top of page

On Dimitri Lascaris vs PM Justin Trudeau

If you've been watching the unfolding back-and-forth with the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) activist Dimitri Lascaris, the Canadian Prime Minister, and MPs Michael Levitt & Anthony Housefather, I invite you to read this.

///

It scares me that too often we forget that when we get involved in solidity work we are involving ourselves in the lives of millions of people. Our involvement may be just speech but it is public debate that has impact in the real world. In general, I believe ideas grow and heal like wounds - when they are exposed to oxygen.

I've had the privilege and the pain of being on various sides of bigotry and to see it institutionally and culturally embraced. My first understanding of what it meant to be a Jew came from learning from neighbours, teachers, and the other children in the soviet kindergarten I attended that it is something loathsome. As a high school student in Israel I was taught by neighbours, teachers, and classmates that non-Jews are not wanted, that everything will be OK if they all just disappeared. It took decades of healing and action towards justice and peace to overcome.

Many don't understand that Israel/ עם ישראל (the Jewish collective identity), the State of Israel (founded in 1948) and the government of Israel are separate (even though they sometimes overlap).

Antisemitism and racism of all kinds are complex. Sometimes they're black and white, sometimes they're grey with misunderstanding and sometimes they're red with blood. One thing antisemitism is not, however, is criticism of the governments of Israel, and I don't care whose definition you throw at me. Lately, with the attempt to redefine political criticism of Israel as "the new antisemitism" some organizations crossed the line. Sometimes activists who struggle in solidarity for peace and justice in Israel/Palestine cross the line. What guides me is the meaning, the context, and the impact.

The Jewish world is beautiful, multicultural, multilingual, and multi-historical. As the Education Director of the Morris Winchevsky School I often refer to it as a civilization of nearly 4000 years. Our liturgy, traditions, and adaptations are a source of wisdom to me, precisely because one can draw on them to build a more just world and also to understand how nationalism and exclusivity evolve.

As a member of Independent Jewish Voices I make a point to say that political Zionism is a liberation movement against European antisemitism and that it became a colonial-racist movement the second it saw Palestine as exclusively Jewish, as a place where rights will be dolled out depending on what you're born as. Its meaning has been a state of multilayered citizenship (see Adalah's amazing resources), its actions have led to the ongoing Nakba (see De-Colonizer, Zochrot, and Badil) and its impact has been profound - In one way or another it affects everyone who calls this place home. It's impact has also meant that the state of Israel has become a lab for the manifestation of political exclusion in an increasingly globalized world, an innovator in population surveillance, a top player in the arms industry, and a brutal PR machine that finds new ways to silence anyone who criticizes the status quo, both at home and abroad.

One of the most ardent advocates of Zionism is the former Soviet political prisoner Natan Sharansky who upon moving to Israel famously said "Will dissent be permitted? The answer to that question will determine whether the society is a free society or a fear society." While the reality of democracy is far more complex than that, I agree.

Most people don't ask me "what did you see" when they learn I've covered Israel/Palestine as a journalist and filmmaker for nearly a decade. They tell me what they think. In recent years Israel's government started to extend its repressive, anti-democratic practices on Palestinians to its Jewish citizens (for details read 972 Magazine). Some ideas are now illegal. Criticism of what the Israeli army or government is doing is met with punishment. Support for non-violent movements that advocate for equality for all who live between the river Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea is equated with treason.

When politicians go after their constituents for their political views they are delegitimizing the country's democratic institutions. Dimitri Lascaris may have landed in the gray zone with his recent tweets, but as his friend and colleague I see him as a restless advocate for equality and have no doubt that in his heart he harbours a love for all of humanity.

So I guess all this is just to say - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau your constituents are watching. You are welcome to stand with Israel/ עם ישראל, as you should with all minorities in this country, for we are all guests on this Turtle Island, but when you stand with the Trump-like racist government of Benjamin Netanyahu, you are saying to your constituents that you will support repressive regimes and their advocates at the cost of democracy in Canada. Going after Dimitri on twitter is a weak, pathetic move not worthy of a leader.

Featured Posts
Recent Posts
Archive
Search By Tags
Follow Us
  • Facebook Basic Square
  • Twitter Basic Square
  • Google+ Basic Square
bottom of page