The incredible gall of Haaretz

Isi Leibler with Yitzhak Rabin, circa 1992

The gall of Haaretz is incredible. I previously reported on the refusal of Haaretz to provide me with a right of reply to an article criticizing me by Bradley Burston which was published in the Hebrew and English sections of the newspaper and appeared for three weeks on the homepage of their website.

On Tuesday November 2, the homepage of the English website carried yet another article attacking me by Carlo Strenger, a Professor of Psychology at Tel Aviv University, titled “Memo to Jewish haters of Liberals: The Middle Ages are over.”  This was a defamatory attack utterly distorting what I had written. Strenger accused me of seeking to reintroduce medieval excommunications “against the large proportion of the Jewish people who disagree with him”. He implied that the alleged murderer Yaacov Teitel could have been influenced by my writings and links the J Street convention with the 14th anniversary of Rabin’s assassination, implicitly suggesting that similar views to those I express led to the assassination of Rabin.

I wrote once more to Haaretz stating “Once again you have a piece on the home page of Haaretz attacking me. Whereas Burston’s article represented a viewpoint from which I differ, the piece by Carlo Strenger is an absolute misrepresentation of what I wrote. I am sure you are aware that the Guardian did provide me with an opportunity to respond. One would perhaps expect that an Israeli newspaper which continuously publishes views which most Israelis would consider extreme, would provide an Israeli whose views have been misrepresented and condemned, with equal opportunities to those provided to columnists who demonize the State and the IDF. I therefore once again formally request a right of reply as distinct from a letter to the editor.”

The editor of the English edition replied informing me that the matter was beyond her jurisdiction and passed my communication to the editor of the internet edition. To date, I have not even had the courtesy of an acknowledgement.

Strenger’s distortion of the facts is typical of the effort by extremists to deny any discussion relating to those who use the instrumentalities of the state to demonize and even call for international boycotts of Israel.

My only reference to excommunication was to point out that self hating Jews can be traced back to apostates in the Middle Ages who were excommunicated by Jewish communities when they wrote obscene anti Semitic tracts which frequently culminated with massacres.

I did say that those self loathing Israelis who exploit academic freedom to undermine the state and call on the world to boycott even their own universities and institutions are abusing academic freedom and should not be provided tenure at institutions funded by Israeli taxpayers and Zionist philanthropies. I stand by this.

I also said that Diaspora Jews who are one dimensional Israel bashers or actively campaign to persuade foreign governments to pressure the Israeli government to make further unilateral concession should be marginalized from mainstream Jewish organizations. I compare these to Jewish communists who defended Soviet anti Semitism and exploited “peace” as an instrument to promote the objectives of the Evil Empire. I also stand by this.

I consider as obscene and not worthy of comment the implication by Strenger that my views create insane monsters like the alleged murderer Yaakov Teitel.

I also object to Strenger and those like him who exploit the memory of Rabin to promote an agenda which runs contrary to everything Rabin believed in. I knew Rabin and met with him frequently. Alas, the Oslo Accords over which he presided proved to be disastrous. But he was a patriot, a Zionist and a man whose motivations were pure. I will not repeat the language Rabin used to describe those Israelis who opposed him when he was alive, and yet today have the chutzpa to bracket themselves with him whilst promoting views he detested.

ileibler@netvision.net.il

Comments

  • zalmi u said:

    The last line is a killer. Bravo.

  • Martin Lackner said:

    The article attacking you for your rightful opinions appears to be the result of the direction the world has taken after WWII and which culminate today with many people not understanding or supporting the right of others to disagree. This downhill attitude is reflected lately by coarse language, insults and demeaning name calling by many people who have stopped understanding the words “FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION” or as Voltaire very clearly illustrated in his own words: “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it…”

    There has been an erosion of chivalry, understanding and a desire to hear out divergent opinions, much of it from public figures, who consistently twist and re-arrange words to suit their purposes and manipulate the masses. This may have been the case since the world began, but lately with communications wide-spread and especially movies and the internet dishonesty has become more pervasive and widespread.

    Intelligent, educated people, sad to say have taken to it like bees to honey and with few exceptions, many “leaders”, take to deceiving those around them like bees take to honey. Bertrand Russell said, (I quote): “We are faced with the paradoxical fact that education has become one of the chief obstacles to intelligence and freedom of thought”

    Haaretz has always been known, at least by many here, to be a paper that will not support fairness or face reality, since they have an agenda…It hasn’t gotten them far, or created a good image for the paper, but it sells…So far for honor and fairness of the press. And there are many like that today, all over the world. Lies, falsehoods and disrespect are spread far and wide. It appears as if nobody fears either the law or the wrath of G-d… not even their conscience…We have the Arab media demonizing Israel and each other, guests to the United Nations making speeches that were it not for their extraordinary and depraved behavior, might be taken seriously, (and many do take them seriously). Overall it is a disgusting display of crassness

    Honor and respect, honesty and character are laughed at in most of society, and the spiral continues downwards, who knows where or when it will end.

    Your opinion of some Diaspora, U.S. Jews eager to exert more pressure on Israel to cede additional land to the Arabs, is a very apparent fact here. This new generation of Jews have not experienced the Holocaust, know little about Israel and have been raised with the 60’s idea of “Peace”…at any cost…They don’t understand and are unable to grasp the consequences of a non existent Israel. As was the case in 1939. Their reactions are knee-jerk for the so called “under-dog”, not intelligently thought through.

    A few decades ago, your ideas and opinions, would have carried some weight with Haaretz and Professor Strenger. Long ago, some in the media and elites might have disagreed with you, possibly not to the point of censoring you. The Guardian of London proves that there are still a few fair exceptions.This is common practice these days. For some, there is not even a Freedom of Conscience to hold onto…Abraham Lincoln put it best (I quote): “Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves…”

  • Steve Lieblich said:

    Those who use the memory of Rabin to promote appeasement should be reminded of the following excerpt from Yitzhak Rabin’s last address to the Knesset (Oct 5, 1995), which Martin Sherman recently recalled:

    … The borders of the State of Israel, during the permanent solution, will be beyond the lines which existed before the Six Day War. We will not return to the 4 June 1967 lines.

    And these are the main changes, not all of them, which we envision and want in the permanent solution:

    A. First and foremost, united Jerusalem, which will include both Ma’ale Adumim and Givat Ze’ev - as the capital of Israel, under Israeli sovereignty, while preserving the rights of the members of the other faiths, Christianity and Islam, to freedom of access and freedom of worship in their holy places, according to the customs of their faiths.

    B. The security border of the State of Israel will be located in the Jordan Valley, in the broadest meaning of that term.

    C. Changes which will include the addition of [the settlements] Gush Etzion, Efrat, Beitar and other communities, most of which are in the area east of what was the “Green Line” prior to the Six-Day War.

    D. The establishment of blocs of settlements in Judea and Samaria, like the one in Gush Katif…



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