“Disgusting . . . Illogical,” says Warren Mundine, a leading
Australian Aboriginal leader. He was
Labour Party President before chairing the Indigenous Advisory Council.
The Australian newspaper has reported this, but it would
mostly remain unknown to Australians.
Much of the Labor Party’s “anti-Jew” policy is pragmatically
driven to win votes of nominally anti-Semitic Moslem voters in crucial Sydney
seats, but it is sourced in the shockingly Jew-hating prejudice that pervades
the “left”. Partly a naïve acceptance of
the propaganda from Israel’s enemies that purports to paint the Palestinians as
victims, despite it being they who have rejected the two-state solution three
times, and despite Palestinian refugees (who did have legitimate claims of
displacement with the return of Jews to Israel) living permanently in refugee
camps, now into their fourth generation, who maintain the fiction that Israel
will soon be eradicated and they can return. These poor people are preserved in their
suffering by all the wealthy Arab countries that will not resettle them nor
financially fund them, in order to keep them as a visible humanitarian symptom of
supposed Jewish barbarism.
Criticising Israel is legitimate, and certainly, fighting a
war of survival will lead to errors, but singling out Israel for continual
condemnation while being silent on the world’s other social problems can only
be attributed to Jew-hatred. Ironically,
Israel was founded by Socialists and the Kibbutz is one of the few examples of the
successful implementation of a true Communism.
Without singling out names, there have been many Australian Jews, particularly lawyers, who have been significant in the fight for Aboriginal Justice and Recognition. Despite the denial by some respected Historians who showed that the claim could not be corroborated with surviving, hard evidence, Australian Aboriginal people have suffered what was a ‘holocaust’, being the deliberate policy of racial extermination. Perhaps this is a source of empathy. It would be nice to think that Mr Mundine’s attitude was widespread amongst Aboriginal people instead of the opposing, leftist view.
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