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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
September 4, 2007
Contact: Sr. Ruth Lautt, O.P., Esq.
(212) 870-2320
New York, New York
Fair Witness Deplores Statement By Rosemary
Radford Ruether
Christians for Fair Witness on the Middle East deplores
a statement entitled “Beyond Holocaust and Nakba Denial: Toward
Compassionate Co-humanity” by Professor Rosemary Radford Ruether which
recently appeared on the Friends of Sabeel, North America website.
“Sabeel has a long history of denying the legitimacy of the Jewish state and
employing supersessionist themes, classic anti-Semitic themes and the use of
deicide language in its characterizations of Israel,” according to Fr. James
Loughran, S.A., Director of the Graymoor Ecumenical & Interreligious
Institute. “We therefore find any claim on the part of this organization to
be seeking ‘compassionate co-humanity’ somewhat disingenuous from the
outset.”
The lack of a genuine search for “compassionate co-humanity” is evidenced at
the beginning of Prof. Ruether’s article where she attempts to explain
Holocaust denial by alleging that the Jewish history with Nazi Germany has
somehow been transformed into an Israeli sense of entitlement to a “state
built on Arab land.” “Prof. Ruether is a scholar. She should acknowledge
that the modern state of Israel was not ‘built on Arab land,’” says Rev. Dr.
Bruce Chilton, the Bernard Iddings Bell Professor of Religion at Bard
College. “After World War I what had previously been territory of the
Ottoman Empire was divided into what are now 21 independent Arab countries
and one Jewish state based upon both peoples’ centuries’ old ties to this
land. The boundaries drawn have sometimes proven problematic, but it does
not help to distort history further.”
Curiously, Prof. Ruether uses a purported anecdote about some anonymous
settlers in Gaza ten years ago to add credence to her premise that a
Holocaust driven mentality shapes Israeli policy. This anecdote strikes
Fair Witness as too conveniently supportive of Ruether’s point to be
credible, especially where she puts quotes around statements then attributed
to “the settlers.” Did they all cry out these alleged statements in
unison? The statements, even if actually made by some Israelis, are
irrelevant. Comments by random Israeli settlers express neither Israeli
policy nor national perspective. Fair Witness is dismayed by Prof.
Ruether’s disingenuous attempt to suggest they do.
While Fair Witness disapproves of a tendency on the part of some to overuse
the Holocaust as a rhetorical and political tool, this in no way renders
Ruether’s insidious use of this historical tragedy to cast doubt on the
legitimacy of the Jewish state permissible. “The world did not need the
Holocaust to justify the creation of a Jewish state. Jews, just like the
Palestinians and all other peoples, have the right to constitute an
autonomous and sovereign political community,” says Sr. Ruth Lautt, Fair
Witness National Director.
Ms. Ruether’s article includes the sensationalist and baseless claim that
Israeli leaders such as David Ben-Gurion planned the ethnic cleansing of
Palestine in 1948. While she provides no citation for this invidious
accusation, it appears to be based upon a letter written by the former Prime
Minister to his son. “Ben-Gurion’s letter has recently been widely
misquoted,” says Dexter Van Zile, who has carefully researched the matter.
“The actual Hebrew text (as reported by Efraim Karsh, Professor of
Mediterranean Studies at the University of London, on pages 50-51 of
Fabricating Israeli History) reads ‘We do not wish, we do not need to
expel Arabs and take their place … All our aspiration is built on the
assumption that there is enough room in the country for ourselves and the
Arabs.’”
“How carefully did Prof. Ruether research her sources?” questions Van Zile.
“You can’t level an accusation as heinous as intentional ethnic cleansing
based upon what appears to be nothing but shoddy scholarship.”
Prof. Ruether also resorts to drawing the contrived parallel between the
Palestinian “Nakba” and the Holocaust. “There would have been no Palestinian
or Jewish refugees had the Arab nations accepted the U.N. partition (under
resolution 181) of the British mandate,” points out Rev. Dr. Roy W. Howard,
pastor of Saint Mark Presbyterian Church (USA) in Rockville, Maryland.
“Prof. Ruether leaves that piece of history out of her narrative. She also
neglects to point out that the ‘expanded state of Israel’ resulted not from
some (implied) Israeli landgrab -- but from a war that followed the combined
Arab armies’ attempt to destroy Israel.
Prof. Ruether’s final point is that the respective suffering of the Jewish
and Palestinian people holds the potential for building a mutual respect on
which a peaceful solution could be constructed. “It is a shame that this
hopeful aspiration, with which we concur, is merely tacked onto the flurry
of distorted historical narrative by which Ruether delegitimizes Israel’s
standing and thereby undermines the very outcome she claims to seek,”
laments Rev. Dr. Peter Pettit, Director of the Institute for
Jewish-Christian Understanding at Muhlenberg College.
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