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Harper's Magazine
January 2005
SAVING ISRAEL FROM ITSELF
A Secular Future for the Jewish State
By Bernard Avishai
In the winter of 2002, I moved to Jerusalem for the third
time, to join my new wife, a professor at the Hebrew University, and teach at an
Israeli business school. It was not the best of times to move to Israel, for the Al-Aqsa
Intifada was at its most terrifying and the Sharon government was preparing
its response in Operation Defensive Shield. When I met one old friend, she put
her hand to the back of my head and started feeling around through my hair.
"I'm looking for the hole," she said. I had spent the better part of
the 1970s living in Israel, and most of the
1980s visiting and writing about the country, so the new disturbances, and the
little ironic gestures of solidarity, were not unfamiliar. But something had changed,
certainly among my graying friends: a sadder-but-wiser air, a barely suppressed
hunger to speak of big categories and formative years.
Recent events--Sharon's plan for Gaza, Arafat's
death--have raised hopes for new diplomacy but do not alleviate the tension.
People call the conflict the
matzav, the "situation." Listen to talk shows, go out to dinner, and
what leaks into nearly every conversation is uncertainty about how to envision Israel going forward in
its existing boundaries. I don't just mean geographic boundaries. I mean legal,
institutional, and cultural limits. Nearly
everybody here will tell you that they see Israel as Jewish and democratic.
Almost nobody can tell you what this means.
Not that Israelis aren't hearing clear arguments. The most common, which is widely
considered hard-headed, argues that the occupation has presented Israel with a
"demographic" threat. Maintain the occupation, the argument goes,
lose the "Jewish majority" between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean, and Israel must become either
an apartheid state or a binational state--a "Jewish state" or a
"democratic state" not both. Less commonly asserted, and widely
considered hard-hearted, is an argument about Israel irrespective of
its occupation. A Jewish state cannot be democratic, this argument goes,
because a state in which the world's Jewish people and the Jewish religion have
exclusive privileges is inherently discriminatory against non-Jewish citizens.
Some kind of binationalism, if not inevitable, is more or less preferable. Both
arguments are made by people in and around Israel, though only the
former is made by people in and around the Israeli government.
So on the one hand are people whose preoccupation with "a Jewish
majority" suggests an intuitive grasp of what it takes to preserve Jewish
culture but whose grasp of building democracy is shallow and mechanical, who
are painting by numbers--and (intentionally or not) laying the groundwork for ethnic
cleansing. On the other hand are people who are more exacting about democracy
but who've completely missed how radically, and for the better, historic
Zionism has changed Jewish culture. The first group calls the second naive, the
patsies of anti-Semites. The second group calls the first "racists"
and "colonialists." Little wonder people are disquieted and can't explain
why. It is becoming nearly impossible to say what has been right--and plainly
wrong--about Israel since its founding
and what needs to be done to save it.
Now, as before, the focus will be on occupied territory. But a quarter of Israel's schoolchildren
are Arabs. Were the West Bank and Gaza to disappear, and Israel did nothing to
reform itself, it would face another intifada in a generation, this time from
within. Israeli Jews know this in their guts, if not from their debate. Listen
only to them, and the "situation" seems hopeless. Israel's deficiencies as
a "democratic state" were always most transparent to Arab Israelis.
Paradoxically, it is only when I am speaking with them that I feel assured of
the promise of a "Jewish state." It will take at least a generation
to fully realize this promise. That is the A length of time it took all of us
to create the disaster we will now have to unmake.
Arthur Koestler once wrote that becoming a Communist was an affair of the heart;
in the summer of 1931, in Berlin, he fell in love
with the Five Year Plan. In the summer of 1967, I fell in love with the Jewish
National Fund--the old Zionist holding company, which formally owned the land
on which most of Israel's farming
collectives had been built. I was eighteen, and had just finished my first year
at McGill University. In what still seems
to me an exhilarating rush of events, I arrived in Israel about a week after
the end of the Six Day War and wound up volunteering to work on Kfar Yehoshua,
the moshav (or cooperative farm) of an indomitable couple whose close neighbor
had been killed early in the war. They were now working his widow's dairy farm
in addition to their own, so they needed an extra hand—a volunteer, they took
pains to explain, since members of the moshav would not hire wage-laborers,
certainly not Arabs, whom they refused "to exploit."
They made it plain that Israel's collectives
enjoyed a certain authentic self-reliance. The old Hebrew motto of Labor
Zionism was "kibbush avodah," "the conquest of labor," by
which the real thing to be conquered was a Diaspora Jew's civilized lethargy.
And what had made it all possible was the Jewish National Fund, or Keren
Kayemeth, whose green logo was still painted on the sign to Kfar Yehoshua.
Members did not own their land, my friends explained; the land had been leased
in perpetuity from the Keren Kayemeth, which had raised money abroad, penny by
penny, then bought Arab estates in the 1920s, '30s, and '40s, eventually
distributing parcels to socialist halutzim, Zionism's pioneers, their parents.
As a child, I had myself slipped change into the Keren Kayemeth's little blue
tin collection boxes, for the fund kept on raising money for reforestation
after the state was founded in 1948, after Israel could as easily expropriate
land as have the Zionist fund buy it--and large tracts were expropriated after
the 1948 war, effacing some 400 Arab villages. Anyway, we were now done with
wars, and Kfar Yehoshua's land remained the "inalienable property of the
Jewish people," that is, mine. I worked until I dropped. After about a
month I was smitten: the warmth of welcome, the élan of revolution, the
conviction that just war had brought lasting peace--that Israelis had won the
former and Jews deserved the latter--the pleasingly triangular smell of cow's
milk, cow's feed, and cow's shit rising into Hebrew air.
This was not exactly love at first sight. My father had been a socialist-Zionist
boy scout in Bialystok in the 1920s, and
later a Zionist "leader" in immigrant Jewish Montreal. I had never
really thought much about what his "Zionism" meant, except that it
covered the bases for "modern" Jews. I understood, vaguely, that
Zionism meant Jews could have fruit trees, fighter jets, a tan. More vivid was
the prestige of the Hebrew language, which I had suspected since childhood
contained a world worth knowing. When I was a pupil at Montreal's Talmud Torah School, half my class's
day had been devoted to Hebrew studies, beginning in the second grade with
readings from Breisheit, the Book of Genesis. Whereas the ABCs conjured
scrubbed little boys watching girls play with kittens, the Alef Bet conjured
families tom up by arbitrary fathers, jealous mothers, and rival brothers, all devoted
to enigmatic things like "sacrifice" and "birthright," or
stirred by the promise of mysterious power. Hebrew stories seemed absolute, and
talking about them seemed a kind of responsibility.
Zionism's personal (or, if you were at McGill, "ideological")
requirement, that Jews should go and live in Israel, had always been
finessed in my family. My father's line, which I never quite bought, was that
sending one's money was "as Zionist" as sending oneself, though he
often lamented that his "big mistake was not joining his own pioneering
group, which had founded Kibbutz Kfar Menachem in 1939. In May 1967, after my
father told me that Israel was being "strangled" by Egypt's blockade
of the Straits of Tiran, he sat me down at the kitchen table and sketched a map
on a napkin, explaining how Israel, whose reserves had been mobilized, would
soon have to attack in Gaza. I became fixed on the vain fantasy I had had as a
child--that were I. to be lined up to board a cattle car,
I would charge the guards in an ecstatic rage rather than get on the train.
That is what "Israelis" did. In any case, I now had the body of a
strong young man and told myself coldly that I could not just see it all end. I
quit my job at Expo '67 and determined to fly to Israel as soon as I could
get there. My father finally went along, but to his relief (and mine), the war
was over before I could leave.
Nothing prepared me for the atmosphere of the country when I arrived. It seemed
that an entire people had done spontaneously what every human being should do
deliberately--defend one's life, touch one's roots, spread progress, show
magnanimity. The tokens of Israeli exceptionalism were everywhere. The radio
played jingoistic songs, and no member of the Israeli government, however
schlumpy, could appear in a newsreel without prompting the theater audience to
burst into applause. Moshe Dayan visited West Bank villages and was
greeted by "notables," while Arab children pranced around him, a hand
covering an eye in homage. Captured Russian trucks, looking like giant Ford
pickups, appeared magically on the roads, and blond Swedish volunteers appeared
magically in kibbutz dining rooms. Zionism had been proven right by, of all
things, Zionism's might.
I got to Jerusalem on June 28, driven
in a lurching Citroen by a family friend, a paratrooper about my own age. We
drove toward the Mandelbaum Gate, the old checkpoint in the divided city, just
after noon, practicing how we might con the
guard into letting us proceed to the Old City. But we found no checkpoint
and no guard. We drove on, passing the shuttered Arab shops on Salah ad-Din
Road, stopping the car a few times to stand silently at piles of rocks, topped
by a rifle and a helmet, the makeshift memorials to friends who had been killed
in the assault. Finally, somewhat bewildered, we flipped on the radio, only to
discover that the Arab city had been annexed and the whole city declared united
an hour before we got there. The government had decided to integrate all parts
of Jerusalem by expanding
Jewish neighborhoods in the Old City and in the eastern
part, especially around Mt. Scopus, where the old Hadassah Hospital and Hebrew University had been before
1948. An expanse around the Wailing Wall, we soon discovered, had already been
bulldozed. The radio played the new Zionist anthem, "Jerusalem of
Gold," and tears streamed down my friend's cheeks.
Nobody thought twice about the families whose houses had just been razed. Hadn't Jordan used the Old City's Jewish
gravestones to pave their roads? As for the 70,000 Jerusalem Arabs who might be
encroached upon or pushed around, there was land enough for all in the new
"Middle East." Twenty-one countries for them, one for us.
One undivided Jerusalem for us, Mayor
Teddy Kollek's liberalism for them.
Only one moment, several weeks later, gave me pause. On a visit with my cousins
to the new campus of Tel Aviv University, I noticed huge
posters with a puzzling map, which seemed exactly like the Arabic map of Palestine in which Israel has been effaced,
only this was a Hebrew map of Israel on which the West
Dank and Gaza were effaced. The
posters, my cousins told me, were from a new organization, the Whole Land of
Israel Movement, which opposed returning any part of the conquered West Bank,
even for peace, since (as their statement read) "no government in Israel
is entitled to give up this entirety, which represents the inherent and
inalienable right of our people from the beginning of its history." The
clear implication of the statement was that the West Bank should now be
settled by Jews.
Even then, this prospect struck me as oddly greedy and provocative, nothing like
what my moshav friends' parents had achieved. The times were completely different,
after all. There was no Hitler, no proletarian internationalism, no British
mandatory government enforcing property law but keeping Jewish refugees out.
Zionists had settled some land by force in the 1940s. But Jews were desperate
then. When Jean Valjean became a mayor, he didn't continue stealing bread. My
cousins, too, were skeptical. Israel was a Jewish
state, they said, but it was "also democratic." The land was ours
but, less esoterically, it was also theirs. It didn't matter which people
wanted it more or longer. What mattered were boundaries that allowed each
people, Jews and Arabs, to be more or less peacefully self-governing. When I
asked others about the Whole Land of Israel Movement, I was reassured to find
that few people took it seriously. Fewer still (myself included) noticed that
this movement was merely proposing for the West Bank as a whole what the government,
with almost universal acclaim, had already enacted in Jerusalem.
It is tempting to look back on those times with a certain wistfulness: young people,
heady victories, reckless enemies, unavoidable hubris. Wistfulness goes well
with what is probably the most common conception of Israel that educated people
in the West have: that it was once a nicely social-democratic state that is
being ruined by the blowback from its occupation--by its quickly multiplying
and pietistic settlers, whom successive governments somewhat naively
tolerated--that if only Israel could end most terrorist attacks, emancipate
itself from the occupation, and replant most settlers back within the Green
Line, the internationally recognized border prior to 1967, then Zionism could
get back to being itself. This half-truth often is posed against the big
lie--that Zionism was just a remnant of great-power
"colonialism"--and so Jews have an understandable reflex to defend
the moral prestige of historic Zionism and deflect criticism of its legacy. But
even David Ben-Gurion, the country's first prime minister, knew that Israeli
democracy had serious problems before there was an occupation: specifically,
that ultimately it would be folly to preserve the Zionist movement's
improvisations and institutions in a democratic state. Thinking back to 1967,
certainly, it is obvious that the settlers' ideas and stridency did not just
grow out of thin air. Both emerged from a revolutionary Zionist logic and a
powerful Zionist bureaucracy--right for their time, in the 1930s and '40s, but
terribly wrong once the state was firmly established, after 1967--a Zionism
that automatically assured Jews privileges that other people, non-Jews subject
to Israeli sovereignty, could not get.
I am not speaking here of the reasonable discrimination of a nation-state in favor
of a dominant national culture: a day off for the Jewish Sabbath, support for
the Hebrew University, the Star of David
on the flag. I mean material discrimination by the state in favor of Jews as
individuals. Settlements may seem part of a grand, premeditated national
project, and were to some extent, especially around Jerusalem. But they were
more often a spontaneous series of decisions by quasi-official Zionist offices
to continue putting families formally defined as "Jewish" in and
around where Arabs lived, or to support Jewish squatters, while excluding
non-Jews from living there.
When I finally moved to Jerusalem in 1972, I was given
a virtually interest-free mortgage to buy an apartment in Jerusalem's French Hill, a
new neighborhood that the state, in collaboration with Zionist philanthropic agencies,
was putting up next to Mt. Scopus in Arab East
Jerusalem. All I had had to do was prove myself a Jew by birth, which I had
done, to an Israeli consul back in Canada. I did not think
of this apartment complex as "a settlement." I did not think it
strange that I was moving into a neighborhood stringently segregated by the
very Zionist laws, dreams, and management I had come to identify with
liberation. The point is, settlements were made in territories beyond the Green
Line so effortlessly after 1967 because the Zionist institutions that built
them and the laws that drove them--The Jewish Agency, Zionist land banks and
mortgage companies, the Law of Return, regulations supporting the Orthodox
Rabbinate's determination of what a Jew is--had all been going full throttle
within the Green Line before 1967. To focus merely on West Bank settlers was
always to beg the question.
After the Yom Kippur War, in the summer of 1974, when I began writing seriously
about these matters, I reported on Henry Kissinger's effort to mediate a
disengagement agreement between Israel and Syria. I recall standing
in a crowd in front of the prime minister's office, surrounded by a few hundred
West Bank settlers; their Gush Emunim ("Bloc of the
Faithful") movement was just getting started. Word had leaked out that
Kissinger, then inside with Golda Meir's government, was pressuring it to
evacuate the captured Syrian town of Kuneitra. When he emerged,
the settlers--a phalanx of knitted skullcaps--chanted, "Jew-boy,
Jew-boy," implying that one evacuation would lead to another, that the
renunciation of one inch of promised land was something only a bare-headed
court Jew like Kissinger could have entertained.
Mrs. Meir gave in to Kissinger on Kuneitra. She upbraided the settlers for their
ugly behavior. And yet everybody knew her prejudices: that Jews had a right to
live anywhere in Eretz (or Greater) Yisrael; that the Orthodox rabbis in her
coalition, although not her type, were at least the genuine article; that
Jerusalem was Israel's "by historic right"; that pioneering settlement
around Jerusalem, or on the Golan Heights, was heroic; that Western Jews who
had never thought to settle in the Jewish state deserved an Israeli's
condescension. These prejudices reflected a basic cynicism about the fate of
Jews in Western democracy, a cynicism that is even more widespread among
Israeli Jews today, who decry the "anti-Semitism" of the press
covering Israel. Meanwhile, the
small band of Gush Emunim has grown to some 230,000 settlers today, not
including those in Jerusalem. Army intelligence
is rumored to have concluded that 10 percent of the settlers (not including
their supporters in Israel proper) would
violently resist being moved, and the army command warns against political
decisions that would force Jews to shed the blood of other Jews.
Let us be clear: Israel is an open society.
According to an Israel Democracy Institute poll, 81 percent of Jewish Israelis
think "equality before the law" essential. And the judiciary is with
them. The Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty, enacted in 1992,
has something like the force of a Bill of Rights in Israel. Chief Justice
Aharon Barak has applied the law broadly to protect civil liberties. Just
recently, the court overturned the military censor's effort to ban Mohammed
Bakri's 2002 film, Jenin, Jenin, which implicitly accused elite Israel Defense
Force combat units (in the face of significant evidence to the contrary) of
indifference to civilian casualties during Operation Defensive Shield. Israel publishes more
scientific papers per capita than any other country, so silencing Israelis (including
Arab Israelis) seems almost unimaginable. Israel is also a country,
however, in which the institutional discrimination I spoke about has always
been so routine as to be hardly noticed, especially among Jews. The most
important continuing inequality is preferential residency on the land. Israeli
Arabs, who are disproportionately engaged in farming, live mostly in separate
towns having jurisdiction over 2.5 percent of the total land mass of pre-1967 Israel, augmenting their
holdings with private land. This segregated pattern of settlement results from
the fact that about 93 percent of pre-1967 Israel is public land administered
by the Israel Lands Administration, which since its founding in 1960 has
essentially taken over the mission of the prestate Jewish National Fund. Few
outside observers have been able to penetrate the Lands Administration's
convoluted leasing arrangements with Jewish Agency mortgage companies, or with
preferred contractors, or with large secretive holding companies such as Himanuta.
Adding to the complexity, a 2001 Supreme Court ruling determined that old
Jewish National Fund regulations, prohibiting sale of land to non-Jews, could
not be used to keep an Arab couple from acquiring housing in the established village of Katzir. Yet nobody doubts
that when any new housing developments are completed, only people with
"Jewish nationality" need apply.
And what exactly is Jewish nationality? Now we are getting to the other side of
the problem, the Zionist movement's historic (and largely opportunistic) merging
of rabbinic and state power. From its inception, Israel recognized two
forms of personal status, ezrahut, most commonly understood as "citizenship,"
and leom, which meant "nationality" or "peoplehood." All citizens
are entitled to equality in civil society, but people legally designated a part
of the Jewish nation are entitled to immediate citizenship, and supplementary
material benefits start from there. The courts came to rule that, insofar as
the Law of Return applied, the child or grandchild of a Jew, or a convert by a
recognized rabbinic authority, is a Jew. Under the pressure of the National
Religious Party--to which Ben-Gurion pandered in order to maintain his own
party's hegemony in the early 1950s--other privileges were reserved for Jews as
they are defined by Orthodox rabbinic courts. Moreover, a burgeoning, official
rabbinical caste now supervises marriage, burial, and kashruth--critical for
the restaurant, food-processing, and tourist industries. There is no civil
marriage in the country, so no state official will marry a Jew to a non-Jew.
Today, some 80,000 children in Jerusalem alone study in
ultra-Orthodox yeshivas, which are state subsidized in numerous ways. The state
directly supports an even larger Dati Leumi ("national religious")
school system. Arabs have their own system, segregated and underfunded.
One Arab Israeli friend, the novelist Sayed Kashua (author of the Hebrew novel
Dancing Arabs), told me recently that his childhood friends are feeling hemmed
in and enraged, their towns in commercial despair, many coming under the threat
of youth gangs. "When these towns blow, Israeli Jews will no doubt say it
is for political reasons. But if the government would give us two meters for
development, we'd all be volunteering for the army. Every time there is a
suicide bombing I think two things: thank God my daughter is not among the
victims, and I hope there is an Arab Israeli among the victims, so they won't
blame my daughter."
Terror has always warped debate about these matters, making talk of Arab rights
seem a failure of Jewish nerve. Since the beginning of the latest intifada,
there have been four suicide bombings just blocks from my Jerusalem home (and
Kashua's, for that matter). The cousins with whom I stayed in 1967 were killed
when their TWA plane was blown
out of the skies of Athens by a Palestinian
terrorist bomb in 1974. No sane person could doubt that various barriers
against terrorist cells are justified, or that preemptive attacks on terrorists
may be defensible if innocent bystanders could be protected from harm.
Moreover, terror has prompted an understandable desire for
"separation," manifested in the controversial security fence. It is
in the context of separation that one hears expression of demographic fears. Israel has 6.8 million
citizens, so the argument goes, of whom about 1.3 million are Arabs. Gaza and the West Bank have another 3.2 million
Arabs. The Arab birthrate in Gaza is triple that of
Israeli Jews; in Israel proper and the West Bank, it's double. Now
do the math. If you keep the territories you lose the "Jewish
majority" sometime after 2010. Meanwhile poll after poll shows that 61
percent of Israelis support Sharon's withdrawal from Gaza and 20 percent
more support the security fence. The New Yorker's Jeffrey Goldberg put the
choices this way in a chilling article about Jewish settlers last spring:
Israel is faced with two
options: keep the settlements, and risk either apartheid or binationalism; or
separate cleanly from the Palestinians, by withdrawing settlements and raising
a wall between the two sides.
What's wrong with putting matters this way? Notice, first, that Arabs who are
Israeli citizens are casually folded into the demographic projections. This is
not just sloppiness; it betrays a curious slide into racial simplifications. If
one assumes what is manifestly true, that Israel's young Arab citizens have
come into their own (albeit tensely) in Israel's Hebrew culture, then equality
of rights, not withdrawal behind a border or fence, is the only peace process
that will mitigate fatal tensions between them and Israeli Jews. Even if
terrorism could be crushed, even if the West Bank and Gaza could be taken
completely out of the equation, Israel would still be left
with hundreds of thousands of Arab citizens and a burgeoning number of young
people. If a great proportion of them are not absorbed as equals into Israel's civil society,
the country will face within its 1967 borders virtually the same dynamic that
it began to face in the occupied territories in the 1970s.
Clearly, "democracy" is being debased here to mean only some vague
notion of national self-determination, like the sophomoric "ideology"
I came to Israel with in 1972. For
most, a democracy that enshrines "inalienable rights" seems an
invitation to Arabs to swamp Jews, or it means a celebration of the bourgeois
self, which sanctions moving to America. Old prejudices
are at work here, too, casting Israel as a kind of work-in-progress for the
world's Jewish people, justifying its borders as provisional by, on the one
hand, claiming the elastic, dream borders of ancient Eretz Yisrael and, on the other,
recalling the horrific crimes of sixty years ago--crimes driven by anti-Semitic
attitudes whose traces are still allegedly found in gentile countries. Who
knows, so the argument goes, how many Jews Israel will eventually have to
accommodate, or where the Palestinians will have to be placed to make Jews
safe? Who knows how big Israel will have to be
while the Zionist revolution continues? And until that revolution ends, why not
continue to assure Jews special privileges: refuge, land, housing, investments--in
a word, settlements?
Worse, there is an obvious way to safeguard a "Jewish majority" that
hardly comes up in conversations, though the way most Israelis now grasp their history
should give us pause. I mean ha'transfer, reducing by forced expulsion or
economic pressure the numbers of Arabs living where Jews do. The fact is, it is
impossible to get the "clean" separation Goldberg speaks of without
extensive ethnic cleansing. And Israelis know this. A June 2002 poll by Tel Aviv University's Jaffe Center for Strategic
Studies revealed that 46 percent of Israelis entertain the idea of expelling
Palestinians.
Benny Elon of the National Union argues openly that if Arabs are not willing to
accept alternate citizenship they should be expelled. Efi Eitam, leader of the
National Religious Party, proposes resettling Palestinians in the Sinai. In or
out of Sharon's coalition these
parties now have 13 (out of 120) Knesset seats, and are gaining ground.
Exclusion of Arabs from Israeli civil life is included in the platforms of the
theocratic parties--Shas, Yahadut Ha'-Torah--another 16 Knesset members. We
have not even begun to explore attitudes in the dominant Likud, whose 40
Knesset members, and over 230,000 active members, anchor Ha'Machane Ha'Leumi,
the "National Camp," a coalition of Greater Israel advocates,
ideological hardliners, Russian immigrants, and less well-educated Mizrahim,
immigrants from Arab countries. Signs for the transfer of Arabs regularly paper
the underpasses on highways between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. They
read, NO ARABS, NO TERROR.
Sharon is withdrawing from Gaza anyway, pointing
to the polls that show a national majority behind the move. But by the end of
last August, 3,700 new housing units were under construction in the West Bank and Gaza. Jewish Jerusalem is at the heart of
the new construction. Its young people increasingly betray the limited horizons
of the settlers' cult, rooted in Orthodox education. Ultra-Orthodox hare. dim
(or "awestruck") are now a third of the Jewish population, and the
city has elected a haredi mayor, Uri Lupolianski, the father of twelve
children.
While Sharon is being depicted
by the zealots he once coddled as caving in to Palestinians, the route of his
fence is already responsible for the migration of thousands of them. It is
creating Palestinian enclaves separated from Jerusalem and from one
another--enclaves surrounded by Jewish settlements that are linked by exclusive
highways and bypass roads. It leaves hinterland towns separated from
metropolitan centers, a rupture that denies any Palestinian business the
prospect of viability. About two miles from my home is the neighborhood of
Jabel Mukhaber. The fence is cutting it off from its sister village, Sheik
Sa'ad, whose 2,000 residents are themselves cut off from the rest of the West Bank by steep cliffs.
They are in danger of being "strangled." One leader of Jabel Mukhaber
told me that a third of those people--their own family members--have left,
while the remaining villagers are living off the gifts of family abroad.
Elsewhere in Jerusalem, the eastern
suburb of Abu Dis (home to Al-Quds University) is cut off from
the northern suburb of Hizma by Jewish settlements--which cuts both off from East Jerusalem's businesses and
hospitals. Yasir Barakat, one of the most established merchants in the Old City, tells me he knows
"nobody whose educated children are not planning to leave Jerusalem if they can."
Speak of this cruelty with Israelis and someone will counter with Yasir Arafat's
recalcitrance at Camp David during the summer
of 2000. "We offered him 95 percent, and he came back with terror"--I
must have heard the sentence a hundred times. This version of events is not
unchallenged, but let us concede the retrospective logic: that today's terror
could justify, or even seem to justify, Israel's continued
occupation of the territories after 1974, when Jordan recognized the
PLO's hegemony there. Nevertheless, how could terror have justified Jewish
settlement and its transformations? Why should democratic reasoning ever have
been preempted by apocalyptic reasoning ? What if, instead of settling the
Palestinians' land, Israeli officials had simply said they wanted for
Palestinians what American officials said they wanted for the hated Germans in
1948: that the German state's sovereignty derive from the consent of its
governed, that it should have an integrated population and economy, the rule of
law, conditions for the investment of advanced corporations, schools and
universities that teach liberal values--and that an occupation army, reinforced
by a Western coalition, would stay in place until it was safe to withdraw and
not beyond? What if, at the same time, Israeli leaders had invested in Israel's Arab citizens at
a rate equal to Jews, and privatized state land and subjected its purchase to
market forces? Would not Israelis and Palestinians be facing a very different
reality today?
This is not the way Israelis are re-imagining their history. Instead, more and
more young people I talk to are becoming resigned to a new master narrative,
which sees the state's founding in an exchange of populations, beginning with
the Shoah and moving to attacks on all fronts by Arab states in 1948. In this
flattened history, 750,000 Palestinian Arabs either fled or were driven from
their homes, while the Arab states dispossessed and expelled some 800,000
Mizrahi Jewish refugees to Israel, especially during
the 1956 Suez war. Israelis were
not perfect, they say, but the pattern is unmistakable.
Dr. Uzi Arad, the former director of intelligence in the Mossad, has proposed
that if a Palestinian state could be negotiated, Israel's largest Arab
towns in the "little triangle"--from Umm al-Fahm in the north to Kfar
Kassem in the south--should be annexed by it. Not coincidentally, Arad is also
the co-author of a new "Zionist Manifesto" for Israel, which would
give "constitutional status" to Israel as a "Zionist-Jewish
state," a state of world Jewry; a state that would teach "the feeling
of a right to the Promised Land, which is a central principle of Judaism."
The manifesto calls for "the preservation of democracy for all of its
citizens." It does not say if this is a central principle of Judaism.
This is where the demographic argument gets you. You put West Bank Palestinians
behind a wall where economic life is virtually impossible, and you hive off
another hundred thousand Arab Israelis and put them behind the wall too.
Meanwhile, you expand your border to include new Jewish settlements and
maintain existing political economic barriers for Arab Israelis, a barrier of
institutional practice and law, a barrier of land and common ideology. You say
Jews and Arabs must be separated because even if Israel's Arab citizens
will make the most of what liberties Israel gives them, they
could not possibly want to be absorbed into Israel. And after all of
this, you suppose yourself a democracy because you represent the general will
of the "Jewish majority." But is the choice really apartheid or binationalism?
People who put things this way, presumably to maintain Zionist momentum, have
actually lost touch with what Zionism was mostly about at its inception, the
power and grace of Hebrew culture. They underestimate the capacity of Israel's cities to absorb
new generations, including Arab citizens and foreign workers, to something both
fully democratic and patently Jewish, yet in a way that does not presume to
straighten the crooked timber--in short, to make Israel Jewish the way France is French. With
the exception of the ultra-Orthodox, secluded in their spreading neighborhoods,
nearly everybody in Israel (Arabs, too) is marinated in a popular Hebrew
culture in which the international terms of science and business are
incorporated, in which one shuttles from Hebrew fiction to subtitled Hollywood
movies, or CNN, or the Lakers' games, from Mizrahi music to sentimentalized
Jewish holidays, or the beach. Go to a wedding or funeral in Tel Aviv, or an
award ceremony in Haifa, and you'll see
that most feel homage when somebody reads, say, a poem by the late Yehuda
Amichai, not when the rabbi chants perfunctorily from the traditional liturgy.
Israel's Arabs remain
close to the Arab world, and most will not likely assimilate as completely into
Israel as, say, shtetl
Jews have into New York City. But this does not
mean they will not assimilate sufficiently into Hebrew culture to become
responsible, even wonderfully iconoclastic, citizens. "One of the first
novels I read," Kashua told me, "was Saul Bellow's Herzog in Hebrew
translation. Then I bought all his books. I felt that Jews like Bellow
understood me, understood what a democratic culture means when you're a
minority. Then I loved Primo Levi, then Zadie Smith. Arab literature, even the
Koran, is full of stories of lost empire. The Arabs say, 'We were once great
and now have been brought low.' The Jews say, 'We were once slaves, but now we
are free.'"
Kashua--who writes only in Hebrew--is unusual, but he is not an anomaly. Israel's Declaration of
Independence declares Israel "a Jewish
state," as the U.N. intended it to be, but also promises to ensure the
"complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants
irrespective of religion, race or sex...." When he read the declaration
aloud, Ben-Gurion unselfconsciously substituted the phrase "Hebrew
people" (Am Ivri) for "Jewish people" when referring to the
Zionist home. Perhaps the most original Zionist of them all, Ahad Ha'am, argued
(after his distant hero, Herbert Spencer) for an organic view of Jewish
community, wired together by the Hebrew language, struggling for existence,
competing on progressive sophistication. He advocated enlightenment,
self-reliance, newness. Living in Odessa in the 1880s, he argued for colonial
settlements in Palestine, not because he wanted a state--not--yet but because
he wanted a "Hebrew national atmosphere" that could provide a new and
more congenial space in which Jews could work out in individual ways what it
means to be Jewish--a place they could ask modern questions in Hebrew. He
edited and mentored the generation that created the state's DNA: A. D. Gordon, the
founder of the kibbutz movement; Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, the creator of the modern
Hebrew dictionary; Chaim Weizmann, the moderate leader of world Zionism during
the Mandate; even, indirectly, Ben-Gurion.
It is Zionism's singular tragedy that all of these figures are just street names
today, while "Zionism" is applied to the people with caravans, Uzis, stylish
forelocks, and visits from Pat Robertson. Once, Israel's sympathizers
took Zionism's innovations for granted. Today, ironically, only Arab Israelis
seem to grasp how radical Zionism was for Jews. About 70 percent say that the
thing that makes you Israeli is the Hebrew language. Until the intifada began,
a larger proportion of Arab Israelis than Jewish Israelis (over 63 percent)
claimed "Israeli" for their primary national identity.
Which brings me, finally, to a curious petition, filed with Israel's High Court of
Justice last December. The petitioners are thirty-eight citizens of Israel, most of them Jews
but a number of them Arabs: businesspeople, professors, entertainers, writers,
jurists. Their petition enjoins the court to order the Ministry of Interior to
inscribe them as "Israeli" in the Registry of Population. Given how
much else is being contested in the country, one would think a petition to
recognize Israelis as "Israeli" is frivolous. It is anything but
that.
The petitioners are asking the state to recognize an inclusive, earned form of
nationality, coterminous with and redundant to citizenship. They believe that
fifty-five years after Israel's founding--when
two-thirds of its citizens have been born in the country, and half of those are
third generation--the experience of Israel itself must be
determinative of national identity. More important, they want to close the door
on discrimination against individuals on religious or racial grounds.
"I have staked my life on the moral and cultural power of the Jewish people,"
says Yoella Har-Shefi, a civil-rights attorney, who is leading the group,
"but you can't say, 'Everybody is equal here, it's just that a Jew is valued
differently'--and if there is international or internal protest, well, that's
proof that 'the whole world is against us.' If Arab citizens can't become
'Israelis,' the country will come apart. We are sitting on the edge of a
volcano, because Israel is the only
country on earth that does not recognize itself."
The state's attorney has so far responded to this petition predictably enough,
arguing that it will divide the Jewish people--that it "undermines the
very principles under which the State of Israel was created." Barak's court
has not yet ruled definitively. But whatever the outcome, the petitioners are
right to see that Israel's real challenge in the coming generation is not only
to get back into a peace process but to shore this up with a democratic
revolution in civil rights; that is, to get Israeli Jews to
"recognize" Israel. This Israel would not be a binational state; it
would be a Hebrew republic, though what would be wrong, ultimately, with
Israelis and Palestinians entering into some mutually convenient federal structure--or
joining a larger one--to share jurisdictions that cannot be effectively
exercised by either nation-state alone; to work on their roads, commercial
links, water, labor standards, monetary policy, immigration, tourism,
telecommunications policy, and more? The need for security cooperation around Jerusalem and its holy sites
is obvious enough, and would probably require some international policing. I
have yet to meet an Israeli businessperson who would not want Israel included in the
European Community. Carl Hahn, the former chairman of Volkswagen, and an architect
of European integration, told me recently that Israel would
"certainly strengthen" the EU. But there is a caveat: "Israel must have peace
with its neighbors and civil rights that conform to European law."
Turkey, which has been Israel's partner in so
many economic and military ventures, is in advanced discussions with the EU.
Why not an Israel subject to the
EU's collective security provisions, or formally joined to NATO, so that an
attack on Israel would prompt a
collective response? That Israel would still be a
"Jewish state," whose national literary and artistic masterpieces,
created in Hebrew, would be open to the cultural and scientific currents of the
developed world. But it would also be a country in which any citizen of the EU
could choose to work, or start a business, and eventually go through a defined
process of naturalization; that is, learn how to make the most of the Jewish
nation's civil society. And something very much like this process of
naturalization would be the key to the advancement and integration of Israel's Arab minority,
who would be learning to be Israeli from primary school on, though individuals
might well choose to live in the Palestinian state or to work in any country in
Europe.
Israel would have to
replace the Law of Return, but it could still have laws that prefer immigrants
who are Diaspora Jews or victims of anti-Semitism. Greece has similar laws.
At the same time, Israel would be a state
in which, by law, the religious imaginations of citizens would be a matter of private
conscience and voluntary assembly. It would be a state in which anyone could marry-anyone,
no religious institution would be supported by state funds, and all young
citizens would be conscripted for some form of national service.
A pipe dream? Perhaps. The alternative, however, is a nightmare, and not only
for Palestinians. According to recent polls, nearly half of Israel's young people
"do not feel connected" to the state, and a quarter of them do not
see their future here. If the attitudes of my own business students are relevant,
the brightest and most highly educated are as infatuated with America today as I was
with Israel in 1967. There
will be many interpretations of this poll, but one thing is clear: The absence
of a coherent democratic vision cannot compete with the presence of a coherent,
if outdated, Zionist vision. There will also be laments about how the Jewish state
was supposed to be a "light unto the nations." Perhaps Israel could just
learn from the European nations for a while--not too much to ask, with its
nemesis dead, its champion backtracking, its patron in too deep, and its once
noble revolution in doubt.
Bernard Avishai is the author of The Tragedy of Zionism: How Its Revolutionary
Past Haunts Israeli Democracy. He teaches business and public
policy at Duke University. |