Evelyn Gordon in Commentary
Yesterday, I wrote about a crucial
legal fallacy behind the “Israeli apartheid” canard. But you don’t
actually need to know anything about the Geneva Convention or
international law to know how ridiculous this slur is; it’s enough to
ask yourself one simple question: How many black Africans in other
countries spoke admiringly about South African apartheid as a model
they’d like their own countries to follow? The answer, of course, is not
many–and if Israel really practiced apartheid against Arabs, Middle
Eastern Arabs would respond similarly to an equivalent question about
Israel. Yet in fact, Arabs throughout the Middle East persistently cite
Israeli democracy as the model they’d like their own countries to adopt.
Back
in 2011, when the Arab Spring revolutions were at their height, Haaretz
correspondent Anshel Pfeffer reported being stunned to hear from
demonstrators in both Tunis and Cairo–neither of whom knew he
represented an Israeli newspaper–that they wanted “a democracy like in
Israel.” Just two weeks ago, the Middle East Media Research Institute
published excerpts from articles in the Arab press over the last year
that held up Israel as a model Arab states should learn from–in some
cases, because of its economic, scientific, and democratic achievements,
but in others, because of its democracy and even its morality.
Even
the Palestinians themselves consistently voice admiration for Israeli
democracy. From 1996-2002 (the last year the question was asked),
Palestinian pollster Khalil Shikaki conducted annual polls of what
governments Palestinians admired. “Every year Israel has been the top
performer, at times receiving more than 80 percent approval,” the New
York Times reported in 2003. “The American system has been the next
best, followed by the French and then, distantly trailing, the Jordanian
and Egyptian.” And that’s not because those years, in contrast to
today, were a time of progress and optimism in the peace process: They
were the years of Benjamin Netanyahu’s first government (1996-99), the
collapse of the Camp David talks (2000) and the height of the second
intifada (2000-03).
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