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Versioning history (and forsaking its complexities)…

“Zionism and Nazism were twins in their narrow nationalism and even
collaborated against the public. The Zionists thus found no reason not
collaborate with the Nazis in the mid-thirties to rid Europe of its Jews.”
(Taken from Professor Mona Baker’s homepage against the occupation of
Palestine and for an academic boycott)

“The attempt to solve the Jewish question through the migration of Jews to
Palestine can now be seen for what it is, a tragic mockery of the Jewish
people. Interested in winning the sympathy of the Arabs who are more
numerous than the Jews, the British government has sharply altered its
policy toward the Jews, and has actually renounced its promise to help
them find their ‘own home’ in a foreign land. The future development of
military events may well transform Palestine into a bloody trap.” (Leon
Trotsky, writing a month prior to his death in August 1940, on the Jewish
question)

For a long-term two nation-states solution and the workers’ unity it
depends on…

How will a workers’ alliance between Palestinians and Israelis be achieved
that is both against the despotic Israeli state and for a two nation-
states solution (involving a withdrawal of the Israeli armed forces from
the Occupied Territories and a return to pre-1967 borders)? Deliberation
of such a question steers me to holding a position against an academic
boycott of Israel; after all, any long-term solution to the conflict in
the Middle East is dependent (amongst many other things) on the principle
that Palestinian and Israeli academics must forge some kind of political
unity.

It is by no means an exclusive stance on the part of those who support the
idea of an academic boycott to claim that the Israeli state is
illegitimate and to call for a one secular Palestinian state solution, but
this is a position that does underpin the most vocal calls for a boycott.
With this in mind, has there been any other case in history in which self-
declared Marxists, socialists or leftists advocated a forced reversal of
history to strip a group of people of their rights to national self-
determination? The actions of the Israeli state in its repression of
Palestinians and its brutal occupation of Palestinian land must be
vehemently condemned (and, indeed, it should never have happened as it
did), but it cannot be ‘made right’ by the absolute dissolution of Israel
as a nation-state. Any such calls for dissolution would be anti-… well,
you decide.

Returning to the conspiracy theory from Mona Baker’s website referenced at
the beginning, it would be fair to say that being anti-Zionist is not (in
and of itself) an anti-Semitic act, although all anti-Semitics are anti-
Zionist. The Jewish question, which Leon Trotsky astutely considered and
urgently wrote about in the 1930s and 1940s, took on a “utopian and
reactionary character” in Zionism. Nevertheless, to now advocate any
political gesture that might threaten the prospect of workers’ unity
between Palestinians and Israelis, and the prospect for a long-term two
nation-states solution, should be seriously challenged.