September 1995, pgs. 76-77
California Chronicle
Jewish Writer Documents Racism in Israeli Films
By Pat and Samir Twair
"Palestinians make up about 20 percent of the Israeli population,
Jews from the Middle East another 50 percent. If you include the
West Bank and Gaza, the figure reaches 90 percentyet they
are forced to view advertising, the media and films from the perspective
of the minority Western Jews."
No, these weren't the words of a disgruntled Palestinian, but of
Prof. Ella Habiba Shohat, an Iraqi-Jewish Israeli who teaches at
City University of New York in Manhattan.
In 1992 when her book, Israeli Cinema: East/West and the Politics
of Representation, was translated into Hebrew, her arguments
shook the Israeli establishment with a national controversy that's
still rumbling in the media.
Shohat isn't about to be silenced by right-wing nationalists, however,
and her reasoned arguments make sense to all but the most devoted
followers of Benyamin Netanyahu, who seem unable even to comprehend
that all of Palestine once was the home of Muslim and Christian
Palestinians.
In an interview with the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs,
Shohat said her entire family emigrated from Baghdad in the 1950s.
"I was robbed of my cultural origins," she stated. "The
first marker of one's identity is your name, yet when my relatives
arrived in Israel, their Arabic names were immediately Hebraized.
My grandmother's name was Masouda, but it was changed to Sara. My
mother had wanted to name me for my great-grandmother, Habiba, who
died shortly after the family arrived in Israel. But the authorities
frowned on Israeli children having Arabic names and they were, after
all, helping us shed our 'backward' ways. The whole idea was that
anything Western was good and anything Middle Eastern was bad."
This, Shohat explains in her book, is the schizoid nature of the
Israeli ethos: it is a nation in the Middle East, with a majority
population of Middle Easterners, that denies any ties to the East.
Shohat attributes this to European Jews who established the Zionist
state and then promoted and propagandized their Yishuv (settlement)
years in films and the media as a struggle of blond, blue-eyed idealistic
pioneers under constant attack by mean-spirited, inferior Arabs.
In this initial period of Israeli filmmaking, which she terms "the
Heroic-Nationalist stage," Shohat argues that there were obvious
analogies between American and Israeli films. Israelis were portrayed
as brave settlers while the Arabs were portrayed as savages, just
as American Indians were portrayed in early American Westerns. Oriental
Jews were portrayed as unskilled laborers in Israeli films, not
unlike past American portrayals of African Americans.
"Growing up an Oriental Jew in the '50s and '60s wasn't easy,"
she recalled. "Any ads we saw idealized blond childrenthe
notion of beauty was a European ideal. It was tough to assert your
Middle Eastern origins and so we internalized our shame and felt
uncomfortable over our visible links with the East."
She says that at home her family spoke a Baghdadi-Iraqi colloquial
Arabic. Even the Hebrew spoken by the Sephardim, the Oriental Jews,
was an Arabized version different in syntax, words and accent from
the Hebrew spoken by Western Jews.
"It was taboo to speak Arabic in school and whenever teachers
wanted to chastise us, they would refer to us as 'you Moroccan'
or 'you Iraqi' or 'you Yemeni,'" Shohat recalled. "Jews
from the Middle East were expected to abandon their Middle Eastern
traits, so we grew up without studying our history or culture. It
was all the more tragic for Palestinian Israelis, who couldn't even
read about Arab history in textbooks."
Shohat says that, in general, Oriental Jews must reach the Ph.D.
level before they learn about their Middle Eastern heritage.
"Our history is different from that of European Jews,"
she continued. "For example, we only heard briefly about Maimonides
(Musa ibn Maymun, court physician to Salahuddin and a 12th century
philosopher who expounded Jewish law in Arabic)." The chasm
between Western and Eastern Jews is exemplified, Shohat stressed,
by the fact that many Oriental Jews who arrived in Israel in the
1950s had not experienced the Holocaust and had little knowledge
of the idea of Zionism.
"It is taken for granted that the Holocaust is a shared historical
memory of all Israelis, but, with all due respect, it isn't,"
she continued. "And so most mizrahim end up knowing
nothing of our accomplishments and contributions to philosophy and
literature in the Arab world."
It was her parents' generation, she remarked, who, for the first
time in history, had to choose between all the generations they
had been a part of Arab culture, and being an Israeli Jew.
Shohat had her own awakening in the 1970s, when the Israeli Black
Panther movement was fighting discrimination. In the 1980s, she
became involved in such mizrahi movements for peace as East
for Peace, the Oriental Front, and Perspective Judeo-Arabes.
She cites such groups to repudiate the stereotype engendered by
Ashkenazi (European) Jews that all Oriental Jews tend to hate Palestinians
or that they support the Likud party.
Shohat was a delegate to the New York conference of the New York-based
World Organization of Jews from Islamic Countries. In 1989, she
was part of a ground-breaking Israeli Sephardic delegation that
met with Palestinians in Toledo, Spain, under the auspices of the
Spanish government. "Our objective was to link our concerns
with those of the Palestinians," she explained.
And therein lies the premise of this outspoken scholar: "It
is impossible to separate the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from
the Ashkenazi-Sephardic conflict."
"Even if there is peace, what does it mean if racist ideas
and conditions continue to prevail in Israel? Real peace to me is
rethinking attitudesthe Arab culture is a legitimate part
of the history of Israel."
Shohat is not an individual to lose heart easily. She proved this
when she stood up to Israeli news commentators and columnists in
1992.
"I was under major attack on the radio, TV and pressnot
because I was critical of Israel's heroic-nationalist films that
brain-washed the people with the ideal of the Eurocentric Sabrabut
because I refused to separate the Palestinian issue from that of
the Western Jew denigrating the Oriental Jew and his culture."
She was surprised to discover that some academics most hostile
to her theories were the so-called liberals in Israel's Peace Now
Movement.
"Somehow, these Western Jews find it threatening to admit
the Palestinian issue is related to the second-class treatment of
Oriental Jews; they refuse to look into this complexity," she
explained.
"I'm not out to abolish all differences in Israel. We Oriental
Jews of the so-called Desert Generation want to reclaim our heritage
and make a more positive future for those who follow after. We don't
want Sephardic Jewish and Palestinian kids to be ashamed of their
origins or their darker colors; we want them to be proud of the
culture they come from."
Shohat has been supportive of two organizations dedicated to democratizing
education in Israel, Hilla and Kedma. The first tries to fight discrimination
within a state educational system geared toward training Sephardic
students for blue-collar jobs. Kedma established two schools last
year in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv that offer a different approach with
multicultural classes.
"One of the things I encouraged last year at a seminar for
Kedma teachers was to have children interview their parents and
grandparents about their lives in the Middle East and North Africa.
This is important because there is virtually no oral history of
the Sephardic experience."
No doubt Shohat's latest book, Unthinking Eurocentrism: Multiculturalism
and the Media, co-authored with Robert Stam and published by
Routlege Press in 1994, will create even more denials from the European
minority when it is translated into Hebrew. And no doubt Shohat
will be ready again to enter into verbal combat with her Eurocentric
critics.
AAPG Conference
The Arab American Press Guild sponsored a conference in July under
the theme "Toward an Arab American Agenda." Traveling
at their own expense to discuss challenges facing them in the future
were Dr. Hala Maksoud of Arab American University Graduates, executive
director Khalil Jahshan, of the National Association of Arab Americans
and national president Hamzi Moghrabi of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee.
All three agreed their agenda for the 21st century is to downsize,
appeal to the new U.S.-born generation, and cultivate grassroots
activists.
In addressing the conference theme, Dr. Maksoud said there are
five issues to consider.
"A strategy must be developed to appeal to a new generation
of Arab Americans," she said. Noting that the national organizations'
agendas have remained the same while their membership is aging,
she stressed "our discourse must change to embolden our young
people to take part in the American process.
"We must sharpen our youths' pride in their Arab heritage.
We cannot be insulated from other communities or world concerns.
If we want the world to be concerned with our problems, we must
contribute to concerns for human rights, population control, protection
of the environment and women's rights."
Jahshan said that of the 2.5 to 3 million Arab Americans in the
U.S., no more than 100,000 claim membership in any Arab-American
organization. He said this equates to one out of 30, as opposed
to one out of three American Jews who belong to an organized group.
Moughrabi reviewed the different waves of Arab emigration to the
U.S. over the past century. The Oklahoma City bombing was a painful
reawakening for Arab Americans, he noted. "We saw how precarious
our existence is."
Responding to queries from the audience of more than 200 activists
about the financial stability of the organizations, Moughrabi said
ADC was threatened with bankruptcy last January but the local community
helped pay its debts and ADC can survive at least until mid-September.
Maksoud said AAUG is not now in financial crisis, but it went through
one four years ago.
Jahshan said that after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, NAAA membership
doubled, but the peace processwhich has not achieved proper
resultshas brought on financial problems over the past 18
months. NAAA has moved to smaller offices, he explained, and it
has cut its 12 national office employees to three.
Wiesenthal Museum Thriving
"Lean Times Don't Imperil Wiesenthal Grant," read the
surprisingly factual headline in the Los Angeles Times for
a story revealing that while public schools and disabled people
are losing tax funds, the private Simon Wiesenthal Center will receive
a $5 million grant in the new California state budget.
Gov. Pete Wilson has a senior political adviser sitting on the
Wiesenthal Center's board of directors, and Democratic and Republican
lawmakers are backing the grant earmarked for the center's Museum
of Tolerance. The museum hosts tours focusing on Holocaust exhibits
for an estimated 350,000 visitors a year.
The L.A. Times article pointed out that the $5 million grant
comes from state of California money that otherwise would be spent
directly on public schools.
Owen Waters, a lobbyist for the California Teachers Association,
one of the strongest lobbies in Sacramento, criticized the grant.
Nonetheless, the Wiesenthal board has some powerful members, including
Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Sinatra, financier Samuel Belzberg, and
Beverly Hills investment banker Richard Blum, who is the husband
of U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein.
Criticism of the center focuses on the enormous salaries paid its
executives. According the the Times , Rabbi Marvin Hier,
the center's dean, receives $225,000 a year.
Pat and Samir Twair are free-lance writers from Southern California. |