Briefing to the Foreign Press by
Deputy Foreign Minister Rabbi Michael Melchior
Durban: UN World Conference Against Racism
Jerusalem, August 9, 2001
Foreign Minister Spokesperson Yaffa Ben-Ari: Good afternoon. It's
with great pleasure that I'm introducing to you Rabbi Michael
Melchior, who is the Deputy Foreign Minister, who is going to lead
our delegation to Durban and he just came back from a conference in
Geneva preparing the Durban meeting.
Deputy Foreign Minister Melchior: I came back here last night from
Geneva where the last 'prep comm' before Durban is going on very
intensively, and these hours are very decisive for the outcome; the
'prep comm' will end tomorrow. I gave orders to the Israeli
delegation that tomorrow evening by six o'clock that's it if we want
to reach an agreement. Then the Sabbath starts, and we don't want any
violation of the Sabbath, and for sure not a government coalition
crisis over this, which you know in this country has created more
problems than any other issue.
I want to speak a little regarding the seriousness of the situation
in general, and specifically to give a comment on what is going on in
these hours and where we might be going from here.
First of all, in general. You know that there were four regional
conferences, the last of the conferences was in Teheran, the Asiatic
conference, where all the proposals were brought back from all the
four regional conferences to Geneva, to the first of the three 'prep
comms', and everything was put together into one big salad, which
from our perspective was very, very serious. It was an upgrading of
any language we've known before.
I want to be specific about one point, because I've seen also in the
Israeli press, and also some places in the world press, a very big
misunderstanding about this issue. There was never a proposal put on
the table of renewing the equation Zionism=racism. That was never on
the table, and because it was never on the table nobody could take it
off the table, and therefore the headlines this week, which I saw in
several newspapers, including Ha'aretz which had a front-page story
and afterwards an editorial the day after, was totally senseless
because it just never has been, and therefore never could be taken
out, and I think it's important to stress that because there's a lot
of misinformation going on.
What is in the proposals is much more sophisticated, much more
serious than the equation. It includes the equation implicitly, but
is on a much broader aspect of issues. What it is really saying is
that everything which has to do with the birth of the State of
Israel, with Zionism, with Israeli government policy, and in general
with the Jewish people, its past, its suffering, and its future, is
not legitimate. It's a total delegitimization of the State of Israel
and the Jewish people. And that is why it is in many aspects much
more serious than the Zionism=racism equation, which caused a lot of
problems for the 16 years during which that equation existed, caused
a lot of problems for Israel but also for the international
community, the Untied Nations, and this is a well-known chapter.
I also want to stress that at this point, at this hour exactly now, I
talked to Geneva five minutes ago, all the language is still there,
not one expression has been taken out, nothing has changed on the
ground. Nothing has changed, and I think it's important to say that.
Again, the expressions are a broad range, using all the worst
vocabulary which the world society knows to condemn Israel, its
birth, its existence, and so on. It's 'ethnic cleansing', it's
'genocide', it's 'neo-apartheid', I don't know what the difference
between neo-apartheid and old apartheid, but it's like neo-Nazism
maybe, where I also don't know what the difference is. It's 'racism';
those are the expressions which are used in every context.
Again, and I want to be very clear about this - to condemn Israeli
government policies is not anti-Semitism. Even strong condemnations
of Israeli government policies - I myself had a long experience in
condemning Israeli government policies, and I think that that's a
very good thing, and a healthy thing in a democratic society. But
there is a red line, and the red line is where you go over from
condemning or a disagreement on a political level, to what I call an
existential level of condemning, making Israel the Jew of the
nations, making the condemnations and on an existential level
delegitimizing Israel's existence. That is already going over the red
line and becoming the new anti-Semitism. We are the new anti-Christ
of the international community, or the devil of the international
community. That is what was proposed in Teheran and brought back to
Geneva, very specifically.
If you say, let's take an issue which is maybe the most discussed
issue, the settlements. If you say to me that the settlements are not
legitimate, or that they're bad for peace, over even that they're
breaching the Fourth Geneva Convention, we can have an argument about
that, and that's legitimate. That's not what's done here. Here it's
taken an upgrading: 'The settlements are ethnic cleansing. The
settlements are genocide.' First of all it's not true. It also makes
it an existential conflict, which it is not.
The same has happened on the issue of the Holocaust. You know that
issue very well; what happened was was that there was a very good
paragraph about the Holocaust, they took the proposals from Teheran
and made a mockery of the Holocaust. I don't think that the Holocaust
should be in at all in any proposals if that is the way it's dealt
with. It's trivialized by taking away the capital 'H', by putting an
's' on the end. It's put in the context of the Middle East, saying
really that the real Holocaust is against the people of Palestine,
and of course implying by that that the Jews deserved the Holocaust
which was against them, because if all the Jews know to do is
holocaust and apartheid and racism and so on, then they also deserve
the Holocaust which was against them.
This is very serious. I'll give you a picture of what's happening
there but let me just elaborate on what the consequences will be. If
these proposals go through, I see that this will be a major blow in
four areas.
Number one, it'll be a major blow to Israel and the Jewish people,
and I must say there's a very unison opinion amongst the Jews also on
this, I don't remember since the Soviet Jury campaign I don't
remember all the Jewish organizations synchronized and working very
very hard from left and from right equally to try to avoid this blow
against the Jewish people and the State of Israel.
Number two, sacrifice of this will be the fight against racism. Of
two reasons; first of all, the meeting in South Africa was really
supposed to be a rejoicement over the victory over apartheid, was
supposed to be the whole world convening in one language in unison
against the evils of racism and xenophobia, discriminations, which
not least come out of what happened in the Second World War to the
Jewish people, that this is a fight which knows no borders, where
everybody has to deal with, every community, every country, and the
international society has to have a fight against this evil which
creates levels of races in the world. That fight will be destroyed.
The whole conference in Durban will be totally destroyed because of
this issue which was put on the table, but not only on the practical
level will the fight against racism which was supposed to emerge from
Durban be destroyed, but also on the philosophical level; if you call
everything racism, if to close a balcony in Gilo is ethnic cleansing
and genocide, then you take out - and the same with the Holocaust -
you take out any kind of moral imperative which are in these
expressions. You empty them, you neutralize the moral imperative of
these expressions of absolute evils, and you trivialize them in a way
that where there is no possibility to work and to really mobilize
against these evils because of the trivializations.
That is why every group since the Holocaust who have wanted again to
open for themselves or for the world new evils not only against Jews
but every extremist group of racists and so on have always have a
certain application of denial or relativization or minimalization or
trivialization or the Holocaust as part of their program, because you
cannot in a world post-Holocaust say and understand the full
implication of the Holocaust and then open for new crimes against
humanity.
And therefore, that is always returning and with still-growing
strength, the trivialization of the Holocaust. This is done here,
also - very clearly. Trivialization of anti-Semitism, turning around
an absurdity and in the word anti-Semitism you probably all know
comes from Central Europe, about 130 years old is the expression. It
was a swap of the word anti-Jew. To be anti-Jewish was not very 'in'
at that time in 1870 in Germany, so they had to find a new word, a
decent, 'in' word, to be an anti-Semite. That was an 'in' word and it
was accepted by everybody that that was a respectable thing to be.
That was where the word anti-Semite comes from, everybody knows its
historical context and how it's been used to the last 2500 years.
As a curioso, over the last years sometimes when we've taken up the
issue of anti-Semitism the Arabs have said, 'Well, we're also
Semites', which is true, but it has nothing to do with the issue.
Here they have taken this curiosity and put it into absurdum. They're
said the real anti-Semitism is the Zionist practices against the
Palestinian Semites. That's anti-Semitism. Now, all of this put
together is part of the 120 pages which was suggested now for
Durban.
I said two things which will be the result, there are two more things
I want to mention. The ability of the UN to work efficiently in the
world seen from many different issues will be totally destroyed
because Durban will be the key word afterwards which will be put on
the table at every single conference, no matter if you talk about
population explosion or if you talk about bird-watching. They will
put Durban on as an issue at every single international conference.
It'll be the new code which will encourage the new hatred and
incitement against the Jewish people, and we'll see that it will
destroy and divide the world and it will destroy any UN effort in the
future for all kinds of good purposes, that will be the code.
The last of the obvious victims will be any kind of hope and
possibility for the peace process in the Middle East. I want to be
very clear - my own opinion is, and I hope it's the opinion also of
my government, that we want to be back at the negotiation table as
soon as possible. There is, according to my opinion, no other
alternative; not for the Palestinian people and not for the Jewish
people, and to find a reasonable and decent compromise. But you can
only find a compromise if you keep and stick to the conflict being a
conflict as a national conflict, as a territorial conflict. Then you
can sit around the table and divide territory. But if you take it out
of that framework, which is now the will of some of most the Islamic
states and some of the Arab states which is on the table now for
Durban. Taking it out of a territorial conflict, of a national
conflict, and putting it into an existential framework, then there is
no possibility to be back again and negotiating.
You don't negotiate with the devil; he can't be a half-devil. You
don't negotiate with apartheid. If the whole of the being and
existence of Israel is apartheid, racism, is the devil, is the
anti-Christ, is ethnic cleansing and genocide, if that is our whole
being in existence, not only in the territories but as the beginning
and the creation of the State of Israel, than there can be no
negotiations with that entirety, there can only be a justification of
violence and terror and eventually to wipe out this entirety from the
face of the Earth, because that is what you do with Apartheid and
racism an the absolute evils of the Earth, and that is why those
Arabs who are pushing for this language know very well that the
consequences of this is not only that Israel is bashed, but the
consequence of this is that there is no possibility, that there's
nothing to go back ever to the negotiation table about. Because the
conflict is transferred from its territorial framework to an
existential framework where it's either they or us who survive, as
they sometimes say in some expressions.
So this is the seriousness, in its full scope of the debate. I want
to say that there are different groups in Durban - there are going to
be a lot of people in Durban, I think according to the plans we're
talking about an invasion of some between 12 and 18,000 people who
are coming to Durban, there are several conferences going on, some of
them parallel, there's a students conference, there's an NGO
conference - the NGO conference is not less disturbing than the main
conference. I want to quote for you just one paragraph just so you
understand how serious this is, of the NGO suggestions. They are
working on this also now in Geneva, but it's not getting any better.
NGOs - you know there are many respected NGOs who are not less
important today than parliaments of the world, this is something we
sometimes misunderstand, the NGOs put the agenda of the world in many
ways in more efficient ways than many parliaments. I'll quote just
one chapter, and believe me it's not the only one. This is a proposal
which is ready now for Durban.
"Stop the escalation of the third Holocaust perpetuated by the
Israeli government and its settler community against he people of
Palestine and intervene in this escalation of war and remove the
United States of America and the United Kingdom from initiating a
flimsy peace process, as they are entirely and fully responsible for
the escalation of this war carried by the Israeli regime against the
people of Palestine. The United States of America and the United
Kingdom are responsible for imposing an Israeli state in the lands of
the Palestinian people, and have continued to fund and support the
expansion of this state. Their intervention has proved to be biased
towards the expansion of the Israeli state, and the extermination of
the Palestinian people. We call for the declaration of Israel as an
apartheid, racist, and fascist state."
And so on. Just to give you some examples of what kind of language
we're dealing with; there are, again thousands of NGOs; there are, I
think, 4,000 NGOs who are preparing their arrival in Durban. I don't
know if they will all come, but this is what we're up against.
Now, there's been a heavy reaction against this. We worked
intensively for a long time, most intensively over the last 4-5
months, together with other governments in the world to stop this,
and I must tell you that the positive part, if I can say a positive
impression from Geneva is, that after my talks there I have not found
one non-Islamic country in the world which is willing to go along
with the Arab/Muslim proposals. There are also some Islamic
countries, but they are telling us that very very privately in four
eyes, that they are not satisfied with this development, and I think
that there is a beginning of a first Arab understanding that they
will not be able to, in this, especially as the Africans say,
arrogant way decide the world agenda at this occasion. For the
Africans, this is a very, very important conference. This is their
initiative, it is their victory, it is their history, their past, and
their future which is at stake there, and they will just not accept,
and we've heard it in very clear terms over the last couple of days,
also said publicly, not only privately, said publicly that they will
not let the, again, Middle East conflict turn their issue into a
farce.
This feeling is getting more and more clear in Geneva as in these
hours I expect that a deal, if you can call it that, on the other big
issue, the other big conflicting issue which was the slavery issue,
what they call the past issue, that the deal on that issue is being
closed now, and I can say with very great certainty that during these
hours that issue will be out and solved, which will leave only this
issue on the table as the only issue. The American have come with a
language which I understand is acceptable also to the Africans, and
even these 'last words' which were words of apology and these words,
they're finding now the last words which are providing a good
solution apparently which everybody is satisfied with, when it comes
to the very important issue of the past and slavery.
As the Israeli government, we want this to be a successful
conference. We want to join in in the world fight against racism, we
want to be promoters of this fight. We have a long experience of
2,500 years of prosecution - they've even invented new words to
describe massacres against Jews just because they're Jews: words like
'pogroms', for example. These are experiences which we can bring with
us to the fight against any kind of discrimination and racism. That's
where we want to be. We will not accept that the Arab countries again
derail the conference. We will not accept also any compromise which
is at the expense of the Jewish people. There are now attempts for
compromises; involved in these attempts is the high commissioner, who
I met with a long meeting on Tuesday, and who I've also been in
contact with now. The South Africans are very active, because they as
host have a vested interest both in the issue, obviously, but also in
a successful conference.
The parameters have to be that there's no singling out. No singling
out of Israel. I mean, if you're dealing with human rights, you want
to deal with human rights in all the countries, fine, then you can
deal with human rights in Israel, but no singling out. There's no
such thing as just Israel being put before the tribunal and all the
others including our neighbors go free: no such thing. There can be
no dealing only with one region of the world. You want to deal with
regions, fine. Not just one region in the world, and all the hate
language has to go out. All of it. We don't want to exchange, to
become the small devil instead of being the big devil. With all due
respect, if we're going to be the devil then we might as well be the
big one. No small devil. And I'm saying this very clearly because
there have been proposals to us which have said, well, we'll take
out, we won't write in the text 'genocide', we'll just write 'ethnic
cleansing' - no such thing. The whole hate-language has to go out,
the garbage where it's supposed to be. Otherwise, again, a
possibility of all the consequences will exist just as much if part
of the hate-language exists. Those are the clear parameters.
I feel that we have a great support from many many countries who are
active on this. I don't have to say that the United States is very
active and we're working hand in hand with the United States, but
with many many other countries. The European Union has a very clear
resolution no this, and they've promised me to stick to that
resolution which was made in the Foreign Minister's meeting a couple
of weeks ago. It was never publicized, therefore not many people know
about it, but it is there, and it is clear on these issues. The OAU,
the African countries are saying things which are very much in the
same direction. Many of the Latin-American countries - I won't talk
about countries like Canada and Australia who are really fighting
intensively here. Also, some of the Asiatic countries we feel are
very much understanding the issues - beginning to understand the
issues, let me say, in that respect, and therefore the question is
what will happen.
The technique of this is strange; it's like when you get a
proposal
in, to take it out is nearly impossible. That is part of our
problem. If there was a vote today in Geneva, I have no doubt what
the outcome would be. But there is no vote, and therefore to take out
the language you need the Arabs who put it in to take it out, and
that is a difficult issue. I think that there are some of the Arabs
who do want to take it out, or want to compromise, and that is what
is going on now in these hours in Geneva, to see, to try, to see if
something can be worked out before they leave tomorrow at 6
o'clock.
The High Commissioner published a press statement a few minutes ago
calling on everybody to continue the efforts until Durban. That is
not something we can accept. We do want to work together with the
High Commissioner, we feel that she understands the seriousness of
the moment, and she wants this to be a successful conference and
knows and has declared that if this language stays in there will no
successful conference. She even said to me clearly in our private
meeting, she said that she would accept no singling out of Israel,
which I thought was a very important statement from her side, but we
don't have all the time, because the problem is that the moment they
have left Geneva, tomorrow afternoon, there is nobody who can in
practice take this language out, erase it. Geneva is a forum which
can do that, but after they leave tomorrow afternoon that's it.
There is no more possibility formally to erase this language, and the
Arab tactic is to just let this go on and on and on to Durban and
even in Durban to let it go on and on and on to the last hour of
Durban.
We will decide during the coming week on the basis of what finally
will happen in Geneva which steps we will take, if we will
participate. Of course, we will do this very much in consultation
with the United States and our other friends and allies on this
issue, and they are doing the same in consultation with us. We hope
that there will still be, and I also call it this occasion, a call to
come to senses at Geneva so that we can still utilize the last 24
hours for coming up with something which will guarantee a
constructive conference in Durban. Don't forget, this is one of the
most important conference of this decade. For sure the most important
conference this year. It's supposed to be a symbol for the new
century, what is happening in South Africa, and we cannot again
afford to let this be totally destroyed by this new anti-Semitism
dominating the language and the atmosphere of the conference against
racism.