I attended a performance of the Theatre of the Surreal as part of Israel Apartheid Week (IAW) at the University of Cape Town.. This particular production was presided over by Dean Cool, whose task was to create the illusion of academic respectability. The chief actors on stage were Prof Unctuous, Mr Revolutionary and Mr Pedantic. The basic script was the same for each but they were apparently free to present the material in the style which best suited their temperaments and talents.
The audience all knew the script, of course. They were divided into "supporters" and a somewhat smaller number of "opponents" reflecting a greater range of ages but almost all Jewish.
The script was (and is) straightforward in substance but allows for a certain flexibility of emphasis depending on the performer and the occasion. The foundational message is that Israel is a mighty, colonial, apartheid, racist,militaristic, occupying and illegitimate state oppressing, brutalising, humiliating, stealing from and murdering its helpless and innocent victims, the Palestinians.
This allowed Prof Unctuous to suggest IAW is an expression of "our shared humanity". A noble (and well-funded and organised) sentiment indeed, but it does raise one question: how come it is Israel alone which arouses such passionate responses in Prof Unctuous and his allies?
Why does Prof Unctuous remain apparently unmoved by the 70 000 dead in Syria, the 5 000 - 20 000 or more women killed or disfigured annually in honour killings across Muslim societies, the endless roll call of victims of Muslim violence amounting to about 11 million over the past 6 decades, most of them fellow Muslims, or the genocide in the Sudan? Where is the "shared humanity" when it comes to dispossed Tibetans, the victims of human rights abuses in Africa or of the political corruption and massive inequalities in our own country?
I would like to suggest an answer. The authors of the IAW script, namely, the Boycott, Disinvestment and Sanctions (BDS) activists, are deliberately vague on outcomes though very clear on the message. But Norman Finkelstein, veteran and avid critic of Israel was very explicit in his interpretation of intent, "We have to be honest... They [BDS Movement] don't want Israel. They think they're being very clever, they call it their three tier - we want the end of the occupation, we want the right of return and we want equal rights for Arabs in Israel. And they... know the result of implementing all three is what? ...There's no Israel... there's no Israel, full stop..."