Showing posts with label pinkwashing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pinkwashing. Show all posts

FAQ for trolls

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QAIA’s facebook page has been heavily trolled lately. The comments display an exhausting mix of misinformation and straight-up racism. Our work is on anticolonialism, not on educating trolls. So rather than take commenters on individually, we’ve written up this FAQ. It gives real answers to the often ridiculous “questions” posed to us here. We’ve also banned hateful commenters and deleted conversations. They are archived, don’t worry.

Here’s the list of comments we respond to here. It may grow as needed. (2019 update: nope, the trolling is pretty much always the same.)
  1. 
“There is no apartheid or genocide in Israel!”
  2. “You don’t get to self-report that you aren’t anti-Semitic! Anti-Semitism is a problem in queer anti-racist organizing!”
  3. “Israeli security is for the protection of Jews under threat from racist/hostile Arabs!”
  4. “Israel is where Palestinian queers run to, because in Palestine, queerness is punishable by death!"
  5. “Queers and Jews who are anti-Zionist are self-loathing!”
  6. “Queers are being murdered in Chechnya, Syria, etc. – but Israel is your problem?!”
  7. “You’re condemning a Jewish-only state but promoting an Arab-only state?!”
  8. “Saying Jews are white is only logical if you’re anti-Semitic!”
  9. “What about Arab oppression of minorities?!”
  10. “Do you protest Pakistani, Saudi, Iranian apartheid?!”
  11. “I oppose occupation/acknowledge Israeli apartheid exists, but I’m still a Zionist.”
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1. “There is no apartheid or genocide in Israel!”

There is apartheid. The 2017 UN ESCWA study examined Israel’s governance of Palestinians in the four categories Israel uses: in the Occupied Territories, Jerusalem, inside Israel, and in refugee camps. It also used international jurisprudence to define apartheid. The report was published according to usual UN practice. (The claim that it “wasn’t cleared” before publishing is a canard: such studies don’t get “cleared.” They are research publications.) Here’s a running list of apartheid laws in Israel.

There is genocide. Genocide is a term defined by the Polish Jewish scholar Raphael Lemkin in 1944. The term has been debated and updated, as ideas should be. Israel’s destruction of Palestinian life fits Lemkin’s definition and others since then. Here’s a simple legal explanation from the Center for Constitutional Rights.


2. “You don’t get to self-report that you aren’t anti-Semitic! Anti-Semitism is a problem in queer anti-racist organizing!”

We got this troll-comment in response to this post, where QAIA said that anti-Semitism isn’t an issue in queer, anti-racist organizations like the Chicago Dyke March. Self-reporting can be iffy (as when Israelis say “there’s no apartheid or genocide in Israel.”) It’s worth looking at the context.
  • QAIA folks work in many queer anti-racist organizations, and our trolls don’t. It’s an activist culture we know. Queer anti-racist organizations – especially collectives! – are extremely attentive to any inkling of anti-blackness, anti-immigrant bias, Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, transphobia, and classism. They are intensively self-policed, believe it. They’re. Not. Anti-Semitic.
  • Accusations of anti-Semitism against queer anti-racists only ever come up when people call for Palestinian rights. Literally, ever. 

    Accusations of anti-Semitism have been levelled by white Jewish activists against queers of color, without any acknowledgement of the power differential between them. White queers claiming they’re being victimized by queers of color… If you’re okay with that, this FAQ is not up to your needs.

  • Accusations of anti-Semitism are often levelled against Jews, without the accuser acknowledging that complication. They’re implying that the person is acting from outside a community, against that community, which is a pretty vile deception. Accusing someone of being self-hating requires a lot more engagement and questioning in order to be credible. Lying about someone being both self-hating and anti-Semitic for your own ends? Despicable. 

     
  • Stories about supposed instances of queer anti-racists being anti-Semitic are increasingly being placed by organizations with PR departments, and are increasingly “post-factual.” For instance, a staff person of a Zionist LGBT organization wrote an article in a national Jewish newspaper about the Chicago Dyke March claiming that supposedly anti-Semitic organizers were “triggered” by seeing a Star of David. Only much later did the people whom she said were “triggered” get to speak for themselves – and not in a national newspaper. Among them were Jewish activists, who had also been wearing Stars of David and other Jewish symbols. Anti-Semitism is real, but the recent crop of accusations is not honest, and it interrupts anti-racist work that actually is interested in combating anti-Semitism along with other racisms.

3. “Israeli security is for the protection of Jews under threat from racist/hostile Arabs!”

Since 1948, Israel has been a colonizer working with other colonial powers. When we talk about security, let’s talk also about what we’re trying to secure.

In more recent decades, Israel has not been insecure: it’s been the aggressor. But it has been useful to present Israel as a vulnerable victim – a tactic commonly used by powerful states. Like when Americans cry “why do they hate us?” as US drones bomb civilian schools and hospitals. Here’s just one take on Israel's insecurity.


4. “Israel is where Palestinian queers run to, because in Palestine, queerness is punishable by death!”

If you’re truly interested in Palestinian queers’ needs, read what this activist from Palestinian queer organization Al Qaws says about Israel as a “haven” and Palestine as a home place for queers. Please stop concern trolling us about Palestinian queers, and worse, using them as props for your argument.


5. “Queers and Jews who are anti-Zionist are self-loathing!”
  • Being anti-Zionist means being against the reasoning of Zionism. It means being against the idea that we as queers, Jews, or anyone else need to fence ourselves in, and fence others out, in order to be safe.
  • It means rejecting the idea that danger to Jews, queers, or anyone is somehow lessened by occupation, apartheid, and the dehumanization of Palestinians, Arabs, Muslims, or others.
  • It means rejecting the Israeli governments’ (and lobbyists’) claims about its intention to “protect” anyone. The idea of believing what any state claims about its virtues is silly, whether it’s Israel, the US, or any other. In the case of Israel, which openly represses, jails, and kills civilians who disagree with it, believing it’s a democracy that “protects rights” is ludicrous.
  • Queers and Jews are anti-Zionist because we’re fighting for our survival and liberation, and Israel is a violent oppressor and generator of violence.

6. “Queers are being murdered in Chechnya, Syria, etc. – but Israel is your problem?!”
  • This is like “all lives matter” but worse. In order to deflect attention from Palestinian suffering, you’re using another group of people’s suffering that also isn’t yours. And you’ve chosen specifically queer suffering to try to claim some moral ground. It’s so foul. Please. Stop. 

  • Israel is the US government's key partner in making war, developing weaponry, and generating fear and "clash of civilizations" rationales for colonialism. So yes: Israel is particularly our problem.

  • When people are working against Israeli apartheid, it doesn’t mean they’re not working against other abuses. 

  • Anti-Zionist queers care about queers, and also other people. A million people in Gaza are starving, without a health care system or other basic needs, denied electricity (cooling, food storage, running water) by a terrifying collusion between Israel and the corrupt Palestinian Authority, and trapped at closed borders by agreement between Israel and Egypt. Palestinians have been undergoing some version of these abuses for 65 years. And Chechnya is your problem? (Of course it is – but Palestine should be too.)

7. “You’re condemning a Jewish-only state but promoting an Arab-only state?!”

Who TF is promoting an Arab-only state? Anti-Zionism opposes the Zionist idea of a state that grants different rights to different groups of people. Supporting Palestinian rights doesn’t mean expelling Jews, it means making people equal and ending the pretense that Palestinians don’t have a right to live freely in Palestine. It also means undoing  some of Israel’s illegal actions, like expelling Palestinians from their homes. Wondering what that would look like? Read one possibility here.


8. “Saying Jews are white is only logical if you’re anti-Semitic!”

Not at all. European Jews were once marginalized as a race, excluded from civic life and political and economic power. Today, they are generally not. White supremacists do indeed target all Jews as a race, and as they gain power, European Jewish inclusion is less stable. But the claim that European Jews are people of color – as it has been made lately by Zionists – is a coded claim that European Jews are marginalized in US and Western society like black people and historically colonized people. And that claim is untrue.

Jews from outside of Europe are people of color, including Arab, Asian, and other Jewish people. Some Jews from POC heritage have white privilege, including political and economic power, that has been created by the whitening of European Jews and the complicated nature of Jewish racialization. Recognizing those Jews as people of color is a way of recognizing and undoing Zionism’s portrayal of Jews and Israel as “European.” At the same time, it’s important to notice when “people of color” is being used to describe people who have and are exercising power – for example, the Israeli military – as if they were disempowered.


9. “What about Arab oppression of minorities?!”
There’s a robust discussion of racism and classism in Arab communities. Pay attention. No need for people from a country with a white supremacist and queer-phobic president, police force, and militia movement to be all that smug.


10. “Do you protest Pakistani, Saudi, Iranian apartheid?!”
QAIA works on the issue of Zionist violence, US support for it, and Israeli pinkwashing. We are proud and supportive of other anti-racist and anti-colonial activists around the globe (and we can’t help it: we especially love the queer ones.) There are SO MANY other issues that also need attention. We encourage trolls to get off our Facebook and go address them.


11. “I oppose occupation/acknowledge Israeli apartheid exists, but I’m still a Zionist.”

Yeah… no.

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Letter in support of #cancelpinkwashing: to 'Creating Change' and The Task Force

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January 20, 2016

NYC QAIA stands with those LGBT community members challenging the pinkwashing of Israeli occupation and apartheid by A Wider Bridge at the Creating Change 2016 conference in Chicago, as expressed in the #cancelpinkwashing statement.

A Wider Bridge's mission is to 'pinkwash' the Israeli occupation of Palestine and generate support for Israel within the LGBT community in the United States. It serves as a front organization for the Israeli government and the Israel lobby that supports it. AWB is trying to mislead the community about the nature of the event that the National LGBTQ Task Force cancelled and then uncancelled. AWB insinuates that those who opposed the reception were targeting the shabbat service scheduled to precede it, and Jerusalem Open House, which is a co-sponsor of the event.

In fact, the anti-apartheid activists who spoke with Creating Change's Sue Hyde made clear that they were not objecting to the shabbat service or to the participation of JOH, but rather to the reception and AWB's use of it to promote the Israeli government and its illegal occupation of Palestine. AWB dishonestly portrayed the #cancelpinkwashing initiative as 'anti-Semitic.' AWB board member Dana Beyer went so far as to write a blog post on HuffingtonPost.com entitled, "National LGBTQ Task Force Censors the Jews" (1.17.16), in which she called the Task Force's initial decision to cancel the AWB event "an act of bigotry against Jewish LGBTQ persons as mean-spirited as any other."

It is well documented that the Israeli government is actively rebranding itself by using "community" organizations, mostly targeting youth and LGBT people, to make the case that Israeli is a hip Middle Eastern hangout rather than an apartheid state. The campaign's much-repeated tactic has been to slip an ostensibly Jewish cultural event onto conference agendas that is in fact intended to build support for the Israeli government -- and to cry discrimination if anyone objects. The Task Force is not the first victim of this ruse, but it has a responsibility to understand the tawdry history it is currently reenacting.

Clearly, the Task Force has not understood it yet. In the Task Force's Jan. 18 statement reversing the cancellation, executive director Rea Carey wrote: "It is our belief that when faced with choices, we should move towards our core value of inclusion and opportunities for constructive dialogue and canceling the reception was a mistake," adding, "We are aware that our original decision made it appear we were taking sides in a complex and long-standing conflict."

In fact, by reversing its original decision and re-scheduling the pinkwashing event, the Task Force is taking sides, providing a platform to build LGBT support for Israeli apartheid and occupation. The reference to 'inclusion' rings especially false as LGBT Palestinians living under the occupation are not included, given that Palestinians need special permission from the Israeli authorities to leave the West Bank, which is rarely granted.

It is not clear what the Task Force is planning when Carey says, “…we will also be creating a facilitated session for dialogue around these issues.” It is hard to imagine how this can happen when the organizers are hosting a group whose mission, again, is to build support for an apartheid state that is specifically using LGBT rights rhetoric -- and Creating Change -- to target Palestinians.

Further, we are upset that Carey felt she needed to call for "peaceful protests" should any be planned at Creating Change. Strong feelings and sharp disagreements should not lead to the assumption that a protest would be anything other than peaceful. In the current climate of Islamophobia in this country, this statement only serves to reinforce stereotypes.

An organization cannot insist that it is on the cutting edge of the pursuit of progressive social and political change when its annual conference legitimizes the pinkwashing of Israeli occupation and apartheid.

Signed,
Naomi Brussel, Leslie Cagan, and Pauline Park
on behalf of NYC Queers Against Israeli Apartheid
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Connecting pinkwashing + NYC Islamophobia

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QAIA cosponsored "Jewish Responses to Islamophobia and Anti-Arab Racism" this week, organized by Jews Against Islamophobia. The event a Congregation Beth Simchat Torah was
"a roundtable conversation about how we can strengthen our work as Jews committed to challenging Islamophobia and anti-Arab racism. We hope the conversation will help us think more deeply about how we can most effectively engage as partners and allies in one of the most pressing and important civil and human rights issues of our time." (JVP-NY)

QAIA brought this letter to add to the conversation:


Islamophobia and Queers: Exploring the Links

We thank the Jews Against Islamophobia Coalition for sponsoring a series of panels addressing the question of Islamophobia. These events have helped deepen the much-needed discussion of this issue here in NYC.

NYC Queers Against Israeli Apartheid, working in solidarity with LQBTQ Palestinians and in support of Palestinian self-determination, urges us all to look at how Islamophobia is embedded in the use of “gay rights” to promote Israel as a self-described democratic, open society. Ostensibly “gay friendly” Israel is always implicitly (and sometimes explicitly) contrasted to repressive homophobic Arab and Muslim societies, feeding on and fuelling Islamophobia.

Israel’s policies do not create a safe haven for Palestinian queers. Recognizing gay “rights” does nothing to advance or broaden a rights discourse in Israel. These are rights compatible with a “for Jews-only” sectarianism and with patriarchal structures that require women to get their husbands’ permission for a divorce.

Deploying gay rights is a cover-up -- referred to as pinkwashing. Israel has spent decades making Palestinian bodies disappear—the ongoing demolition of Arab villages, house demolitions in Jerusalem, expulsion of Arab Bedouins from the Negev, imprisonment for those who dissent.

Palestinian queer organizations have made clear that rights for gays in an overall situation of domination and disparagement of Arabs and Muslims do not advance freedom for any Palestinians.

We hope that all those who oppose racism will look at the links between Islamophobia and queers—from NYC to (the rising far right in) Europe to Israel/Palestine.

Specifically we ask you to join us in the boycott of gay tourism to Israel, as part of our support for the broader BDS campaign. The city of Tel Aviv alone has allotted $90 million dollars to promote itself as a gay paradise, including sending gay “diplomats” to the U.S. to enlist liberal gays to defend Israel’s power over and against Palestinians. In the coming months, QAIA will be working to challenge the promoting of gay tourism and we welcome your cooperation in this effort.
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Dueling op-eds: NY Post & NY Daily News

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Can it be that that the doomed, wrongheaded effort to repress speech at a City University has ended decades of blackout on public debate on BDS, queers, silencing criticism of Israel and EVERYTHING!!!? Today, Omar Barghouti talks gentle sense in the Daily News! Alan Dershowitz spews victimology and hate (targeting CUNY again, and queers too) in the NY Post! The floor is open, people.

Barghouti:
"Our opponents call us “Jew haters.” That is a lie and a slander. BDS advocates equal rights for all and consistently opposes all forms of racism, including anti-Semitism. In fact, many progressive Jewish activists, intellectuals, students, feminists and others participate in and sometimes lead BDS campaigns in Western countries. The increasing impact of Israeli supporters of BDS has led the Knesset to pass a draconian anti-boycott law banning advocacy of any boycott against Israel or its complicit institutions..."
"...Building on its global ascendance, the BDS movement is spreading across the U.S., especially on campuses and in churches. Multi-million-dollar campaigns by Israel’s foreign ministry to counter BDS by “rebranding” through art, science and cynically using LGBT rights to “pinkwash” Israel’s denial of basic Palestinian rights have failed to stem the tide."

Dershowitz:
"Are the media supposed to be so impressed with Israel’s pro-gay policies that they no longer cover the Palestinian issue? Well, that certainly hasn’t worked.Are gays around the world supposed to feel so indebted to Israel that they no longer criticize the Jewish nation? That surely hasn’t worked, either — witness the increasingly rabid anti-Israel advocacy by some radical gay groups..." 
"...But to the anti-Semite, it doesn’t matter how Jews manage their supposed manipulations. The anti-Semite just knows that there’s something sinister at work if Jews do anything positive. The core characteristic of anti-Semitism is the certainty that everything the Jews do is wrong, and everything that’s wrong is done by the Jews."

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Now at our community center!!! March 11: QAIA's Schulman reading

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NYC Queers Against Israeli Apartheid is (extremely!) proud to present...

Sarah Schulman reading from her new book
Israel/Palestine and the Queer International

Mon. March 11 @ 7pm
NYC LGBT Community Center (208 West 13th St.
Free & open to the public!
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Queers Against Israeli Apartheid (NYC-QAIA) is proud to welcome Sarah Schulman with a reading from her new book, Israel/Palestine and the Queer International as NYC launches Israel Apartheid Week.

This event is a huge victory for free speech and queer organizing, and we hope you’ll come celebrate it with us! Beginning in March 2011, the NYC LGBT Center banned any discussion of Palestine, in response to pressure from wealthy supporters of Israel’s anti-Palestinian policies.

In February 2013, Queers Against Israeli Apartheid (QAIA) applied to the NYC LGBT Community Center for space for this reading. But in response to that denial and the two years history of censorship at the Center, the LGBT community mobilized in outrage, and overturned the ban!


From Palestinian Queers for BDS:
‘As Palestinian queers, our struggle is not only against social injustice and our rights as a queer minority in Palestinian society, but rather, our main struggle is one against Israel’s colonization, occupation and apartheid; a system that has oppressed us for the past 63 years… In the last years Israel has been leading an international campaign that tries to present Israel as the “only democracy” and the “gay haven” in the Middle East, while ironically portraying Palestinians, who suffer every single day from Israel’s state racism and terrorism, as barbaric and homophobic.’ (pqbds.com)
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This is wild: Center "lifts moratorium", NYC electeds bid to reimpose it.

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Check out this announcement from the NYC LGBT Center, posted about 15 minutes ago... and the racist, repressive press release from NYC electeds (below), posted about four nanoseconds later.

STATEMENT ON CENTER SPACE USE POLICY FROM GLENNDA TESTONE, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, AND THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL & TRANSGENDER COMMUNITY CENTER

February 15, 2013 – In 2011 the Center was thrust into a controversy involving the Israeli/Palestinian conflict about which we took no position, but were forced to expend significant resources to address. This controversy placed substantial strains on management resources and front line staff, and created an environment that interfered with our ability to assist those in our community who needed our services. In response, we imposed a moratorium on renting space to groups that organize on all sides of this conflict, which, while itself controversial, allowed things to cool down and gave us time to rethink the Center's space use policies.

Our resulting Space Use Guidelines, Terms and Conditions will govern the use of our space going forward, and, accordingly, the moratorium is no longer in effect. The Center does not endorse the views of any groups to which it rents space. We adamantly believe in and defend free speech and the open exchange of ideas, but we deplore the rhetoric of hate and bigotry. As stated in our guidelines: "no group utilizing space at the Center shall engage in hate speech or bigotry of any kind." Therefore, all groups wishing to utilize space at the Center must agree and commit to our Pledge of Nondiscrimination and our above-described prohibition on hate speech and bigotry.

Going forward, if members of the community feel that hate speech or bigotry has occurred at the Center, they are encouraged to submit a formal complaint in writing. The Center does not have the resources to "pre-vet" all content that comes through groups that rent space, and we encourage community members themselves to help us keep our space safe through this formal process. In the coming weeks, the Center will publish the details of a formal resolution process to address space use-related complaints.
Provided applicants agree in good faith to fully comply with our guidelines, we will process current and future requests for space, including from entities who were previously declined under the moratorium. And we encourage other groups or individuals of differing viewpoints to apply to rent space as well so that all voices may be heard.
The Center must move forward and remains strongly committed to serving the needs of our community as best we can. We hope everyone will join us in good faith.
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Joint Statement by NYC Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn, NYS Assembly Member Deborah Glick, NYS Senator Brad Hoylman, and NYC Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer

Re: New LGBT Community Center Space Use Guidelines

“We support the new Space Use guidelines, terms and conditions being implemented by the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community Center. Their decision to allow groups to have open discussion and to create a resolution process to address complaints of potential hate-related speech is the correct approach. Under the Center’s new guidelines, all parties will have access to rent space to organize around LGBT issues, and the Center will remain a safe space, where hate-related speech will not be tolerated. This will allow the Center staff and board to promote its core mission of providing health and wellbeing services to our community, in addition to providing a safe and secure forum for issues relevant to NYC’s LGBT community.

That said, we want to make abundantly clear that we categorically reject attempts by any organization to use the Center to delegitimize Israel and promote an anti-Israel agenda. We adamantly oppose any and all efforts to inappropriately inject the Center into politics that are not the core of their important mission.

We vehemently oppose the absurd accusations by some groups that Israel is engaged in so-called “pinkwashing”. We find this charge offensive and fundamentally detrimental to the global cause of LGBT equality. These accusations should be understood as just one part of the arsenal of those who seek to completely discredit the state of Israel altogether. In fact, Israel’s highly laudable record in advancing LGBT rights deserves praise, not scorn. Given the very poor record of much of the world on LGBT issues, we should be celebrating Israel's – or any country's – LGBT equality advances. We must always encourage countries with strong records of achievement for our community to be rightly and publicly proud so they may set an example for others. We continue to believe that the boycott, sanctions and divestment (BDS) movement against Israel is wrongheaded, destructive, and an obstacle to our collective hope for a peaceful two-state solution.

We applaud the Center Board and staff for taking this important step. We now hope everyone will respect the Center as a safe space for open and safe discussions. We hope the Center can move forward and serve the LGBT community as it has always done.”

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Pinkwashing is NPR's top story right now!

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This story popped up on NPR's All Things Considered this afternoon, and this evening it's the top story on NPR's website!

It's pretty straightforward reporting on the issue: Israel is unpopular so it's doing intensive PR, it's using queers as fodder and massively overblowing its queer progress, and the occupation is still a war crime that can't be papered over. Couldn't be simpler.

Full text is below, but go read it on NPR's website.



June 4, 2012
The sun is setting, gay pride flags wave next to the water, same-sex couples kiss and cuddle on the beach. This is Tel Aviv — which the government of Israel is now pushing as one of the most gay-friendly cities in the world — and gay tourism is booming.
"It's a place you have to go, good parties, nice people, beautiful people and just different from all the other tourist destinations you can go to," says Jorg Grosskopf, a German tourist who, together with his partner, Peter, is on his seventh vacation in Israel.
Tel Aviv will host its annual gay pride parade June 8. The government and organizers say it's expected to be the biggest one ever.
The government of Israel is styling the country as a haven for the gay community. But it's more than just beaches, parades and clubs. Israel has laws protecting the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender, or LGBT, community.
"LGBT rights in Israel are truly an achievement," says Itai Pinkas, a former Tel Aviv council member. "It's an obligation to show to the world."
Pinkas notes that gays can openly serve in the Israeli army. Gay marriages from other countries are respected. However, Israel's religious authorities, who control marriages in the country, do not sanction civil marriages, a prohibition that covers both heterosexual and same-sex couples.
Drawing Comparisons In The Region
The LGBT community has other protections as well, which is not the case in other parts of the Middle East, Pinkas says.
"People should not forget that our neighborhood is not a good one for gays, as for women, as for anyone who is not religious or very conservative," he says.
Thousands of members of Israel's gay community and its supporters marched on June 11, 2010, in the annual gay pride parade in Tel Aviv. The parade began in central Tel Aviv and ended at the city's beachfront.
EnlargeKfir Sivan/Israel Sun/Landov
Thousands of members of Israel's gay community and its supporters marched on June 11, 2010, in the annual gay pride parade in Tel Aviv. The parade began in central Tel Aviv and ended at the city's beachfront.
However, even within Israel, acceptance of the gay community is not universal. Jerusalem, for example, is just an hour's drive from Tel Aviv, but is far more conservative, and there is less tolerance for the gay community.
Not everyone in the gay-rights community agrees that the government should be taking credit for any progress that has occurred.
"They don't have the right to claim fame on that," says Mike Hamel, who is on the board of Israel's National LGBT Task Force, a private organization.
"If Israel is a haven for the LGBT community, it's because of the community, the organizations that are working very hard to make it a good place for LGBT people to live," he says. "It's not because of the government policies. It's in spite of the government policies."
Generally speaking, Hamel says successive governments have not been supportive of gay rights, and it took legal challenges for there to be progress — a pattern that continues today.
For example, a recent bid to include a specific clause barring discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in a student-rights bill was blocked by Israel's justice minister, Yaakov Neeman, who is a member of a religious party.
Israel's current government is a coalition that includes several conservative religious parties that control sensitive ministries such as justice and the interior — ones that control what services and rights the gay community has, Hamel says.
"When it comes to practical things, we still have a hard battle to fight," he says.
Other critics accuse the government of what they call "pinkwashing."
Gay groups that support the Palestinian bid for an independent state use the phrase to describe Israel's public relations strategy. They charge that the Israeli government is highlighting the rights enjoyed by the gay community in Israel to obscure the occupation of the Palestinians.
"Israel is a wonderful country in many ways. The sea is beautiful, it's a wonderful country for high-tech, and they've made a lot of progress in terms of gay rights," says Sari Bashi, who is with the Israeli human rights group Gisha, which advocates on behalf of the Palestinians. "It doesn't change the fact that what is going on in the occupied territories is a severe violation of human rights that needs to be stopped."
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Re: "Arab panic" mural in West Village

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Seen in the West Village.


(in response to this mural...)
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"Arab panic" mural in West Village

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http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/05/17/a-west-village-mural-weighs-gay-rights-in-the-middle-east/
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/
2012/05/17/a-west-village-mural-weighs-
gay-rights-in-the-middle-east/
There's a new "Arab panic" mural in the West Village. In a clumsy attempt to win over queers, NYC Birthright Israel Alumni commissioned the piece. For context, Birthright is the free-trip-to-Israel organization founded to encourage Jewish youth to have sex, make Jewish babies and/or get married, and make "oh yeah, I've been to Israel" into a sort of tribal rite of passage. It is the so-very-opposite of queer.

This mural does just what an advertisement is supposed to: hits a few buzz words, scares you into thinking you need what it's selling, and makes sure you don't get any real information. It reads:
Arabs are super scary and weird -- so not like you and me!
Men holding hands!
Gay wedding!
Pride parade!
Israel!
Which is also funny because queers actually can't get married in Israel. But never mind.

This crappy mural, lacking any hint of a queer aesthetic, absolutely crystallizes pinkwashing in the US. It's a message for queers, designed by straight people with no clue about queers (and apparently no access to the internet to learn about us), and stuck on a wall in a neighborhood that those people think of as gay. (News flash about gentrification, people! If you want to propagandize the West Village, focus on messaging about how great Israel is for bankers and movie stars.)  The mural is about as authentic as the YouTube video, exposed as an Israeli government propaganda piece, where a fake gay activist claims to have been rejected from the Free Gaza flotilla because of Palestinian homophobia.

It is AMAZING that anyone is falling for this stuff.
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(In)Equality Forum 2012: Pinkwashing & the Palestinian Queer Community

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KNOW Pinkwashing Presents:

(In)Equality Forum 2012: Pinkwashing & the Palestinian Queer Community
Featuring Pauline Park, co-founder of Queers Against Israeli Apartheid (NYC QAIA) and Che Gossett of ACT UP Philadelphia.

When: Saturday, May 5, 3-5 p.m.
Where: William Way LGBTQ Community Center, 1315 Spruce Street, in the Mark Segal Ballroom

The 2012 Equality Forum chose Israel as its ‘featured nation’ and invited Israeli Ambassador to the United States, Michael Oren. By working in coordination with the Israeli Embassy in Washington and the Israeli Ministry of Tourism, the Equality Forum is promoting Israel’s efforts at Pinkwashing. Panelists will discuss Israel’s continuing human rights violations against Palestinians, Israel’s ‘Brand Israel’ public relations campaign, and the necessity of boycotting this year’s Equality Forum as a means to finding justice and equality in Palestine/Israel and in our own communities.

Pauline Park is a co-founder of the New York City Queers Against Israel Apartheid, and chair of the New York Association for Gender Rights Advocacy (NYAGRA). In January, she participated in the first LGBTQ delegation to Palestine. Che Gossett is a genderqueer artist and activist, a member of ACT UP Philadelphia, a board member of the Sex Worker Outreach Project, and a contributor to Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment and the Prison-Industrial Complex
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ADL weighs in to defend pinkwashing (as ever.)

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Shocking no one, the Anti-Defamation League is booing queer activists who call out Israel's pinkwashing. ("The Persistency of “Pinkwashing” Allegations at Columbia University" (5/12/12))

The ADL is an original pinkwasher, producing this poster (at left) around 2002 -- waaay before the Israeli foreign ministry launched the "Brand Israel" campaign. Thanks again for your support, right-wing straight people!
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Queering Solidarity: A Panel on Pinkwashing and LGBTQ Activism for Israel-Palestine

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"Queering Solidarity: A Panel on Pinkwashing and LGBTQ Activism for Israel-Palestine"
with Columbia Law School Professor Katherine Franke and Harvard PhD Candidate Sa’ed Adel Atshan

April 10th, 8:00pm @ Barnard College
Sponsored by Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine
Details: http://www.facebook.com/events/297903396946120/
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"Equality Forum" pinkwashing defended in seriously racist gay article

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Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren
Equality Forum's keynote speaker

Drape this guy in rainbows, and he's
still a straight, war-mongering, racist
politician telling queers what to think.
The Equality Forum, an annual symposium (organized by a Log Cabin Republican and sporting a website with pictures only of white people), is making Israel its featured nation this year. In addition to being an pretty foul, deliberately-timed act of pinkwashing, the whole thing is creepily fetishy about Israelis. The keynote speaker is the Israeli Ambassador, who isn't gay -- but at least he's Israeli! At least three panels are described only as "Israeli speaker" or "Israeli moderator and Israeli panelists." (Update - no names even now that the forum is over. Their Israeliness is apparently all the information you need.) The Equality Forum website excitedly annouces that Tel Aviv was named "best gay city of 2011!" by some other random website. As with all things pinkwashing, information is replaced by empty slogans.

Accordingly, the Equality Forum is defended in a stunningly racist op-ed by the publisher of the Philadelphia Gay News, Mark Segal. Here's a sample:
"The [Palestinian] culture is so hateful to LGBT people that any LGBT activism is limited due to the very possible chance of violence... By supporting the Palestinians, one is supporting an anti-equality cause, if not supporting hate crimes themselves."
As any fan of racist, jingoistic writing knows, it's important to lump all members of a group together and then speak for them, just as Segal does. Especially when they've been speaking for themselves, but not saying what you wish they'd say. A blob called "The Palestinians" is much easier to dismiss as evil homophobic demons than actual Palestinians, especially queer ones, and especially queer activists.

It's also important to credential oneself as a gay liberal ("I have been a member of Peace Now"!) before deciding that Palestinian queers' analysis of their own culture and means for change is not worth mentioning, and endorsing Israeli Apartheid as the solution.

Palestinian Queers for BDS has written another relatively patient correction...

Update 5/14/12: Columbia profs Katherine Franke and Kendall Thomas, as well as "Rabbi Rebecca Alpert who was scheduled to speak on a panel about religion, and Pauline Park, who was also a member of the January delegation and was slated to speak on transgender rights, have also decided to boycott the Equality Forum’s global summit this year due to its selection of Israel as its 'featured nation.'"
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Hanging out the pinkwashing: word is on the street.

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It took a while, but after 5 years of Israeli PR targeted at LGBT tourists, queers are finally succeeding in blowing the lid off the Israeli government's pinkwashing campaign. Just as pro-Israel/pro-Apartheid newspapers are full of claims (like this one) that queers should adore Israel and despise Palestinians, LGBT newspapers are increasingly full of calls to refuse the hate bait. Here are this week's bits:
...And a must-read from Israel's Alternative Information Center (plus credit for photo above):
Israel seeks minorities, gays for propaganda efforts
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QAIA intro to "Occupy the LGBT Center!"

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Mic check!! Queers Against Israeli Apartheid is here to Occupy the LGBT Center, to protest the Center's exclusion of queers from our own community space.

We see the barricades outside, we see the cops! They are shamefully policing queers who are challenging the Center's racist exclusion. They are shamefully policing queers who challenge pinkwashing of Israeli apartheid. Shamefully policing queers who challenge anti-Arab and anti-Muslim bigots.

For the last year, the Center's director and board have shut out queers:
 Queers whose political organizing for human rights makes the Center nervous.
 Queers whose Arab ethnicity or Muslim religion makes the Center nervous.
 Queers whose challenging of Israel's racist apartheid laws makes the Center nervous.

How did this happen?!

Last year, the Center tossed out Siegebusters, and Palestine solidarity group of queers and non-queers, just days before its biggest awareness and fundraising event. Our communities were outraged! The Center heard from...
 Palestinian queers who were outraged...
 Immigrant queers who were outraged...
 Queers of color who were outraged...
 Trans queers who were outraged...
 Activist queers who were outraged...
... all of whose work got queers the rights we "enjoy" today.


The Center also heard from a few powerful gay and straight bigots. They said anyone who stands with Palestinian queers is providing "a fig leaf for Arab homophobes." They wanted to pit queers against Arabs and Muslims -- as if no Arabs or Muslims are queers. As if queers must go along with racism out of some twisted kind of self-interest.

The Center sided with the bigots. In a community meeting, they promised to "deal with the issue." One year later, they're still excluding us. From the Center, we've heard only silence.

But we will not be silent! Here's who's in the room today!
 Queers for an Open LGBT Center (QFOLC)
 alQaws for Sexual and Gender Diversity in Palestinian Society
 Adalah-NY: the New York Campaign for Boycott of Israel
 Brooklyn for Peace
 FIERCE!
 Jewish Voice for Peace-NY
 Jews Say No!
 International Action Center
 International Socialist Organization
 Lesbian & Gay Solidarity, Melbourne, Australia
 Metropolitan Community Church of New York
 New York Association for Gender Rights Advocacy (NYAGRA)
 Palestinian Queers for BDS
 Siegebusters
 South Asian Lesbian & Gay Association (SALGA)
 Sylvia Rivera Law Project
 Workers World Party
 Young, Jewish and Proud
 and... Queers Against Israeli Apartheid!

All of us together stand up against pinkwashing! Pinkwashing tries to use queer rights as cover to deny Palestinian rights, and to cover up apartheid. Queers reject pinkwashing in Israel!
And we won't let our community center be a tool for racism -- for excluding.

We're here to Occupy the Center, until the Center
- Ends the ban on Palestine solidarity organizing here.
- opens the Center for all.
- brings its board meetings and decision-making out of the corporate boardroom and back into our community!

Whose Center? Our Center!!
Anti-Arab hate? NO! Queers won't take the bait!

(Emmaia Gelman for Queers Against Israeli Apartheid.)
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FAQ for "Occupy the LGBT Center!"

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  • Why are we protesting against the LGBT Center?
  • What do we want from the LGBT Center?
  • Queer liberation and Palestinian self-determination? Aren’t these separate issues?
  • What is “pinkwashing”?
NYC Queers Against Israeli Apartheid: queersagainstisraeliapartheid.blogspot.com
For info on Israeli Apartheid Week: newyork.apartheidweek.org


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Why We Fight: Refusing NYC Arab-baiting, refusing Israel's pinkwashing

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The LGBT Center's ban on “groups meeting about the Israel-Palestine conflict” is racist – and it makes the queer community an instrument of racism. It extends the practice of pinkwashing beyond facilitating Israeli apartheid, and into a facilitation of New York's anti-Arab/anti-Muslim hate.

Let's be clear about what the Center's ban does: it brands any queer who stands up against the racism and violence of Israeli apartheid as a terrorist sympathizer, and a threat to the safety of “good” and “normal” queers. It brands as “dangerous” Palestinian queers' call for support for their human rights, and any talk of Palestinian human rights in general. It shuts out Palestinian queers themselves. It tells Arab and Muslim queers that they're only welcome if they promise not to mention an issue deeply affecting their communities. By stark contrast, we're allowed talk about Israel at the Center all day long, as long as we ignore its six decades of occupation and the existence of the Palestinians, queer and straight, under its military control.

That deeply unequal impact is not an accident.
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Israeli ministry recruits queers and "diverse" flight attendants as pitchmen

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Israel has stepped up its campaign to innoculate American liberals against critiques of its apartheid laws. The effort centers on queers and other minorities (just as New York's Jewish Community Relations Council specifically recruits NY City Councilmembers and other leaders from communities of color for its carefully-scripted junkets to Israel.)

Although the campaign is reportedly sending "ambassadors" to in response to invitations to speak, it looks like the ambassadors are being packaged as a tool for Israel lobby groups in places where anti-apartheid groups are having an impact. The flight attendants' first stop: Rutgers University.

In new pinkwashing recruitment campaign, Israel offers free travel for propaganda services
(Electronic Intifada)
"The story of the floundering “Brand Israel” advertising campaign continues. An Israeli government ministry... [is] asking for volunteer “candidates eligible to conduct public diplomacy activities abroad”. The volunteers “will not be eligible for any remuneration” apart from “costs of travel, daily expenses and insurance”...The ministry’s advert says it is looking particularly for “minority members” and “representatives of the gay community” to argue Israel’s case abroad."

In their off hours, El Al flight crews are now ‘ambassadors’
(Jewish Telegraphic Agency)
"...an initiative [puts] El Al crews to use during their U.S. layover time to create a positive image of Israel in the United States. The idea is to counteract the negative images of Israel in the news with the personal stories and faces of El Al pilots and flight attendants... [T]he El Al delegation was unusually diverse: two gay men, a Druze Israeli, a woman who sidelines as an aerobics instructor and a pilot who also is a yoga teacher. The six also happened to be particularly attractive... The Monday talk largely kept clear of the Israeli-Arab conflict..."
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Documenting "Brand Israel"

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In the wake of the NYT Pinkwashing op-ed, Sarah Schulman and the folks at PrettyQueer.com posted this handy Documentary Guide to Pinkwashing. It tracks Israel's perverse queer-oriented PR campaign to cloak apartheid in LGBTQ rights, from 2005 to the present.
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Pinkwashing hits the New York Times!

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Queers have known about pinkwashing for a good while. But because queers are now the sacred darlings of liberals (or at least, nice queers are) it's been hard to crack through the well-meant mainstream's idea that Palestinian queers are better off with Israel.

Sarah Schulman's op-ed in the New York Times finally gets pinkwashing the huge exposure it deserves. She hits not just the pinkwashing of Israeli apartheid, but the use of queers to demonize Muslims and Arabs far beyond Palestine. And not too soon: QAIA's battles in NYC have been framed nearly as much by the general Muslim-hating of powerful New York institutions as by pro-Israel drum-beating. It's the logical extension of the post-911 freakout: not only are Muslims terrorists who are always a step away from procuring bombs, but they're homophobes all the time!


"...depictions of immigrants — usually Muslims of Arab, South Asian, Turkish or African origin — as “homophobic fanatics” opportunistically ignore the existence of Muslim gays and their allies within their communities. They also render invisible the role that fundamentalist Christians, the Roman Catholic Church and Orthodox Jews play in perpetuating fear and even hatred of gays. And that cynical message has now spread from its roots in European xenophobia to become a potent tool in the long-running Israeli-Palestinian conflict."


That connection is at the heart of many QAIA folks' willingness to focus on fighting the LGBT Center and the bigots who turned human rights organizing into a "controversy" in the queer community, even though it's something of a distraction from more direct Palestine anti-apartheid work.
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