Shlomo Sand: ‘I Wish to Resign and Cease
Considering Myself a Jew’
His past was Jewish, but today he sees Israel as one
of the most racist societies in the western world. Historian Shlomo
Sand explains why he doesn’t want to be Jewish anymore
By Shlomo Sand
October 20, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Guardian"
- During the first half of the 20th century, my father
abandoned Talmudic school, permanently stopped going to synagogue,
and regularly expressed his aversion to rabbis. At this point in my
own life, in the early 21st century, I feel in turn a moral
obligation to break definitively with tribal Judeocentrism. I am
today fully conscious of having never been a genuinely secular Jew,
understanding that such an imaginary characteristic lacks any
specific basis or cultural perspective, and that its existence is
based on a hollow and ethnocentric view of the world. Earlier I
mistakenly believed that the Yiddish culture of the family I grew up
in was the embodiment of Jewish culture. A little later, inspired by
Bernard Lazare, Mordechai Anielewicz, Marcel Rayman and Marek
Edelman – who all fought antisemitism, nazism and Stalinism without
adopting an ethnocentric view – I identified as part of an oppressed
and rejected minority. In the company, so to speak, of the socialist
leader Léon Blum, the poet Julian Tuwim and many others, I
stubbornly remained a Jew who had accepted this identity on account
of persecutions and murderers, crimes and their victims.
Now, having painfully become aware that I have
undergone an adherence to
Israel, been assimilated by law into a fictitious ethnos of
persecutors and their supporters, and have appeared in the world as
one of the exclusive club of the elect and their acolytes, I wish to
resign and cease considering myself a Jew.
Although the state of Israel is not disposed to
transform my official nationality from “Jew” to “Israeli”, I dare to
hope that kindly philosemites, committed Zionists and exalted
anti-Zionists, all of them so often nourished on essentialist
conceptions, will respect my desire and cease to catalogue me as a
Jew. As a matter of fact, what they think matters little to me, and
still less what the remaining antisemitic idiots think. In the light
of the historic tragedies of the 20th century, I am determined no
longer to be a small minority in an exclusive club that others have
neither the possibility nor the qualifications to join.
By my refusal to be a Jew, I represent a species
in the course of disappearing. I know that by insisting that only my
historical past was Jewish, while my everyday present (for better or
worse) is Israeli, and finally that my future and that of my
children (at least the future I wish for) must be guided by
universal, open and generous principles, I run counter to the
dominant fashion, which is oriented towards ethnocentrism.
As a historian of the modern age, I put forward
the hypothesis that the cultural distance between my great-grandson
and me will be as great or greater than that separating me from my
own great-grandfather. All the better! I have the misfortune of
living now among too many people who believe their descendants will
resemble them in all respects, because for them peoples are eternal
– a fortiori a race-people such as the Jews.
I am aware of living in one of the most racist
societies in the western world. Racism is present to some degree
everywhere, but in Israel it exists deep within the spirit of the
laws. It is taught in schools and colleges, spread in the media, and
above all and most dreadful, in Israel the racists do not know what
they are doing and, because of this, feel in no way obliged to
apologise. This absence of a need for self-justification has made
Israel a particularly prized reference point for many movements of
the far right throughout the world, movements whose past history of
antisemitism is only too well known.
To live in such a society has become increasingly
intolerable to me, but I must also admit that it is no less
difficult to make my home elsewhere. I am myself a part of the
cultural, linguistic and even conceptual production of the Zionist
enterprise, and I cannot undo this. By my everyday life and my basic
culture I am an Israeli. I am not especially proud of this, just as
I have no reason to take pride in being a man with brown eyes and of
average height. I am often even ashamed of Israel, particularly when
I witness evidence of its cruel military colonisation, with its weak
and defenceless victims who are not part of the “chosen people”.
Earlier in my life I had a fleeting utopian dream
that a Palestinian Israeli should feel as much at home in Tel Aviv
as a Jewish American does in New York. I struggled and sought for
the civil life of a Muslim Israeli in Jerusalem to be similar to
that of the Jewish French person whose home is in Paris. I wanted
Israeli children of Christian African immigrants to be treated as
the British children of immigrants from the Indian subcontinent are
in London. I hoped with all my heart that all Israeli children would
be educated together in the same schools. Today I know that my dream
is outrageously demanding, that my demands are exaggerated and
impertinent, that the very fact of formulating them is viewed by
Zionists and their supporters as an attack on the Jewish character
of the state of Israel, and thus as antisemitism.
However, strange as it may seem, and in contrast
to the locked-in character of secular Jewish identity, treating
Israeli identity as politico-cultural rather than “ethnic” does
appear to offer the potential for achieving an open and inclusive
identity. According to the law, in fact, it is possible to be an
Israeli citizen without being a secular “ethnic” Jew, to participate
in its “supra-culture” while preserving one’s “infra-culture”, to
speak the hegemonic language and cultivate in parallel another
language, to maintain varied ways of life and fuse different ones
together. To consolidate this republican political potential, it
would be necessary, of course, to have long abandoned tribal
hermeticism, to learn to respect the Other and welcome him or her as
an equal, and to change the constitutional laws of Israel to make
them compatible with democratic principles.
Most important, if it has been momentarily
forgotten: before we put forward ideas on changing Israel’s identity
policy, we must first free ourselves from the accursed and
interminable occupation that is leading us on the road to hell. In
fact, our relation to those who are second-class citizens of Israel
is inextricably bound up with our relation to those who live in
immense distress at the bottom of the chain of the Zionist rescue
operation. That oppressed population, which has lived under the
occupation for close to 50 years, deprived of political and civil
rights, on land that the “state of the Jews” considers its own,
remains abandoned and ignored by international politics. I recognise
today that my dream of an end to the occupation and the creation of
a confederation between two republics, Israeli and Palestinian, was
a chimera that underestimated the balance of forces between the two
parties.
Increasingly it appears to be already too late;
all seems already lost, and any serious approach to a political
solution is deadlocked. Israel has grown used to this, and is unable
to rid itself of its colonial domination over another people. The
world outside, unfortunately, does not do what is needed either. Its
remorse and bad conscience prevent it from convincing Israel to
withdraw to the 1948 frontiers. Nor is Israel ready to annex the
occupied territories officially, as it would then have to grant
equal citizenship to the occupied population and, by that fact
alone, transform itself into a binational state. It’s rather like
the mythological serpent that swallowed too big a victim, but
prefers to choke rather than to abandon it.
Does this mean I, too, must abandon hope? I
inhabit a deep contradiction. I feel like an exile in the face of
the growing Jewish ethnicisation that surrounds me, while at the
same time the language in which I speak, write and dream is
overwhelmingly Hebrew. When I find myself abroad, I feel nostalgia
for this language, the vehicle of my emotions and thoughts. When I
am far from Israel, I see my street corner in Tel Aviv and look
forward to the moment I can return to it. I do not go to synagogues
to dissipate this nostalgia, because they pray there in a language
that is not mine, and the people I meet there have absolutely no
interest in understanding what being Israeli means for me.
In London it is the universities and their
students of both sexes, not the Talmudic schools (where there are no
female students), that remind me of the campus where I work. In New
York it is the Manhattan cafes, not the Brooklyn enclaves, that
invite and attract me, like those of Tel Aviv. And when I visit the
teeming Paris bookstores, what comes to my mind is the Hebrew book
week organised each year in Israel, not the sacred literature of my
ancestors.
My deep attachment to the place serves only to
fuel the pessimism I feel towards it. And so I often plunge into
despondency about the present and fear for the future. I am tired,
and feel that the last leaves of reason are falling from our tree of
political action, leaving us barren in the face of the caprices of
the sleepwalking sorcerers of the tribe. But I cannot allow myself
to be completely fatalistic. I dare to believe that if humanity
succeeded in emerging from the 20th century without a nuclear war,
everything is possible, even in the Middle East. We should remember
the words of Theodor Herzl, the dreamer responsible for the fact
that I am an Israeli: “If you will it, it is no legend.”
As a scion of the persecuted who emerged from the
European hell of the 1940s without having abandoned the hope of a
better life, I did not receive permission from the frightened
archangel of history to abdicate and despair. Which is why, in order
to hasten a different tomorrow, and whatever my detractors say, I
shall continue to write.
•
This is an edited extract from How I Stopped Being a Jew by Shlomo
Sand, published by Verso at £9.99. Buy it for £7.49 at
bookshop.theguardian.com. Sand will discuss the
book at SOAS,
University of London on 14 October,
versobooks.com/events.