Ramzy Baroud
October 5, 2023
A new trend is emerging
in the Israeli hasbara discourse targeting Palestinians, Arabs and Muslims:
women’s rights.
The word ‘new’ is not
exactly accurate. The misuse of the genuine struggle for women’s rights in the
Arab and Muslim world is only new insofar as the increasing reliance on the
tactic within the larger Israeli propaganda discourse.
This was demonstrated
in a most bizarre way during the speech of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi on
September 19, at the 78th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New
York.
The story was
orchestrated by Gilad Erdan, a mediocre Israeli diplomat and Tel Aviv’s UN
Ambassador.
Erdan’s real strength
comes from the fact that he is supported by the same Western governments that
continue to fund and defend Israel’s war machine and military occupation of
Palestine.
Naturally, he is also
given a disproportionate amount of media coverage by corporate Western
mainstream media, when compared to any other UN diplomat.
Erdan’s work is
predicated mostly on a single tactic: If he is not pleased by the conduct of
his peers at the UN General Assembly, he simply accuses them of being ‘anti-Semitic’,
as a matter of course.
At times, the entire UN
political body is accused of being anti-Israel and anti-Semitic.
This Israeli strategy –
defaming truthsayers as anti-Semites – only succeeds because it is part of a
massive political and intellectual discourse that is constantly fed by the
media and accepted as a fact by Western politicians.
Indeed, if Erdan is
judged as a diplomat, completely independent from the unquestionable support he
receives by Western media and governments, he would have been forced to find
another profession altogether.
His recent conduct at
the UNGA was a perfect illustration. In a terribly choreographed gesture, he
began walking up and down the Assembly Hall, raising a photo of Mahsa Amini,
who died in Tehran last year. The placard said: “Iranian women deserve freedom
now.”
Consistent with the
rules of the UN, Erdan was eventually removed by security, which he must have
anticipated.
For him, however, his
charade was a success, as it created the needed distraction, not only from the
speech of the Iranian President, but in the coverage of Raisi’s speech
altogether.
Though some have
suggested that Erdan had humiliated himself, namely because of his removal from
the UNGA hall, I wonder if he was, in any way, surprised by the outcome of his
behavior.
He wanted to be a star,
at least for like-minded anti-Iranian governments and organizations; he wanted
the conversation to shift from the rights of the Palestinians to that of
Iranians. For him, the mission was accomplished.
Of the many articles
and news coverage that followed Erdan’s display, a few, even in the Middle
East, spoke about Israel’s war on Palestinian women: the killings,
imprisonment, torture, denial of freedom of movement, daily humiliation, denial
of life-saving medications, and much more.
According to the United
Nations, at least 253 women were killed in Gaza in the 2014 war alone.
These numbers are only
the tip of the iceberg, as every single Palestinian woman living under Israeli
occupation, anywhere in East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza suffers daily.
These women are hardly removed from the collective struggle and suffering of
all Palestinians.
Erdan had no signs
prepared for those women; neither do many mainstream, supposedly feminist
organizations that continue to rally in solidarity with Iranian women, while
ignoring the pain and humiliation of Palestinian women at the hands of the
Israeli military and government.
Sadly, little action
followed a damning report issued by Israel’s rights organization, B’Tselem on
September 5, where Palestinian women from the Ajlouni family were humiliated
and paraded completely naked in front of their children. This episode took place
while the Ajlouni’s boys and men were handcuffed and blindfolded, and while
Israeli soldiers stole the women’s gold and money.
This is, of course, the
norm, not the exception. It seems that whatever Israel does to Palestinian
women, little action, aside from that organized by Palestinians and their
supporters, ever follows: No placards at the UNGA, no US State Department-led
campaigns, no unique hashtags, no mass protests, nothing of the sort.
When advocacy for human
and women’s rights only applies in situations where the culprit is an enemy of
the US, one must question if human rights have anything to do with the
discussion altogether.
The irony is that
Israel has been one of the main political forces behind the deadly US-Western
sanctions imposed on Iran for years, which devastating Iranian society and
families – women and men alike.
That, too, was another
missing context from the coverage following Erdan’s UN act.
But Erdan is not alone.
Sheltering behind women’s rights in the Middle East is now the go-to tactic in
many public conversations, conferences and media coverage of Israel and
Palestine.
Even if the tactic
fails to strike a major shift in the perception of the Israeli occupation and
apartheid in Palestine, at least, in the minds of some, it does create a
distraction.
I have personally
experienced this during many of my tours in various parts of the world, from
Vancouver Canada, to Madrid, to Nairobi. Sadly, often well-intentioned people
engage in the side discussion, either defending Middle Eastern societies, or
nodding in agreement with the self-proclaimed women’s rights ‘activists’.
But Israel did not
invent the ‘liberation of women’ as a strategy aimed at deflecting or
justifying its own war crimes against civilians. The US used it as a backbone
of its massive propaganda that preceded the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
And, of course, once
the invasions and subduing of these countries were completed, Iraqi and Afghani
women disappeared from media coverage.
In both cases, tens of
thousands of women were killed, raped and tortured by the US military. As for
those ‘activists’ who had originally joined the initial US-championed women’s
rights campaigns, they often disappear when women become victims of the US, the
West and Israel.
While Arab and Muslim
societies have their own social and political struggles, we must be wary not to
allow Tel Aviv and Washington to hijack these struggles for their own
politically sinister reasons.
It does not follow
that, for women to be ‘freed’ from one society, the women of another society
would have to live in perpetual bondage, of permanent occupation and racist
apartheid.
This logic should apply
to all situations of inequality, injustice, discrimination and racism, anywhere
in the world.
And, a defender of war
crimes, like Gilad Erdan, must not be allowed to serve two roles: an apologist
for the mistreatment of women in Palestine, and a freedom fighter for women
anywhere else.
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