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Industry of Lies: Media, Academia, and the Israeli-Arab Conflict Paperback – October 24, 2017
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Ben-Dror Yemini
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The Industry of Lies is one of the greatest frauds of recent decades - a fraud of historic, even epic, proportions. When almost half of all Europeans believe that Israel treats the Palestinians just like the Nazis treated the Jews, when leading politicians assert that the Arab-Israeli conflict is the central cause of violence in the world, and when prominent intellectuals argue that Israel is an apartheid state, the unfortunate reality is that the lies are winning.
As a result, Israel has become the devil incarnate in the eyes of many otherwise good and reasonable people - people who genuinely want to see peace but inadvertently contribute to the continuation of the Israeli-Arab conflict. The tragedy is that they are neither helping the Palestinians nor promoting agreement or reconciliation. Instead, they lend legitimacy to the most fallacious claims of the most extreme activists, empowering not moderates but the worst of the radicals who have no interest in attaining peace.
Israel is not free from flaws. However, this book draws a clear distinction between legitimate criticism and the industry of lies that has emerged from two unlikely sources - the media and academia - undermining their reputation as bastions of truth and knowledge. Ben-Dror Yemini presents an in-depth analysis of the many inaccurate and malicious accusations leveled against Israel and refutes them one by one in this thought-provoking and well-researched volume that invites us to rethink the causes and consequences of the Israeli-Arab conflict.
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Print length354 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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Publication dateOctober 24, 2017
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Dimensions6.14 x 0.8 x 9.21 inches
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ISBN-101979061432
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ISBN-13978-1979061438
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Editorial Reviews
Review
-Ehud Barak, former Prime Minister of Israel
"In a world where we're trying to sort out the truth, the forgotten facts that Ben-Dror Yemini has assembled should be known by all those trying to resolve the Israel-Palestine conflict in the future."
-Robert Bernstein, former President of Random House and founder of Human Rights Watch
"I am going to do something unconventional: recommend a book that excoriates me. Ben-Dror Yemini and I have some fundamental differences of opinion. And yet, I think his new book on the global rise of anti-Israeli propaganda is important, thorough, and thought-provoking. For too long, too many good people have been swayed by the derisive campaign that describes the Jewish-democratic state in a distorted, pernicious manner. Industry of Lies offers a robust rebuttal to this campaign. It undercuts the basic arguments of BDS supporters and those who see Zionism as monstrous. Yemini opens the door to a much-needed, balanced, and fair discussion of Israel's achievements and failures."
-Ari Shavit, journalist and author of My Promised Land
"This book is important and deserves a wide readership. It is important because it reveals and explains the big and small lies that underpin contemporary anti-Zionist and anti-Israeli discourse. Yemini himself is a critic of current Israeli policy and believes in a two-state solution. But he asserts that the distortions purveyed in Western university campuses and in the Western media about Israel and the history of the Arab-Israeli conflict are actually an impediment to Arab-Israeli peace."
-Professor Benny Morris, author and historian
-Professor PeterBerkowitz is the Tad and Dianne Taube senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, StanfordUniversity
"Ben-Dror Yemini belongs to a unique breed of Israeli scholars and journalists. He criticizes Israel's settlement policy and advocates a rapprochement with the Palestinians through the two-state solution. Nevertheless, he takes up arms against the anti-Israel web of outlandish lies and vitriolic propaganda and exposes them for what they truly are: a sophisticated form of hate speech directing its all too familiar venom against the Jewish state and the Zionist idea. This book should be read by all truth-seeking people."
-Professor Amnon Rubinstein, former Israeli Minister of Education on behalf of Meretz
From the Author
"Tomorrow an op-ed article of mine will be publishedin the New York Times, and it is actually due to something you wrote." I was startled. A tall, impressive, elderly man had taken me by surpriseat the end of a lecture I had just given in Manhattan, the evening of October 18,2009. How could something I had written have led him to write a piece in the New York Times? I cordially asked the stranger to identifyhimself. He introduced himself as Robert Bernstein and added "But call me Bob." He then suggested we do lunch. The name ranga bell. He was the man who had founded Human Rights Watch (HRW), the largest humanrights organization in the world. The previous year I had published several piecescriticizing some of the publications and distortions of that organization. At firstI thought that Bernstein wanted to take me to task and confront me with facts that he thought would disprove my allegations that HRW hadmisrepresented the situation in Israel.
The next day I rushed to a nearby newsstand to buy the Times and read his op ed.1 Again, I was surprised.He had written a piercing critique of the very organization he had established.It was a landmark article. Over lunch the next day, he explained: "When I read your claims that HRW was distorting reality, I hoped thatyou were mistaken. After looking into it, it became clear to me that your criticismwas correct. That is one of the reasons I published my op-ed. I wanted to meet youbecause I feel you must write a book." This was not only a surprise,it was a compliment. Bernstein had been, for several decades, the president of RandomHouse, one of the most prestigious publishers in the United States.
Itdid not take much to persuade me. I was being encouraged to write a book by theperson to whom so many writers had, over the years, been submitting manuscripts.I had some reservations about whether my newspaper articles, and especially my researchpieces, could constitute the basis for a book. Bernstein was decisive: "Your writing," he told me, "is both polemical andwell researched. If you have
convincedme to write against the organization that I set up with my own two hands, then your message shouldreach many more people."
I hope Bernstein was right. I hope this book will reach more people.
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform; 1st edition (October 24, 2017)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 354 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1979061432
- ISBN-13 : 978-1979061438
- Item Weight : 1.1 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.14 x 0.8 x 9.21 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#618,364 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #937 in Middle Eastern Politics
- #1,093 in Philosophy & Social Aspects of Education
- #1,864 in Political Commentary & Opinion
- Customer Reviews:
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Top reviews from other countries
I moved to the UK from Israel 3 decades ago. When I had my ArtWear business in Oxford and London between 1993-2007, there were only a very few incidents where customers left when they heard I'm an Israeli Jew. Now that I am a pensioner, I have become accutely aware of an increasing Israel-hate among my friends here, and Jews' hate in England. This troubles-d me deeply. Over the past month or two I spent all my time reading, watching and sharing a wide range of links online [facebook] on Israel. My main problem at the time was how to break through my fear of confrontation - both with people and with friends - and the fear of not knowing enough to respond to those who became experts at propagating aweful bloody images and hate and biased news about Israel - the worst thing was that I myself was very ignorant not only of what was really happening in Israel, but not at all clear about my own sense of Identity.
I was, over this short research period, on the one hand, shocked to notice/recollect how I myself used to be a 'leftist' in Israel since the early 70s, reading almost exclusively hard-left magazines/newspapers which affected in me a deep blind bias towards the Palestinian people.. This inclination has left in me a kind of a mental fog since, such as even when my son was blown up by Al-Qaeda in Sinai in 2004, I was quite convinced that this was because Israel occupied Israel- the land - or Palestine - even though we were all called Palestinians at the time of the British Mandate.
On the other hand, this period of research had miraculously sparked in me a kind of heart connection with all the Jews - I have to admit that I don't feel it all the time but I know it's there. My sense of identity-fog also melted away and was replaced by an unapologetic certainty that indeed the Jewish people do HAVE a right to exist in the Land of Israel. That peace is possible if there is a strong desire for it. This was a gradual but a huge shift in my hitherto crippling sense of eroded identity/being.
I discovered Ben Dror Yemini and his book only less than a week ago and became utterly astonished - I'm still reading it. Astonished, not only because here was an indepth, complete research into the global history of Israel hate - something which helped me more than any other fragmented or incomplete, however reliable, source I have found as yet. I am, strangely, finding the book also an educational treasure, enhancing my awareness as to how one/I fall so easily into the temptation to bend the truth for the sake of, or in defence of something one cares about so deeply.
Mr Yemini has kindly agreed for me to use quotes, even chunks, from his book - provided they will be credited and linked to Amazon - on social media, which is very helpful. I hope, this book would also help many of my Jewish friends in the world who feel, still, intimidated by increasing waves of hate in England, the US and France. I feel indebted for this book.
Why is this book so important? Because recent studies undertaken in the UK have proven that the more anti-Israel a person is, the more likely they are anti-Semitic too. Anti-Semitism has increased enormously in the UK, spiking to more than 250% during the Gaza conflict of 2014 when the media was disseminating disinformation on a daily basis about the IDF. Mr Yemini's book is beautifully written and his unique use of graphs and tables illuminates in a visual way the glaring lies that this relatively 'new' industry has created.
This book is essential reading for any student wishing to study Middle Eastern history, enter politics, work for an NGO, enter the world of charity organisations, or simply wants to understand how 'Israel' and 'Zionism' have become pejorative racist euphemistic terms for 'Jew.'
José Veiga








