life
expectancy for
women was 46. When
it left Gaza, it
was 73.
Shall we even
bother to discuss
life expectancy
for Jews under
Nazi occupation?
The Second World
War in Europe
lasted from
September 1, 1939
to May 8, 1945 -
68 months in all.
That means an
average monthly
extermination rate
of nearly 90,000
Jews.
Compare that to
the total number
of victims in Gaza
over three weeks -
roughly
guesstimated at
more or less 1,000
- and recall that
the majority were
armed fighters
committed to
Israel's
destruction, who
used civilians,
including
children, as human
shields, mosques
as arms depots,
and hospitals as
sanctuaries.
Believe me, Ms.
Lilleng, if the
"grandchildren of
the Holocaust
survivors" had
wanted to do
exactly what the
Nazis did to their
grandparents, they
would have
unleashed their
full air, land,
and sea power.
They would have
thrown the Israel
Defense Forces'
ethical guidelines
to the wind,
kicked out the UN
and Red Cross
personnel on the
ground, stopped h
umanitarian
transports of
food, fuel, and
medicine,
prevented media
reporting, and
left absolutely
nothing - and no
one - standing.
Unless, of course,
they needed slave
labor, in which
case they would
have carted off
the able-bodied to
work in Auschwitz
replicas until
they dropped. Or
material for
ghoulish medical
experimentation,
in which case, in
the spirit of
Mengele, they
would have kept
Palestinian twins
alive temporarily.
But Israel didn't
do any of these
things. It's a
peace-seeking
democracy
dedicated to the
rule of law -
unlike so many of
the countries
whose horrific
sins you blithely
choose to
overlook.
What are we to
make of your
selective moral
outrage and rank
hypocrisy?
You ought to take
a look in the
mirror and ask
yourself why
Israel, and only
Israel, makes your
blood boil and
leads you to speak
out, even at the
risk of grossly
distorting both
reality and
history.
The answer, Ms.
Lilleng, should be
painfully obvious.
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