Saturday, 30 January 2016

Is Israel a Jewish Republic?


-The New York Times has run another piece for readers who choose to believe the mythology of Israel over the reality of Israel.  This time it is Kai Bird’s Christmas Day Op-Ed piece, “Israel, a Jewish Republic,” an essay on the upcoming March election that portrays the Israeli ultraright as the “bad guys” and Isaac Herzog and Tzipi Livni as the “good guys.” TheNew York Times benefits from publishing these kinds of pieces because a dichotomy within Israeli politics–the “good guys” as the liberal Zionists and the “bad guys” as the ultra right–ultimately helps perpetuate the feeling among liberal Zionists that their brand of Zionism is so much more humane than the right.  Bird opens his essay with the declaration that “Israel has an identity problem.”   While this might be true, Bird’s essay fails to recognize a core issue that most liberal Zionists are unwilling to see–that every effort to resolve the country’s identity problem must first confront the distinction between the mythology of Israel and the reality of Israel.

I read Bird’s piece on Christmas Day while sitting in the San Francisco airport waiting to return to Chicago.  I had just finished the paragraph where he writes that Israel is no more Jewish than the U.S. is Christian when I was wished–for the sixth or seventh time–a “Merry Christmas.” I thought about Paul Kivel’s book that I had recently read, Living in the Shadow of the Cross: Understanding and Resisting the Power and Privilege of Christian Hegemony, in which he meticulously explains the ways in which the U.S. still operates from its deep Christian roots.  I was also reminded, however, that while I do live in a Christian nation, .  Bird is correct when he writes that “American Jews have thrived over the last hundred years, and in doing so they have enriched the secular and multi-cultural ethos of the United States.”  Bird might have mentioned, too, Alan Wolfe’s new book, At Home in Exile: Why Diaspora is Good for the Jews, in which Wolfe claims that it might indeed be better for the Jews to live outside of Israel and gives tons of historical proof for his claim.  But Bird seems more interested in mythos than historical context here.  His generalization is undermined by using an already incorrect metaphor by stating that Israel isn’t really Jewish, and the U.S. isn’t really Christian.  Both of these statements are false.  To suggest otherwise is to believe the mythology of how both of these nations were founded.  The reality, however, reveals the context that Bird avoids–that both states were created by ethnically cleansing their indigenous populations in the desire to create a white hegemonic society underwritten by a dominant religion.
In addition to arguing that Israel’s “Jewishness” is more cultural than national, Bird also upholds the mythology of Israel as an open, diverse state, writing that “Israel’s 1948 declaration of independence guarantees complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants irrespective of religion, race or sex.”  Though this indeed is stated in Israel’s declaration of independence, Bird’s essay neglects the reality of the occupation and discrimination faced by Palestinian citizens of Israel.  All one needs to do is to look at Israel’s everyday discrimination played out in housing laws, jobs, checkpoints, home demolitions, lack of access to education and health care (not to mention the daily racism towards Jewish Israelis who are not Ashkenazi), lack of access to water (the list goes on and on), and of course the apartheid wall that keeps a significant portion of its indigenous population from freely living their own lives.
Bird’s piece further defends Israel as a model of secular diversity, writing that Israel is a “multiethnic, vibrant and largely secular society.”  For this Zionist turned anti-Zionist, halfway into the essay, I realized why this was such an appealing piece for the New York Times to print: it defends the Israel that liberal Zionists want to believe still exists.  Bird doesn’t write about the Israel that was founded by ethnically cleansing Palestinians, the Israel whose goal was–and still is–to have a white European colony in occupied Palestine, as Ilan Pappe says so eloquently, “with as much Palestine as possible with as few Palestinians as possible.”  And then I remembered my former self who used to believe the same things that liberal Zionists believe and cling to.  The Israel that Bird is writing about is the same Israel that I grew up loving and defending at all costs.  Bird’s piece–with the New York Times as the perfect venue–is perpetuating the myth that is Israel: a Jewish, culturally rich democracy devoted to supporting all of its citizens.  Indeed, Bird writes that Israel’s original Zionist founding fathers envisioned this “multiethnic, vibrant and largely secular society” as “a new, modern state in ancient Palestine,” yet he writes this without mentioning that anyone ever lived there, typical of liberal Zionism that upholds this mythology that is Israel, a country which exists among the nameless generalized “ancient” ruins.
What is good for peace, Bird’s piece claims, are the “good” Israeli politicians.  Bird does rightfully criticize Netanyahu here, writing that Netanyahu’s “insistence on a ‘Jewish state’ seems to be only a prescription for endless conflict with his ‘Muslim’ neighbors–and perhaps today a tactic to postpone further negotiations on the creation of a Palestinian state.”  However, Bird also writes that all Israeli politicians, since Israel’s beginning, have struggled with the question of whether Israel is a secular nation-state or a Jewish state.  “For more than six decades,” he writes, “Israeli politicians have maintained a useful ambiguity about this deeply existential question.”  But few Israeli politicians actually have been ambiguous about the creation of a Jewish state in occupied Palestine.  The plan to conquer Palestine was a meticulous and systematic effort and one that is still currently being carried out today.  For the last six decades, Israeli politicians have created settlements, uprooted Palestinians and Bedouins, and denied them their basic human rights.  To see it as anything else is to believe in the mythology over the reality.
At the end of his essay, Bird says that “talking about a ‘Jewish state’ destroys a useful and wise ambiguity,” and that instead, Israelis should “celebrate their ‘Israeli’ national identity,”  and their “cultural and technological achievements.”   It is true that Israel has had a lot of success in the areas of technology, academia, science, medicine, among others, but there is no mention that this success has come at the expense of destroying another people’s opportunities for equal success.
As I was finishing this essay, I re-read Bird’s moving New York Times Op-Ed piece from April 30, 2010, “Who Lives in Sheik Jarrah?” Bird writes about living there from 1956-1958 and having the privilege of “seeing both sides.”  In this piece, Bird is genuinely disillusioned at the Israeli efforts to destroy the Palestinian area.  He is critical of Nir Birkat for expanding into Arab neighborhoods.  He defends the Palestinians living in Sheik Jarrah, and personalizes the story by talking about his own experiences and focusing on the Kalbian family.  He says in his final paragraph that he supports a Palestinian state.  What makes this conclusion problematic, though, is that his reason for supporting a state for Palestinians is to ensure a Jewish democratic Israel.  “If Israel wishes to remain largely Jewish and democratic, then it must soon withdraw from all of the occupied territories and negotiate the creation of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza with East Jerusalem as its capital.”  Bird’s essay supports a Palestinian state but seems to emphasize here that this is so that Israel can remain a Jewish democracy, instead of for the sake and dignity of the Palestinians–portrayed here as an “othered” backdrop.
What is happening with liberal Zionism?   I felt a similar twinge when I read Ari Shavit’s book My Promised Land: The Triumph and Tragedy of Israel.  There’s a bait-and-switch that is occurring.  The reader is enticed with the progressive rhetoric, and once you’re deeper inside the writing, the author stops short and unveils potentially colonialist rhetoric.
When I was a liberal Zionist, I used to think that Israel had an identity problem.  I’d walk the tightrope of Zionism, believing that I could be both a Zionist and a progressive, but then I’d just stop short before getting to the other side of any real change (Max Blumenthal has written courageously on the inherent contradiction with liberalism and Zionism).  I’d sit at coffee shops in Tel-Aviv with other Americans after an afternoon at the beach, dissecting what we thought were these identity problems–dissecting the mythology we thought was Israel–personifying Israel as though she was sitting in a therapist’s office with her hand across her forehead trying to figure out just what her problems were.  And we liberal Zionists–protesting at checkpoints by day and drinking coffee at cafes and swimming at the beaches by night–with our own arms across our own foreheads as we accessed our own privilege of theorizing, swooning, and struggling about what we think is Israel, dribbling on in abstract theories while the occupation of indigenous Palestinians was going on all around us.
And then I awakened to the reality that the Israel I and so many Jews loved was a mythology that was constructed for us to fall in love with.  I don’t think Israel has an identity problem.  Israel and its politicians know exactly what they are doing.  Unfortunately, however, the New York Times needs to continue running pieces that perpetuate the myth of the good “old-fashioned Zionists” so that liberal Zionist readers of the New York Times can continue to feel good about their liberalism.  It would behoove the New York Times, one day, to begin to separate the mythology from the reality.  Only then could we have a chance at a real and just peace.

Liberal Zionism: A Contradiction in Terms

Liberal Zionism: A Contradiction in Terms

Peter Beinart is fast becoming the pin-up boy of the Liberal Zionist movement.
Peter Beinart is fast becoming the pin-up boy of the Liberal Zionist movement. An American political scientist and journalist, his New York Review of Books essay, “The Failure of the American Jewish Establishment,” generated intense international debate when it was published in June 2010 and reached record inboxes virally. His new online group blog, the virtual ‘Zion Square,’ which was launched in March 2012 to provide a platform for “conversation” among a selected group of political thinkers and activists, explicitly states: “We believe in a two-state solution in accordance with the liberal Zionist principles articulated in Israel’s declaration of independence.” Beinart’s latest book, The Crisis of Zionism, launched at J-Street’s 2012 conference, is similarly premised on Liberal Zionist principles. Beinart believes that the original Herzlian Zionism was both a nationalist movement and a liberal one. Though he accepts that there is a tension between the two, he does not view it as any more problematic than the tension between, say, economic development and environmental protection, or government spending and fiscal discipline.
The problem, according to him, is posed by the illiberal Zionism unleashed by Israel’s territorial acquisitions during the 1967 war, and the subsequent establishment of Jewish settlements beyond the so-called ‘Green Line.’ In Beinart’s words, “to the west of that line, Israel is a flawed but genuine democracy. To the east, it is an ethnocracy. In the Israel created in 1948, inequities notwithstanding, citizenship is open to everyone. In the Israel created in 1967, by contrast, Jews are citizens of a state whose government they help elect; Palestinians are not.” Alongside this political injustice, Beinart identifies another problem: a vicious cycle, “in which the illiberal Zionism beyond the green line destroys the possibility of liberal Zionism inside it” by breeding intolerance towards both Jewish and Palestinian citizens of Israel. Fearful of the imminent destruction of Herzl’s democratic dream, Beinart effectively appeals to the most powerful leaders of the American Jewish establishment to recognize the urgency of the situation, and support a return to the original liberal variant of Zionism. In so doing, he holds out a tantalising opportunity to a new and bewildered generation caught between the unapologetic ultra- Zionism of the right and the disillusioned non-, anti- or post-Zionism of the left: that they can reconcile these increasingly conflicting aspects of their identities — the liberal and the Zionist — and that in seeking to square that circle they are effectively fighting “the battle every Zionist generation wages against itself.” Not surprisingly, Beinart appears to be acquiring an iconic status in some circles, especially among young Jewish liberals.
Some argue that Zionism is an exclusionary ideology that privileges one ethnic group over another
Yet there are those who question this fusion of liberalism and Zionism. Some argue that Zionism is an exclusionary ideology that privileges one ethnic group over another, and as such is inherently incompatible with liberalism, which is premised on equality. Several writers and academics share this perspective, including Oren Yiftachel, a political geographer at Ben-Gurion University, who regards the ‘Jewish and democratic state’ formula as an oxymoron akin to ‘hot ice.’ Yiftachel argues that the common scholarly and political attempts to portray the existence of ‘Israel proper’ within the ‘Green Line’ as ‘Jewish and democratic’ are both “analytically flawed and politically deceiving.” Instead, he argues that the whole entity, territorially and politically, ought to be characterised as an ethnocracy, which he defines as “a non-democratic regime which attempts to extend or preserve disproportional ethnic control over a contested multi-ethnic territory.” Yiftachel’s argument partly stems from what he regards as Israel’s history as a settler society, marked by ethno-nationalism and the ethnic logic of capital, with its resultant discriminatory land laws and planning policies.
But Yiftachel’s argument is not merely about history; he also points to the inherent conceptual incompatibility between liberalism and Zionism, which seeks to simultaneously privilege one group while guaranteeing equal citizenship for all. In this, he is supported by Nadim Rouhana, a legal scholar at Tufts University, who emphasises, “a Jewish state in theory and practice means privileging Jewish citizens over all other citizens [...] There are few honest observers in Israel who dispute that a Jewish state, by definition, privileges one group of citizens over another.” Given these internal inconsistencies, the journalist Joseph Dana wrote in the Israeli blog-based web magazine +972 that “liberal Zionism, as used today, is a dangerous and, in some profound ways, dishonest system of thought.”
Liberal Zionists come in many shapes and sizes. The UK based Labour Friends of Israel recently published a collection of essays “Making the Progressive Case for Israel” that introduced a conscious re-branding of the organisation using Liberal Zionist arguments and phrases. Lorna Fitzsimons, the former CEO of the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre (BICOM), which is “dedicated to creating a more supportive environment for Israel in Britain,” adopted a similar approach, announcing in The Jerusalem Post, “We are launching a campaign to win back and hold the centre ground alongside many other communal organizations. We are launching the progressive case for Israel and driving the campaign for the Left to support it as a Jewish state.” The UK’s Union of Jewish Students also shifted to a liberal Zionist approach with the launch of their ‘Liberation’ campaign in September 2011.
Some liberals are genuinely struggling — or hugging and wrestling, as they themselves often describe it — with Zionism in a bid to reconcile their love for the Jewish state with their belief in social justice. Finally, there are those who doubt the coherence of Liberal Zionism, and in turn the Jewish and democratic state formula, but who nevertheless support Liberal Zionist organisations that make a valuable contribution to equal rights in Israel. For example, some supporters of the New Israel Fund may question the premise of the organisation, yet acknowledge the importance of the Fund’s investment in groups at the forefront of the struggle for civil and political rights in Israel, like the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) and Adalah, the Legal Centre for Arab Minority Rights in Israel.
“At the heart of the Zionist project is the struggle to reconcile these two valid but conflicting ideals.”
Beinart accepts that the principles of Zionism and liberalism are absolutely in tension. “There will always be tension between Israel’s responsibility to the Jewish people and its responsibility to all its people, Jewish and non-Jewish alike,” he explains, “at the heart of the Zionist project is the struggle to reconcile these two valid but conflicting ideals.” At the same time, he defends the pairing, arguing that the tension between them is neither indicative of one of the values being illegitimate, nor irreconcilable. But are Beinart’s analogies, comparing the tension in liberalism and Zionism to that between economic development and environmental protection, or government spending and fiscal discipline, appropriate? Might other analogies be more appropriate, those in which the two terms are fundamentally at odds with one another, such as the contradiction between heredity and meritocracy, or evolution and creationism?
Much of this debate hinges on the definitions of “Zionism” and “liberalism.” Liberalism, like Zionism, has been through several historical incarnations, and can now be understood as incorporating many things from a loose sense of liberty or equality (themselves arguably in tension) to liberal democracy as a political system, free and fair elections, constitutionalism, and human rights. Liberalism evolved from a focus on ‘negative liberty,’ the reduction of government intervention in the lives of individuals, to incorporate ideals of ‘social liberalism,’ in which the state was obligated to protect its citizens through welfare support. Despite these various, sometimes competing, definitions, it appears that most political theorists agree that liberalism incorporates some notion of individual rights, universal equality and civil liberties.
Zionism, in most of its incarnations, is an ethno-centric political ideology
By contrast, Zionism, in most of its incarnations, is an ethno-centric political ideology committed to returning the Jews to, and sovereignty in, Eretz Yisrael. Though this may be conceived in more territorially expansive terms (Revisionist Zionism) or twinned with certain socialist economic arrangements (Labour Zionism), the underlying assumptions seem to be that Jews constitute an ancient nation, or people group; that they require self- determination to protect themselves from timeless and annihilationist anti-Semitism; and that the logical site of that self-determining entity ought to be the historic Land of Israel.
It seems that this ideology, which privileges one group on the basis of their membership in an ethnic, religious or national group, is inherently at odds with a political philosophy premised on individual rights and universal equality: a state founded by and for the Jewish people, living both within and outside of its territory, cannot also be a democratic state for all its citizens within territorial limits. It is illogical to claim that everyone is equal, yet some are more equal.
The debate about Liberal Zionism is not only about concepts. It is also about history.
But the debate about Liberal Zionism is not only about concepts. It is also about history. Ever since the founding of the State of Israel, the theoretical privileging of Jews within Zionist ideology has resulted in widely documented discrimination in the allocation of resources in Israel, especially access to land and housing, and government budget allocations. Though the socio- economic indicators suggest improvements in the lives of Israel’s Palestinian citizens (as they prefer to be identified) over time, they remain one of the poorest groups in Israel, have a lower life expectancy than Jewish citizens, and their infant mortality rate is twice as high as that of the Jewish population. According to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), around 50% of Israel’s Palestinian population lives in poverty, compared to around 15% for Jewish families. Palestinian citizens of Israel are vastly under-represented among university students in Israel, making up only 8.1% of all university students in 2003, less than half their share of the country’s population. The gaps between the Jewish majority and Arab minority are the result of multiple factors including large Arab families, the low participation rate of Arab women in the labour force, the overall lower skill level of the Arab workforce, and discrimination in the labour market. But discriminatory state policies and neglect by many Israeli governments have also contributed to this gap, particularly visible in the area of land planning and rural-urban development; in 1949 Jews owned 13.5% of the land. By the 1960s they had 93%. The upshot is that Arab towns and villages have a high population density, and Arab homes are overcrowded.
Perhaps the most serious discrimination has occurred in relation to population policies. Zionism was not only a nationalist movement that saw itself as a revival of an ancient people and a solution to rising levels of European anti-Semitism, but also a settler colonial project that sought to establish a Jewish nation- state in a region populated predominantly by non- Jewish Palestinians. Ironically, the goal of establishing a democratic Jewish state, with a Jewish majority, necessitated a range of population policies to ensure first the creation, and then the maintenance, of that Jewish majority. Population displacement, especially in 1948 and 1967, combined with discriminatory immigration policies, according to which Jews are effectively entitled to automatic citizenship via the Law of Return while Palestinian refugees who fled, or were driven from, their homes in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war are barred from returning. According to the sociologist Christian Joppke at Bern University, “Israel cannot be a liberal state, with a non-discriminatory immigration policy, unless it ceases to be Jewish. Its Jewishness prevents Israel from ever coming to rest within its territory, and from becoming a ‘state of all of its citizens.’” At times, there have also been unofficial discriminatory fertility policies intended to increase Jewish and decrease Palestinian fertility. The 1970 Veteran’s Benefit Law, for example, offered increased child allowances to families in which at least one member had served in the IDF.
In the UK, those who advocate discriminatory immigration policies are not regarded as “ultra-liberals.”
Liberal Zionists often share these demographic fears, pointing out that their support for the two state solution stems from their fear concerning the threat to the Jewish majority posed by retaining areas containing large numbers of Palestinians. For the same reason, many support the continuation of Israel’s selective immigration policies, in particular the Law of Return coupled with the continued barring of the ‘Right of Return’ to Palestinian refugees. The self-described “ultra-liberal Zionist” Larry Derfner says that he would “do away with all the discrimination, except in one area — immigration.” In the UK, those who advocate discriminatory immigration policies are not regarded as “ultra-liberals.” Quite the reverse, they are seen as ultra-nationalists, aligned with the British National Party (BNP) or English Defense League (EDL).
The contradiction of Liberal Zionism, in turn, has serious implications for the “two state solution,” which envisages a Jewish and democratic state alongside a Palestinian and democratic state. The analysis above suggests problems with at least half of that formula. Moreover, the ethno- national logic and exclusivist tendencies of Zionism may be mirrored on the Palestinian side; there are already worrying demands from some Palestinians for a Jew- free Palestinian state. At minimum, Jews left inside the future Palestinian state are likely to experience the same second-class status as Palestinian citizens of Israel. This would not be surprising; anti-colonialist nationalist resistance movements often come to embody the very entity they have fought so hard to throw off.
To resolve this problem one could redefine Zionism and Palestinian nationalism by removing the discriminatory ethno-national elements of both. Within a two state framework this would look as follows: The Palestinian side would be required to forgo an exclusivist conception of the state premised on ethno-national Palestinian peoplehood transcending geographical boundaries, in favour of a more inclusive legal-territorial citizenship with Palestinian symbols on the flag and national holidays. On the Israeli side, this would entail abandoning the original Herzlian notion of Jewish self-determination, and limiting the ‘Jewish’ element so that it included only symbols, like the Star of David on the flag or Jewish festivals as national holidays. Such cultural symbols, though not innocuous, would render Israel akin to the UK, which has a flag comprising crosses and national holidays that are generally Christian in origin, yet no official policy of selecting or privileging citizens according to ethno-national or ethno-religious belonging or identity.
Do the (discriminatory population policy) means justify the (Jewish majority) ends?
These changes would not, however, ensure the continuation of Israel as a Jewish majority state or safe- haven for persecuted Jews. But is that conception of a state still necessary or has it become an anachronism? Even if it were necessary, do the (discriminatory population policy) means justify the (Jewish majority) ends? In other words, is the Jewish community prepared to accept un- or anti-democratic discriminatory policies in order to maintain the Jewish state? Can anything ever justify flouting democratic norms? Finally, can anti-Semitism be truly resolved by creating a state that perpetuates ethno- national difference, and institutionalises discrimination rather than promoting inclusive citizenship?
The debate about “Liberal Zionism” is not merely a conceptual or historical debate. It is both central to potential political solutions to the conflict, and to the debate about Jewish identity and its relationship to Israel. As ‘Zion Square’ develops, I hope that its contributors live up to their promise “to put front and centre the very questions that official Jewish discourse rules out of order,” in particular questioning Liberal Zionism itself. I also hope that those Liberal Zionists hugging and wrestling with complex ideas find the will and the courage to engage honestly with these questions. This may not be easy, but will be absolutely necessary to the future wellbeing of the Jewish people and Israel.
RESPONSE BY HANNAH WEISFELD
It is true that there is a tendency among those that define themselves as Liberal Zionists to displace the tensions between Liberalism and Zionism over the green line. The territory considered by the international community and a growing number of Jews to be illegally occupied — a place where 3.5 million Palestinians live without passports, freedom of movement and the right to vote for a government that controls their land, sea and air space to mention just a few of the implications of a 45 year old occupation — is not Israel ‘proper’ and therefore ‘Liberal’ Zionists can voice heartfelt criticism. It is seen to be legitimate criticism as it is tied up with ‘love’ for Israel and concern for its long-term safety and security. The conversation is on much tougher terrain when it comes to dealing with that considered to be ‘legal’ Israel — the territory within the 1949 armistice lines — as it calls into question the Jewish national project in its entirety.
The early Zionists comprised an eclectic mix of visionaries, each believing a nation state for the Jewish people would revive Judaism and the Jewish people in a way that continual dispersal in the diaspora could not. Herzl in particular was driven by the notion that without self determination — in the form of a political entity that could defend itself — the Jews would forever face the threat of annihilation. One could argue that Israel’s premier, Netanyahu, sees himself as a the baton carrier for the political Zionism of Herzl . In his latest interaction with Obama in the White House, in which the threat of a nuclear Iran dominated the conversation, he made clear that “…after all, that’s the very purpose of the Jewish state, to restore to the Jewish people control over our destiny.”
However, while anti-Semitism and pogroms served as one historical backdrop, it was by no means the sole motivating factor for many of these idealists. There were those who believed that Israel did not actually need to be a political entity, rather an opportunity for Jews to build a physical connection to the land, others who believed that the Jewish people would create a truly equal society if they refused to exploit local Palestinian labourers through a class based system, and others who, driven by God, were part of a different discourse entirely: the fulfilment of religious obligation. Underpinning these diverse beliefs was the 20th century discourse of nationalism. Amos Oz describes the modern state of Israel in relation to its early Zionist thinkers as a collection of dreams: ‘dreams can only remain wonderful as long as they don’t come true. But the real Israel is not one dream come true, but a conglomeration of dreams, fantasies, blueprints and master plan’. For many Jews, the dream being played out today is one that does not reflect the core Jewish values of equality and justice. Within the diaspora, and in fact among Jewish and non-Jewish communities alike, the actions of the Israeli government have become synonymous with the state of Israel which, in turn, represents the embodiment of the Zionist dream.
Zionism itself has come to be associated with an ongoing occupation and increasingly anti-democratic legislation
So Zionism itself has come to be associated with an ongoing occupation and increasingly anti-democratic legislation that seeks to marginalise dissenting voices within Israel, along with minority communities. It is for this reason that the widely acclaimed ‘Beinart theory’ of young Jews ‘checking’ their Zionism at the door of liberalism is playing out. It is not surprising, Zionism having been redacted so significantly, that there is a powerful drive within diaspora communities to reinvent a ‘brand’ of Zionism that can engage a new generation of Jews.
Organisations such as J Street in the USA and Yachad in the UK assert that the most urgent task of this generation of Zionists is to end the occupation and safeguard Israel as a Jewish and democratic state. As this can only be achieved by removing the ‘demographic’ threat of 3.5 million Palestinians, who most people believe, cannot and should not be indefinitely occupied, the choice must be either to give them the vote or give them their own state. So does this mean that Liberal Zionism fails to deal with the tensions existing within the green line, and is, therefore, an intellectually dishonest exercise in protecting what is, at its core, a rotten concept — a nationalist dream that will forever need to privilege one group over another? Is the very discourse of viewing a minority population as a ‘demographic threat’ entirely illiberal?
At the first Zionist Congress held on August 29th 1897 Herzl famously said ‘“In Basle I founded the Jewish state . . . Maybe in five years, certainly in fifty, everyone will realise it.’ On November 29th 1947, three months short of exactly fifty years, the United Nations voted into existence the Jewish state. The sense of urgency and visionary leadership which drove the Zionist movement in 1897 is today required by the Liberal Zionist movement of 2012.
The Liberal Zionism of the 21st century must continue to recognise the urgency of ending the Occupation
Liberal Zionism must not only to give legitimacy back to an ideology which was once considered to be core to our national self determination, but build a new narrative that will take the Jewish national project in the 21st century. The Liberal Zionism of the 21st century must continue to recognise the urgency of ending the Occupation, not least because of the grave threat it poses to the viability of a Jewish state. At the same time it must articulate a civic narrative for all the citizens of Israel, including the 20% that are not Jewish. This narrative will contain multiple, and sometimes conflicting versions of history, and accept that those holding the literal (or metaphorical) key to a home no longer theirs, form part of the story of contemporary Israel. Liberal Zionism will revisit the discussions of the early Zionists and understand that what was, for some, an attempt to build a Marxist utopia, resulted for others in displacement and economic hardship. The Israel of the new Liberal Zionist may not look like that of the old Zionists. Some of the symbols of statehood, and certain state institutions and mechanisms created during the years when the Jewish people were fighting a war of survival, may no longer be deemed fit for purpose. This is not a rejection of rotten ideology, it is modernisation.
While modernising, Liberal Zionism retains at its core the narrative of the Jewish people: the longing to return, the desire to have a place where Jewish people can feel safe both physically and psychologically, and a place where the revival of the Hebrew language and culture can provide sustenance to Jewish culture and tradition world-wide. This is the legitimate dream of successive generations and any national manifestation must, in part, be a reflection of the dreams of the people.
The Israel of the new Liberal Zionist may not look like that of the old Zionists
The task of defusing the tension within the term ‘Liberal Zionism’ has barely begun. Those already on task in Israel need the support of their fellow Jews abroad — Zionism was always a co-creation between the diaspora and Jews of Israel. Rather than dismissing the task as too great, or irreconcilable before it has even been tried, we can both hold onto the dream and bring it into a new world that looks and feels quite different from the original world into which it was born.

Post Zionist Schools 's One State Solution

Celebrating the Jewish state with Israeli flags. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.
Celebrating the Jewish state with Israeli flags. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.
In my understanding, the concept “Post Zionism” is–at the ideological level–a demand for democratization of the state – i. e. a call for a liberal democratic state in the Western mode. — Prof. Uri Ram (from The Anti Zionist Congress” Israel Radio April 27, 2008.)
This quote from one of the leaders of the post-Zionist school in Israeli academia clearly reflects the moral hypocrisy, the intellectual shallowness and pompous -– and grossly misplaced — self-righteousness that characterize the adherents of this sadly self-contradictory philosophy.
After all, it takes little  analytical skill to identify the glaring flaw in the logic of post-Zionist positions which — allegedly, in the name of enlightened liberal values — calls for the conversion of Israel from a “Jewish state” to  a “state-of-all-its-citizens.”  It requires no extraordinary intellect to grasp the fact that should such a change indeed take place, the resulting realities would, in fact, be the exact antithesis of the values invoked for making it.  All that is needed for that is a smidgeon of common sense and iota of intellectual integrity.
An inexorable chain of events
Yet, as  growing realization of the infeasibility/impracticability of the two-state paradigm begins to dawn (see, for example, editorial “The Fading Two-State Solution,” NYT, January. 22, 2016), a critical analysis of the post-Zionist vision of a one-state-for all- its citizens, widely perceived as the default alternative, is both appropriate and imperative.
Indeed, the chain of events, which such any move in such a direction would inevitably trigger, is plainly predictable.
The first link in this inexorable chain is a simple but far-reaching truth: If Israel is indeed defined as a “Jewish state,” there is a valid rationale, and a viable justification, for the existence of an entire range of elements that characterize the conduct of national and public life in the country, such as: the Star of David on the Flag; the “Menorah” candelabrum as the state emblem; the words of the national anthem referring to the “yearning of the Jewish soul”; the structure of  the annual calendar in which the holidays (and holy days) are determined  in accordance with Jewish heritage and Zionist history; the status of Hebrew as the dominant vehicle of communication in business, academia, the judicial process and in the conduct of official ceremonies. The same is true for a considerable body of “Judeo-centric legislation such as the Law of Return, granting any Jew immediate citizenship on immigrating to Israel.
Only the ultra-pious?
By contrast however, should Israel be re-defined as a “state of all its citizens, there would be no valid rationale, or viable justification, for any of these features!
As an inevitable consequence, there will neither be rhyme nor reason why any Jew (apart perhaps from those ultra-devout few who regard living in the Holy Land a religious command) would choose to live his/her life in a “non-Jewish” or “un-Jewish” Israel, rather than in any other “state-of-all-its-citizens” where the rigors of daily life are less demanding and less stressful — such as, say,  Holland or New Zealand.
No Jew (apart from the handful of ultra-pious souls who believe in the divine sanctity of the Land of  Israel) would insist on living his/her life in a country, where  instead of the blue Star of David, the national flag displays stripes – whether vertical or horizontal – of different colors even if these include nostalgic tinges of blue and white.
The inevitable result would almost certainly be, not only a dramatic increase in the number of Jews who leave the country (and who, of course, will no longer be called “yordim” but merely “emigrants”), but also an almost complete cessation of the number of Jews arriving here  (who of course no longer will be called “olim” but merely “immigrants”).
If Israel became a “state-of-all-its-citizens”
After all, if Israel in not a Jewish state, there will be absolutely no motivation for — nor reason — why-highly educated, highly skilled and highly trained Jews from across the developed world should aspire to make their homes here — not scientists, not doctors, not engineers not entrepreneurs, not academics.
There would be no mass “aliyah” from lands where Jews were oppressed and sought safe haven in the Jewish state.  Obviously the extraordinary phenomenon of the huge inflow of Jewry from the former USSR – with its huge contribution to every aspect of life in the country would be inconceivable — if Israel became just another “state-of-all-its-citizens” on the fringes of a desert at the gateway to the Levant.
Moreover, if Israel became a state of all its citizens, there would be little grounds for preventing the massive influx of migrants from neighboring lands, pouring into the country – whether to fulfill the “right of return” or merely seeking to earn a better living – since, initially, the chances of finding a more lucrative livelihood would still be higher here rather than there.
Inevitably, these processes will bring about a continual erosion of the Jewish population within the “state-of-all-its-citizens.” And as the composition of the population in the land becomes similar to that in the other states of the region, there is no reason to suppose that the realities that prevail in it, will not also become similar to those prevailing in those states – including the level of economic development, the standard of living and style of life, the status of women, the nature of the regime and the liberties it allows those living under it.
If Israel is not Zionist…
It is difficult to imagine that even the post-Zionists, with their bias and selective view of the world, are unaware of the fact that in the entire Arab world –- from Casablanca to Kuwait — there is no semblance of any “liberal democratic state in the Western mode,” for which they allegedly yearn with such passion. But even if there was once such an unfounded hope, the horrors of the post-Spring turmoil surely must have extinguished any illusions in this regard.
Indeed, in view of the stark contrast between their declared objectives and the nature of the realities, that they endeavor to achieve that objective, is likely to create; in light of the clear contradiction between their purported aspirations and the consequences likely to result from the pursuit of those aspirations, it is difficult to determine whether the post-Zionists’ motivations are nefarious or simply naïve ; whether they are mean-spirited or only feeble-minded; whether they are malevolent or merely moronic…
However, whatever the explanation may be, all those genuinely desirous of a “liberal democratic state in the Western mode,” in this neck of the woods, must recognize a basic inescapable truth: If Israel is not Zionist, it will not be Jewish; if it is not Jewish it will not be democratic.