Wednesday 28 November 2012
Why I am no longer a Zionist
In this highly personal guest contribution, a British and Jewish blogger reflects on his youth membership of Zionist movements, the recent conflict in the Middle East between Israel and Hamas, and how his relationship with faith changes as he gets older
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I'm a nice Jewish boy from North West London. I was brought up in a family
that was never particularly religious – we belonged to a Reform synagogue, not
an Orthodox one - but where my Jewish identity was considered extremely
important, and where support for Israel was an absolute given. Not blanket,
unquestioning support, but support nonetheless.
As a teenager I was heavily
involved in RSY-Netzer, the Zionist Jewish youth movement affiliated with
the Reform Synagogues of Great Britain. In 1987, at the age of 16, I spent a
summer in Israel with RSY, and two years later took a gap-year there. Half that
year was spent on Kibbutz Lotan, one of the two Reform Synagogue affiliated
kibbutzim, and the other half was spent on a course known colloquially as
'Machon', at the Institute For Youth Leaders From Abroad in Jerusalem, run by an
arm of the Israeli state known as the Jewish Agency.
'Hasbarah'
On Machon, along with dozens of other young Jews of my own age
from a range of different Zionist youth movements, I received training in youth
leadership skills, Jewish history, and what is known in Hebrew as 'hasbarah'.
Hasbarah literally means 'explaining', but it has another meaning, which is
essentially 'propaganda'.
RSY-Netzer was at that point one
of the three most left-wing Zionist youth movements - the other two are the
explicitly socialist Habonim-Dror and HaShomer
HaTzair. We were encouraged – and at the age of 18 or 19 we needed no
encouragement – to spend much time discussing and arguing the fine points of
Zionist ideology and Israeli politics both among ourselves and with members of
the other movements.
The left-wingers among us were highly critical of many of
Israel's actions from the War in Lebanon to the whole of the Occupation, and we
all argued strenuously that it was a fundamental necessity for Israel to behave
ethically at all times; moreover we left-wingers argued that it was of prime
importance that we as Zionists stood up and criticised Israel when it did not do
so.
However, none of that criticism was ever allowed to cross the
red line of rejecting the idea of the Jewish State itself. We did not go so far
as to accept the idea that Zionism was racism or that Israel ought not exist –
indeed we had special sessions on Machon where we were explicitly taught
strategies for arguing against these ideas. The concept of a democratic secular
one-state solution for all inhabitants of the Holy Land, under which Jews and
Palestinians would be equal citizens in the eyes of the law, was not at any
point on the table.
Unlike most of my colleagues on the Machon course, I made a
particular point of learning Hebrew, and while in Jerusalem I met and fell in
love with Ayelet, an Israeli girl my own age. She was not long out of basic Army
training and had taken up a post as a remedial Hebrew teacher at an Israeli Army
school. We spoke only in Hebrew and were for a while very much in love, though
she thought I was a complete lunatic not just for being a Zionist – among
Israelis the word 'Zionist' means something somewhat different to its meaning in
the wider Jewish community – but also for being on the Machon course at all and
for seriously considering moving to Israel permanently: her ambition at the time
was to move to New York.
Sexual Zionism
I remember joking then that the most potent form of Zionism was
not Religious Zionism, Revisionist Zionism, Political Zionism, or Cultural
Zionism, all of which we had been taught about in class at Machon, but was
rather Sexual Zionism, which we had not been taught about even once. Looking
back, I now understand why hardly anyone, Ayelet included, found my joke
funny.
As a Jew, despite being born in London, I had and still have
the right at any time to move to Israel and immediately take up Israeli
citizenship under the Israeli Law of Return. The only reason that I did not do
so straight away was that I had a place at Oxford for which, as a state-school
applicant, I had worked very hard, and on which I had no intention of missing
out. My plan at the time was to get my degree from Oxford and move to Israel
afterwards.
Once back in the UK, my obsession with Zionism continued. At
Oxford I changed my degree from Maths and Philosophy to Oriental Studies
(Hebrew), a course comprising Hebrew literature and Jewish history; on the
history side I made a special study of Zionism up to 1948. It astonished me at
the time that my parents were implacably against the idea of me becoming an
Israeli, but I was 19 and – like all 19 year olds – knew deeply that I was as
right about everything as my parents were wrong about everything.
Life at university was something of a shock for two reasons.
The first was that as a state-schooler at Oxford, surrounded by the products of
public and private school educations, the trappings of extreme privilege to
which most of my contemporaries were so effortlessly accustomed seemed
enormously strange and discomforting to me. Despite this I largely fit in well
at my college, Balliol, which had a reputation for being very left-wing. The
second shock was that for the first time in my life I was meeting both Jewish
and non-Jewish anti-Zionists.
All my Hasbarah training came out.
I became involved with both the
Oxford Jewish
Society and the Oxford Israel Society, and ended up spending a lot of time
arguing with people about Israel on all sides. With those on my right, I was
arguing that Israel was not and had not for some time been behaving ethically,
and that it was the absolute duty of anyone who called themselves a Zionist or a
supporter of Israel to stand up and call Israel out on these ethical
transgressions. With those on my left I was arguing that while Israel might
indeed be as ethically dubious a state as any other state on the planet, nothing
that it did in any way impinged on its right to exist as a Jewish State.
Many of my left-wing friends at Balliol were utterly shocked
to find that I was a Zionist, but I continued to argue passionately for a
position on the extreme left of Zionism; I was critical of Israel's moral
transgressions, critical of the Occupation, supportive of the putative
Palestinian state, supportive of the idea that Jerusalem should be again
partitioned de jure (as it already is de facto) so it could be both the capital
of that Palestinian state as well as the capital of Israel, but at no point did
I dare to cross the red line that questioned the legitimacy of the Jewish State
itself.
Charming
While I was at Balliol, Ariel Sharon was invited to speak at the Oxford Union; this
resulted in an extremely busy time for me. I was involved in organising the
pro-Zionist counter-demonstration to the anti-Zionist demonstration outside the
Union; as a Zionist critical of Israel, I was also involved in ensuring that
strong criticisms of Israel in general and Sharon in particular were made during
the debate. Later that evening, as a guest of the L'Chaim Society, an
alternative Jewish student organisation then run by Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, I
ended up having dinner with Sharon, along with thirty or forty other people, and
was astonished at how charming he seemed in person, for all that I strongly
disagreed with all aspects of his politics.
I was also pleasantly shocked by Sharon's stories of how his
closest friends were not other Israelis at all but were rather Palestinians
living in the West Bank for whom – he explained - hospitality and personal
relationships trumped any notion of tribal hostility.
By 1993, when I left Oxford, things in my personal life had
changed. Ayelet, quite reasonably unwilling to spend three years of her early
twenties in a long-distance relationship with a complete lunatic, had left me,
and I was now romantically involved with Abigail, a rather posh Jewish girl from
one of the old established Anglo-Jewish families from before the wave of
immigration from Eastern Europe at the beginning of the 20th century that had
brought my own great-grandparents to London. Abigail was about as likely to move
to Israel as she was to grow feathers and a beak, and I found myself strongly
reconsidering my decision to move there myself.
My political position, however,
did not change. As a Zionist I felt passionately that it was of prime importance
that Israel's moral transgressions – especially those in the Lebanon war of 1982
and the ongoing indefensible occupation of the West Bank and Gaza - be censured.
I felt that the Occupation had to end, and end now, and that the Two State Solution was the only way forward. Since the
idea of the right of national self-determination was at the core of my support
for Zionism, I found it hard to understand how any Zionist could be against the
two state solution.
If the Jews should have self-determination in Israel, I
argued, surely it is only logical that the Palestinians should also have
self-determination in Palestine. I simply could not understand how those
Zionists to my right – which was basically all of them – could not see this.
On Jerusalem, I also could not understand the mainstream
Zionist position. Having lived there for some time, and being well aware that
the city was effectively divided into Jewish West Jerusalem, where you could
safely go, and Palestinian East Jerusalem, which was dangerous and to be avoided
at all costs, I simply could not grasp any of the stuff about the 'unification'
of Jerusalem that I had been taught.
It might have been unified legally as far as a Zionist was
concerned but it certainly wasn't unified in any way in practice, and it seemed
to me only right that a repartitioned East Jerusalem should be the capital of
the forthcoming Palestinian state just as much as West Jerusalem should remain
the capital of the Israeli state. I was sure that Palestinians felt just as
passionately about Jerusalem as I did myself, and repartition seemed to me to be
the just and reasonable answer to this question.
Drink
In 1994/5 I spent a further year in Jerusalem on the One Year
Graduate Program at the Hebrew University. This was supposed to be my year to
'check out' whether or not I really wanted to go and live in Israel, before I
made a final decision. Jerusalem is and was a miserable and tedious place for a
young secular man in his early twenties; it soon became clear to me that I did
not wish to live there after all, and I began drinking heavily.
Mostly this went on at a bar called 'Mike's Place' run by a
burned out Canadian ex-photo-journalist called Mike, and populated almost
exclusively by Israeli leftists and members of the international press corps who
were old friends of Mike's. Abigail came to visit, and hated it all even more
than I did. I began to make arrangements to go home early.
Before I left, however, I was befriended at Mike's Place by a
member of the press corps, an American called Stefan Ellis, who considered his
time in Jerusalem to be basically R&R away from the really hideous places in
the world he had worked before, like Cambodia. Stefan was horrified by my
youthful ideological support of Israel. Life as a photo-journalist specialising
in war-zones had inoculated him against all forms of ideology. As far as he was
concerned, all sides committing atrocities, everywhere, were all as bad as each
other.
It was his job as a journalist to get close to those
atrocities in order to document them so that the rest of the world could see. Of
course they wouldn't – he was all too aware of this - but it was his job
nonetheless.
I did not, at the time, remotely understand him.
Fast-forward to 2008.
I'd long split up with Abigail. I was still in London. I'd had
two failed careers, first as a freelance journalist, and then as a computer
programmer. Both had gone wrong as I'd also been trying to pursue music in a
serious way; there are only so many hours in a day and as a result of pursuing
multiple career goals I'd made myself seriously ill twice and (just) survived a
complete nervous breakdown. I was at last pursuing music full-time and, as part
of this, had finally received my London Underground busking licence. I'd finally
recorded and released an album of original music, not that anyone had noticed.
At least, I felt, I was now on the right path.
My position on Israel had not changed.
I had by this time met Daphna
Baram, an Israeli journalist and Guardian contributor effectively in exile in
London for her anti-Zionist views. Despite our differences of opinion over
Israel we had become close friends, and spent many nights staying up late
arguing in a mixture of English and Hebrew over the fine points of whether or
not Achad Ha-am, the founder of Cultural Zionism, would have supported the
actions of the current Israeli state, or whether the 1947 position of the
Zionist youth movement Hashomer HaTzair, that British Mandate Palestine should be formed into a bi-national
state for both Jews and Palestinians, had any relevance today.
Daphna was the first to put to me directly the astonishing
proposition that the best solution for the Israel-Palestine problem was a single
genuinely democratic state in which all citizens were treated equally regardless
of ethnic origin. Currently, that is not the case. While the state of Israel
makes just as reasonable a claim to be a democracy as, say, Belarus or Russia,
the fact is that Jewish and non-Jewish citizens are not treated equally.
Second-class
It is true that there are Israeli Arab Knesset members and
that Israeli Arabs can vote, but it is also true that there are huge differences
in the way that Israeli Arabs and Israeli Jews are treated by the state, ranging
from whether or not they are required to join the army at the age of 18 to
whether or not their home town or village gets a reasonable annual budget to
cover municipal requirements. It is painfully obvious from available statistics
that Israeli Arab areas get substantially less support from the Israeli state
than equivalent size Jewish settlements, and that in general, while Israeli
Arabs may not offically be second-class citizens of Israel, that is certainly
what they are in practice.
Then, in late 2008, Operation Cast Lead began. Having previously largely withdrawn
from Gaza in 2005 (though still keeping it surrounded and effectively cut off
from the West Bank), Israel began in December 2008 to bombard it
indiscriminately, in the name of ending rocket fire into Israel from within the
Strip. For the life of me, I could not see how this was supposed to work. I
could not see any way of defending this action. As the number of Palestinian
casualties grew – far out of proportion to the number of casualties on the
Israeli side - it just got worse and worse.
For the first time in my adult life I began wondering whether
the Jewish State was actually worth defending at all on any level if this was
the price. I was watching a blatant and brutal massacre of Palestinian civilians
in Gaza, utterly disproportionate to the attacks that had provoked it, which had
in turn been provoked by earlier Israeli incursions, in an endless
back-and-forth cycle, in order to defend what?
An Israeli State that would allow me – born in London – to
become a citizen at a moment's notice, while Palestinian friends of friends
actually born in the Holy Land itself could never become citizens of anything
anywhere? Exactly what convoluted justification would stand that up?
I couldn't do it any more. On Machon, I'd had training in how
to argue against the proposition that Zionism was racism, but no training in how
to argue in defence of the indiscriminate massacre of civilian children. That
one hadn't come up.
I began to consider the possibility that I'd been misled.
It looked terribly plausible. It was horribly embarrassing and
deeply painful, but it began to seem to me an awful lot as if Achad Ha-am,
founder of Cultural Zionism, and a somewhat flawed but deeply ethical character,
would have himself been implacably against anything calling itself a Jewish
State that behaved like this.
Around the same time, I took up the saxophone, as part of an
effort to give up smoking, and had a one-off lesson with the best local
saxophonist I could find, who happened to be another Israeli exile by the name
of Gilad Atzmon. This was an incredible stroke of luck, as without exaggeration
I can promise you that Gilad is one of the best saxophonists alive anywhere in
the world; he is also a lovely guy in person and a fantastic music teacher.
Additionally, he is highly politically active as an anti-Zionist, and is
considered so extreme that most other anti-Zionists consider him totally beyond
the pale; he is widely accused by both anti-Zionists and Zionists alike of
actual anti-semitism.
This is of course utter rubbish. It was clear to Gilad from
the second he met me that I was Jewish – we even discussed the fact during my
first pre-lesson meeting - and had he been a real anti-semite he would never
have agreed to teach a Jew to play the saxophone.
His views are, nonetheless, extreme; for example he is against
the concept of secular Jewish anti-Zionist organisations, and believes them all,
along with any concept of secular Jewish identity, to be a stalking horse for
Zionism itself. This stems from his deeply philosophical approach to the whole
Israel-Palestine question, and his view that any secular expression of Jewish
identity is inherently somehow supremacist; this has led him – as I understand
it - to hold that any kind of Jewish identity itself is deeply flawed outside of
the religious context.
Secular and positive
I do not agree with Gilad on that. I do believe that it is
possible to be a secular Jew with a positive Jewish identity that does not in
any way believe in Jewish supremacy. I do not even agree with his view that
Zionism is inherently racist. For example, the pre-1948 position of the Zionist
youth movement Hashomer HaTzair, which argued, as Zionists, for a secular
binational state to be shared equally between Jews and Palestinians, puts paid
to that.
In the 1920s Martin Buber,
a humanist philosopher who had absolutely no truck with racism, developed a
branch of Zionism centered politically around the concept of a binational state,
and sadly, like Hashomer HaTzair, got nowhere. Today it is clear that the racist
branches of Zionism have prevailed. But it does not take much more than a
cursory view of the history to see that those were not the only branches.
Nevertheless, post 1948, it is very hard to argue that Zionism
has not behaved, since Independence, in a de facto racist way. On that at least,
Gilad, Daphna and I can all agree. Right now in 2012 we are watching aghast at
yet another massacre of Palestinian civilians in Gaza. Yet again this comes just
before the Israeli elections; this time we are hearing Israeli ministers such as
Eli Yishai assert that “the goal of the operation is to send Gaza back to the
Middle Ages.”
Not only can I no longer defend any of this, I can no longer
defend Zionism at all, not even in an abstract philosophical sense outside of
any context involving the actions of the Israeli state. The Law of Return, under
which I - an occasional tourist who just happens to be Jewish – can claim
Israeli citizenship at a moment's notice, while a Palestinian actually born in,
say, Haifa, but subsequently exiled cannot – that is a racist law. The notion of
a Jewish state? That is – as far as it has been put into practice since 1948 - a
racist notion.
Is Zionism racism? It didn't have to be. There were historical
strands within Zionism that were not racist. Martin Buber – Zionist founder, in
1925, of the Brit Shalom organisation advocating a binational state, was not a
racist, and nor were the pre-1948 Hashomer Hatzair.
But right now?
It's really very hard indeed to argue otherwise.
And it's such a blessed relief to feel that I am no longer
obligated to attempt to do so.
That relief does not, however, in any way reduce the anger I
feel at the current massacre of civilians in Gaza.
This article originally
appeared at conniptions.org
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