More trouble around Shamir 
   
   In a week or so we shall have a sad commemoration of Deir Yassin
   Massacre, and as an advisor to the Deir Yassin Remembered (DYR) I call
   upon you to take part in it, wherever you are. You can check the place
   and time with Prof Dan McGowan mcgowan@hws.edu or Paul Eisen
   dyr@eisen.demon.co.uk or on their site www.DeirYassin.org . This good
   organisation was heavily attacked by usual suspects because of electing
   me as their adviser, a purely nominal position. A man who made his name
   by besmirching me, Ali Abunima, ran a vicious campaign against DYR and
   tried (with help of an Omar Fayez, another renegade Palestinian) to
   strike DYR out of the roll of tax exempt bodies in the US. Abunima, an
   American of Palestinian-Jordanian extraction, an honorary
   Jew-for-justice, apparently believes that the pocket is the most
   precious and vulnerable place of a man. But it was not all: some English
   Jewish activists from Roland Rance milieu (see my Not Cricket article on
   my website) wrote a letter calling to disband DYR if they dare to have
   me. (Their letter is at the bottom of this email, as well as my reply).
   Here is a brave response of Paul Eisen, the London director of DYR,
   where he points out some fallacies of peace-loving Jewish activists. 

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From Paul Eisen, DYR London 

Dear all 

Regarding Israel Shamir and Deir Yassin Remembered: 

Israel Shamir is an extraordinary thinker and writer and an outstanding
and tireless supporter of Palestinian rights. He also has severe
criticisms to make of the way Jews and Jewish organisations are
currently behaving and have behaved in the past. Shamir has also
proposed the existence of what he would term a Jewish "spirit" or
"paradigm" (which incidentally is by no means confined only to those who
identify themselves as Jewish) which, if unchecked and unbalanced can
lead to supremacism. 

Israel Shamir has never been guilty of violence nor has he ever
advocated violence. He has never discriminated against anyone, nor has
he ever advocated discriminating against anyone. Nor has he ever
advocated anyone the right to free speech, or to a fair hearing. 

I like Shamir enormously, always find him stimulating and informative
and I agree with a lot, though not all, of what he says and writes. 

Shamir is in full agreement with the spirit and meaning of Deir Yassin,
he has contributed enormously to Deir Yassin Remembered and is an
honoured member of the Deir Yassin Remembered Board of Advisers. 

Regarding my feelings about my fellow Jews and Deir Yassin remembrance,
these were perfectly well expressed in the piece below which I wrote a
while back. 

If you have any questions or comments, please don't hesitate to get in
touch 

Paul Eisen 

 Deir Yassin Remembered 
 
 In Sight of Yad Vashem…. 
 
 Jews and Deir Yassin Remembrance 
 
 Paul Eisen 
 
  "The central part of Deir Yassin is a cluster of buildings now used as a
  mental hospital. To the east lies the industrial area of Givat Shaul; to
  the north lies Har Hamenuchot (the Jewish cemetery), to the west, built
  into the side of the mountain on which Deir Yassin is located is Har
  Nof, a new settlement of orthodox Jews. To the south is a steep valley
  terraced and containing part of the Jerusalem Forest. On the other side
  of that valley, roughly a mile and a half from Deir Yassin and in clear
  view of it, are Mount Herzl and Yad Vashem. " 
                                    --Dan McGowan "Remembering Deir Yassin"
 
 Deir Yassin is as important a part of Jewish as it is of Palestinian
 history. Deir Yassin, coming in April 1948, just three years after the
 liberation of Auschwitz in January 1945, marks a Jewish transition from
 enslavement to empowerment and from abused to abuser. Can there ever
 have been such a remarkable shift, over such a short period, in the
 history of a people? Deir Yassin also signalled the ethnic cleansing of
 750,000 Palestinians leading to their eventual dispossession and exile
 and was just one example of a conscious and premeditated plan to destroy
 the Palestinians as a people in their own homeland. For the fifty-odd
 years since the establishment of the state of Israel, successive Israeli
 governments whether Labour or Likud, and whether by force as at Deir
 Yassin, or by chicanery as at Oslo and Camp David, have followed the
 same policy of oppressing and dispossessing Palestinians to make way for
 an exclusively Jewish state. Even now, when Israel could have peace and
 security for the asking, Israeli governments persist in their original
 intention of conquering the whole of Palestine for the use of the Jewish
 people alone. And all this was done, and is still being done, by Jews,
 for Jews and in the name of Jews. 
 
 But should we, as Jews, feel ourselves culpable? After all, these are
 the crimes of Zionists not of Jews committed in a different place and
 time. Are we, Jews who were not there, who were not even born at the
 time, to feel responsible for these deeds? And anyway, not all Jews
 committed these crimes, so surely not all Jews need accept
 responsibility? But Zionism and the state of Israel now lie at the very
 heart of Jewish life and so many Jews have benefited from the associated
 empowerment. So many Jews, even if unaffiliated officially to Zionism,
 have still supported it in its aims. Indeed, almost the entire organised
 Jewish establishments throughout the western world, in Israel, Europe
 and North America have used their power, influence and, most
 importantly, their moral prestige to support Israel in its attempts to
 subjugate the Palestinians. And not only have they offered their support
 for these crimes. These same groups and individuals are also telling the
 rest of the world that it's not really happening, that Israel is not the
 aggressor, that Israel is not trying to destroy the Palestinian people,
 that black is white. And not only do they deny this reality, anyone who
 dares say otherwise is branded an anti-Semite and excluded from society.
 
 This militarization and politicisation of Jewish life, this silencing of
 dissent, this bowing down before the God of the state of Israel, is this
 the tradition that was handed down to us, and what does this leave us to
 pass on to our children? If we are really honest with ourselves, should
 we not, as suggested by Marc Ellis, replace every Torah scroll, in every
 ark, in every synagogue in the Jewish world, with a helicopter gunship?
 Because, as Ellis says, "what we do, we worship". 
 
 That the relationship with the Palestinian people is fractured is
 self-evident, but what of the relationships within our own community and
 the relationship with our own history and tradition? Are these also not
 affected? And how does one repair a fractured relationship? As with an
 old friend whom one has offended, but to whom one has never acknowledged
 the offence, surely only the absolute truth will do. 
 
 So, for the sake of the future of Jewish life, there can only be one
 solution - a complete and full confession that what we Jews have done to
 the Palestinian people is wrong and what we are doing to the Palestinian
 people is wrong, and, with that confession, a resolve, as far as is
 possible, to put the matter right. 
 
 And where better to begin than at Deir Yassin - the scene of the crime
 against the Palestinian people, the place of transition from enslavement
 to empowerment and from abused to abuser? For Deir Yassin, in clear
 sight of Yad Vashem, the symbol of our own tragedy, is the symbol of the
 tragedy visited by us on another people. Where better to begin this
 process of confession and restitution? But will they come? Will Jews
 come to commemorate Deir Yassin? For the overwhelming majority, the
 answer is a resounding "no". Jews will not come to Deir Yassin. Jews
 will not confess to the Palestinian people. For most Jews, commemoration
 of Deir Yassin is tantamount to siding with the enemy, to conspiring to
 destroy Israel and the Jewish people. Buoyed up by their own propaganda
 and blinded by their sense of innocence and victimhood, most Jews will
 not join with Palestinians in commemorating Deir Yassin. 
 
 But there is a fringe of Jews who do not take this view, Jews who do not
 share this vision of the Jewish establishments. These Jews, who
 generally make up what is known as the "Peace Camp," do not wish to see
 the complete destruction of the Palestinian people but, instead, wish to
 come to some kind of accommodation with them. These Jews, whilst also
 uneasy about coming to Deir Yassin, will at least talk about it. What of
 them? These Jews will often say, "Yes, we will join Palestinians in
 commemorating Deir Yassin when Palestinians join us in commemorating
 Maalot" or "We will remember Deir Yassin when Palestinians remember the
 more recent Sbarro Pizza Bar bombing", We then point out that we don't
 commemorate Deir Yassin because it was a massacre. (If we did, we would
 be commemorating every day of the week, every week of the year since
 there were plenty of massacres, on both sides) We commemorate because
 Deir Yassin is a symbol of the Palestinian catastrophe rather as Anne
 Frank is a symbol of the Holocaust. After all, as Anne Frank was just
 one child so Deir Yassin was just one village. 
 
 So then these Jews say, "Okay, we shall commemorate Deir Yassin when
 Palestinians commemorate Auschwitz". To this we have to say, "Yes, but
 Palestinians didn't do Auschwitz to us; we did do Deir Yassin to them".
 These Jews also don't want to admit that what they have done to the
 Palestinians is wrong, and what they are doing to the Palestinians is
 wrong. Nor do these Jews really want to make restitution to the
 Palestinians. These Jews, just like those who flatly refuse to come to
 Deir Yassin and make no apologies, these, more moderate Jews, also want
 to assert their power. But, unlike the others, they want to keep their
 innocence as well. And this is not easy. At one time they simply told
 themselves that it had never happened, but now, largely thanks to the
 new Israeli historians, this is no longer possible. So they dress it up
 in what Professor Walid Khalidi has called "the sin of moral
 equivalence". They say, "This is not a case of one people trying to
 destroy another, of a victim and a perpetrator; this is a conflict, a
 conflict between two rights and both sides have suffered terribly. If
 only both sides would understand each other's suffering, all will be
 well." So these Jews say that they will come to Deir Yassin and, once
 there, will say to Palestinians, "Okay, we've suffered; you've suffered,
 let's talk". To which we have to say, "No, it's not we've suffered,
 you've suffered, let's talk"; it's "We've suffered and we've caused you
 to suffer; NOW let's talk". Deir Yassin is surely about peace and
 reconciliation, but the peace cannot be the peace and quiet for the
 victor to go on robbing the victims, and the reconciliation cannot be
 the reconciliation of the victims reconciling themselves with their
 victim-hood. 
 
 But for those few Jews of conscience who do make it to our
 commemorations, for that tiny remnant who do wish to remember and to
 confess, what will they find? First, they will encounter a people and a
 narrative that they may never have met or heard before. For most Jews,
 Palestinians remain stereotyped as biblical shepherds, refugees or
 terrorists, and their story is largely unknown. To encounter the
 Palestinian community, as so many Jews did for the first time at our
 London commemorations, is to encounter a community not only human and
 diverse, but, most importantly, so very like their own. 
 
 They will also be witness to Palestinians remembering their own tragedy.
 For many Palestinians, particularly those old enough to have been
 present at the events being remembered, Deir Yassin commemorations can
 be very emotional. Silently to accompany these people as they remember
 their tragic history is, for any Jew of conscience, a deeply moving
 experience. 
 
 Thirdly, and so importantly, they will encounter a story of
 dispossession and exile so reminiscent of their own. For any Jew, the
 Palestinian father who was dragged out of his home in Deir Yassin, as
 re-enacted at the London 2001 commemoration, could so easily have been a
 surrendered ghetto fighter in Warsaw 1941, and that bourgeois Madame, in
 her now-bedraggled fur coat trudging the road out of Jaffa and into
 exile, was nothing if not a Berliner boarding a train for Riga in 1942. 
 
 Finally, they will have the opportunity and the privilege to say, loud
 and clear, with no ifs and buts, "what we have done to the Palestinian
 people is wrong and what we are doing to the Palestinian people is
 wrong. Let us now work together to put it right." 
 
 Paul Eisen  
 dyr@eisen.demon.co.uk  
 January 2003  
 Paul Eisen is the London-based director of Deir Yassin Remembered 

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   -----Original Message----- 
   
   From Charlie Pottins 
   
   To Asaf, friends in Israel, Roland Rance et al 
   
   Dear Asaf, and comrades, 
   
   Knowing your work with the Workers Advice Centre, I apologise for
   troubling you with another matter, but it concerns us as communists and
   peace activists. I expect you are familiar with the organisation Dir
   Yassin Remembered? When I first heard of it a few years ago, I thought
   its stated aims were highly commendable and noble. 
   
   I wrote to them in support, and when they appointed a British
   representative, Paul Eisen, I arranged for him to speak at a Jewish
   Socialists' Group meeting in London. 
   
   I remain fully in support of telling the truth about Dir Yassin and
   other atrocities, and of establishing a memorial. We owe it not only to
   the past but to the future, as an earnest that we are serious about
   peace and repect between peoples. 
   
   Unfortunately, despite some impressive and successful work and no doubt
   sincere convictions, Mr.Eisen has alienated some of us by his pursuit of
   a personal religious quest and repentance for supposed collective sins,
   not just in modern times but over centuries, which is neither part of
   his remit nor useful to the cause of Dir Yassin. But that is our
   problem. 
   
   The bigger issue, which concerns you in Israel-Palestine, is the
   presence on DYR's board of one Israel Shamir, and the circulation of his
   articles. On DYR's website and elsewhere, Shamir is described as an
   Israeli resident in Jaffa. But for over a year now he has been known as
   leading a double existence, having an address in Stockholm and using the
   name Joran Jermas. As Jermas he has a reputation in Scandinavia as an
   antisemite and conspiracy theorist. 
   
   Under another name, Robert David, Shamir was a contributor to the
   Russian magazine Zavtra, which is a Russian nationalist and fascist
   journal whose editor Pokhrasov hosted a visit to Russia by former Ku
   Klux Klan leader David Duke. Far from denying such connections Shamir
   has himself boasted of his "friend Martin Webster" - the former National
   Front leader in Britain and a vicious racist. He greeted the votes for
   Jean Marie Le Pen in France as a blow to Jewish influence. Evidently his
   pretence at concern for Arabs in Palestine does not extend to Arabs in
   France, who are more likely to feel the physical blows from LePen's
   supporters. 
   
   Leading Palestinian and Arab activists in the United States decided
   after meeting Shamir and hearing his views on Jews as "Christ killers"
   and conspirators that he could only harm their cause and they wanted
   nothing to do with. Among some of us here there is debate as to whether
   Shamir is a "genuine" antisemite, who has pretended to be a Jew (before
   converting to Orthodox Christian), a clever but crazy person, or a
   really determined agent provocateur deliberately infiltrating
   pro-Palestinian circles with the aim of discrediting them. Whatever the
   truth, he is dangerous, and now the pro-Zionist propagandists have
   seized on his words and name to smear anyone associated with him. It
   seems therefore weak and irresponsible of Dir Yassin Remembered or any
   other movement charged with a decent cause to harbour this character. 
   
   Looking at the DYR website I see the names of several people who are
   known and respected such as Hanan Ashrawi, Leah Tsemel and Roni Ben
   Efrat. I am glad they have taken up this cause, but I wish they would
   use their place as advisors to advise DYR to get rid of Shamir. I heard
   some people had already withdrawn, and I apologise if the information
   is out of date. If, for whatever hidden reason, Dir Yassin Remembered
   insists on keeping Shamir and ignoring the harm he does to the cause,
   the best thing would be to break away and establish a better, cleaner
   organisation to honour the people of Dir Yassin and the cause they
   symbolise. 
   
   Please pass this on to Roni and anyone else it concerns - except of
   course Israel Shamir! 
   
   Charlie Pottins 

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Israel Shamir (ishamir@013.net) writes: 

   Pottins forgot to mention that I am also a paedophile, holocaust denier,
   homophobe, male chauvinist pig, white supremacist, and not a real Jew.
   Sorry, this last 'accusation' was not missed. 
   
   You should also be aware that whenever you have met me on a
   demonstration or on a street in Israel, it was only an apparition, while
   my true self was safely residing in Timbuktu, under the name of Robert
   Jermas. After this disclosure, nothing can stop you from winning the
   battle for Palestine like you did for the previous thirty years before
   the intrusion of the named Shamir.