http://rabble.ca/print/news/2010/03/coming-out-against-israeli-apartheid-case-solidarity
Coming out against Israeli apartheid: The case for solidarity
By *Cathryn Atkinson*
Created *Mar 11 2010 - 1:58am*

Story Publish Date:
March 11, 2010

Each year, in the lead up to Israeli Apartheid Week (IAW), organizers expect
backlash and attempts to shut down events. IAW 2010 was no different. The
Ontario Legislature condemned IAW, The Toronto District School Board banned
IAW from its premises even though no events were scheduled there, and
Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff slammed IAW for the second year in a row.

One noticeable difference is that this year queer issues have been front and
centre in the attacks on IAW. This is no doubt in response to the "Coming
out Against Apartheid" event at IAW, along with the huge success of Queers
Against Israeli Apartheid (QuAIA). This backlash is an indication of success
-- our movement is growing and evoking strong reactions from Israel's
supporters. While this is something to be proud of, it means that now more
than ever, all of us need to be prepared to answer these attacks by clearly
giving our reasons for being queers against Israeli apartheid. My goal in
writing is to give everyone the rationale behind queer Palestine solidarity
organizing so that they can be empowered to counter the homophobic, sexist
and racist arguments put forward by Israel's supporters.

So I am going to take you on a little journey into pro-Israel logic around
queer issues -- along the way, I will challenge their rationale and
dismantle their arguments, so that when readers are confronted with them,
they can readily do the same.

The Zionists attacks queer down into three main points:

1. Palestinian society is inherently homophobic.

2. Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East and the only safe-haven
for queers.

3. Queers worldwide should naturally align with queer-friendly Israel, not
homophobic Palestinians.


*Palestine is Homophobic*

Let's look at the first argument: Palestinian society is homophobic. I
cannot disagree with that statement. Queer Palestinians do face violence and
discrimination and it is unacceptable. I oppose homophobia in Palestine, but
I oppose it everywhere because it exists everywhere, even here. Queers in
Canada have achieved some rights and many people have dedicated their lives
to fighting for those rights. Despite what Canadian nationalists want us to
believe, we didn't get these rights because we live in the enlightened,
tolerant west -- it was not simply the natural course of history here.
Social movements achieved these changes through struggle. Anyone engaged in
activism knows how hard it is to mobilize people even under the best of
circumstances. Now imagine trying to organize under military occupation and
apartheid -- these are the enormous additional challenges facing Palestinian
queer social movements.

Just take for example the fact that there is no place on earth, not one
square foot where a queer Palestinian citizen of Israel, a queer from Gaza,
the West Bank, and a queer Palestinian refugee could meet. Gazans are under
siege and cannot leave, people in the West Bank need permits to travel,
Palestinian citizens of Israel cannot go to Gaza or the West Bank and many
refugees cannot go anywhere. So before we criticize Palestinian homophobia,
we need to look at the challenges facing activists there, and remember that
there are activists there. We need to ask how can we best support queer
Palestinian social movements? The answer to me is clearly that we fight
Israeli apartheid. Ending apartheid is good for all Palestinian social
movements -- queer and straight.

Queer Palestinians are oppressed by Israel as Palestinians, not just as
queers. We cannot choose to support them as queers, but not as Palestinians
or vice versa. Real support comes through solidarity -- it can and does
effect change. In South Africa, alongside queer mobilizing there,
international queer anti-apartheid activism shifted the ANC's position on
queer issues and to this day, South Africa has some of the most progressive
gay rights in the world. This can happen in Palestine if we work alongside
queer Palestinians through genuine solidarity and supporting the campaign
for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions <http://www.bdsmovement.net/>
[1](BDS). You can see that happening already. When queer filmmaker
John Greyson
pulled his film from the Toronto International Film Festival in protest over
the city-to-city spotlight on Tel Aviv, he was attacked in fiercely
homophobic ways. In response, the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and
Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) put out a statement
condemning<http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1100>
[2] the homophobia of those attacks. In early 2010, Judith Butler, one of
the most famous queer theorists taught guest
lectures<http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1152017.html>
[3] at Bir Zeit University near Ramallah. How does this happen? It happens
because Greyson and Butler stand with Palestinians, support BDS and their
solidarity is clearly having an impact.

*Israel is a safe haven for queers in the Middle East*

Since we are on a journey into the pro-Israel mind, for the sake of argument
I will take their first point as true -- Palestinian society is inherently
homophobic. That brings me to point two -- Israel is the only democracy in
the Middle East and the only safe haven for queers. First of all, Israel is
not a democracy -- it is an apartheid state. Apartheid is a crime under
international law, a crime of systematic segregation based on race or
ethnicity. Israel's war crimes in the West Bank -- settlements, checkpoints,
the Apartheid Wall -- and last year's brutal military assault and the now
three-year-long siege of Gaza are well documented, but the situation inside
Israel itself is also one of apartheid. Palestinian citizens of Israel are
second-class citizens -- they cannot own much of the land, their towns and
villages receive limited services, if any, and recently Israel banned the
teaching of the Nakba -- Arabic for catastrophe, referring to the 1948
ethnic cleansing of Palestine in order to create the State of Israel. Israel
is at best an ethnic democracy, meaning that membership in an ethnic group
is required to have full rights. An ethnic democracy is not a democracy, it
is apartheid.

In terms of queer rights, yes, Israel has pride parades, some protection
against discrimination and homosexuality is not illegal. Israel is not free
of homophobia -- the murder of two queer people in Tel Aviv last year, the
stabbings at Jerusalem Pride in 2005 prove that homophobic violence still
exists in Israel. The militarization of Israeli society only increases the
level of violence there. However, for the sake of argument I will humour the
Zionists and say that queers in Israel have a good thing going. The problem
is that none of these rights are truly extended to queer Palestinians. I
want to exemplify this by recounting part of my trip to Palestine this
summer. I was in the West Bank and was invited to Jerusalem Pride. With a
Canadian passport, I can make a trip from Ramallah to Jerusalem, but a queer
Palestinian from the West Bank would have to sneak into Jerusalem for Pride
and could easily wind up in jail instead. At Pride in Jerusalem, soldiers
and police outnumber participants by at least two to one. It may seem
obvious, but if you need an army for your parade, your country is not safe
for queers. All the speeches made at Pride revolved around the theme of
making Jerusalem an open, diverse and welcoming city. It was clearly a
message to homophobes, but in an occupied city that is off limits to
millions of Palestinians, the message is sickeningly ironic. I am not
arguing that queer Israelis should not fight for their rights. My point here
is that whatever rights queer Israeli's enjoy, queer Palestinians do not.
You cannot have true equality when apartheid exists.

*Queers Must Support Israeli Apartheid*

I now turn to the final, crucial step in Zionist logic: queers worldwide
must support gay positive Israel, not homophobic Palestine. Intuitively we
know this is wrong. It is offensive that they think that as queers we define
our solidarity based on their narrow definition of gay rights and that they
think we would forgive racism because they grant some gay rights. Yet
somehow this argument is proving effective. To untangle this one fully
though, we need to talk about what is really going on here. It comes down to
this -- Israel, like most western imperial powers, has managed to co-opt the
language of feminist and queer rights.

To explain how this works, it helps to look at Canada first. So we have the
real Canada -- where there are over 500 murdered or missing aboriginal women
that the police are not searching for, thousands of people, predominantly
women living in poverty across the country and a Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration appointing homophobes to the Immigration and Refugee Board. Then
we have the mythical tolerant multicultural Canada, gay rights leader and
liberator of Afghan women. I must admit the strategy is brilliant -- commit
massive human rights violations, but trumpet the human rights you do offer
in order to cover up your crimes. Then you can claim that unlike non-western
states you respect women and queers and therefore you are civilized,
democratic countries. That is how they demonize non-Western states -- label
them intolerant and justify military occupations that bring tolerance to the
intolerant.

In Israel's case, they claim to be democratic, civilized and tolerant
because, unlike the allegedly sexist, homophobic Palestinians, they respect
women and defend the human rights of gays and lesbians. This becomes
blatantly obvious when you see the way the Israeli State promotes that they
allow women and queer people to serve in the army. This inclusion is used to
make the Israeli army appear tolerant and inclusive. This ignores, of
course, that this "open" and "welcoming" army commits war crimes against
Palestinians -- including women and queer people. There are no gay-friendly
bombs, no feminist checkpoints and no such thing as a moral army.

If we do not challenge Israeli Apartheid as queer people, we allow the
Israeli state to continue to propagate the myth that it is a tolerant,
civilized democracy, even as it commits war crimes and repeatedly violates
international law. When queer people visibly stand up against Israeli
apartheid we interfere, not just with their PR campaigns, but with
myth-making that is vital to letting them get away with apartheid.

*Pride and ‘Politics'*

One of the pro-Israel arguments that came out during protests against QuAIA
marching in the Toronto Pride parade last year was the charge that QuAIA
marching was politicizing Pride. Yes, it is offensive that straight, mostly
homophobic Zionists are trying to tell us what pride is supposed to be
about, but here I am inclined to agree with their assessment. Pride has, in
many ways, lost touch with its radical roots and QuAIA is a return to good
old-fashioned radical queer politics.

At a time where the Canadian military, the police, all political parties and
major corporations march in pride, we need groups like QuAIA and other
radical queer activists to make Pride political again. I often think that it
would not be such a bad thing if pride lost all its corporate sponsorships.
Think about it. What if queers here refused to buy into Canadian nationalism
that tells us how great this country is because we have gay marriage? What
if we instead demand to know why our country is involved in imperialist wars
worldwide and wars on poor people, sex workers, migrants and First Nations
people here at home? What if we recognize that we have won rights through
struggle and honour those who fought, but at the same time critically
examine how some of these rights were because some corporations know there
is money to be made off us? What if we refuse to be a niche market, walking
homo-dollar bills and instead spent our time, energy and resources to stand
up against homophobia, racism, capitalism and apartheid? When that happens,
we will have something to be proud of. So I am encouraging everyone to get
involved -- join Queers Against Israeli Apartheid, and come out for Pride
2010 to make the anti-apartheid contingent bigger, bolder and louder than
last year.

*Jenny Peto is an activist with the Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid.*

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