Category Archives: Europe

Natan Sharansky’s rules for being Never Alone

I just finished an excellent book, highly recommend it to everyone, written by an imprisoned Soviet dissident, Israeli politician (all the way to the deputy PM), and the head of Sochnut (The Jewish Agency) – in equal measure, 9 years each. A fascinating read in which he argues how important the diaspora is to Israel, and how important Israel is to the diaspora. Which made me think about how our (a broad community of BCAA members) different politics can easily tear us apart, if we let it.

Today, we Jews stand against two powerful tides sweeping the world. One is the tide of illiberal liberalism. It speaks in the name of universal human rights, but in its extreme form denies the value of a nation-state while seeing Israel as the last remnant of colonialism. But Israel, the democratic nation-state of the Jewish people, insists that its strong bottom-up grassroots national identity, consecrated by the will of the people, gives it the strength to be the only island of democracy in the Middle East.

Opposing illiberal liberalism is also the tide of the new nationalism, which appeals to a lost sense of national pride and helps to mobilize the energy citizens get from belonging. But it, in its extreme form, is illiberal. Most members of the progressive Jewish community oppose this extreme, insisting that their strong liberal society preserves their Jewish identity.

Each community is doing what it does naturally to survive. But when the Jewish world works together, as a Jewish democratic state in the Middle East and as a constellation of minority Jewish communities in Western democracies, we can bring out the best in each other. Benefiting from the best of liberalism and the best of nationalism, together we can champion the joint mission to belong and to be free as both central to human happiness. This synthesis could also help moderate some of the extremes afflicting the West and affecting each of us in our respective communities today. This approach requires a conceptual leap in all societies, accepting that we are complementary, not carbon copies of one another.

Natan Sharansky and Gil Troy. Never Alone: Prison, Politics, and My People, 2020.

And this is how Sharansky ends this 2020 book, with these five rules for surviving the COVID epidemic, but I think they transcend that. You may think of them of how to be Never Alone.

• First, remember that you are a soldier in a bigger struggle, and you have an important role to play in determining whether we win or lose.

• Second, don’t try controlling what you can’t control—focus on what you can control. You cannot control when this craziness will finish, but, in the meantime, you can take on ambitious plans to challenge yourself. Learn a new language. Read that thick book. Clean your closets—or finally build that new one. Don’t let corona bring you to despair.

• Third, don’t stop laughing at yourself and the world—it puts everything in proportion.

• Fourth, use your hobbies, like I used chess. This is your time to enjoy life.

• Fifth, always remember that you are part of something bigger than yourself.

Ibid.

Parlamentarians behaving badly

European Parliament removed cameras from a hearing where a watchdog group presented findings concerning UNRWA ties to terrorism. What were they afraid that the public would find out?

“I have arrived in Brussels at the invitation of the European Parliament to present evidence tomorrow concerning UNRWA’s longstanding refusal to take seriously the widespread encouragement and promotion of terrorism by its school teachers, principals and other staff,” said Hillel Neuer, executive director of the Geneva-based United Nations Watch, an independent non-governmental organization that monitors the world body.

“I was astonished to learn that members of the European Parliament representing the Left Group, the Greens/EFA and the Socialists and Democrats first tried to stop my testimony and the hearing, and when that failed, they have now initiated removal of cameras tomorrow to prevent my words from going public,” said Neuer.

“My understanding is that the removal of cameras is an extremely rare occurrence for this kind of hearing when the invited witness has not made the request, but rather the members of the working group of the foreign affairs committee.”

“Given that EU voters are paying more than 100 million Euro a year to UNRWA, one would think the taxpayers have a right to know how their funds are being used, and what they are funding. Forcing evidence to be hidden contradicts the basic democratic principles of transparency and accountability.”

https://unwatch.org/leftist-meps-force-removal-of-cameras-from-hearing-on-unrwa-terror-ties/

Canadian Parliament was not far behind:

You can read more about the play-by-play circus that was the last session of Parliament before a two-week March break, with a Liberal aide running in and distributing copies of amendments not five minutes before the vote was scheduled to take place (and which was likely to defeat the original motion). The NDP MP for Edmonton-Strathcona – dressed for the occasion – read in the amendments, some of which were hand-written, and the Liberal-NDP coalition forced a vote minutes later. The French version of the amendments, and thus of the motion, did not even exist at the time the vote was called, and the BQ was appropriately peeved.

This is our seat of power, the place of reasoned debate on behalf of all Canadians?

The vote is in and we have forced the Liberals to:
– Stop selling arms to the Israeli govt,
– Support the ICC and ICJ,
– Place sanctions on extremist settlers,
– and much more
Every single Conservative MP and some Liberals tried to block it – they failed.— Jagmeet Singh (@theJagmeetSingh) March 19, 2024

Not clear what the implications are, as Canada has not been selling any arms to Israel (some non-lethal materiel notwithstanding); we don’t really make much of it, or of anything these days, but the symbolism of the first G7 country to make this shameful betrayal of a friend and ally nation in the time of its war with a terrorist organization is not lost on the world.

The motion’s main backer began her speech with a quote from a pro-terror antisemite: “Mr. Speaker, ‘If I must die, you must live to tell my story.’ Those are the words of Refaat Alareer, who was killed in an Israeli air strike in Gaza on December 6.” Which is true, except on October 8, when revelations surfaced of Israeli babies burned to death on Oct. 7, Alareer asked in a social media post if it was done “with or without baking powder.”

Kudos to Anthony Housefather, MP for Mount Royal, who broke ranks with his party (one of only three Liberals who dared):

I am a Canadian, I am a Jew and I am a Zionist, and I am not embarrassed or ashamed of being a Zionist. And Canadian Jews should not have to live what we’re living through, right now. […]

Hamas launched the deadliest attack on Israel, the deadliest pogrom against Jews since the Holocaust, and we are changing our foreign policy to reward Hamas and say ‘Good for you, terrorists!’

Dutch university reinstates Holocaust course cancelled after pro-Palestinian lobbying

I sent this last month through email, but email is more ephemeral, so here it is again, to be preserved.

Some universities can be turned around!

https://www.timesofisrael.com/dutch-university-reinstates-holocaust-course-cancelled-upon-pro-palestinian-lobbying/

My favourite part:

Dutch Justice Minister Dilan Yesilgöz-Zegerius posted to X:

“Seriously? A ‘diverse and balanced dialogue’ about the persecution of Jews?! Six million Jews were murdered because of who they were. Six million lives were brutally destroyed because of pure hatred of Jews. Anyone who wants to nuance that needs a history lesson themselves.”

Imagine a similar paragraph today in, say, Globe and Mail, that starts with “Canada’s Justice Minister…”

I can’t, and this is a problem.