June 8, 2010
"Any Better Comments?"
The Ambush of Helen Thomas
By GARY LEUPP 
Outrage! 
White House journalist Helen Thomas, covering a
Jewish American Heritage Month celebration at the White House May 27,
is accosted on the sidewalk by someone who asks: “Any comments about
Israel? We’re asking everybody today---any comments about Israel?” 
Smiling in grandmotherly fashion----the way an 89
year-old woman might do when suddenly approached by an 17 year old boy
who seems sincerely interested in her thoughts---she replies: “Tell
them to get the hell out of Palestine.” 
 “Oooh…” responds the questioner. “Any better comments?” (A voice in the 
background: “Helen is fun!”)
“Hah hah hah,” laughs Helen. “ Remember these people are occupied, and it’s 
their land, not German, and not Poland.”
“So where should they go? What should they do?”
“They could go home. Poland. Germany.”
“Where’s home? You’re saying Jews should go back to Poland and Germany?”
“And America and everywhere else.”
A week later this video of the impromptu interview
appears on “RabbiLIVE.com,” website of Rabbi David Nesenoff. (Who by
the way is this “live rabbi”? Who is this rabbi character who’s
terminated the career of a Washington press icon? How many journalists
are even asking?) 
The clip begins and ends with strident musical
accompaniment, and concludes with the caption: “Six million Jews were
killed in Germany and Poland. Does Helen know that Jews have lived in
Israel way before the Holocaust. How can Helen report unbiased?” 
According to one report the questioner was Adam
Nesenoff, David’s son. The latter supposedly “sat on the Thomas scoop”
for a week while his “webmaster son” Adam took final exams. 
“So we waited,” Rabbi Nesenoff told Yahoo News. “And
of course, during the waiting of it, the flotilla happened.” Nesenoff
doesn’t explain how the Israeli assault on the Gaza aid flotilla
connects to Helen or the timing of the video release. But clearly it
(and perhaps Thomas’s comments about it?) influenced the timing of the
video. And once it was online, the White House---which was not outraged
at all by the murder of 9 aid workers by the “Israeli Defense Forces”
last week---immediately condemned the journalist.
Nesenoff contacted her employer, Hearst Newspapers, telling them they had “to 
get rid of her.” They did.
Outrage! About what? A journalist is suddenly
approached on the sidewalk by two high school students who say they’re
asking everybody today if they have comments about Israel. (Might I
ask: Why did this happen in the first place? Was this for a school
project? Are there other filmed interviews young Adam would
like to share, to prove that he and his friend were really fact “asking
everybody” and not  just Helen?)
“Tell them to get the hell out of Palestine.” This
was obviously a totally spontaneous statement, and could mean simply,
“Tell them to withdraw from the occupied territories, as demanded by
the entire world.” 
The interviewer responds with apparent humor, asking for more comments.
So the veteran journalist says, “Remember these people are occupied,
and it’s their land.” It is of course absolutely true that Zionists
occupy Palestinian land. This fact, not the comment, is outrageous.
Most people on the planet understand this.
“Where should they go?” asks the youth rhetorically, perhaps psyched for his 
gotcha
moment.  In this elliptical conversation, the “they” could have been
interpreted by Helen, who has just mentioned “occupied” land, as
referring to settlers on the West Bank or on the Golan Heights. The
topic under discussion is Palestine, which in U.S. journalistic useage
is more likely to refer to a future Palestinian state than to the state
of Israel in its 1967 borders. But the video is skewed to make it seem
as though Thomas said all Jews in Israel and the occupied territories
should leave, and go back to places where mass murder occurred. 
To those who care about fairness, I suggest that’s
unfair. That’s not what Helen Thomas said. She said Israel should leave
Palestine. When prompted to say where those referenced should go, she
referred to countries with historically large Jewish populations. Lots
of Israelis are in fact leaving Israel for those countries.  (About
14,000 Israeli Jews left annually between 1990 and 2005. According to a
2007 poll, half of Israeli youth between ages 14 and 18 express the
desire to live outside of Israel, which they see as having a bleak
future. A huge percentage of Israelis has or plans to inquire about
obtaining foreign nationality; many Europeans offer this generously to
descendents of citizens who can prove their ancestry. The Berlin
synagogue has 12,000 members and is flourishing. There are now maybe
55,000 Jews in Poland, many emigrating from Israel following Poland’s
admission to the EU.)
It’s not clear exactly what Thomas was saying in
this spontaneous, fragmentary sidewalk conversation with kids who said
that they were, for some reason, asking “everyone to comment about
Israel.” Rabbi Nesenoff says there are more excerpts to come, but it’s
likely that the above piece is the most “controversial.” 
But let’s just suppose that Thomas is saying that
the establishment of the Jewish state in 1948 was itself a bad thing, a
catastrophy for the indigenous Palestinian people. (These by the way
almost surely include descendents of the ancient Judaeans. There was
never a total dispersion-- -diaspora- --of Jews from Roman Judaea.
Following the rebellions against Roman rule in the province between 66
and 135, a large but undetermined number of Jews were driven from
Judaea as punishment. But the Romans did not, and probably couldn’t
have, thoroughly “dispersed” the Jews. Many remained, some becoming
Christians and later, Muslims.  It is altogether likely that the DNA of
many Palestinians is closer to that of the first century Judaeans than
to that of Jews with centuries of European ancestry. And by the first
century there were already huge numbers of Jews outside Judaea, many
voluntarily, constituting trading communities from Britain to India.
St. Paul visited many synagogues in Anatolia and Greece and dreamed of
preaching the Christian gospel to the Jews of Spain.)
Let’s say Thomas is saying that the Zionists should
have stayed in Europe (where anti-Semitism has greatly diminished in
the last half-century,  typically flourishing now mainly as a result of
Israeli policy towards Palestinians) rather than pursuing their agenda
in Palestine under Turkish rule or the British mandate. Maybe she’s
saying that it was wrong for the Zionists to terrorize Palestinians
into fleeing their villages in the diaspora of 1948. Maybe she’s saying
that it’s wrong for Israel to accept any Jew (as defined by the
rabbinical establishment) as a citizen while denying hundreds of
thousands of Arabs the right to return to their homeland. If so, many
agree with her. I do, certainly.
But there are some who demand that we all accept a certain understanding of 
Israel. Everyone must, to avoid charges of anti-Semitism, agree on these points:

1. The establishment of the state of Israel was
absolutely necessary, to prevent the annihilation of the Jewish people
in a future holocaust. (This is of course an unproveable assertion. The
global Jewish population today is about what it was in the
1910s---about 16 million---and if it is declining it’s mostly because
of birth control and intermarriage. The prospect for future Auschwitzes
seems minimal.) 
2. The Jewish state must be within the boundaries of
the ancient state of Israel, as it existed during the (legendary) reign
of King David, as described in the Bible. It is the right of Jews to 
reconstitute that state, from which they were wrongly driven. It has always 
been theirs,
no matter where they roamed. It is their “birthright” to live in
Israel. (Tens of millions of Christian Zionists embrace this notion,
noting that God, in the Bible, made the Jews his Chosen People and gave
them that land. Enough said!)
3. The establishment of the modern state of Israel
was the result of a just and humane struggle. The displacement of
hundreds of thousands of Palestinian Arabs was their own fault, or a
consequence of propaganda from Arab regimes urging them to flee.
(Israeli historians like the estimable Ilan Pappe have effectively
disproven this.)
4. The occupation of the lands invaded in 1967 is
necessary as a security measure against Arab anti-Semitism, irrational
anti-Jewish hate. (You can maybe advocate withdrawal from the
territories, and even promote a two-state solution, without being
called anti-Semitic. But if you note matter-of-factly that the
occupation is against international law, is cruelly implemented, and
produces enormous suffering, expect charges of anti-Semitism. )
If you don’t agree that Israel is a moral exemplar
and light to the world, “the only democracy in the Middle East” just
attending reasonably to its security needs against a world that is (for
no good reason) hostile to itself, you can be hounded, harrassed,
intimidated, discredited, denied tenure, fired.  Helen was fired. 
That’s the real outrage here.
“So we waited. And of course, during the waiting of
it, the flotilla happened.” Yes. A 19 year old Turkish-American boy
(among nine others) was shot to death at close range in the head and
back in international waters by Israeli hijackers wo’ve subsequently
claimed that that their victims wanted to “lynch” them. They
effectively conveyed the message: “Don’t mess with Israel.”  And then
89 year old Helen got ambushed (lynched?) by this innocent-looking kid
on the street. 
The message? Shut up, you critics of Israel, you terrorists, you anti-Semites!
I hope Helen Thomas keeps talking and writing. She’s
understood and exposed the brutal realities of recent history, and is
much too young to shut up now.


Gary Leupp
is Professor of History at Tufts University, and holds a secondary
appointment in the Department of Religion. He is the author of Servants, 
Shophands and Laborers in in the Cities of Tokugawa Japan; Male Colors: The 
Construction of Homosexuality in Tokugawa Japan; and Interracial Intimacy in 
Japan: Western Men and Japanese Women, 1543-1900. He is also a contributor to 
CounterPunch' s merciless chronicle of the wars on Iraq, Afghanistan and 
Yugoslavia, Imperial Crusades. He can be reached at: gle...@granite. tufts.edu  







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