As the Ukrainian war engulfs Europe, it was left to a squash player to remind the world of a few awkward truths.
After winning a tournament in England late last week, Egyptian squash champion, Ali Farag, noted that since Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, all sorts of usually demure types – including athletes trained by their agents to shut up for fear of censure or losing money – have, remarkably, emerged from comfortable silence to condemn the “oppression” of Ukrainians by a larger and ruthless occupying power.
Indeed, these suddenly uninhibited voices have
been amplified by a lot of Western media that, as a general editorial rule,
believe that athletes should keep quiet and play their silly games and let
better-equipped journalists continue to lecture the rest of us on serious
matters like war and peace.
Given this newfound licence to speak out without
inviting the blanket wrath of an agitated swarm of condescending Western
scribes, Farag said that just as the killing of innocents in Ukraine was
unacceptable, the 74-year-long “oppression” of Palestinian innocents was
unforgivable too.
Telling that truth, he added, did not fit the
West’s “narrative” of what kind of “oppressed” people are worthy of praise,
sympathy and attention and what other kinds of people – who have also suffered
the inhumane whims of a large, ruthless occupying power – are not.
“Please keep that in mind,” Farag urged.
Well said, sir.
Beyond this blatant hypocrisy, the coverage of
Putin’s war in Ukraine by Western media and even non Western media that rely on
American and British information has not only revealed a sickening score of
hypocrisies but marquee-sized blind spots about prickly subjects that, like
clockwork, provoke hysterical outbursts of outrage by a swaggering tribe of
easily triggered journalists and politicians.
Exhibit A:
Western columnists and editorial writers have
been busy lately trying to outduel each other in resurrecting the sullied ghost
of Winston Churchill to demand that Putin, his insanely rich pals and
not-so-well-off Russians, pay a debilitating price for invading Ukraine.
These days, the economic weapons of choice
championed by the revenge-hungry keyboard cavalry involve boycotting, divesting
from and imposing sanctions on anything or anyone emblazoned with a
made-in-Russia label.
Perhaps, like me, you remember when the keyboard
cavalry smeared anyone, anywhere who, at any time, has suggested using the same
economic weapons to resist made-in-Israel apartheid as “anti-Semites” intent on
the destruction of the little-country-that-could.
Irish author Sally Rooney tasted the clichéd rod
of these rank hypocrites late last year after she committed the “anti-Semitic”
sin of opting not to have an Israeli publisher
translate her new novel into Hebrew as a small gesture of concord with occupied
Palestinians.
Back then, BDS was a useless, anti-Semitic
affront. Today, it is all the rage among journalists and politicians who once
denounced it like crazed hyenas.
Exhibit B:
It is laudable and somewhat dizzying to see
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau swing open Canada’s door to welcome –
without hesitation or bureaucratic obstacles – the legion of Ukrainians harmed
by Putin’s bullets and bombs.
In Trudeau’s cynical calculus, this necessary
humanitarian gesture may inspire a political dividend as well.
Canada is home to a sizeable Ukrainian diaspora.
The last census revealed that more than 1.3 million Canadians of Ukrainian
descent call Canada chez nous.
In crass political terms, that big number
translates into big influence.
Alas, the same census shows that a little more
than 44,000 Canadians claim Palestinian ancestry.
In crass political terms, that small number
translates into small influence.
The latter figure goes, I think, some way
towards explaining Trudeau’s shameful reneging of his support – while
opposition leader – to help get only 100 of the thousands of Palestinian
children injured by Israeli bullets and bombs to Canada for medical help.
As prime minister, Trudeau has not responded to
repeated entreaties made publicly and privately by Nobel Peace Prize nominee
and Palestinian-Canadian doctor, Dr Izzeldin Abuelaish, to keep his pledge –
finally.
Decency and humanity demand providing safe haven
to Palestinian children and their families in desperate need.
Clearly, for Trudeau, damaged Palestinian
children are not worth sheltering, but damaged Ukrainian children are.
Exhibit C:
I suspect that the ugly undercurrent driving
Trudeau’s refusal to help 100 Palestinian kids is that he does not want to be
accused by the establishment press of offering succour to Palestinian
“terrorists” who use those disfigured kids as “human shields”.
Most Western media and pedestrian politicians
like Trudeau abide by this stubborn, simplistic equation: Palestinians + Hamas
= terrorists, not resistants to the brutal Israeli occupation. De facto, they
paint all Palestinians are anti-Semites bent on the violent erasure of Israel.
This is, of course, a gross, but self-serving
distortion.
It is akin, I am afraid, to describing all
Ukrainians as democracy-loving pluralists, as amnesiac journalists and
politicians have been prone to do recently.
As I said, anyone making this uncharitable point
is bound, on cue, to be tarred as a Putin apologist or stooge. But someone must
say it because this organized neo-nazi militias is bound to have serial
consequences for Ukraine and Europe.
It should be possible, even during these
horrible times filled, as they are, with misery and death, to challenge the
prevailing view that Ukraine is a lovely democratic oasis that requires the
country’s more sinister history to be airbrushed out of view or consideration
by journalists and politicians turned revisionists.
In the rush to show unwavering solidarity with
besieged Ukrainians, columns like these published in 2018 by Reuters and in 2019 by The Nation detailing the country’s cobweb
network of avowedly fascist groups and personalities that “penetrated”
Ukraine’s military, police, government and bureaucracy and “campaigned to
transform Ukraine into a hub for transnational supremacy” have, for the
most part, disappeared.
So have stories about Ukraine’s hideous pogroms
of Jews throughout World War II and the much more recent and disturbing
expressions of anti-Semitism featuring tiki-torch marches and chants of “Jews
out,” Nazi-salutes and illiterate Holocaust denials.
In 2014, after the coup d’état in Ukraine and Crimea
going back to Russia, the decrepit state of Ukraine’s military was exposed and
virulent far-right militias like the Azov «regiment» stepped into the breach,
fending off the Russian-backed separatists while Ukraine’s regular military
regrouped”. Once these groups succeeded in pushing back Russian-backed
separatists from strategic cities like Mariupol, they not only achieved
widespread legitimacy, but also won effusive praise from Ukraine’s government.
“These are our best warriors,” then-President
Petro Poroshenko reportedly said at an awards ceremony, “Our best volunteers.”
A
number of these militias were eventually absorbed into Ukraine’s army.
Meanwhile, other ultranationalist groups preferred to operate independently,
attracting like-minded fascists through youth summer camps who went on to
attack city council meetings, Roma, LGBT events, anti-racist and environmental
activists and feminists with impunity.
Several
commentators have claimed that, over time, Ukraine’s neo-Nazi militias have
been reduced to a “fringe”.
I totally, from the ground, disagree. Too many
Ukrainians “continue to regard the militias with gratitude and admiration” and
share their intolerant and illiberal ideology.
In 2012, the far-right Svoboda party translated
its previous electoral breakthrough in regional elections into 38 seats in Ukraine’s federal parliament
after securing two million votes, or slightly more than 10 percent of the
popular vote.
It is true, that, in the years since, the
party’s appeal has waned. But one this argument is a bit of red herring.
It’s not extremists’ electoral prospects that should concern Ukraine’s friends,
but rather the state’s unwillingness or inability to confront violent groups
and end their impunity.
In 2014, after the coup d’état, the Ukrainian
state embraced openly everyone willing to fight, including neo-Nazis. Today, it
is once again all hands on deck in Ukraine – as it were – to stave off Putin’s designs.
And many of those Ukrainian hands are as repulsive as it gets.
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