Racism is "the belief that one 'racial group' is
inferior to another and the practices of the dominant group to maintain the
inferior position of the dominated group. Often defined as a combination of
power, prejudice and discrimination."
This is how the British Library
defines racism on its Web site. The above definition hardly deviates from the
essence of almost all definitions of the ominous concept. And, indeed, the
concept is being fully utilized with Israel's onslaught against the
Palestinians, and the international community and media's mild, if not
accommodating response to the onslaught.
The capture of Israeli soldier,
Gilad Shalit is an act of self-defense. According to international law and the
Geneva Conventions, he can be considered a prisoner of war, but not according
to CNN, Fox News and the increasingly spineless BBC, which presents the soldier
as a victim, who was "kidnapped" by Palestinian "militants"
who are "affiliated" with the Hamas government.
By not challenging the Israeli
narrative in any meaningful way, the uncritical media have become a tool in the
hands of Israel's war strategists and their eternal concoctions.
Consider this example. An Israeli
military commander tells a BBC correspondent, dispatched to the border area
between Israel and Gaza, that Israel intends on opening the border for "as
long as it takes" to offset the humanitarian crisis developing in Gaza.
The Israeli Army representative in a barefaced lie declares that the border has
always been open, despite the perpetual Palestinian threat on the state of
Israel. The BBC correspondent thanks him and signs off.
Is it possible that the BBC is
unaware of the fact that Gaza has been under a strict military siege since
Hamas' democratic advent to power through the January 2006 elections? Could it
be that the Western media have missed the dozens of shocking reports that have
warned that the Israeli siege -- which began months before the capture of
Shalit -- was soon to create chaos and panic among the already malnourished
Palestinians in Gaza? Did they all miss statements by top Israeli officials
vowing to carry on with the siege until the outset of Hamas?
Some reporters misrepresent facts
out of ignorance, not by design. But if that indeed were the case, then how can
one excuse the fact that the same media that coined the term
"kidnapping" to describe the action of the Palestinian fighters who
captured Shalit refused to use the same association to describe the kidnapping
of most of the elected Palestinian Cabinet, mostly academics with no connection
to any militant wing?
Israel's military spokesman
insisted that they are "all terrorists" and Israel, "like any
democratic" country has the right to protect itself against terrorists. If
that were true, why did Israel refrain from kidnapping them until Palestinian
fighters embarrassed the Israeli Army and captured their first prisoner of war
in a long time? Is "rounding up" Palestinian ministers and scores of
legislators the same as having a soldier captured in what has been for long a
one-sided Israeli war?
If you are an avid viewer of Fox
News or a reader of the New York Times, then Israel is yet to exceed its
legitimate legal boundaries: that of a democracy opting to defend its citizens.
But only racism can lead to such rationale. Only a racist media portray the
capture of a soldier whose army units have besieged Gazans for years, denying
them food and medicine, as a violation of all that is holy. Only a racist media
present the kidnapping of 9,000 Palestinians, now in Israeli jails, as a just
outcome of Israel's routine arrests of Palestinian terrorists or potential
terrorists. Only racism can play down the Israeli destruction of Gaza's
infrastructure, which is justified without question, for such actions are
necessary to impede the militants' efforts.
And yet, Israel is praised for its
"generous" act of allowing some food to be transferred to Gazans, who
ironically have gone hungry because of the Israeli-spearheaded international
campaign to punish Palestinians for electing Hamas.
Only racism can completely remove
from the current discourse the murder of dozens of Palestinian civilians at the
hands of the Israeli Army (90 civilians in seven weeks) as the reason that led
to the Palestinian raid on the Israeli Army post and the capture of Shalit, and
instead depict the current escalation as if it were entirely the work of the
Palestinians, with Israel's slate still clean.
Indeed, Israel's slate will continue to be clean as long as
racism and inequality are the concepts according to which this conflict is
explained. Israel has the right to do all the above actions without hesitation
because Israel is not Palestine, and the lives and well being of the residents
of Israel, at least some of them, cannot be equated with Palestinians. Turn the
tables for a moment and you'll understand how repellent such racism is.
Inequality has always been at the
heart of this conflict, the late professor Edward Said used to say. Racism is
at the heart of inequality, I must add. The media can be ignorant, biased and
self-serving, indeed, but they can also be utterly racist.
Veteran Arab American journalist Ramzy Baroud teaches mass communication
at Australia�s Curtin University of Technology, Malaysia Campus. His latest
book is "The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronology of a People�s
Struggle" (Pluto Press, London). He is also the editor-in-chief of the PalestineChronicle.com.