News Bulletin! Jewish Currents
Senior
Reporter Alex Kane
December 28th, 2021
On Sunday, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who crusaded against apartheid and
helped lead South Africa into a new democratic era, died
at the age of 90. Leaders around the world, from the Dalai Lama
to the mayor of New
York, issued tributes to Tutu after news of his death
broke.
By contrast, Israeli officials and the American Jewish establishment generally stayed silent.
But they weren’t so quiet over the past two decades, as Tutu’s repeated
denunciations of Israel’s rule over Palestinians and his comparisons between
the South African and Israeli versions of apartheid earned him the ire of
Jewish leaders in both countries, as well as the United States. Tutu’s
pronouncements sparked a particularly intense reaction; criticism hurts more
when it comes from someone widely lionized as a moral beacon.
Israel was one of South Africa’s closest allies during apartheid, even offering
to sell the apartheid regime nuclear warheads in 1975. As early as the 1980s,
the Anti-Defamation League kept a watchful eye on the US anti-apartheid
movement as activists criticized Israel’s close relationship with Pretoria. In
1960, the ADL hired a
private spy named Roy Bullock to collect information on Arab American activists
and the broader left, which he did for the next 30 years. As Sasha
Polakow-Suransky notes
in his book The
Unspoken Alliance: Israel’s Secret Relationship With Apartheid South Africa, the
ADL dispatched Bullock “to attend the meetings of U.S.-based anti-apartheid
groups, collect their publications, and take down the license plate numbers of
leaders’ cars—including visitors such as Archbishop Desmond Tutu and South
African Communist Party leader Chris Hani.”
The attacks escalated as the archbishop grew more outspoken about Israel’s
military occupation after the end of apartheid in South Africa. In 2002, Tutu gave a speech
to a Boston conference calling for an end to Israel’s occupation in which he
said that, while “Israel has a right to secure borders,” a recent trip to
Israel/Palestine reminded him “so much of what happened to us black people in
South Africa.” The checkpoints in the occupied West Bank humiliate
Palestinians, he said, comparing them to what South Africans experienced “when
young white police officers prevented us from moving about.” He also noted that
some were scared to forthrightly criticize Israel because of the power of the
“Jewish lobby.”
The next year, student groups at Yeshiva University’s Cardozo Law School
decided to honor Tutu. In response, American Jewish officials joined some
right-wing Jewish students in criticizing the decision. Mark Weitzman, of the
Simon Wiesenthal Center, told The New York Jewish Week that Tutu
shouldn’t be honored because he “blames Israel disproportionately for tensions
in the Middle East.” ADL head Abe Foxman was even harsher: “He has flirted with
anti-Semitism and his condemnations have been angry and nasty.”
In 2005, inspired by the global movement to isolate South Africa’s apartheid
regime, Palestinian civil society groups issued a call to boycott, divest from,
and sanction Israel. Tutu became one of the BDS movement’s most prominent
endorsers. Seven years after the BDS call first emerged, the United Methodist
Church debated whether to divest their funds from corporations that do business
with the IDF. Tutu issued an open letter,
urging the church “to disinvest from companies who benefit from the Occupation
of Palestine. This is a moral position that I have no choice but to support,
especially since I know of the effect that Boycotts, Disinvestment, and
Sanctions had on the apartheid regime in South Africa.” As part of Tutu’s
argument, he wrote that “The situation in Israel and Palestine pains me greatly
since it is the place where God formed a very particular relationship with a particular
group of people; Hebrews who were oppressed as slaves in another land. As time
moved on, these people disobeyed God, and time and time again the prophets had to
call them back to their deepest values.” In response, the ADL argued Tutu
“veered into classical religion-based anti-Semitism.” (The church declined
divestment that year, but the church pension board removed
investments from Israeli banks that fund illegal West Bank settlements in
2016.)
Nineteen years after Tutu first raised the apartheid comparison—a parallel
originally raised by Palestinian
intellectuals and, in fact, by South African
apartheid officials
themselves—the rest of the world is beginning to catch up. In January, the
leading Israeli human rights group B’Tselem proclaimed
that Israel had instituted an “apartheid regime.” In April, Human Rights Watch issued
its own report, arguing that certain Israeli abuses targeting Palestinians made
Israel guilty of “the crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution.”
The American Jewish establishment’s response to the charges of apartheid,
though, hasn’t changed. The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish
Organizations, the umbrella lobby group for the Jewish establishment, denounced
HRW for inflaming tensions, inciting violence, and “giving voice” to “vicious
hate.” But with no end in sight to Israel’s military occupation, it’s
inevitable that more liberal organizations like HRW will follow in Tutu’s
footsteps, leaving the Jewish establishment with fewer and fewer allies in its
defense of apartheid.
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