Uri Avnery
August 4, 2018
YEARS AGO I had a friendly discussion with Ariel Sharon.
I told him: "I am first of all an Israeli. After that I am a Jew."
He responded heatedly: "I am first of all a Jew, and only after that an Israeli!"
That may look like an
abstract debate. But in reality, this is the question that lies at the
heart of all our basic problems. It is the core of the crisis which is
now rending Israel apart.
THE IMMEDIATE cause of this
crisis is the law that was adopted in great haste last week by the
rightist Knesset majority. It is entitled "Basic Law: Israel the Nation
State of the Jewish People".
This is a constitutional
law. When Israel was founded during the war of 1948, it did not adopt a
constitution. There was a problem with the Orthodox religious community,
which made an agreed formula impossible. Instead David Ben-Gurion read
out a "Declaration of Independence", which announced that "we are
founding the Jewish State, namely the State of Israel".
The declaration did not
become law. The Supreme Court adopted its principles without a legal
basis. The new document, however, is a binding law.
So what is new about the new
law, which at a first glance looks like a copy of the declaration? It
contains two important omissions: the declaration spoke of a "Jewish and
Democratic" state, and promised full equality between all its citizens,
without regard to religion, ethnicity or sex.
All this has disappeared. No democracy. No equality. A state of the Jews, for the Jews, by the Jews.
THE FIRST to cry out were the Druze.
The Druze are a small and
close-knit minority. They send their sons to serve in the Israeli army
and police and consider themselves "blood brothers". Suddenly they have
been robbed of all their legal rights and sense of belonging.
Are they Arabs or not?
Muslims or not? That depends on who is speaking, where and what for.
They threaten to demonstrate, to leave the army and generally rebel.
Binyamin Netanyahu tries to bribe them, but they are a proud community.
However, the Druze are not
the main point. The new law completely ignores the 1.8 million Arabs who
are Israeli citizens, including the Bedouin and Christians. (No one
even thinks about the hundreds of thousands of European Christians, who
immigrated with their Jewish spouses and other relatives, mainly from
Russia.)
The Arabic language with all
its splendor, which until now was one of the two official languages,
was demoted to a mere "special status", whatever that means.
(All this applies to Israel
proper, not to the 5 million or so Arabs in the occupied West Bank and
the Gaza Strip, who have no rights at all.)
Netanyahu is defending this
law like a lion against mounting criticism from within. He has publicly
declared that all the Jewish critics of the law are leftists and
traitors (synonyms), "who have forgotten what it is to be Jewish".
AND THAT is really the point.
Years ago, my friends and I
asked the Supreme Court to change the "nationality" entry in our
identity cards, from "Jewish" to “Israeli". The courts refused, stating
that there is no Israeli nation. The official register recognizes almost
a hundred nations, but not an Israeli one.
This curious situation started with the birth of Zionism in the late 19th
century. It was a Jewish movement, designed to solve the Jewish
Question. The settlers in Palestine were Jewish. The whole project was
closely connected with Jewish tradition.
But once a second generation
of settlers grew up, they felt uneasy about being just Jewish, like
Jews in Brooklyn or Krakow. They felt that they were something new,
different, special.
The most extreme were a
small group of young poets and artists, who in 1941 formed an
organization nicknamed "the Canaanites", who proclaimed that we were a
new nation, a Hebrew one. In their enthusiasm they went to extremes,
declaring that we have nothing to do with Jews abroad, and that there
was no Arab nation – Arabs were just Hebrews who had adopted Islam.
Then there came the news of the Holocaust, the Canaanites were forgotten and everybody became remorseful super-Jews.
But not really. Without a
conscious decision, the popular language of my generation adopted a
clear distinction: Jewish Diaspora and Hebrew agriculture, Jewish
history and Hebrew battalions, Jewish religion and Hebrew language.
When the British were here, I
took part in dozens of demonstrations shouting "Free Immigration!
Hebrew State!". I don't remember a single demonstration where anyone
shouted "Jewish State!"
So why does the Declaration
of Independence speak of a "Jewish State"? Simple: it was alluding to
the UN resolution which decreed the partition of Palestine into an Arab
and a Jewish state. The founders simply stated that we are now setting
up this Jewish state.
Vladimir Jabotinsky, the legendary forefather of the Likud, wrote an anthem declaring "A Hebrew is the son of a prince".
ACTUALLY THIS is a natural
process. A nation is a territorial unit. It is conditioned by its
landscape, climate, history, neighbors.
When the British settled in
America, they felt after some time that they were different from the
British they had left behind in their island. They became Americans. The
British convicts sent to the Far East became Australians. In two World
Wars, Australians rushed to the rescue of Britain, but they are not
British. They are a proud new nation. So are Canadians, New Zealanders,
and Argentinians. And so are we.
Or would have been, if official ideology had allowed it. What has happened?
First of all, there was the
huge immigration from the Arab world and Eastern Europe in the early
fifties – for every one Hebrew there were two, three, four new
immigrants, who considered themselves Jews.
Then there was the need for
money and political support from the Jews abroad, especially in the US.
These, while considering themselves full and true Americans (try and say
they are not, you bloody anti-Semite!) are proud to have a Jewish State
somewhere.
And then there was (and is!)
a rigorous government policy of Judaization of everything. The present
government has reached new heights. Active – even frantic – government
actions try to Judaize education, culture, even sports. Orthodox Jews, a
small minority in Israel, exert immense influence. Their votes in the
Knesset are essential to the Netanyahu government.
WHEN THE State of Israel was founded, the term Hebrew was exchanged for the term Israeli. Hebrew is now only a language.
So is there an Israeli nation? Of course there is. Is there a Jewish nation? Of course there isn't.
Jews are members of an
ethnic-religious people, dispersed throughout the world and belonging to
many nations, with a strong feeling of affinity with Israel. We, in
this country, belong to the Israeli nation, whose Hebrew members are
part of the Jewish people.
It is crucial that we
recognize this. It decides our outlook. Quite literally. Are we looking
towards Jewish centers like New York, London, Paris and Berlin, or are
we looking towards our neighbors, Damascus, Beirut and Cairo? Are we
part of a region inhabited by Arabs? Do we realize that making peace
with these Arabs, and especially the Palestinians, is the main task of
this generation?
We are not temporary tenants
in this country, ready at any moment to go and join our brother and
sister Jews around the globe. We belong to this country and are going to
live here for many generations to come, and therefore we must become
peaceful neighbors in this region, which I called, 75 years ago, "the
Semitic Region".
The new Nation Law, by its
clearly semi-fascist nature, shows us how urgent this debate is. We must
decide who we are, what we want, where we belong. Otherwise we will be
condemned to a permanent state of impermanence.
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