Readers
of the Charlottetown Guardian on Prince Edward Island, the
largest newspaper in the province, are aware that I was the
victim of unremitting attacks for some six weeks from September
to November by one Richard L. Deaton, who recently retired to
Stanley Bridge, PEI after a career as a trade union official in
Ottawa with the Canadian Union of Public Employees.
Apart
from my teaching and scholarship, I write (unpaid) opeds for the
paper, on a variety of issues and countries. In a Guardian
article entitled “Hear No Evil, see no Evil,” published Sept.
21, Deaton publically attacked me, out of the blue, for NOT
writing critical articles about Israel.
“When it comes to Israel, Professor Srebrnik’s
silences are deafening,” he wrote. He listed, among others, my
so-called “silences” regarding the nuclear deal with Iran; the
death of a Palestinian boy; Israel doing nothing to help Syrian
refugees; and not mentioning Jimmy Carter’s book accusing Israel
of “apartheid.”
“Given these examples, we are entitled to ask
whether Professor Srebrnik is a pitchman for Israel. Has he ever
written an article critical of Israel?,” Deaton concluded.
Actually, I have written articles criticizing
Israel, but not, of course, to the point of recommending that the
state be destroyed.
Deaton,
on the other hand, would prefer this. He mentioned that he
belongs to Independent Jewish Voices, a supporter of the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions) movement, which seeks to weaken Israel economically and
politically, as a means to eventually replace it with a
non-Jewish state. He has been involved with many other
anti-Israeli and radical pro-Palestinian groups.
He
launched the attack on me because I am Jewish, and it appears
essential to him to insist that any Jew who writes for
publication must prove he is a “good” Jew by attacking Israel:
otherwise, why did he single me out in his initial attack? What
differentiates me from any other regular contributor to the
Guardian?
Deaton
makes things up out of thin air – in one screed, “Smoke and
Mirrors Sticks and Stones,” published Oct. 1, he smeared me by
seeming to imply that I was similar to “learned rabbis” (his
words) who allegedly said it was fine to kill Palestinian babies
because their lives were worth less than those of Israelis.
These are tactics worthy of Joe McCarthy.
In
that same piece, he also castigated me for my choice of topics.
“Are the politics of Upper Volta or Outer Mongolia really
more important? If Srebrnik really thinks so, then he takes the
readers of this newspaper for fools.”
He
targeted me personally – he wrote in “The Big Lie and Sounds of
Silence,” Oct. 15, that “Henry’s C.V. is available on line,
including the fact that he studied at a well-known U.S. Jewish
university” (I got one of my four degrees at Brandeis University
near Boston) – as if this were obviously something shameful.
In a
letter to the editor in the Guardian, “Dyer Speaks Out in
Critical Article,” Nov. 2, referring to an article by journalist
Gwynne Dyer regarding Israel published by the paper a few days
earlier, Deaton sneered that “certain academics will
begin their usual chorus of yelling ‘Wolf’, or ‘anti-Semite.’”
The “certain academics” refers, of course, to
me (despite it being plural). But how does Deaton know what I
think of Dyer’s article? So he was again attacking me for what I
have NOT written.
He congratulated the newspaper for being brave
enough to publish the article – though Dyer is a syndicated
columnist who appears in the Guardian regularly – because in
Deaton’s fevered imagination, an all-powerful Zionist cabal tries
to prevent anyone from speaking out against Israeli policies.
Deaton called me a
“right-wing Zionist,” for him a term of opprobrium, of course.
It simply refers to anyone not as anti-Israeli as he is.
Deaton
has also made light of the Holocaust, stating that the fact that
my parents were survivors of a Nazi concentration camp in
Poland, and their entire families killed, to be nothing special,
since millions of other people also died during the war (“The
Big Lie and Sounds of Silence,” Oct. 15).
Like others of that ilk, he always claims that the “Zionist lobby” tries to
silence people like him – though he seems to
have carte blanche at the Guardian and elsewhere and has no
trouble publishing his tirades.
The
past president of the PEI Jewish community, Leo Mednick,
complained in a letter to the editor protesting Deaton’s callous
remarks concerning the Holocaust, but he, on the other hand, was
not published.
Mednick
also alerted the community about Deaton: “He has a
history of writing very hostile articles about Israel and lately
he has turned his nastiness against a member of our community
Henry Srebrnik because Henry does not choose to write against
Israeli policies. It is important that we support Henry as well as
not sit by and let Richard Deaton become the voice for our
community.”
While Deaton is clearly
obsessed with Israel, to the exclusion of almost anyplace else,
the newspaper served as an enabler in his campaign of calumny
and character assassination.
Deaton
is Jewish by birth, and is one of those people who claim Zionism
is a perversion of “true” Judaism. In reality, he has minimal
Jewish education and does not participate in any of the very
small PEI Jewish community’s activities. He only parades his
Jewishness to demonstrate that he therefore “can’t be an
anti-Semite.”
Deaton
describes his background in the foreword to the book Confronting
Gouldner: Sociology and Political Activism, by James J. Chriss,
published earlier this year. He had no Jewish education
as a child, that the family did not observe Jewish holidays, and
that he had not had a bar mitzvah. In fact, they used to have a
Christmas tree.
Indeed, Deaton himself comes from
anti-Zionist “royalty.” His father, Alvin W. Gouldner, was a
prominent American sociologist at Washington University in St.
Louis. He earlier taught at the University of Illinois and at
Antioch College in Ohio.
Deaton
called his father an “angry outsider and intellectual street
fighter” who was both “feared and respected.” The Coming Crisis
of Western Sociology, published in 1970, was his major work.
Native
New Yorkers, both Gouldner and his first wife were members of
the American Communist Party until the 1950s. I mention this
because the CP throughout almost all of its history was a
staunch opponent of a Jewish state in what became Israel.
While
Deaton, who himself has a PhD in sociology and a law degree, had
a famous academic father, my parents were in Nazi concentration
camps in Poland, and later poor immigrants in Montreal, not on
university campuses, during the same period.
1 comment:
So, your point is what Henry? You should get some of your facts straight, or use a fact checker; and stop misleading your readers as you have in The Guardian and on this blog. You have so badly misquoted me - deliberately or otherwise- that you are now engaging in defamation.
Yours truly,
Richard Deaton
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