Are the Israelis Really Responsible for Palestinian Wife Beating?
Apr 20, 2010
"Once, there was a time" when I believed in National Geographic and in the British medical Journal The Lancet. I did not think they traded in propaganda, but in science and nature photography. But that was back in the era of the musical Beatles. Now, my views have changed. Reality has forced my hand. National Geographic cannot be trusted about Israel or about Christians in the Arab world. And, The Lancet leaves much to be desired on many subjects.
Some years back, I had an interesting "brush" with The Lancet over the issue of the unfortunately named "Chronic Fatigue Immune Dysfunction Syndrome" (CFS), also known as "Myalgic Encephalomyelitis" — an illness which The Lancet's man, Dr. Simon Wessely, considers a mere psychiatric disorder, a form of hysteria which cognitive therapy should be able to cure within twelve weeks. I and many others totally disagree with his point of view. In fact, an explosive but still unpublished journalistic account of the "Blood Feud" on this subject is right now in my hands. Written by Mindy Kitei, she documents the "transatlantic battle raging over the role of the newly discovered retrovirus in patients with CFS."
In any event, I had completely forgotten all about this until someone sent me a more recent 2010 piece in The Lancet, "Intimate-Partner Violence in Gaza and the West Bank," in which six researchers claim that they have documented an increase in Palestinian wife-beating — and that it is due to the alleged Israeli occupation. (Unfortunately the full article is available only to subscribers.) Thus, once again, the Israelis — or the Israeli right to defend itself — are to blame. The indigenous practice of wife-beating and the increase in political Islam are not blameworthy.
So, I instantly wrote a piece which challenged the so-called study and sent it to The Lancet; in turn, they suggested that I write a Letter. And so I did. And then I waited and I waited. In the interim, I joked that it may be taking the six researchers (the lead researcher is at Harvard) all this time to rebut the critiques.
Well, it took more than two months — but The Lancet finally published my letter together with other letters and the obligatory, long-awaited authors' response. Here is my letter:
Is this worth doing? Hell, yes. 'Twould be better if thousands of us did similar things every day. But, is it wise to always be on the defensive, always in the position of responding, not initiating? Hell, no. And that's why Israel should set up a War Room for Propaganda, a massive but coordinated Office to debunk all the Lies and Blood Libels and to systematically keep putting out the truth.
America and Europe have a harder task. Our most distinguished professors and journalists are themselves putting out the Islamist disinformation, are themselves advising our president about the Middle East, the Muslim world, the nature of jihad, and Islam. How do we defeat or at least counterbalance this? Where do we start?
Well, right here of course. And on the Internet. And in parlor meetings, at tea parties, on any air-wave that will have us. Maybe we have to raise the money to have a new global channel that will not accept any Arab oil money. How about that?