Author's Note: This is my opinion as a humanist.
A new view has appeared on the horizon and it is called Peace. What is Israel to do? Even Ariel
Sharon, the hardest of the far right Israeli war mongers saw the writing on the wall. His recent
Freudian slip, so quickly denied, reveals the truth of the heart of the matter - the occupation
cannot last forever. The pressure on Israel’s fragile, aide propped economy is unbearable. While
everyone has been asking how Peace can be achieved and what price must be paid, one question is not
being asked. How will Israel cope with Peace?
Israel’s struggle against the Arabs is more than a struggle over place. It is a struggle over
identity. For, while it is true the people of Israel are linked by the bonds of religion, they are
not one nation, but a plurality of nationalities. Jewish-ness is not an ethnicity. Anthropological
studies have disproved the idea that the Jews are racial group. Instead it has been proven that
Jewish populations largely conform to the characteristics of the larger national population of the
country of their origin. A Yemeni Jew is a Yemeni. A Russian Jew is a
Russian. A Palestinian Jew is a Palestinian. Ethnicity is a myth.
Medieval philosopher of history, Ibn Khaldun noted that ‘group feeling’ held society together, and
there was no stronger group feeling than that of religion. This was well understood by the earliest
Jewish communities and helped to forge the unique Jewish identity. Belief in their uniqueness and
special character sustained the Jewish people through the millennia, in the face of tragedy and
persecution. Through tradition and religion, the Jewish communities scattered across the Old World,
sustained themselves as a separate and unique people.
While the Jews formed a distinct and identifiable community, they were not separate. Everywhere
the Jews were active, and indeed in many places essential, members of the wider community. In this
day and age where the lie of an eternal Jewish/Muslim conflict gets wide airplay, the contribution of
Jewish philosophers to the development of Islam is rarely mentioned. Jews were intimately involved in
the administration of the early Islamic empires; were critical to the cross cultural flowering that
occurred in Muslim Spain and Christian Sicily, and even later in the Ottoman Empire. It was the
Crusades, the Christian West’s first real attempt at colonialism and genocide, that poisoned
relations between the religions. It is typical of Western conceit that this fact goes
unrecognized.
The trauma of Crusades deeply affected both Muslim and Jew communities in Europe and the Middle
East. For Jewish communities in Europe it marked the beginning of a long dark age or persecution.
Jewish communities withdrew within themselves in the hope that the storm and hatred would pass. It
didn’t, and it eventually ended in the gas chambers of Auschwitz and Belsen. For the Jews living in
the Muslim world, things were not quite so bad. The Ottoman Empire opened its doors to the Sephardim
expelled from Spain, where they joined others of Europe’s outcasts, such as the Huguenots who were
expelled from France. But the relationship between the two religious communities was never the same.
The shocked Muslim community was itself withdrawing upon itself, beginning the long, slow process of
political and intellectual isolationism.
At the western extremity of Asia, around the shores of the Black Sea there was a tribe of nomadic
Turkic barbarians called the Khazars. In the tenth century, shortly before the forces of Western
Christendom started slaughtering Jews and Muslims in earnest, the Khazars converted to Judaism.
Sandwiched between the Christian Byzantines to the West and the Islamic Caliphate to the south east,
the decision to convert to Judaism was an astute political decision which elevated the Khazars’
status to that of other ‘civilized’ nations, without aligning themselves with either of their
powerful neighbors.
For almost 300 years Khazaria existed as a Jewish homeland in what is now the Ukraine. The
population was massive in comparison with the population of the Jewish Diaspora - some half a million
people. The Khazars came under increasing pressure from first the pagan,
and then the Christian Rus, but in the end it was the Mongols in the thirteenth century that smashed
Khazaria into oblivion. Many hundreds of thousands of Khazar refugees fled westward into Poland,
Bulgaria and Hungary. The refugees largely settled in rural communities away from the Christian
majority towns. Where they did settle in the cities, the Khazars lived packed together in
Jewish ghettos. Isolation in the shtetls and ghettos helped the Khazars
preserve their traditional cultural heritage and protect the community from the antipathy of their
Christian neighbours, but it also produced a psychology of cultural isolationism.
Europe in the last decade of the eighteenth century was convulsed by monumental social and
political change. The Ancien regimes fell and European nationalism was born. Europe’s Jewish
communities eschewed isolationism and embraced this wave of cosmopolitan rationalism. They became
culturally assimilated and largely bourgeoisie. Jewish thinkers, writers, philosophers made
significant contributions to all fields of nineteenth century thought.
Zionism was a product of the nineteenth century. It combined European colonialism, classical
nostalgia, radical nationalism and no small element of paranoia. The leading Zionists were
predominantly westernized intellectuals, secular, and predominantly of east European origin. Their
fathers and grandfathers had known persecution and, although they themselves had little to fear in
that respect, they remained obsessed with security. The Zionist’s constantly asked themselves, why,
considering the Jew’s significant contribution to human history, were they a scattered people? In the
age of nation states it was clear that a sovereign people required a state if they were to truly
fulfill their potential.
Theodore Herzl felt no special attachment towards Palestine, then little more than an impoverished
backwater province of the Ottoman Empire. He happily considered east Africa and Madagascar as
alternatives, but clearly for most Jews, Palestine had an emotional attraction. The problem of
Palestine’s current inhabitants was little more than an abstraction. This was after all the age of
European colonialism. The opinions of the natives were not sought, let alone considered and Herzl
seems genuinely surprised when the Palestinian’s expressed objections to the foundation of a Jewish
state. And so began the inevitable conflict between the dispossessor’s and the soon to be
dispossessed..
It was nationalism that blinded the Zionists to the crime they were about to commit. For
nationalism - the love of one’s own - separates ‘us’ from ‘them.’ It requires barriers to be erected
between communities. If ‘we’ are special, then ‘they’ are not. If ‘we’ belong, then ‘they’ do not. If
‘we’ have been wronged, then ‘they’ are responsible. The most hateful crimes have been committed in
the name of nationalism.
It was perfectly natural for the Palestinians to object to their dispossession. Their sovereignty
had been judged less worthy and their nation had been taken from them and given to strangers. That
the Palestinians would feel wronged by this, the Zionists simply could not comprehend. Religion had
nothing to do with the matter.
There was, of course, another way, but because the Zionist movement was a European movement,
constrained by European philosophies and prejudices, it was deemed inconceivable: the peaceful
co-existence of communities. Jews continued to make up sizable minorities throughout the Middle East,
where they remained an active and integral part of the community. The Jews of Iraq for example
represented a continuous Jewish presence in that country since the Exile to Babylon two and a half
millennia ago. But for the Zionists, the culture of the Oriental Jews was as alien and backward as
the culture of the Arabs. It was simply unthinkable for the communities to co-exist as equals.
The State of Israel was born out of the unspeakable horror of the Nazi extermination camps. At the
beginning of the Twentieth Century, Zionism was the political ideology of a tiny handful of Jews,
even amongst those Jews living Palestine. But for Jewish communities
around the world, the Final Solution made real the most paranoid fantasies of the Zionists. Here was
the evidence that the Jews needed their own state to ensure their security. That no state has ever
been guaranteed security was irrelevant. It suited the agenda. The rest of the world, also reeling in
shock and disgust, nodded its assent to the Zionist venture.
In the years after the Second World War, hundreds of thousands of refugees from Europe flooded
into Palestine. Their enthusiasm for Israel helped to transform the country. The trials of the War of
Independence in 1948 helped to forge the disparate communities of Jewish settlers into a nation.
However, after all the blood - Jewish and Palestinian - that was spilt, the Zionist venture required
one more sacrifice, perhaps the most terrible of all. For Israel to truly be the Jewish homeland, the
Diaspora had to return.
Much has been written about the Jewish Exodus from the Arab countries. Depending on your
viewpoint, it was the result of the age old Arab hatred of the Jews or it was a malicious Zionist
plot to disguise Israel’s own ethnic cleansing. The truth lies in the middle ground. The Jewish
communities in the neighboring Arab states largely felt themselves to be Arab and there was no
communal rush to migrate to Israel. But Israel’s aggressive stance towards the Arab states, and her
universalist claim to the loyalty of Jews everywhere could only raise suspicion that the Jews outside
Israel represented a fifth column. It must be remembered that many of the Arab states were themselves
newly independent and their ability to formulate clear foreign policy objectives were uncertain.
Actions taken, for valid and logical reasons, were often misinterpreted. In Iraq, which had the
oldest indigenous community of Jews in the world, outside Israel, the Iraqi government attempted to
isolate it!
s Jewish community from the Zionist ‘virus’ by banning all travel to and from Israel. In Israel, this
was interpreted as oppression of the Jewish community’s natural right to return, and the anti-Arab
rhetoric was ramped up. The Iraqi government reacted badly, arresting, imprisoning and even executing
Zionist agitators. The combined effect of Zionist agitation and propaganda and clumsy government
oppression was to eventually drive the Iraq Jews from their homeland of 2,500 years.
By the early 1950’s, the Zionists had virtually achieved what two and half thousand years of
‘persecution’ had failed to: - ethnically cleanse the Jewish people from the Middle East. This, in my
opinion, is a greater communal tragedy than the deaths of six million people.
Half a century has now passed and statehood has not brought the people of Israel peace or
security. Despite its massive army and sophisticated weaponry, Israel is a terrified nation of
foreigners, held together - not by their common religious heritage or culture, but by fear. Its
people are beleaguered, embittered and besieged, and more than ever afraid. In 1891, Jewish Thinker,
Asher Ginzburg recognized the extraordinary threat Zionism posed to Jewish culture. He wrote, "Such a
state of the Jews will be mortal poison to our people and will grind its spirit in the dust... This
small state... will survive only by diplomatic intrigues and by constant servility to the powers that
happen to be dominant... This it will really be, much more than now, "a small, miserable, people", a
spiritual slave to whomever happens to be dominant ... Isn't it preferable for 'an ancient people,
which has been a light unto nations', to disappear from history rather than reach such a goal?"