Ruthie Blum - Israel Hayom
One of the highlights
of the annual report released on Tuesday by Israeli State Comptroller
Judge Yosef Shapira is the government's failure to combat the boycott,
divestment and sanctions movement and other attempts at delegitimizing
the Jewish state.
According to Shapira,
no significant victories have been won in this battle, because the two
ministries charged with waging it -- Foreign Affairs and Strategic
Affairs -- have been too busy bickering with each other over purviews
and powers to join forces in what should be a common war with a shared
goal.
One doesn't know whether to laugh or cry about such a critique.
Though it's healthy to
have an independent body monitoring government activities, certain
phenomena are so inherent, self-evident and redundant that they're not
worth wasting paper to expose. Two of these can't be stressed enough.
The first is that
democratic governments by their nature are bureaucracies whose biggest
claim to fame is inefficiency. This is true in general and of countries
like Israel in particular. Though headed by a highly savvy, free-market
maven, it continues to operate like a socialist apparatus. And though
its citizens have ample evidence at their disposal to grasp that private
endeavors always get things done better and more cheaply, they still
can't get it through their simultaneously innovative and thick skulls
that the government is a necessary pill to swallow, not some doctor
capable of curing all ills. This is an irrefutable truth.
Another is that no
amount of quality "hasbara" -- an untranslatable Hebrew word for public
diplomacy, the field of Israel's making a case for itself in the
international arena -- can prevent or eliminate anti-Semitism.
Nor is lamenting about
how poorly the Israeli government rates on this score the least bit new.
In the aftermath of the Six-Day War in 1967, when Israel's reputation
in the eyes of the world shifted from David to Goliath, the issue of
explaining why the Jewish state was still a moral entity surrounded by
enemies bent on its destruction came to the fore and has been a point of
debate, at home and abroad, ever since.
Self-flagellation may
be a trait of the tribe, as is hysteria from Diaspora Jews about the
combination of arrogance and naivete that Israelis have historically
exhibited in the face of political onslaughts. But in this case, I have
always considered both to be unfair.
In the past, we heard
incessant whining about the fact that not enough foreign service
staffers spoke proper English, or the other languages of the countries
to which they were dispatched. It was also a national pastime to tear
one's hair out when watching a debate between an Israeli and an Arab on
CNN or the BBC (well before Fox News was launched).
"Oy, it was soooo
embarrassing," Israelis would wail at the water cooler about one or
another diplomat who spoke on TV with a heavy accent. "No wonder we're
losing the propaganda war."
What nobody seemed to
notice was that the Palestinian in the studio had ranted in equally
terrible English, while presenting an utterly incoherent argument, based
on bald-faced lies. In other words, it wasn't the quality or content of
their presentations that mattered, but rather the fact that Israel --
the collective Jew -- had become the bad guy. And no number of Berlitz
courses could have countered that.
Proof that making
Israel's case in eloquent English does not put a dent in the global
assault against the Jewish state lies in the fact that Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu is a master at it, yet the situation has grown worse,
not better.
On the other side of
the ocean, while figures like Alan Dershowitz in the United States,
Irwin Cotler in Canada, Michael Gove in Britain and hundreds of other
tireless defenders of Israel have stepped up their campaigns to
contradict the false narratives that are taking campuses and political
parties by storm, the BDS movement particularly, and anti-Semitism in
general, have continued to rage on, spreading like a deadly virus immune
to all available treatment.
This is not to say that
such efforts are in vain. On the contrary. Not only do they provide
ammunition and solace to the many "lone soldiers" at universities and
elsewhere who are caught in the anti-Israel crossfire, but such tenacity
has borne actual fruit, such as the blocking of BDS bills and altering
of hostile resolutions.
It is good to know that
the state comptroller considers battling BDS to be a serious enough
priority to warrant mention in his report. And if he were to conclude
that government resources would be better handled by private individuals
and groups with creativity, know-how, dedication and a lack of
diplomatic constraint, I would champion his findings.
But neither he nor the
rest of us should be under any illusions about the root and character of
Israel-bashing and anti-Semitism, which are not the Israeli
government's fault.
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