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Norway’s Jewish problem
Caroline Glick ^ | August 10, 2011 | Caroline Glick

Posted on 08/10/2011 4:31:24 PM PDT by SJackson

In the wake of Anders Breivik's massacre of his fellow Norwegians, I was amazed at the speed with which the leftist media throughout the US and Europe used his crime as a means of criminalizing their ideological opponents on the Right. Just hours after Breivik's identity was reported, leftist media outlets and blogs were filled with attempts to blame Breivik's crime on conservative public intellectuals whose ideas he cited in a 1,500 page online manifesto.

My revulsion at this bald attempt to use Breivik's crime to attack freedom of speech propelled me to write my July 29 column, "Breivik and totalitarian democrats."

While the focus of my column was the Left's attempt to silence their conservative opponents, I also noted that widespread popular support for Palestinian terrorists in Norway indicates that for many Norwegians, opposition to terrorism is less than comprehensive.

To support this position, I quoted an interview in Maariv with Norway's Ambassador to Israel Svein Sevje.

Sevje explained that most Norwegians think that the Palestinians' opposition to the supposed Israeli "occupation" is justified and so their lack of sympathy for Israeli victims of Palestinian terrorism was unlikely to change in the wake of Breivik's attack on Norwegians.

Since my column was a defense of free speech and a general explanation of why terrorism is antithetical to the foundations of liberal democracy - regardless of its ideological motivations - I did not focus my attention on Norwegian society. I did not discuss Norwegian anti- Semitism or anti-Zionism. Indeed, I purposely ignored these issues.

But when on Friday, Norway's Deputy Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide published an unjustified attack on me on these pages, he forced me to take the time to study the intellectual and political climate of hatred towards Israel and Jews that pervades Norwegian society.

That climate is not a contemporary development. Rather it has been a mainstay of Norwegian society.

In a 2006 report on Jew hatred in contemporary Norwegian caricatures published by the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, Erez Uriely noted among other things that Norway banned kosher ritual slaughter in 1929 - three years before a similar ban was instituted in Nazi Germany.

And whereas the ban on kosher ritual slaughter was lifted in post-war Germany, it was never abrogated in Norway.

As Uriely noted, Norway's prohibition on Jewish ritual slaughter makes Judaism the only religion that cannot be freely practiced in Norway.

Fascism was deeply popular in Norway in the 1930s. In the wake of the Nazi invasion, Norwegian governmental leaders founded and joined the Norwegian Nazi Party. Apparently, sympathy for Nazi collaborators is strong today in Norway.

As the JCPA's Manfred Gerstenfeld noted in a report on the rise in Norwegian anti-Semitic attacks during 2009, two years ago the Norwegian government allocated more than $20 million in public funds to commemorate Norwegian novelist Knut Hamsun on the occasion of the Nobel laureate for literature's 150th birthday. As The New York Times reported, in February 2009, Norway's Queen Sonja opened the, "year-long, publicly financed commemoration of Hamsun's 150th birthday called 'Hamsun 2009.'"

But while Hamsun may have been a good writer, he is better remembered for being an enthusiastic Nazi. Hamsun gave his Nobel prize to Nazi propaganda chief Josef Goebbels. During a wartime visit to Germany, Hamsun flew to meet Adolf Hitler at Hitler's mountain home in Bavaria.

And in 2009, Norway built a $20 million museum to honor his achievements.

As Uriely explained in his report, "Norwegian anti- Semitism does not come from the grassroots but from the leadership - politicians, organization leaders, church leaders, and senior journalists. It does not come from Muslims but from the European-Christian society."

Despite indignant claims that the two are unrelated, Norway's elite anti-Semitism merges seamlessly with their anti-Zionism. An apparently unwitting example of this fusion is found in Eide's attack against me in last Friday's Post.

Eide's attack on me revolved around my citation of Ambassador Sevje's interview with Maariv. In his column Eide wrote, "Several other Israeli media have latched on to this [interview] as well."

While this may be true, I first learned of Sevje's interview in the US media. Specifically, I read about the interview at Commentary Magazine's website, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency's website, and the website of the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA) before I read the original interview on Maariv's website.

Commentary, JTA and CAMERA are not Israeli organizations or outlets. They are Jewish American organizations and outlets. Eide's conflation of them with the "Israeli media" indicates that the deputy minister has a hard time separating Jews from Israelis, (and by extension, Jew hatred from Israel hatred).

One of the Jewish Americans who attacked the Norwegian ambassador's willingness to distinguish between Palestinian terrorist murderers of Israelis and Breivik's terrorist murder of Norwegians was Harvard Professor Alan Dershowitz. Dershowitz said, "I know of no reasonable person who has tried to justify the terrorist attacks against Norway. Yet there are many Norwegians who not only justify terrorist attacks against Israel, but praise them, support them, help finance them and legitimate them."

In March Dershowitz experienced Norway's elite anti- Semitism-qua-anti-Zionism firsthand. Dershowitz was brought to Norway by a pro-Israel group to conduct lectures at three Norwegian universities. All three university administrations refused to invite him to speak. Student groups acting independently of their university administrations in the end invited Dershowitz to give his lectures.

As Dershowitz explained in a Wall Street Journal article, he was the victim of an unofficial Norwegian university boycott of Israeli universities. The unofficial boycott is so extensive that it bans not only Israeli academics, but non-Israeli, Jewish academics that are pro-Israel.

And lest someone believe Norway's anti-Jewish boycott is due to the so-called "occupation," as Dershowitz pointed out, the petition calling for an academic boycott of Israel begins, "Since 1948 the state of Israel has occupied Palestinian land."

The Norwegian elite's rejection of Israel's right to exist, and ban on pro-Israel Jewish speakers from university campuses goes a long way in explaining Norway's support for Hamas. If Norway's opposition to Israel was merely due to its size, rather than its very existence, it would be difficult to understand why Norway maintains friendly contact with Hamas. Hamas is after all a genocidal, terrorist group, which like the Nazis seeks the annihilation of the Jewish people as a whole. Yet Norway's Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Store wrote an article justifying his relations with Hamas as in line with Norway's embrace of "dialogue."

As Store's deputy Eide's unrestrained and unjustified attack against me, and as Norway's academic - and to a large degree media - boycott of pro-Israel voices make clear, Norway's embrace of dialogue is as selective as its condemnation of terrorism.

Here we should recall that Norway's ruling class supported Hamas against Israel in Operation Cast Lead.

Israel's dovish Kadima government only began the operation in Gaza because it had no choice. For months then prime minister Ehud Olmert sat on his hands as southern Israel was pummeled with unprovoked barrages of thousands of missiles and rockets from Gaza. Olmert was forced to take action after Hamas massively escalated its rocket and missile attacks in November and early December 2008.

While silent about Palestinian aggression, Norway's government attacked Israel for defending itself. As Store put it, "The Israeli ground offensive in Gaza constitutes a dramatic escalation of the conflict. Norway strongly condemns any form of warfare that causes severe civilian suffering, and calls on Israel to withdraw its forces immediately."

Two of Store's associates, Eric Fosse and Mads Gilbert, decamped to Gaza during Cast Lead and set up shop in Shifa Hospital. The two were fixtures in the Norwegian media, which constantly interviewed them throughout the conflict, and so spread their libelous charges against the IDF without question.

Fosse and Gilbert never mentioned that Hamas's high command was located at the hospital in open breach of the laws of war.

When they returned home, they co-authored a book in which they accused the IDF of entering Gaza with the express goal of murdering women and children.

Store wrote a blurb of endorsement on the book's back cover.

Store visited Israel in January. During his visit he gave an interview to the Post where he ignored diplomatic protocol and attacked the Knesset's contemporaneous decision to form a parliamentary commission of inquiry into foreign funding of anti-Zionist Israeli NGOs.

The basic rationale for the commission was that Israelis have a right to know that many purportedly Israeli groups are actually foreign organizations staffed by local Israelis. And many of the most virulently anti-Zionist NGOs staffed by Israelis operating in Israel are funded by the Norwegian government. Store arrogantly opined, "I think it is a worrying sign" about the state of Israeli democracy.

During Operation Cast Lead, Oslo was the scene of unprecedented anti-Semitic rioting. According to Eirik Eiglad, protesters who participated in anti-Israel demonstrations - and even a supposedly pro-peace demonstration - called out "Kill the Jews" and attacked policemen who tried to prevent them from rioting. Demonstrators at a pro-Israel demonstration were beaten. The Israeli embassy was threatened. Pro-Israel politicians who participated in the pro-Israel rally were beaten and received death threats.

It is a fact that the day before Breivik's massacre of teenagers at the Labor Party's youth camp on Utoya Island, Store spoke to them about the need to destroy Israel's security fence. The campers role-played pro- Hamas activists breaking international law by challenging Israel's lawful maritime blockade of the Gaza coastline.

They held signs calling for a boycott of Israel.

Despite their obvious animosity towards Israel and sympathy for genocidal, Jew hating Hamas terrorists, at no point did I or any of my Jerusalem Post colleagues do anything other than condemn completely Breivik's barbaric massacre of his fellow Norwegians. And yet, the Norwegian government attacked us for merely pointing out in various ways, that Norway should not use Breivik's attack as justification for further weakening Norwegian democracy.

Following the massacre, the Post published a well-argued, empathetic editorial making these general points. In response, the paper was deluged by unhinged attacks claiming that the editorial was insensitive and excused Breivik's crimes. In response, the Post published a follow-up editorial last Friday apologizing to the Norwegian people for the earlier editorial.

I was not consulted about this editorial ahead of time, and the editorial does not reflect my views. However I understand the moral impulse of not wishing to pour salt on anyone's wounds, which stood behind the decision to write it.

For my part, I will not request a similar apology from the Norwegian government for gratuitously attacking me. I will not request a similar apology from the Norwegian government and elites for libelously defaming my military, my country and my people. I will not request a similar apology from Norway for limiting Jews' freedom of religion in Norway. I will not request a similar apology from Norway for comparing Israel to Nazi Germany and celebrating Norwegian Nazis.

I will not request such an apology because there are certain actions that are simply unforgivable.


TOPICS: Editorial; Israel; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: breivik; carolineglick

1 posted on 08/10/2011 4:31:25 PM PDT by SJackson
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; Lent; GregB; ..
Middle East and terrorism, occasional political and Jewish issues Ping List. High Volume

If you’d like to be on or off, please FR mail me.

..................

2 posted on 08/10/2011 4:42:01 PM PDT by SJackson (Normal people don't sit cross-legged on the floor and bang on drums, WI State Sen Glenn Grothman (R))
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To: SJackson

I hate Norwegian Nazis.


3 posted on 08/10/2011 5:06:00 PM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Amber Lamps !"~~)
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To: SJackson

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/jewpop.html
According to Jewish Virtual Library, 1,200 Jews live in Norway. What I can’t understand is why any Jew would remain in a country that is so anti-Jewish.


4 posted on 08/10/2011 5:07:25 PM PDT by mrvirgo
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To: SJackson
Glick is sort of Israel's Sarah Palin, if this comment in her autobio is accurate:

In its Israeli Independence Day supplement in 2003, Ma’ariv named me the most prominent woman in Israel.

Is it possible under Israel's constitution for this American born woman to become Israel's prime minister? Just musing. I don't think the Moosies would know what hit them if she did.

5 posted on 08/10/2011 5:13:46 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (There's gonna be a Redneck Revolution! (See my freep page) [rednecks come in many colors])
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To: mrvirgo

There are Jews in even more improbable places like Iraq and Iran, though their freedom of worship may actually be better in those Islamic countries. (A country that does halal usually has no qualms about the procedures of kashrut.)


6 posted on 08/10/2011 5:17:13 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (There's gonna be a Redneck Revolution! (See my freep page) [rednecks come in many colors])
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To: HiTech RedNeck

I don’t know, but many Prime Ministers were foreign born. After all there was no secular state of Israel till 1948. I seriously doubt any restriction has been added.


7 posted on 08/10/2011 5:18:43 PM PDT by SJackson (Normal people don't sit cross-legged on the floor and bang on drums, WI State Sen Glenn Grothman (R))
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To: fieldmarshaldj
Way back in the Continuation War, Finland's War as part of the deal it had to make to stop Russian attacks agreed to EXPEL something like 180,000 German Nazi troops then occupying a great deal of the country.

On their way out the Germans BURNED Rovaniemi, the capital of Finnish Lapland.

That's not a really well-known place, but in the Skolt language it appears to mean Reindeer Crossing. The German "cultural experts" probably knew all about that ~ but this wasn't an attack on the Finns as much as it was an attack on the minority Skolt, Northern Sa'ami and Inari Sa'ami (the Skolt, btw, number about 500 people in Finland and no more than 5000 in Russia, and there may be about as many of the other two nations in Finland).

Norwegians were happy to have them flee into their country in the far North ~ where they got to spend the war.

I think the Norwegians really have a problem with understanding their standing as a nation and actually imagine themselves (except for their 60,000 Sa'ami) to be Germans.

I think they should go there. Get it out of their systems. Oh, yeah, and then stay there.

8 posted on 08/10/2011 5:30:23 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: HiTech RedNeck

Shimon Peres was born in Poland, so I don’t see why not.


9 posted on 08/10/2011 10:01:08 PM PDT by Sonny M ("oderint dum metuant")
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To: HiTech RedNeck

No, they are hostages in those countries. Let’s not be hysterical. Oslo is safer than Tehran for a Jew.


10 posted on 08/10/2011 11:48:47 PM PDT by rmlew ("Mosques are our barracks, minarets our bayonets, domes our helmets, the believers our soldiers.")
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To: HiTech RedNeck
Is it possible under Israel's constitution for this American born woman to become Israel's prime minister? Just musing. I don't think the Moosies would know what hit them if she did.
Palin isn't Jewish. Many of Israel's Prime Ministers have been foreign born including David Ben Gurion (then Russian, now Poland), Moshe Sharett (then Russia, now Ukraine), Levi Eshkol (then Russia, now Ukraine), Golda Meir (then Russia, now Ukraine), Menachem Begin(then Russia, now Belarus), Yitzak Shamir (then Russia, now Belarus), and Shimon Peres (then Poland, now Belarus).
11 posted on 08/11/2011 12:04:43 AM PDT by rmlew ("Mosques are our barracks, minarets our bayonets, domes our helmets, the believers our soldiers.")
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To: rmlew

Not speaking of Palin, but of Glick. Glick as most prominent woman of Israel would be a rough parallel to Palin’s prominence in the USA. And both are outspokenly conservative. Why assume the wrong hypothetical here? I would really like to know.


12 posted on 08/11/2011 2:22:32 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (There's gonna be a Redneck Revolution! (See my freep page) [rednecks come in many colors])
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To: HiTech RedNeck

It’s theoretically possible, but politically unlikely.

Bibi (who is a sabra, I believe) gets some grief for being “too American” because his parents (?) were American and he spent much of his early life/college in USA/Pittsburg.


13 posted on 08/11/2011 7:45:43 AM PDT by Jewbacca (The residents of Iroquois territory may not determine whether Jews may live in Jerusalem.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck
Glick is nowhere near the most prominent woman in Israel. The snivling head of Kadima, Tzipi Livni would be, except that she has prostituted herself to the left.

As for prominent women politicians in the Knesset, there are
Orly Levi-Abekasis (Yisrael Beitenu), the Deputy Speaker of the Knesset
Gila Gamliel (Likud)
Tzipi Hotovely (Likud), who has often acted as an unofficial spokeswoman for the right wing of Likud.
Fania Kirshenbaum, Director General, Yisrael Beitenu
Sofa Landver (Yisrael Beitenu), Minister of Immigrant Absorption
Limor Livnat (Likud), Minister of Culture and Sport
Miri Regev (Likud), who chairs the committees on the "settlements". She's a Reserve Brigadier and former spokesman of the IDF.

There are no governors in Israel, and Israeli politics are more cmplex than American. There are 13 parties in the Knesset 3 to 6 of which are on the right, depending on the issue.
14 posted on 09/02/2011 8:28:16 PM PDT by rmlew ("Mosques are our barracks, minarets our bayonets, domes our helmets, the believers our soldiers.")
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