A planned exhibit at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) entitled Palestine Uprooted: Nakba Past and Present is having the expected controversy and protest.
It's only a snall exhibit, just a few panels with some photos, video clips and first-person accounts, and it comes at the request of many Palestinian-Canadians who want to see some exposure of the violent displacement of some 800,000 Palestinians from their lands by the nascent state.of Israel in 1947.
Many influential Jewish people, including "honorary board member" Gail Asper (who, with her father, Israel Asper, was instrumental in fundraising and getting the museum up and running), are taking issue with it, complaining that it lacks historical context and might inflame antisemitism. Jewish museum trustee Mark Berlin, who describes himself as pro-Palestinian, also resigned his position over the exhibit.
They argue that the exhibit does not cover the history surrounding the establishment of Israel, or the displacement of Jews from Arab lands in 1948. But, hold on, does any discussion of Nazi Germany have to include a counterveiling segment on the Huns' invasion of Germany in the 4th century or Napoleon's invasion in the early 19th century, "for context"?
The so-called "Jewish nakba" of 1948 is its own story, and probably merits a separate exhibit some time. The museum's CEO Isha Khan.(not Jewish!) has defended the planmed Palestinian exhibit, saying that it is not anti-Zionist, and that it does not challenge the legitimacy of the state of Israel. It is merely a piece to highlight a little-known aspect of Middle Easterm history and its human rights connotations.
What would the objectors have the museum do? Gloss over these historically-validated events? Grow the exhibit by two or three times in order to encompass the Israeli "context" (and thereby dilute the poignancy of the Palestinian story)? This is not a Jewish museum. Israel and the Jewish people have been the perpetrators of some pretty bad stuff over the years, as well as being the victims. Those stories need to be told too.
It was so predictable that there would be outrage expressed whenever Israel is critcized in any way. It was equally predictable that the "antisemitism card" would get played at some point. I find it hard to understand that some people identify so closely with a race or a religion or a nationality that it subsumes almost everything else. But I do understand, from having observed it, that that's how it is with some people.