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           |  | Might Does Not Make Zionist, Apartheid Israel Right
 
 By Mazin Qumsiyeh
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 28, 2012   *In this newsletter are notes: on Middle East shifting politics, on a 
	baby fruit bat, on success of BDS campaign against Caterpillar, on an 
	upcoming trip to Germany, and a factoid on "anti-Semitism".*
 Many 
	years ago, I started to state in my lectures and in conversations and in my 
	writings that we have only two paths going forward: the path of "might makes 
	right" (those with the bigger stick get what they want right or wrong) OR 
	the path of justice and human rights and international law. I stated that we 
	Palestinians wanted the second path but it was full of land mines laid by 
	people who chose the first path.  I predicted that Zionism, which chose 
	the first path, will lose anyway.  It can lose by enforcement of 
	International law (Universal Declaration of Human Rights, International 
	Convention for the Suppression of the Crime of Apartheid and Racial 
	Discrimination).  It will also lose if "might makes right" remains the 
	path of governments like Israel and the United States. This is because to 
	every action there is a reaction.  Fundamentalism will be answered with 
	fundamentalism.  Hypocrisy cannot last forever unexposed.  Why is 
	NATO criticizing Syria for shooting down a Turkish Jet over Syrian territory 
	when NATO said nothing about an Israeli attack on a Turkish civilian ship in 
	International waters including execution of 9 Turkish passengers?
 
 The rise of Jewish fundamentalism and its intensifying atrocities (e.g. in 
	Gaza and the West Bank), is now facing a rising Islamic tide.  Its 
	largest manifestation is amply demonstrated in the results of election in 
	Palestinian Occupied areas in 2006, in Lebanon over the past two decades, in 
	Tunisia, and most recently in the Egyptian elections.  Libya's model is 
	different (a coup backed by the West).  These dramatic changes in the 
	geopolitical landscape need to be digested, and properly responded to. The 
	train to the future will leave behind any political leader or party which 
	does not act positively based on a deep understanding of current and future 
	trends.
 
 It remains to be seen how Islamic oriented political 
	parties rule. Hamas is not an example here since Palestinians are under 
	occupation and only Israel rules the occupied areas including Gaza.  
	Hezbollah is part of the Lebanese government and it seems the system is an 
	uneasy equilibrium between secular and Islamic forces.  In Iran, the 
	Mullahs run the government but the economy is in bad shape partly due to 
	centralization and the sanctions being imposed on Iran thanks to the Israeli 
	lobby in Western countries.  Turkey has a moderate Islamic party in 
	power and seems to be doing very well economically. I think the era of one 
	man dictatorial rule is slowly giving way to a trend of Islamization but 
	also of empowerment of people.  We must insist first and foremost on 
	freedom: of thought, of religion (and from religion too), of movement, of 
	assembly and
 demonstration etc.   But governments (Islamic or 
	Secular) must also do more
 to educate citizens, empower them, improve 
	economies, education, health care etc. Consumerism must be replaced by 
	improving production, responsible development, protecting the environmental 
	etc.
 
 *On a baby bat:* I now have a baby fruit bat at home.  
	She is 2-3 weeks old.  After the untimely death of its mother, it took 
	us a while to figure out how to take care of it. We now use a piece of cloth 
	as an artificial nipple and human baby formula.  The delicate helpless 
	baby is like human babies in many ways.  Their larger than usual heads, 
	chubby cheeks, tender skin, and feeble cries elicit a motherly instinct in 
	all who encounter it.
 I see the flood of emotion from any friend or relative who visits and see 
	the baby bat.  A baby elephant is helped by any member of the group 
	nearby. A baby dog is coddled by humans and dogs alike. These emotions remind us 
	of the connectedness of all living things.  Babies grow to the 
	curiosity and inquisitiveness of childhood.  Among humans that leads to 
	the idealism of youth.  Among humans though, unfortunately some of us 
	grow up to do mean things to fellow human beings and other creatures around 
	them.  Other animals do not kill for greed or for sport or for a flag 
	or a religion.  They kill only to feed if they are carnivorous or 
	defend themselves from being killed. If only humans remained young or 
	reconnected with fellow creatures.  We could avoid war, environmental 
	destruction and much more.
 Major US Retirement Fund Divests From 
	Caterpillar
 
 http://imemc.org/article/63783
 
 *Trip*: I will on a trip to 
	Germany June 28-July 7 (Munich, Pfaffenhoffen, Heidelberg, and Karlsruhe) 
	for a conference and talks. Let me know if you are in one of these Southern 
	German towns or if you know anyone there to connect with.
 
 *Factoid*: A Jewish German by the name of Heyman Steinthal was actually the 
	first person to use the words "ani-Semitism" in 1860 in Zeitschrift fur 
	Volkespsychologie und Sprachwissenschaft 1:328 (The Jewish Question:
 Biography of a World Problem,  By Alex Bei, p. 594). Later the term 
	was used by Wilhelm Marr (who had twice married Jewish women with unhappymarriages) and was more well known after the "Anti-Semite League was 
	formed".  The term is misleading since most European Jews are not 
	Semites.  Arabs are of course Semites.
 
 
 Mazin Qumsiyeh
 
 A Bedouin in Cyberspace, a villager at home
 
 http://qumsiyeh.org
 
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