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Reasonable Conjecture on Racist Israel's Changing
Demographics
By Lawrence Davidson
Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 21, 2011
Lawrence Davidson
considers why a growing number of Israeli Jews are voting – or preparing to
vote – with their feet by emigrating or acquiring foreign passports, and
views a possible future scenario where the majority of Jews remaining in
Israel are racist, ideologically-motivated religious fanatics.
”...as Zionism "purifies"
itself, gets rid of all those who would question it or compromise it, it
must take its remaining adherents into the realm of unadorned horror. We
should all be afraid of this. Very afraid.” (Lawrence Davidson)
Israeli Jews are voting with their feet
If the historical goal of the state of Israel is to provide the world’s
Jews with a secure national home, a place of refuge in a world of real or
potential anti-Semitism, it seems to have failed. It has failed not because
this writer says so, but because an increasing number of its own Jewish
citizens say so.
There have been studies originating both in Israel
and abroad that show "as
many as half of the Jews living in Israel will consider leaving ... if
in the next few years the current political and social trends continue".
This finding is in addition to the fact that yerida, or emigration
out of Israel, has long been running at higher numbers than aliyah,
or immigration into the country. "
According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, as of 2005,
650,000 Israelis have left the country for over one year and not returned".
The great majority of these were Jews. In addition,
polls show that at
least 60 per cent and as high as 80 per cent of remaining Israeli Jews
"sympathize with those who leave the country".
Among those who stay,
there is the conviction that the safe thing is to have a second passport
issued by the United States or a European country. As the Haaretz
reporter Gideon Levy
puts it, "if our forefathers dreamt of an Israeli passport, there are
those among us who are now dreaming of a foreign passport".
At
present the United States has
issued over half a
million passports to Israelis and a quarter million additional
applications are pending.
Germany runs second
with 100,000 passports given to Israeli Jews and 7,000 new ones issued
yearly.
“...when you combine the growth in emigration with the
desire for foreign passports you get a different sort of
message. Planning to possibly emigrate on a foreign passport
implies that there are a number of Israelis who foresee the
demise of the state. In other words, they foresee a day when
the Israeli passport will be worthless.”
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Why the scramble for foreign passports? Well,
according to Levy,
"the excuses are strange and diverse, but at the base of them all are unease
and anxiety, both personal and national. The foreign passport has become an
insurance policy against a rainy day. It turns out there are more and more
Israelis who are thinking that day may eventually come."
There are two
prevailing explanations for this phenomenon. The first is that it
reflects the conviction that the safe haven that Zionism was suppose to
create is not safe at all. This is the position taken by the University of
Pennsylvania political scientist Ian Lustick. According to him,
The danger for the Jewish
state is that, given the choice between convincing Middle Easterners
that Israel can be a good neighbour and leaving the neighbourhood, more
and more Israelis are attracted to the latter... The logically extreme
expression of escape is, of course, emigration.
Lustick is supported by Stephen Walt, Professor of International
Relations at Harvard University, who suggests that "the Zionist ideal is
losing hold within Israel itself" because the Israeli government "endlessly
delays the [peace] process".
The second explanation is that suggested
by the editors of the Jerusalem Post who cite interviews with
"hundreds of Israeli expats in North America". Their conclusion is that when
Israelis go abroad and stay, it is due to economic, and not political or
security reasons.
Actually, the explanation offered by the
Jerusalem Post is suspect. If the desire to emigrate is motivated
mainly by economics, the demand for second passports would not be necessary.
Israelis travel freely in the United States and the economic
interconnections between the two countries make it relatively easy for
Israeli Jews to get "green cards" to stay and work. This is probably true in
some other parts of the West as well, as long as you are not
tagged as a war criminal.
However, when you combine the
growth in emigration with the desire for foreign passports you get a
different sort of message. Planning to possibly emigrate on a foreign
passport implies that there are a number of Israelis who foresee the demise
of the state. In other words, they foresee a day when the Israeli passport
will be worthless. Given the fact that emigration is something of an
ideological sin for Zionists, it is no surprise that some of the emigrants
tell pollsters their motivation is economic. It sounds better. But in the
end it hardly matters, leaving for whatever reason is the equivalent of
voting with your feet.
Not without its costs
This trend is no doubt encouraging to the Palestinians and their
supporters, but it is not without its costs. If we assume no change and
project this development into the future, say 20 years or so, what will
Jewish Israel look like?
“In a population shorn of its middle class, there will be
no real political opposition and the right-wing parties will
become ever more aggressive against what they regard as
anti-Zionist elements within the Jewish population.”
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First, the ratio of Jews to Israeli Arabs within the Green Line [i.e. the
pre-1967-war borders] will certainly shrink. That is, the Arab population,
which already has a higher birth rate than the Jewish one, will grow all the
more rapidly, making up an increasing percentage of the population. Factor
in the occupied territories and there will be more Palestinians than Jews.
One can, of course, say that this is as it should be. The notion that
Palestine must have a Jewish majority has always been a perverse one.
Nonetheless, as a consequence of the changing demographics, it is almost
certain that Palestinian-Jewish Israeli relations, which have never been
good, will get rapidly and proportionately worse. Why so? The second point
answers this question.
Second, of the Jews who remain in Israel, an
increasing percentage will be ideological fanatics. Take a look at the
religiously-motivated, armed and aggressive settlers on the West Bank and
then imagine them, along with those in black hats and pa’ot
(unshaven sideburns), as making up 60 or 70 per cent of the Jewish
population. That is a masada majority who will be willing to
"defend" their way of life in all of Palestine not due to patriotic
propaganda, but out of real racial conviction and religious zeal.
Third, the other remaining Jews, the ones not necessarily fanatical, will be
mostly docile. These are the ones who cannot get the foreign passports, who
have no relatives abroad to vouch for them, and not enough resources to
bankroll a new start even if they could find another place to go. They will
follow what orders they are given by their increasingly fanatical government
for the sake of their jobs, their pensions, to put bread on the table,
because their peers are doing so, etc.
Fourth, ideological fanatics
confronting their worse nightmare, in this case the "demographic holocaust",
are not going to be devotees of democracy and human rights. Israel’s
government will become more and more dictatorial. We can already see this in
today’s Israel where the Knesset, presently controlled by ideological
parties, is in the process of passing anti-democratic laws. This may be just
the beginning. In a population shorn of its middle class, there will be no
real political opposition and the right-wing parties will become ever more
aggressive against what they regard as anti-Zionist elements within the
Jewish population. Organizations such as B’tselem, Gush Shalom, Rabbis for
Human Rights, the Israeli Committee Against Home Demolitions and the like
will be shut down. Supporters of these groups will become silent or go into
exile, as will the small number of Israeli academics who now stand against
government policy. If they do not, they will likely end up in jail.
Conclusion
“In today’s Israel you can still tell the difference
between those Jewish Israelis who want a just and humane
settlement with the Palestinians and those who do not. If
things keep going as they are now there will come a time
when it will be much harder to make that distinction.”
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This, of course, is just conjecture. However, it is reasonable
conjecture. And so we really ought to think about this. In today’s Israel
you can still tell the difference between those Jewish Israelis who want a
just and humane settlement with the Palestinians and those who do not. If
things keep going as they are now there will come a time when it will be
much harder to make that distinction. In other words, when the everyday man
and women just looking for economic or physical safety, just looking for a
better place to raise their kids, packs up and leaves, the "neutral zone" of
everyday life vanishes with them. Society becomes a place where, as George
Bush once put it, you’re with us or against us. And, if to be with us means
to be a racist, a supporter of the God-chosen people and an active enemy of
the inferior and doomed Amalekites, then that is how everyone still in
residence will behave.
When and if that time comes, how are we on the
outside, and especially those of us who are Jews, going to react to an
Israel where those who seek a just peace are either silenced, imprisoned or
exiled? What do you do with a society where everyone must support injustice
or be themselves condemned as traitors or criminals? Under these
circumstances how do you tell the difference between the innocent and the
guilty?
This is not a potential scenario unique to Israel’s
situation. It has been played out before. The difference is that before the
Jews were among the victims and not victimizers. This is what happens when
any group gives itself over to a doctrine, be it racial, religious or
political, which destroys all notions of common humanity. That is what the
prevailing ideology of Israel has done. And, if history remains consistent,
as Zionism "purifies" itself, gets rid of all those who would question it or
compromise it, it must take its remaining adherents into the realm of
unadorned horror. We should all be afraid of this. Very afraid.
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