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      http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/985450.html
 
 
 An obsession called Israel
 By Ofri Ilani, Haaretz, 21/05/2008
 
 
 To the sound of the audience's applause, Francois Heilbronn, the
 president of French Friends of Tel Aviv University, stood up and read
 off the names of dozens of French intellectuals. The list included
 poets, writers, playwrights and philosophers, Catholics and communists,
 past and present, who all shared one common denominator: their
 enthusiastic attitude toward Zionism and the State of Israel. "A
 wonderful list; it is such a pleasure for me to recite these names,"
 said Heilbronn and read: Malraux, Camus, Blanchard, Barthes, Aragon, and
 many other names that were swallowed up by the applause. "Here, in Tel
 Aviv, we salute you," he declared, and concluded with a pro-Israeli
 quote from Jean-Paul Sartre, the leading French intellectual of the
 twentieth century.
 
 It was one of the highlights of a unique conference held at the
 university this week on the attitudes of French intellectuals toward
 Israel, from its establishment to today. In contrast to Heilbronn's
 speech, which was devoted to the pro-Israel intellectuals, the lectures
 of most of the speakers radiated flagrant offense at the positions that
 French thinkers, especially from the left, have taken toward Israel. One
 after another, the speakers described a similar pattern: Excitement over
 the establishment of the Jewish state, which swept across the French
 intelligentsia after 1948, was replaced after 1967 by increasing
 criticism, which in some cases reached the point of completely denying
 Israel's right to exist.
 
 It is sometimes surprising to see the intensity with which intellectuals
 on the banks of the Seine deal with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in
 dozens of articles and essays, most of which are totally unknown to the
 Israeli public. "The topic of Israel was always important in France, but
 in the last ten years, it has become the number-one subject for
 intellectual debate," said Dr. Denis Charbit of the Open University, a
 researcher of French culture, who organized the conference.
 
 
 Eric Marty, an essayist and lecturer on contemporary literature at the
 University of Paris, argued that Israel is a unique obsession in French
 intellectual discourse - to the point that the Israeli-Palestinian
 question has created conflict among several leading French thinkers. The
 close ties between Sartre and the writer Jean Genet, for instance, were
 ruptured after Sartre moved closer to Israel and Genet moved closer to
 Fatah. The relationship between philosophers Michel Foucault and Gilles
 Deleuze also cooled due to Deleuze's support for Palestinian terror
 attacks. Today, Marty said, the debate over Israel is so heated that
 intense hostility and hatred prevails among disputants on both sides of
 the argument.
 
 As an example, he cited the philosopher Alain Badiou, whom many consider
 the leading French philosopher of the current generation. In a series of
 recent essays, Badiou (whose book "Ethics: An Essay on the Understanding
 of Evil" was published in Hebrew by Resling) argues that Israel must
 disappear completely, just like French Algeria. According to Badiou, as
 quoted by Marty, the Jew by definition must be foreign to any land, and
 therefore Israel is the state with the least number of Jews in the world
 today, and its very existence is perceived by him as a crime.
 
 "Badiou is considered the leading intellectual in France," Marty said.
 "Derrida bequeathed his place to Badiou. It is necessary to fight to
 make him beyond the pale."
 
 Unsurprisingly, the word "anti-Semitism" recurred in several lectures.
 Yet some of Israel's harshest critics happen to be Jews. Moreover, said
 sociologist Pierre Birnbaum of the Sorbonne, ever since Theodor Herzl's
 day, many pro-Zionist intellectuals have actually been anti-Semites. For
 example, Edouard Drumont, author of the anti-Semitic book "Jewish
 France," congratulated Herzl, saying that France is for the French,
 while Palestine is for the Jews. Louis-Ferdinand Celine, the
 anti-Semitic pro-Nazi writer, praised the rebirth of the Jewish people
 in Israel and said a new person had been created there: He builds, he
 farms, he fights.
 
 Charbit noted that several thinkers actually present the denial of
 Israel's right to exist as a conclusion drawn from the memory of the
 Holocaust. "The Holocaust has never been as present in French discourse
 as it has been in recent decades," he said. "But because of the
 connection between colonialism and the Holocaust, the victims have
 become the main subject of the historical discussion. In such a
 situation, there is a split: Either the contemporary Jews are [viewed
 as] the heirs of the victims, and then there is support for Israel, or
 the approach is to consider all victims in general, and then the
 Palestinians are portrayed as the victims of today."
 
 Historian Prof. Elie Barnavi, a former Israeli ambassador to France,
 noted at the conference that there is a large gap between the Parisian
 intellectuals' position and that of the public at large. When he visited
 rural areas of France, he said, he received an almost royal welcome and
 Israeli flags were hung in his honor. "We focus on the Parisian
 microcosm, which is indeed important, but it isn't representative," said
 Barnavi. Many of the speakers noted that Nicolas Sarkozy, the man
 sitting in the Elysee Palace, is actually an ardent supporter of Israel.
 
 And indeed, while discussing Israel and the Palestinians is indeed
 important to the intellectuals, it is unclear how important the
 intellectuals are to France today. Their status does not even come to
 close to what it was several decades ago, Marty said, and the field of
 French intellectualism is in a truly terminal condition.
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