Omri Grinberg, an Israeli Jew on a temporary stay in Sweden, writes in The Local:
Being a Jewish-Israeli who has moved (temporarily) to Sweden, I am often approached as a representative of the state of Israel. I am far from being that: I am often ashamed of the crimes committed by the Israeli army and Israeli politicians, crimes that do not help any cause but the vague interests of the politicians themselves.
However, this does not mean that I see Israel as the side solely responsible for the many suffering civilians (both Palestinian and Israeli). The politicians in the Palestinian territories are at least as responsible—I wonder how many of the supporters at Saturday’s demonstration actually know the history, causes and doctrine of Hamas?
It might be a bit naive to expect Israelis to make some humanistic distinctions in the current situation, understanding that a human is a human, pain is pain, death is death and suffering is suffering, just as it might naive to expect the Palestinians to re-consider their strategy for reaching the goal of their own state.
But how come people who live in Sweden can’t take a deep breath, sit down, read, listen and think things through?
This desire to pick a side automatically and show support through clichés and stereotypes seems odd, to say the least, when it comes from people who are in a position to understand the complexity of the situation.
He’s right. But I think he is missing one aspect. Sweden has a large Muslim and Palestinian minority with strong ties to the world’s best-organised socialist movement. This movement has controlled the parliament, the state-run television, and most labour organisations in this country for most of the twentieth century. Non-socialist governments are very rare, and often the Social Democratic Party and the state appear to be one and the same. This, I think, is key to understanding Swedish bias in favour of Hamas and other Palestinian organisations. This is key, and so is Europe’s well-established anti-Americanism, which simply states that everything favoured by American governments must be bad for the rest of the world. Israel is a close friend of the United States, and subsequently an enemy of everyone else. In other words, to understand why Swedes ignore the true complexity of the Middle East conflict, one must understand Sweden’s political culture. We are a peaceful people who enjoy our black-and-white outlook on world politics.