德班反犹太复国主义:其来源、影响及其与早期反犹太意识形态的关系

D. Hirsh, H. Miller
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引用次数: 4

摘要

2001年联合国“世界反种族主义大会”上的反犹太复国主义既不是一种完全的“新反犹太主义”,也不仅仅是一种非历史的、永恒的现象的最新表现。在80年代末和90年代的和平进程中,把以色列作为世界上所有坏事的关键象征的强烈关注已经有所缓解,但在德班,20世纪70年代的“犹太复国主义=种族主义”文化又回来了。许多参与者内化并接受了重新配置的反犹太复国主义。另一些人则没有说出来,即使他们目睹了与之交织在一起的、可识别的老式反犹主义修辞。同意犹太复国主义是种族隔离制度垮台后世界上种族主义的主要象征形式的提议,为不同运动和环境提供了统一:后殖民主义、人权和人道主义法;妇女运动,反种族主义,许多全球左派和非政府组织;甚至是压迫性的政府,如果他们把自己定位为反帝国主义或“伊斯兰”的话。德班的积极分子、外交官和联合国工作人员并没有被动地受到这种反犹太复国主义意识形态的感染,他们选择积极地接受它或容忍它。德班反犹太复国主义基于真实、夸张和虚构的元素,并通过过去的反犹主义的模糊碎片变得可信。德班反犹太复国主义之所以具有吸引力,是因为它提供了一种情感上强有力的方式,可以想象和传达“好人”反对的、他们难以理性面对的一切。它用以色列的面孔描绘了种族主义,并最终描绘了压迫本身。代表们把这种世界观带到了他们生活的地方,带到了他们在思想上和政治上运作的领域。他们努力使德班反犹太复国主义成为21世纪的激进常识。在会议上和世界各地的反霸权空间中,有人明白围绕反对普遍的犹太人威胁而建立的团结的危险,但他们发现自己处于防御状态,反对自信,强大,表面上连贯的意识形态或世界观。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Durban Antizionism: Its Sources, Its Impact, and Its Relation to Older Anti-Jewish Ideologies
Abstract The antizionism that dominated the 2001 UN “World Conference against Racism” was neither a completely “new antisemitism” nor was it simply the latest manifestation of an ahistorical and eternal phenomenon. During the peace process in the late 80s and 90s, the intensifying focus on Israel as a key symbol of all that was bad in the world had been in remission, but at Durban, the 1970s “Zionism=Racism” culture returned. Many participants internalized and embraced the reconfigured antizionism. Others failed to speak out, even when they witnessed the recognizable older antisemitic tropes with which it came intertwined. The proposal to agree that Zionism was the key symbolic form of racism in the world after the fall of apartheid offered unity across different movements and milieus: post-colonialism, human rights and humanitarian law; the women’s movement, anti-racism, much of the global left and NGOs; even oppressive governments if they positioned themselves as antiimperialist or “Islamic.” Activists, diplomats, and UN personnel at Durban were not passively infected by this antizionist ideology, they chose actively to embrace it or to tolerate it. Based on elements of truth, exaggeration, and invention, and made plausible by half-visible fragments of older antisemitisms, Durban antizionism was attractive because it offered an emotionally potent way of imagining and communicating all that “good people” oppose and that they have difficulty facing rationally. It portrayed racism, and in the end oppression itself, with an Israeli face. Delegates brought this worldview home to where they lived and to the spheres in which they operated intellectually and politically. They worked to make Durban antizionism into the radical common sense of the twenty-first century. There were people at the conference and in anti-hegemonic spaces around the world who understood the dangers of a unity built around opposition to a universal Jewish threat, but they found themselves on the defensive against a self-confident, formidable, and ostensibly coherent ideology or worldview.
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