Dutch support for Israel eroding
By Michel Hoebink
13-05-2008
The Netherlands has always headed the list of European countries that
support Israel. Since
1982, however, public opinion has grown ambivalent. The Dutch still admire
Israel as a nation,
but they frown on its policies toward the Palestinians.
Israel and the NetherlandsPerhaps the Dutch have a guilty conscience.
During World War Two, the
Nazis deported about 100,000 Dutch Jews, meeting little resistance from
the non-Jewish
population. This may be one reason why the Netherlands has always had more
sympathy for Israel
than most other European countries.
During and after the 1967 Six Day War, Dutch support for Israel was almost
unanimous. Secondary
school pupils sang the battle songs of the Israeli army and many Dutch
cars sported bumper
stickers that read 'We support Israel'.
David and Goliath
Dutch Christians upheld the concept of Israel as the 'Holy Land'. The more
progressive, secular
Dutch population saw Israel as a small, enlightened nation that brought
European ideals of
socialism and democracy to a 'backwards' Middle East. Hundreds of
idealistic Dutch youths
traveled to Israel to work on the collective farms, the Kibbutzim.
The wars of 1967 and 1973 confirmed the Dutch perception of the Israelis
as the underdogs. The
small nation fighting the armies of the surrounding Arab countries was
compared to the biblical
hero David who defeated the giant Goliath. The plight of the Palestinians
was ignored.
Middle East expert Bertus Hendriks remembers how difficult it was in those
days to express a
balanced viewpoint including a Palestinian perspective. He was the
president of the General
Students' Union of Amsterdam (ASVA), which supported Israel's right to
exist in peace and
security. But it also criticized the one-sided approach to the conflict
which was so pervasive
in the Netherlands at that time. The union also disputed anti-Arab
rhetoric, says Hendriks.
"This standpoint brought us strong condemnations from all sides."
Massacres
Dutch public opinion began to change during the 1982 Israeli invasion of
Lebanon. Palestinian
terrorist attacks in the preceding years had only boosted sympathy for
Israel, but Israeli air
strikes on Palestinian civilians and Israel's indirect involvement in the
massacres at the
Sabra and Shatila refugee camps met with condemnation. Israel went from
victim to perpetrator.
According to political scientist Fred Grünfeld, who wrote a book on Dutch
perceptions of
Israel, public opinion grew ambivalent after 1982.
"On the one hand, the basic attitude is pro-Israel, but at the same time
there is a growing
irritation with Israeli policies."
From 1982, the idealized image of Israel became tarnished, explains
Bertus Hendriks.
"The first intifada played a prominent role in this process. The Israeli
military firing at
stone-throwing Palestinian youths; Prime Minister Rabin vowing to 'break
the bones' of the
stone-throwers."
The allegory of David and Goliath was reversed in favour of the
Palestinians, says Hendriks.
"A helpless people fighting their oppressor with stones. That image lent
an enormous legitimacy
to the Palestinian cause in Dutch public opinion."
After the Oslo agreements of 1993, Dutch development workers traveled to
the occupied
territories and came back with stories about the daily life of the
Palestinians.
"They saw the harassments, the illegal expansion of Jewish settlements.
The image of liberal
occupation, carefully projected by Israel, was further undermined."
Support fades
The emergence of the fundamentalist Hamas movement and a wave of suicide
attacks against Israel
did not help the Palestinian cause in the Netherlands. All the more
because these developments
coincided with the global tension between the Islam and the West after
9/11. But according to
Bertus Hendriks, sympathy for Israel continued to erode.
Until today, however, Dutch governments have always stuck to their
pro-Israeli stance. The
present coalition of Christian Democrats and Labour supports the Israeli
boycott of Hamas as a
partner in peace negotiations. Speaking in January this year, Foreign
Minister Maxime Verhagen,
a Christian Democrat, blamed Hamas for the crisis in Gaza. But Dutch
Development Minister Bert
Koenders, from the Labour Party, caused commotion by calling the Israeli
blockade of Gaza a
"collective punishment and a transgression of international law". With
this statement, Koenders
expressed a growing call within his party to take a firmer stand towards
Israel.
http://www.radionetherlands.nl/currentaffairs/region/netherlands/080513-netherlands-israel-mc


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