Zionism
Begins to Unravel
By
Lawrence Davidson
Part
I – A Flaw in the Ideological Outlook
May 20,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Ideological movements, be they religious or
secular, are demanding and Procrustean movements. By
ideological movements I mean those that demand of
their adherents resolute belief in some “deep set of
truths” posited by a deity, by supposed immutable
historical laws, or by some other equally
unchallengeable source. Their followers, once
initiated, or even just born into the fold, are
expected to stay there and, as the saying goes,
“keep the faith.”
However, in
cultural, political and religious terms there are no
eternal deep truths. History has an abrasive quality
that erodes our beliefs in this god and that law.
Though the process might take a longer or shorter
time to manifest itself, yesterday’s faith will at
some point start to ring less true. At some point
followers start to fall away.
What
happens when ideologically driven leaders start to
lose their following? Well, they get very upset
because those who are supposed to affirm everything
the movement stands for are now having doubts. Such
doubters are dangerous to the supposed true faith
and so are usually dealt with in one of two ways:
(1) the ideologues in charge attempt to marginalize
the disaffected by denigrating them and then casting
them out of the fold or (2) if we are dealing with
totalitarian types, they send the dissenters off to
a gulag, or worse.
Part II –
Zionism Unravelling
This sort
of unraveling – the loss of growing numbers of
traditional followers of an ideological movement –
seems to be going on within the Zionist community,
particularly among American Jews. Zionism is an
ideological movement that preaches the God-given
Jewish right to control and settle all of historical
Palestine. Since the founding of Israel in 1948 the
Zionists have also claimed that the “Jewish State”
represents all of world Jewry, thus self-aware Jews
owe allegiance to both Israel and its prevailing
Zionist philosophy. However, in the last ten or so
years that allegiance has been breaking down. In the
U.S. a growing “disconnect” has been noted between
the outlook and actions of the ideologically rigid
leaders of major U.S. Jewish organizations (who
remain uncritically supportive of Israel) and the
increasingly alienated Jewish American rank and file
whom, at least up until recently, the leaders
claimed to represent. This gap has been repeatedly
documented by several sources ranging from, Pew
Research Center surveys, to the Jewish Forward
newspaper, and the organization of Reform Judaism.
As
characterized by the Jewish Forward the situation is
that ordinary American Jews are “far more critical
of Israel than the Jewish establishment.” Almost
half of the American Jews surveyed by a Pew study in
2013 did not think the Israeli government was making
a “sincere effort” to achieve peace with the
Palestinians. Almost as many saw Israel’s expanding
colonization of the West Bank as counterproductive.
Thus, this disconnect is not a sudden or new
situation. The numbers of questioning American Jews
have continued to grow, and things have only gotten
worse for the Zionist leadership. Indeed, just as
many young American Jews may be joining pro-peace
activist groups as are cheering on AIPAC at its
conventions.
Part III –
Leadership Reactions in the U.S.
Following
the two-option scheme described above, the main
reaction of the leadership of American Jewish
organizations is to try to marginalize these
questioning Jews – to dismiss them as “uninformed,
unengaged, or wrong.” To that end American Jewish
officials are now conveniently asking if they really
need to represent “the disorganized, unaffiliated
Jewish community … the 50% of Jews who, in a
calendar year, do not step into a synagogue, do not
belong to a JCC [Jewish Community Center], and are
Jews in name only.”
This sort
of marginalizing of all but the true believers was
articulated by Abraham Foxman, national director of
the Anti-Defamation League. He told the Jewish
Forward, “you know who the Jewish establishment
represents? Those who care.” Here Foxman was
engaging in a bit of circular thinking: the
important constituency are those represented by the
establishment. How do we know? They are the ones who
still “care” about Israel. How do we define caring?
Caring means continuing to believe what the Jewish
establishment and the Israeli government tell them.
Eventually Foxman goes even further, concluding that
Jewish leaders aren’t beholden to the opinions of
any aspect of the Jewish public. “I don’t sit and
poll my constituency,” Foxman said. “Part of Jewish
leadership is leadership. We lead.” It would appear
that, over time, he is leading diminishing numbers.
Part IV –
Leadership Reactions in Israel
Reaction
out of Israel to reports of the growing alienation
of American Jews has been aggressively negative.
After all, Israel is the centerpiece of Zionist
ideology – its grand achievement. Being the subject
of criticism by growing numbers of Jews, in the U.S.
or elsewhere, is utterly unacceptable to those now
in charge of Israel’s ruling institutions.
These
leaders, both secular and religious, have begun to
write off critical and skeptical Jews as apostates,
even to the point of denying that they are Jews at
all. Seymour Reich, who is a former chairman of the
Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish
Organizations (such folks always wait till they
retire to speak out critically), has recently
described Israel’s current leadership as alarmingly
anti-democratic. He writes of “the Israeli
government’s assault on democratic values” and its
use of “legislation and incitement to strike down
dissent,” be it expressed through “speech, press,
religion [or] academic freedoms.” He goes on to
quote the Israeli Minister of Religious Affairs,
David Azoulay. “Speaking about Reform and
Conservative Jews,” who happen to make up the
majority of Jews in the U.S., are often of liberal
persuasion, and increasingly alienated by the
ultraorthodox policies of Israel’s religious
establishment, Azoulay said, “I cannot allow myself
to call such a person a Jew,” and, “We cannot allow
these groups to get near the Torah of Israel.”
Things appear potentially even worse when we hear
Israel’s Intelligence Minister Israel Katz calling
for the “targeted killing” of Boycott, Divestment
and Sanctions (BDS) leaders. In the U.S. many of
these leaders are Jewish.
Such
official Israeli attitudes make a mockery of the
claims of American politicians, such as Hillary
Clinton, that Israel “is built on principles of
equality, tolerance and pluralism. … And we marvel
that such a bastion of liberty exists in a region so
plagued by intolerance.” It should be noted that in
January 2016 the Israeli Knesset rejected a bill
that would have secured in law equality for all the
country’s citizens.
Part V –
Conclusion
In truth,
Zionism and the state it created have always been
ideologically rigid. Every effort at modifying the
movement’s basic demand for a state exclusive to one
people, from early concepts of “cultural Zionism” to
more recent notions of “liberal Zionism,” has
failed. The occasional bit of propagandistic
dissimulation notwithstanding, Zionist leaders from
Ben Gurion to Netanyahu have been dedicated to (a)
territorial expansion based on the principle of
Eretz Israel (greater Israel) and (b) the principle
of inequality – none of them have ever seriously
considered equal social and economic, much less
political, treatment for non-Jews. That means that
the present, obnoxiously rigid hardliners both in
the U.S. and Israel are pushing persistent racist
and colonialist themes.
It is the
persistence of these Zionist themes that has led to
increasing skepticism among U.S. Jews, most of whom
take the ideals of democracy seriously. And it is
the ideologically rigid refusal to reach a just
peace with the Palestinians, who 67 years after the
triumph of Zionism are still being ethnically
cleansed, that has pushed many otherwise passive
Jews into open opposition.
It has
taken us several generations to get to this point,
but our arrival has been predictable all along. That
is because the ideology of Zionism brooks no
compromises and admits to no sins – even as Israeli
behavior grows evermore barbaric. Thus, the number
of dissenters and critics grow and the ideologues
start to become anxious and vengeful – a display of
aggression that only alienates more Jews. Thus it is
that Zionism has begun to unravel.
Lawrence
Davidson is a retired professor of history from West
Chester University in West Chester PA. His academic
research focused on the history of American foreign
relations with the Middle East. He taught courses in
Middle East history, the history of science and
modern European intellectual history. |