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US Editor's Lament for Israel Overlooks
Zionism's Inherent Racism
By Lawrence Davidson
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 19, 2012
Lawrence Davidson argues that Israel’s anti-democratic and
racist traits are not recent phenomena, located mainly among the settlers on
the West Bank, but “flow from structural problems that were built into the
Zionist experiment that ultimately resulted in the Israeli state. They were
built in by the Zionist ideology itself.”
The lamentOn 12 March 2012 David Remnick, editor of the
New Yorker, wrote a brief lament for Israeli democracy. It appeared
under the title"Threatened"
and can be found in the magazine’s “Talk of the Town” comment section. Here
are some of the points that Remnick made:
1. "Democracy is never
fully achieved. At best, it’s an ambition, a state of becoming." Remnick
goes on to say that in the US it has taken "generations" for many minority
groups to attain "the rights of citizenship". And, even now it is an ongoing
struggle for there are always those (including some of the contenders for
the Republican presidential nomination) who wish to "scale back such
rights".
Remnick is correct. However, it should be emphasized that
the general historical trend in the US, particularly since World War II, has
been toward greater inclusiveness. Sometimes its two steps forward and one
step backward, but the presence of the nation’s first black president should
be taken as a sign of the direction in which the US is moving.
2.
Israel is "embroiled in a crisis of democratic becoming". Politically,
Israel was built on a social democratic model and the resulting institutions
should be seen as "points of pride". And yet "an intensifying conflict of
values has put its democratic nature under tremendous stress".
“While the democratic majority in the US has chosen to
interpret its laws and political philosophy in an inclusive
manner, Israel’s Jewish majority has chosen to pursue the
opposite goal – an exclusive, ethnocentric, and ultimately
racist state.”
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Remnick refers here to "an existential threat that looms within". What is
this potentially fatal threat? "Reactionary elements" who would lead Israel
to the political brink – a "descent into apartheid, xenophobia and
isolation".
Remnick believes that "the political corrosion begins ... with the
occupation of the Palestinian territories ... that has lasted for 45 years".
He points out that the result has been "a profoundly anti-democratic, even
racist, political culture [that] has become endemic among much of the Jewish
population in the West Bank, and jeopardizes Israel proper". He notes that
recent Israeli polls show the youth of the country "losing touch with the
liberal democratic principles of the state".
3. Remnick sees this as
a horrible step backward from Theodor Herzl’s vision of "a pluralist
Zionism" and he puts a lot of the blame on "emboldened [Jewish]
fundamentalists [who] flaunt an increasingly aggressive medievalism", the
kind that has made heroes of Jewish terrorists such as the mass murder
Baruch Goldstein. Such people now thrive in a political environment in which
"the tenets of liberal democracy [are] negotiable in a game of coalition
politics".
4. Remnick’s conclusion is that "such short-term
expedience cannot but exact a long-term price: this dream – and process of
democratic becoming – may be painfully, even fatally, deferred".
Historical corrections
Certainly many of David Remnick’s observations of anti-democratic Israeli
behaviour are accurate but his assumption that these are relatively recent
phenomena, located mainly among the settlers on the West Bank, is just
historically wrong. Israel’s anti-democratic trends flow from structural
problems that were built into the Zionist experiment that ultimately
resulted in the Israeli state. They were built in by the Zionist ideology
itself.
The truth is that you cannot design a state, and its
supporting political ideology, for one in-group only, then try to implement
it in a land filled with out-groups, and not come forth with a
discriminatory product. Having an exclusionary goal from the beginning, as
the Zionists did, makes Israeli prejudices structural and not an accident of
this or that government’s policies.
Thus, an accurate reading of
Theodor Herzl reveals that his "pluralistic Zionism" was a concept that
assumed, indeed demanded, that the population of the state be overwhelmingly
Jewish. The non-Jewish population had to be enticed or pushed out of the
Jewish state. That makes Israel’s anti-democratic Zionist attitude 117 years
old (dating from the 1895 publication of Herzl’s Der Jundenstaat –
The Jewish State) and not, as Remnick suggests, 45. Once Herzl’s
desired purge was accomplished, there could them be "pluralism" among the
solely Jewish population remaining. Today, we call such ethnocentrism by its
name, racism.
“…there is a split among Zionists … in the United States.
The so-called ‘soft Zionists’ are increasingly troubled by
the fact that Israel’s behaviour contradicts their long
cherished myths.
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An accurate and open-minded look at Israel’s history, as can be had from the
works of Ilan Pappe and Benny Morris, among others, shows beyond a doubt
that, from the beginning, Israeli political leaders, be they of the right or
the left, secular or religious, all had the same goal of purging the country
of non-Jews. If differences existed relevant to this goal, they were
tactical and not strategic. And this, by the way, is why all the talk heard
across the American political spectrum of how Israel is "just like us" is
again, historically incorrect. While the democratic majority in the US has
chosen to interpret its laws and political philosophy in an inclusive
manner, Israel’s Jewish majority has chosen to pursue the opposite goal – an
exclusive, ethnocentric, and ultimately racist state.
ConclusionNonetheless, David Remnick’s brief essay is both
interesting and important. It shows that there is a split among Zionists
here in the United States. The so-called "soft Zionists" are increasingly
troubled by the fact that Israel’s behaviour contradicts their long
cherished myths.
All nations have cherished myths and they are
important in sustaining support for and faith in the nation itself. When the
myths start to fall away you know that support must fall away as well. And
so it is with Israel. You can see it in the increasing numbers of Israelis
deciding to emigrate out of their country, and you can see it in David
Remnick’s essay which, in its own way, is an act of emigration. Seeing his
imagined liberal Israel overtaken by "an increasingly aggressive
medievalism", David Remnick has apparently come to the conclusion that this
is not the sort of Israel he can support.
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