Israel Divides the Jews – An Analysis by Lawrence Davidson
Posted
by Dr. Lawrence Davidson on November 18, 2015 in
Culture
& Religion, News &
Analysis, Palestine/Israel,
United States, World
Rabbi
Rick Jacobs, president of the Union for Reform
Judaism.
The
leader of the largest Jewish group in North America has criticized Israel’s
policies toward Palestinians as “misguided.”
By
Dr. Lawrence Davidson
Part
I – Reform Judaism vs. Israel
Something
significant recently happened in the ongoing political-ethical drama that grips
Israel
and, by extension, Jewish communities worldwide. As reported by the Jewish
Daily Forward on on 6 November 2015, Rabbi Rick Jacobs, the president
of the Union for Reform Judaism (a position that makes him the leader of
largest Jewish denomination in the United States),
publicly broke with Israel’s
political and religious leadership. In a major speech at the Union’s
biennial conference he said, “Asking
Jews around the world only to wave the flag of Israel and to support even the most
misguided policies of its leaders drives a wedge between the Jewish soul and
the Jewish state.”
Going
public in this fashion is significant and welcome. However, as we shall see,
this aspect of his critique has a long history.
Jacobs
then got more specific: “the treatment of Israel’s minorities” and the “way
ultra-Orthodox views of Judaism are being enshrined in secular law” are
indications that Israeli society is “broken” and that Reform Jews will not be
quiet about this. Jacobs offers the concept of Tikkun olam or “good
works that benefit the wider community” and the “power and wisdom of pluralism”
as antidotes that can help “repair” Israel. This is potentially
powerful stuff for the situation here in the U.S.,
if not in Israel
itself. If Jacobs moves to mobilize America’s Reform Jews behind a
campaign opposing present Israeli behavior, it will constitute a major
challenge to Zionist tribalism. It might also help liberate the U.S. Congress
from its present role of accomplice to Israeli crimes.
Part
II – The Past as Prologue
While
the Zionists will never admit it and it is unlikely that the great majority of
Reform Jews are aware of it, Rabbi Jacobs’s criticism is not new. Indeed,
warnings and skepticism of what Zionism meant for the Jews and Judaism go back
to the late nineteenth century and intensified with the announcement of the
Balfour Declaration in 1917.
I
wrote a long essay on this subject in 2004. It is entitled “Zionism and the
Attack on Jewish Values” and appeared in the online journal of ideas Logos (Vol.
3, No. 2, Spring 2004). Here are some excerpts:
Ahad
Ha-am (the pen name of the famous Jewish moralist Asher Ginzberg) noted as
early as 1891 that Zionist settlers in Palestine
had “an inclination to despotism. They treat the Arabs with hostility and
cruelty, deprive them of their rights, offend them without cause, and even
boast of these deeds; and no one among us opposes this despicable and dangerous
inclination.”
In
England, on May 24, 1917,
the Joint Foreign Committee of two Jewish organizations, the Board of Deputies
of British Jews and the Anglo-Jewish Association, issued a statement which
asserted, “the feature of the Zionist program objected to proposes to invest
Jewish settlers in Palestine
with special rights over others. This would prove a calamity to the whole
Jewish people who hold that the principle of equal rights for all denominations
is essential. The [Zionist program] is all the more inadmissable because … it
might involve them in most bitter feuds with their neighbors of other races and
religion.”
Hannah
Arendt, one of the most insightful Jewish political philosophers of the
twentieth century, characterized the Zionist movement in a 1945 essay as a
“German-inspired nationalism.” The result of this was a modern form of tribal
ethnocentrism that led to virulent, politicized racism. In 1948 she and 27
other prominent Jews living in the United States wrote a letter to
the New York Times condemning the growth of right-wing political
influences in the newly founded Israeli state.
Toward
the end of his life, Albert Einstein warned that “the attitude we adopt toward
the Arab minority will provide the real test of our moral standards as a
people.” An investigation of the conclusions drawn by every human rights
organization that has examined Israeli behavior toward the Palestinians over
the last 50 years, leaves no doubt that the Zionists have failed Einstein’s
test.
Yet
that is just the conclusion that today’s Zionists cannot face. Any revival of
these early and prescient objections as part of a contemporary critique of
Zionism represents, to the ardent Zionist, the promotion of supposedly
traitorous anachronisms that are not only an embarrassment, but also
politically dangerous. Jews who express such concerns are systematically
denigrated and non-Jews who are critical of Zionism are slandered with charges
of anti-Semitism.
Part
III – Judaism Divided
Thus,
Rabbi Rick Jacobs is the latest in a long line of important critics. Now that
he has joined their ranks, the question is, Will Jacobs be able to popularize
his critique while withstanding the enormous pressure that is certainly about
to befall him? He will be libeled and threatened in an effort to force him to
back down.The movement of Reform Judaism might itself come under fire as
subversive. After all, officially Israel doesn’t even see Reform
Jewry as real Jews.
Though
an effort to discredit Jacobs and the Reform movement will be made, it will
only make matters worse for the Zionists and Israel. Thanks to its racist
policies and brutal aggressiveness, the Zionist state has become the most
divisive issue for Jews throughout the Western world. Jacobs’s pronouncement
is a sure sign of this. A Zionist counterattack on Reform Jewry will make it
more so.
The
truth is that Zionism has always divided Jews. On one side have been those
sensitive to humanitarian issues and the religion’s traditional championship of
egalitarianism and justice. And on the other side have been those who have
committed themselves to a Jewish future defined in Zionist ideological terms.
Before World War II those on the humanitarian side were mainly outspoken
intellectuals. At that time the Zionists were better organized than those who
opposed them and they were politically savvy and assertive.
However,
apart from areas of Eastern Europe, the vast
majority of ordinary Jews remained neutral. With the advent of Nazi persecution
the entire balance shifted in favor of the Zionists, who saw vindication for
their statist philosophy in the Holocaust. By 1948, few Jews said a word
against Zionism and the state of Israel.
But
that pro-Zionist balance could not last. Eventually Israel’s combining of religion and
state power produced the worst of both worlds. In the name of defending
Judaism, Israel
has conquered, persecuted, and massacred, and it has self-righteously refused
to acknowledge its own culpability for the ongoing tragedy of both itself and
its victims. Now, more and more Jews are disgusted and alienated, or just
mightily confused, by the ongoing malfeasance of a movement that was supposed
to create their ultimate safe haven.
As
the journalist Laurie
Goodstein noted in a 22 September 2014 article in the international
edition of the New York Times, ever greater numbers of younger
American Jews are turning against the Zionism and Israel. However, older and more
conservative Jews still remain ardent Zionists. These are the big donors not
only at their local congregational level, but also when it comes to politics.
They will continue to try to intimidate Jewish skeptics into silence and to
sway members of Congress. Hopefully, the efforts of men like Rabbi Jacobs will
make it easier for those Jews who support more progressive and humane policies
to stand up and compete for influence.
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