Jewish History, Jewish Religion
The Weight of Three Thousand Years
by Professor:
Israel Shahak
Sometime in the late 1950s, that world-class gossip
and occasional historian, John F. Kennedy, told me how, in 1948,
Harry S. Truman had been pretty much abandoned by everyone when
he came to run for president. Then an American Zionist brought
him two million dollars in cash, in a suitcase, aboard his whistle-stop
campaign train. 'That's why our recognition of Israel was rushed
through so fast.' As neither Jack nor I was an antisemite (unlike
his father and my grandfather) we took this to be just another
funny story about Truman and the serene corruption of American
politics.
Unfortunately, the hurried recognition of Israel as a state has
resulted in forty-five years of murderous confusion, and the destruction
of what Zionist fellow travellers thought would be a pluralistic
state - home to its native population of Muslims, Christians and
Jews, as well as a future home to peaceful European and American
Jewish immigrants, even the ones who affected to believe that
the great creator in the sky had given them, in perpetuity, the
lands of Judea and Sameria. Since many of the immigrants were
good socialists in Europe, we assumed that they would not allow
the new state to become a theocracy, and that the native Palestinians
could live with them as equals. This was not meant to be. I shall
not rehearse the wars and alarms of that unhappy region. But I
will say that the hasty invention of Israel has poisoned the political
and intellectual life of the USA, Israel's unlikely patron.
Unlikely, because no other minority in American history has ever
hijacked so much money from the American taxpayers in order to
invest in a 'homeland'. It is as if the American taxpayer had
been obliged to support the Pope in his reconquest of the Papal
States simply because one third of our people are Roman Catholic.
Had this been attempted, there would have been a great uproar
and Congress would have said no. But a religious minority of less
than two per cent has bought or intimidated seventy senators (the
necessary two thirds to overcome an unlikely presidential veto)
while enjoying support of the media.
In a sense, I rather admire the way that the Israel lobby has
gone about its business of seeing that billions of dollars, year
after year, go to make Israel a 'bulwark against communism'. Actually,
neither the USSR nor communism was ever much of a presence in
the region. What America did manage to do was to turn the once
friendly Arab world against us. Meanwhile, the misinformation
about what is going on in the Middle East has got even greater
and the principal victim of these gaudy lies - the American taxpayer
to one side - is American Jewry, as it is constantly bullied by
such professional terrorists as Begin and Shamir. Worse, with
a few honorable exceptions, Jewish-American intellectuals abandoned
liberalism for a series of demented alliances with the Christian
(antisemtic) right and with the Pentagon-industrial complex. In
1985 one of them blithely wrote that when Jews arrived on the
American scene they 'found liberal opinion and liberal politicians
more congenial in their attitudes, more sensitive to Jewish concerns'
but now it is in the Jewish interest to ally with the Protestant
fundamentalists because, after all, "is there any point in Jews
hanging on dogmatically, hypocritically, to their opinions of
yesteryear?' At this point the American left split and those of
us who criticised our onetime Jewish allies for misguided opportunism,
were promptly rewarded with the ritual epithet 'antisemite' or
'self-hating Jew'.
Fortunately, the voice of reason is alive and well, and in Israel,
of all places. From Jerusalem, Israel Shahak never ceases to analyse
not only the dismal politics of Israel today but the Talmud itself,
and the effect of the entire rabbinical tradition on a small state
that the right-wing rabbinate means to turn into a theocracy for
Jews only. I have been reading Shahak for years. He has a satirist's
eye for the confusions to be found in any religion that tries
to rationalise the irrational. He has a scholar's sharp eye for
textual contradictions. He is a joy to read on the great Gentile-hating
Dr Maimonides.
Needless to say, Israel's authorities deplore Shahak. But there
is not much to be done with a retired professor of chemistry who
was born in Warsaw in 1933 and spent his childhood in the concentration
camp at Belsen. In 1945, he came to Israel; served in the Israeli
military; did not become a Marxist in the years when it was fashionable.
He was - and still is - a humanist who detests imperialism whether
in the names of the God of Abraham or of George Bush. Equally,
he opposes with great wit and learning the totalitarian strain
in Judaism. Like a highly learned Thomas Paine, Shahank illustrates
the prospect before us, as well as the long history behind us,
and thus he continues to reason, year after year. Those who heed
him will certainly be wiser and - dare I say? - better. He is
the latest, if not the last, of the great prophets.
-
Gore Vidal
CHAPTER
1
A Closed Utopia?
THIS
BOOK, although written in English and addressed to
people living outside the State of Israel, is, in a way, a continuation
of my political activities as an Israeli Jew. Those activities
began in 1965-6 with a protest which caused a considerable scandal
at the time: I had personally witnessed an ultra-religious Jew
refuse to allow his phone to be used on the Sabbath in order to
call an ambulance for a non-Jew who happened to have collapsed
in his Jerusalem neighbourhood. Instead of simply publishing the
incident in the press, I asked for a meeting which is composed
of rabbis nominated by the State of Israel. I asked them whether
such behavior was consistent with their interpretation of the
Jewish religion. They answered that the Jew in question had behaved
correctly, indeed piously, and backed their statement by referring
me to a passage in an authoritative compendium of Talmudic laws,
written in this century. I reported the incident to the main Hebrew
daily, Ha'aretz, whose publication of the story caused a media
scandal.
The results of the scandal were, for me, rather negative. Neither
the Israeli, nor the diaspora, rabbinical authorities ever reversed
their ruling that a Jew should not violate the Sabbath in order
to save the life of a Gentile. They added much sanctimonious twaddle
to the effect that if the consequence of such an act puts Jews
in danger, the violation of the Sabbath is permitted, for their
sake. It became apparent to me, as drawing on Talmudic laws governing
the relations between Jews and non-Jews, that neither Zionism,
including its seemingly secular part, nor Israeli politics since
the inception of the State of Israel, nor particularly the policies
of the Jewish supporters of Israel in the diaspora, could be understood
unless the deeper influence of those laws, and the worldview which
they both create and express is taken into account. The actual
policies Israel pursued after the Six Day War, and in particular
the apartheid character of the Israeli regime in the Occupied
Territories and the attitude of the majority of Jews to the issue
of the rights of the Palestinians, even in the abstract, have
merely strengthened this conviction.
By making this statement I am not trying to ignore the political
or strategic considerations which may have also influenced the
rulers of Israel. I am merely saying that actual politics is an
interaction between realistic considerations (whether valid or
mistaken, moral or immoral in my view) and ideological influences.
The latter tend to be more influential the less they are discussed
and 'dragged into the light'. Any form of racism, discrimination
and xenophobia becomes more potent and politically influential
if it is taken for granted by the society which indulges in it.
This is especially so if its discussion is prohibited, either
formally or by tacit agreement. When racism, discrimination and
xenophobia is prevalent among Jews, and directed against non-Jews,
being fueled by religious motivations, it is like its opposite
case, that of antisemitism and its religious motivations. Today,
however, while the second is being discussed, the very existence
of the first is generally ignored, more outside Israel than within
it.
Without a discussion of the prevalent Jewish attitudes to non-Jews,
even the concept of Israel as 'a Jewish state', as Israel formally
defines itself, cannot be understood. The widespread misconception
that Israel, even without considering its regime in the Occupied
Territories, is a true democracy arises from the refusal to confront
the significance of the term 'a Jewish state' for non-Jews. In
my view, Israel as a Jewish state constitutes a danger not only
to itself and its inhabitants, but to all Jews and to all other
peoples and states in the Middle East and beyond. I also consider
that other Middle Eastern states or entities which define themselves
as 'Arab' or 'Muslim', like the Israeli self-definition as being
'Jewish', likewise constitute a danger. However, while this danger
is widely discussed, the danger inherent in the Jewish character
of the State of Israel is not.
The principle of Israel as 'a Jewish state' was supremely important
to Israeli politicians from the inception of the state and was
inculcated into the Jewish population by all conceivable ways.
When, in the early 1980s, a tiny minority of Israeli Jews emerged
which opposed this concept, a Constitutional Law (that is, a law
overriding provisions of other laws, which cannot be revoked except
by a special procedure) was passed in 1985 by an enormous majority
of the Knesset.
By this law no party whose programme openly opposes the principle
of 'a Jewish state' or proposes to change it by democratic means,
is allowed to participate in the elections to the Knesset. I myself
strongly oppose this constitutional principle. The legal consequence
for me is that I cannot belong, in the state of which I am a citizen,
to a party having principles with which I would agree and which
is allowed to participate in Knesset elections. Even this example
shows that the State of Israel is not a democracy due to the application
of a Jewish ideology directed against all non-Jews and those Jews
who oppose this ideology. But the danger which this dominant ideology
represents is not limited to domestic affairs. It also influences
Israeli foreign policies. This danger will continue to grow, as
long as two currently operating developments are being strengthened:
the increase in the Jewish character of Israel and the increase
in its power, particularly in nuclear power. Another ominous factor
is that Israeli influence in the USA political establishment is
also increasing. Hence accurate information about Judaism, and
especially about the treatment of non-Jews by Israel, is now not
only important, but politically vital as well.
Let me begin with the official Israeli definition of the term
'Jewish', illustrating the crucial difference between Israel as
'a Jewish state' and the majority of other states. By this official
definition, Israel 'belongs' to persons who are defined by the
Israeli authorities as 'Jewish', irrespective of where they live,
and to them alone. On the other hand, Israel doesn't officially
'belong' to its non-Jewish citizens, whose status is considered
even officially as inferior. This means in practice that if members
of a Peruvian tribe are converted to Judaism, and thus regarded
as Jewish, they are entitled at once to become Israeli citizens
and benefit from the approximately 70 per cent of the West Bank
land (and the 92 per cent of the area of Israel proper), officially
designated only for the benefit of Jews. All non-Jews ( not only
all Palestinians) are prohibited from benefiting from those lands.
(The prohibition applies even to Israeli Arabs who served in the
Israeli army and reached a high rank.) The case involving Peruvian
converts to Judaism actually occurred a few years ago. The newly-created
Jews were settled in the West Bank, near Nablus, on land from
which non-Jews are officially excluded. All Israeli governments
are taking enormous political risks, including the risk of war,
so that such settlements, composed exclusively of persons who
are defined as 'Jewish' (and not 'Israeli' as most of the media
mendaciously claims) would be subject to only 'Jewish' authority.
I suspect that the Jews of the USA or of Britian would regard
it as antisemitic if Christians would propose that the USA or
the United Kingdom should become a 'Christian state', belonging
only to citizens officially defined as 'Christians'. The consequence
of such doctrine is that Jews converting to Christianity would
become full citizens because of their conversion. It should be
recalled that the benefits of conversions are well known to Jews
from their own history. When the Christian and the Islamic states
used to discriminate against all persons not belonging to the
religion of the state, including the Jews, the discrimination
against Jews was at once removed by their conversion. But a non-Jew
discriminated against by the State of Israel will cease to be
so treated the moment he or she converts to Judaism.This simply
shows that the same kind of exclusivity that is regarded by a
majority of the diaspora Jews as antisemitic is regarded by the
majority of all Jews as Jewish. To oppose both antisemitism and
Jewish chauvinism is widely regarded among Jews as a 'self-hatred',
a concept which I regard as nonsensical.
The meaning of the term 'Jewish' and its cognates, including 'Judaism',
thus becomes in the context of Israeli politics as important as
the meaning of 'Islamic', when officially used by Iran, or 'communist'
when it was officially used by the USSR. However, the meaning
of the term 'Jewish' as it is popularly used is not clear, either
in Hebrew or when translated into other languages, and so the
term had to be defined officially.
According to Israeli law a person is considered 'Jewish' if either
their mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and great-great-grandmother
were Jewesses by religion; or if the person was converted to Judaism
in a way satisfactory to the Israeli authorities, and on condition
that the person has not converted from Judaism to another religion,
in which case Israel ceases to regard them as 'Jewish'. Of the
three conditions, the first represents the Talmudic definition
of 'who is a Jew', a defintion followed by Jewish Orthodoxy. The
Talmud and post-Talmudic rabbinic law also recognise the conversion
of a non-Jew to Judaism (as well as the purchase of a non-Jewish
slave by a Jew followed by a different kind of conversion) as
a method of becoming Jewish, provided that the conversion is performed
by authorised rabbis in a proper manner. This 'proper manner'
entails for females, their inspection by three rabbis while naked
in a 'bath of purification', a ritual which, although notorious
to all readers of the Hebrew press, is not often mentioned by
the English media in spite of its undoubted interest for certain
readers. I hope that this book will be the beginning of a process
which will rectify this discrepancy.
But there is another urgent necessity for an official definitionof
who is, and who is not 'Jewish'. The State of Israel officially
discriminates in favour of Jews and against non-Jews in many domains
of life, of which I regard three as being most important: residency
rights, the right to work and the right to equality before the
law. Discrimination in residency is based on the fact that about
92 per cent of Israel's land is the property of the state and
is administered by the Israel Land Authority according to regulations
issued by the Jewish National Fund (JNF), and affiliate of the
World Zionist Organization. In its regualtions the JNFdenies the
right to reside, to open a business, and often to work, to anyone
who is not Jewish, only because he is not Jewish. At the same
time, Jews are not prohibited from taking residence or opening
businesses anywhere in Israel. If applied in another state against
the Jews, such discriminatory practice would instantly and justifiably
be labelled antisemitism and would no doubt spark massive public
protests. When applied by Israel as a part of its 'Jewish ideology',
they are usually studiously ignored or excused when rarely mentioned.
The denial of the right to work means that non-Jews are prohibited
officially from working on land administered by the Israel Land
Authority according to the JNF regulations. No doubt these regulations
are not always, or even often, enforced but they do exist. From
time to time Israel attempts enforcement campaigns by state authorities,
as, for example, when the Agriculture Ministry acts against 'the
pestilence of letting fruit orchards belonging to Jews and situated
on National Land [i.e., land belonging to the State of Israel]
be harvested by Arab labourers', even if the labourers in question
are citizens of Israel. Israel also strictly prohibits Jews settled
on 'National Land' to sub-rent even a part of their land to Arabs,
even for a short time; and those who do so are punished, usually
by heavy fines. There is no prohibitions on non-Jews renting their
land to Jews. This means, in my own case, that by virtue of being
a Jew I have the right to lease an orchard for harvesting its
produce from another Jew, but a non-Jew, whether a citizen of
Israel or a resident alien, does not have this right.
Non-Jewish citizens of Israel do not have the right to equality
before the law. This discimination is expressed in many Israeli
laws in which, presumably in order to avoid embarressment, the
terms 'Jewish' and 'non-Jewish' are usually not explicitly stated,
as they are in the crucial Law of Return. According to that law
only persons officially recognised as 'Jewish' have an automatic
right of entry to Israel and of settling in it. They automatically
receive an 'immigration certificate' which provides them on arrival
with 'citizenship by virtue of having returned to the Jewish homeland',
and with the right to many financial benefits, which vary somewhat
according to the country from which they emmigrated. The Jews
who emigrate from the states of the former UUSR receive 'an absorption
grant' of more than $20,000 per family. All Jews immigrating to
Israel accordingthis law immediately acquire the right to vote
in elections and to be elected to the Knesset -- even if they
do not speak a word of Hebrew.
Other Israeli laws substitute the more obtuse expressions 'anyone
who can immigrate in accordance with the Law of Return' and 'anyone
who is not entitled to immigrate in accordance with the law of
Return'. Depending onthe law in questionm benefits are them grantedto
the first category and systematically denied to the second. The
routine means for enforcing discrimination in everyday life is
the ID card, which everyone is obliged to carry at all times.
ID cards list the official 'nationality' of a person, which can
be 'Jewish', 'Arab', 'Druze' and the like, witah the significant
exception of 'Israeli'. Attempts to force the Interior Minister
to allow Israelis wishing to be officially described as 'Israeli',
or even as 'Israeli-Jew' in their ID cards have failed. Those
who have attempted to do so have a letter from the Ministry of
the Interior stating that 'it was decided not to recognise an
Israeli nationality'. The letter does not specify who made this
decision or when.
There are so many laws and regulations in Israel which discriminate
in favour of the persons defined in Israel as those 'who can immigrate
in accordance with the Law of Return' that the subject demands
seperate treatment. We can look here at one example, seemingly
trivial in comparison with residence restrictions, but nevertheless
important since it reveals the real intentions of the Israeli
legislator. Israeli citizens who left the country for a time but
who are defined as those who 'can immigrate in accordance with
the Law of Return' are eligible on their return to generous customs
benefits, to receive subsidy for their children's high school
education, and to receive either a grant or a loan on easy terms
for the purchase of an apartment, as well as other benefits. Citizens
who cannot be so defined, in other words, the non-Jewish citizens
of Israel, get none of these benefits. The obvious intention of
such discriminatory measures is to decrease tje number of non-Jewish
citizens of Israel, in order to make Israel a more 'Jewish' state.
The Ideology of 'Redeemed' Land:
Israel also propagates among its Jewish citizens
an exclusivist ideology of the Redemption of Land. Its official
aim of minimizing the number of non-Jews can be well perceived
in this ideology , which is inculcated to Jewish schoolchildren
in Israel. They are taught that it is applicable to the entire
extent of either the State of Israel or, after 1967, to what is
referred to as the Land of Israel. According to this ideology,
the land which has been 'redeemed' is the land which has passed
from non-Jewish ownership to Jewish ownership. The ownership can
be either private, or belong to either the JNF or the Jewish state.
The land which belongs to non-Jews is, on the contrary, considered
to be 'unredeemed'. Thus, if a Jew who committed the blackest
crimes which can be imagined buys a piece of land from a virtuous
non-Jew, the 'unredeemed' land becomes 'redeemed' by such a transaction.
However, if a virtuous non-Jew purchases land from the worst Jew,
the formerly pure and 'redeemed' land becomes 'unredeemed' again.
The logical conclusion of such an ideology is the expulsion, called
'transfer', of all non-Jews from the area of land which has to
be 'redeemed'. Therefore the Utopia of the 'Jewish ideology' adopted
by the State of Israel is a land which is wholly 'redeemed' and
none of it is owned or worked by non-Jews. The leaders of the
Zionist labour movement expressed this utterly repellent idea
with the greatest clarity. Walter Laquer a devoted Zionist, tells
in his History of Zionism
how one of these spiritual fathers, A.D. Gordon, who died in 1919,
'objected to violence in principle and justified self defence
only in extreme circumstances. But he and his friends wanted every
tree and bush in the Jewish homeland to be planted by nobody else
except Jewish pioneers'. This means that they wanted everybody
else to just go away and leave the land to be 'redeemed' by Jews.
Gordon's successors added more violence than he intended but the
principle of 'redemption' and its consequences have remained.
In the same way, the kibbutz, widely hailed as an attempt to create
a Utopia, was and is an exclusivist Utopia; even if it is composed
of atheists, it does not accent Arab members on principle and
demands that potential members from other nationalities be first
converted to Judaism. No wonder the kibbutz boys can be regarded
as the most militaristic segment of the Israeli jewish society.
It is this exclusivist ideology, rather than all the 'security
needs' alleged by Israeli propaganda, which determines the takeovers
of land in Israel in the 1950s and again in the mid-1960s and
in the Occupied Territories after 1967. This ideology also dictated
official Israeli plans for 'the Judaizition of Galilee'. This
curious term means encouraging Jews to settle in Galilee by giving
them financial benefits. (I wonder what would be the reaction
of US Jews if a plan for 'the Christianization of New York' or
even only of Brooklyn, would be proposed in their country.) But
the Redemption of the Land implies more than regional 'Judaization'.
In the entire area of Israel the JNF, vigorously backed by Israeli
state agencies (especially by the secret police) is spending great
sums of public money in order to 'redeem' any land which non-Jews
are willing to sell, and to preempt any attempt by a Jew to sell
his land to a non-Jew by paying him a higher price.
Israeli Expansionism:
The main danger which Israel, as 'a Jewish state',
poses to its own people, to other Jews and to its neighbors, is
its ideologically motivated pursuit of territorial expansion and
the inevitable series of wars resulting from this aim. The more
Israel becomes Jewish or, as one says in Hebrew, the more it 'returns
to Judaism' (a process which has been under way in Israel at least
since 1967), the more its actual politics are guided by Jewish
ideological considerations and less by rational ones. My use of
the term 'rational' does not refer here to a moral evaluation
of Israeli policies, or to the supposed defence or security needs
of Israel - even less so to the supposed needs of 'Israeli survival'.
I am referring here to Israeli imperial policies based on its
presumed interests. However morally bad or politically crass such
policies are, I regard the adoption of policies based on 'Jewish
ideology', in all its different versions as being even worse.
The ideological defence of Israeli policies are usually based
on Jewish religious beliefs or, in the case of secular Jews, on
the 'historical rights' of the Jews which derive from those beliefs
and retain the dogmatic character of religious faith.
My own early political conversion from admirer of Ben-Gurion to
his dedicated opponent began exactly with such an issue. In 1956
I eagerly swallowed all of Ben-Gurion's political and military
reasons for Israel initiating the Suez War, until he (in spite
of being an atheist, proud of his disregard of the commandments
of Jewish religion) pronounced in the Knesset on the third day
of that war, that the real reason for it is 'the restoration of
the kingdom of David and Solomon' to its Biblical borders. At
this point in his speech, almost every Knesset member spontaneously
rose and sang the Israeli national anthem. To my knowledge, no
zionist politician has ever repudiated Ben-Gurion's idea that
Israeli policies must be based (within the limits of pragmatic
considerations) on the restoration of the Biblical borders as
the borders of the Jewish state. Indeed, close analysis of Israeli
grand strategies and actual principles of foreign policy, as they
are expressed in Hebrew, makes it clear that it is 'Jewish ideology',
more than any other factor, which determines actual Israeli policies.
The disregard of Judaism as it really is and of 'Jewish ideology'
makes those policies incomprehensible to foreign observers who
usually know nothing about Judaism exept crude apologetics.
Let me give a more recent illustration of the essential difference
which exists between Israeli imperial planning of the most inflated
but secular type, and the principles of 'Jewish ideology'. The
latter enjoins that land which was either ruled by any Jewish
ruler in ancient times or was promised by God to the Jews, either
in the Bible or - what is actually more important politically
- according to a rabbinic interpretation of the Bible and the
Talmud, should belong to Israel since it is a Jewish state. No
doubt, many Jewish 'doves' are of the opinion that such conquest
should be deferred to a time when Israel will be stronger than
it is now, or that there would be, hopefully, a 'peaceful conquest',
that is , that the Arab rulers or peoples would be 'persuaded'
to cede the land in question in return for benefits which the
Jewish state would then confer on them.
A number of discrepant versions of Biblical borders of the Land
of Israel, which rabbinical authorities interpret as ideally belonging
to the Jewish state, are in circulation. The most far-reaching
among them include the following areas within these borders: in
the south, all of Sinai and a part of nothern Egypt up to the
environs of Cairo; in the east, all of Jordan and a large chunk
of Saudi Arabia, all of Kuwait and a part of Iraq south of the
Euphrates; in the north, all of Lebanon and all of Syria together
with a huge part of Turkey (up to lake Van); and in the west,
Cyprus. An enormous body of research and learned discussion based
on these borders, embodied in atlases, books, articles and more
popular forms of propaganda is being published in Israel, often
with state subsidies, or other forms of support. Certainly the
late Kahane and his followers, as will as influential bodies such
as Gush Emunim, not only desire the conquest of those territories
by Israel, but regard it as a divinely commanded act, sure to
be successful since it will be aided by God. In fact, important
Jewish religious figures regard the Israeli refusal to undertake
such a holy war, or even worse, the return of Sinai to Egypt,
as a national sin which was justly punished by God. One of the
more influential Gush Emunim rabbis, Dov Lior, the rabbi of Jewish
settlements of Kiryat Arba and of Hebron, stated repeatedly that
the Israeli failure to conquer Lebanon in 1982-5 was a well-merited
divine punishment for its sin of 'giving a part of Land of Israel',
namely Sinai, to Egypt.
Although I have chosen an admittedly extreme example of the Biblical
borders of the Land of Israel which 'belong' to the 'Jewish state',
those borders are quite popular in national-religious circles.
There are less extreme versions of Biblical borders, sometimes
also called 'historical borders'. It should however be emphasized
that within Israel and the community of its diaspora Jewish supporters,
the validity of the concept of either Biblical borders or historical
borders as delineating the bordrers of land which belongs to Jews
by right is not denied on grounds of principle, except by the
tiny minority which opposes the concept of a Jewish state. Otherwise,
objections to the realisation of such borders by a war are purely
pragmatical. One can claim that Israel is now too weak to conquer
all the land which 'belongs' to the Jews, or that the loss of
Jewish lives (but not of Arab lives!) entailed in a war of conquest
of such magnitude is more important than the conquest of the land,
but in normative Judaism one cannot claim that 'the Land of Israel',
in whatever borders, does not 'belong' to all the Jews. In May
1993, Ariel Sharon formally proposed in the Likud Convention that
Israel should adopt the 'Biblical borders' concept as its official
policy. There were rather few objections to this proposal, either
in the Likud or outside it, and all were cased on pragmaic grounds.
No one even asked Sharon where exactly are the Biblical borders
which he was urging that Israel should attain. Let us recall that
among those who call themselves Leninists there was no doubt that
history follows the principles laid out by Marx and Lenin. It
is not only the belief itself, however dogmatic, but the refusal
that it should ever be doubted, by thwarting open discussion,
which creates a totalitarian cast of mind. Israeli-Jewish society
and diaspora Jews who are leading 'Jewish lives' and organised
in purely Jewish organisations, can be said therefore to have
a strong streak of totalitarianism in their character.
However, an Israeli grand strategy, not based on the tenets of
'Jewish ideology', but based on purely strategic or imperial considerations
had also developed since the inception of the state. An authoriative
and lucid description of the principles governing such strategy
was given by General (Reserves) Shlomo Gazit, a former Military
Intelligence commander.-- According to Gazit,
-
"Israel's main task has not changed at all [since the demise
of the USSR] and it remains of crucial importance. The geographical
location of Israel at the centre of the Arab-Muslim Middle
East predestines Israel to be a devoted guardian of stability
in all the countries surrounding it. Its [role] is to protect
the existing regimes: to prevent or halt the processes of
radicalization, and to block the expansion of fundamentalist
religious zealtory.
For this purpose Israel will prevent changes occuring beyond
Israel's borders [which it] will regard as intolerable,
to the point of feeling compelled to use all its military
power for the sake of their prevention or eradication."
In other words, Israel aims at imposing a hegemony
on other Middle Eastern states. Needless to say, according to
Gazit, Israel has a benevolent concern for the stability of the
Arab regimes. In Gazit's view, by protecting Middle Eastern regimes,
Israel performs a vital service for 'the industrially advanced
states, all of which are keenly concerned with guaranteeing the
stability in the Middle East'. He argues that without Israel the
existing regimes of the region would have collapsed long ago and
that they remain in existence only because of Israeli threats.
While this view may be hypocritical, one should recall in such
contexts La Rochefoucault's maxim that 'hypocrisy is the tax which
wickedness pays to virtue'. Redemption of the Land is an attempt
to evade paying any such tax.
Needless to say, I also oppose root and branch the Israeli non-ideological
policies as they are so lucidly and correctly explained by Gazit.
At the same time, I recognize that the dangers of the policies
of Ben-Gurion of Sharon, motivated by 'Jewish ideology', are much
worse than merely imperial policies, however criminal. The results
of policies of other ideologically motivated regimes point in
the same direction. The existence of an important component of
Israeli policy, which is based on 'Jewish ideology', makes its
analysis politically imperative. This ideology is, in turn based
on the attitudes of historic Judaism to non-Jews, one of the main
themes of this book. Those attitudes necessarily influence many
Jews, consciously or unconciously. Our task here is to discuss
historic Judaism in real terms.
The influence on 'Jewish ideology' on many Jews will be stronger
the more it is hidden from public discussion. Such discussion
will, it is hoped, lead people take the same attitude towards
Jewish chauvinism and the contempt displayed by so many Jews towards
non-Jews (which will be documented below) as that commonly taken
towards antisemitism and all other forms of xenophobia, chauvinism
and racism. It is justly assumed that only the full exposition,
not only of antisemitism, but also of its historical roots, can
be the basis of struggle against it. Likewise I am assuming that
only the full exposition of Jewish chauvinism and religious fanaticism
can be the basis of struggle against those phenomena. This is
especially true today when, contrary to the situation prevailing
fifty or sixty years ago, the political influence of Jewish chauvinism
and religious fanaticism is much greater than that of antisemitism.
But there is also another important consideration. I strongly
believe that antisemitism and Jewish chauvinism can only be fought
simultaneously.
A Closed Utopia?
Until such attitudes are widely adopted, the actual
danger of Israeli policies based on 'Jewish ideology' remains
greater than the danger of policies based on purely strategic
considerations. The difference between the two kinds of policies
was well expressed by Hugh Trevor-Roper in his essay 'Sir Thomas
More and Utopia'
in which he termed them Platonic and Machiavellian:
-
"Machiavelli at least apologized for the methods which
he thought necessary in politics. He regretted the necessity
of force and fraud and did not call them by any other name.
But Plato and More sanctified them, provided that they were
used to sustain their own Utopian republics."
In a similiar way true believers in that Utopia
called the 'Jewish state', which will strive to achieve the 'Biblical
borders', are more dangerous than the grand strategists of Gazit's
type because their policies are being sanctified either by the
use of religion or, worse, by the use of secularized religious
principles which retaim absolute validity. While Gazit at least
sees a need to argue that the Israel diktat benefits the Arab
regimes, Ben-Gurion did not pretend that the re-establishment
of the kingdom of David and Solomon will benefit anybody except
the Jewish state.
Using the concepts of Platonism to analyse Israeli policies based
on 'Jewish ideology' should not seem strange. It was noticed by
several scholars, of whom the most important was Moses Hadas,
who claimed that the foundations of 'classical Judaism', that
is, of Judaism as it was established by talmudic sages, are based
on Platonic influences and especially on the image of Sparta as
it appears in Plato. According to Hadas, a crucial feature of
the Platonic political system, adopted by Judaism as early as
the Maccabean period (142-63 BC), was 'that every phase of human
conduct be subject to religious sanctions which are in fact to
be manipulated by the ruler'. There can be no better definition
of 'classical Judaism' and of the ways in which the rabbis manipulated
it than this Platonic definition. In particular, Hadas claims
that Judaism adopted what 'Plato himself summarized [as] the objectives
of his program', in the following well-known passage:
-
"The principle thing is that no one, man or woman, should
ever be without an officer set over him, and that none should
get the mental habit of taking any step, whether in earnest
or in jest, on his individual responsibility. In peace as
in war he must live always with his eyes on his superior
officer... In a word, we must train the mind not to even
consider acting as an invidual or know how to do it." (Laws,
942ab)
If the word 'rabbi' is substituted for 'an officer'
we will have a perfect image of classical Judaism. The latter
is still deeply influencing Israeli-Jewish society and determing
to a large extent the Israeli policies.
It was the above quoted passage which was chosen by Karl Popper
in The Open Society and Its Enemies as describing the essence
of 'a closed society'. Historical Judaism and its two successors,
Jewish Orthodoxy and Zionism, are both sworn enemies of the concept
of the open society as applied to Israel. A Jewish state, whether
based on its present Jewish ideology or, if it becomes even more
Jewish in character than it is now, on the principles of Jewish
Orthodoxy, cannot ever contain an open society. There are two
choices which face Israeli-Jewish society. It can become a fully
closed and warlike ghetto, a Jewish Sparta, supported by the labour
of Arab helots, kept in existence by its influence on the US political
establishment and by threats to use its nuclear power, or it can
try to become an open society. The second choice is dependent
on an honest examination of its Jewish past, on the admission
that Jewish chauvinism and exclusivism exist, and on an honest
examination of the attitudes of Judaism towards the non-Jews.
COPYRIGHT NOTICE:
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First
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7 6 5 4 3
Chapters 2, 3, 4 and 5 first appeared in the journal Khamsin
and
are reproduced with permission
Foreword copyright © 1994 Gore Vidal
Copyright © 1994 Israel Shahak
The right of Israel Shahak to be identified as the author of this
work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright,
Designs and Patents Act 1988
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the
British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Shahak, Israel.
Jewish history, Jewish religion: the weight of three
thousand
years/Israel Shahak
ll8pp. 22cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-7453-0818-X
1. Israel - Politics and government. 2. Orthodox Judaism
- Israel - Controversial literature. 3. Zionism -
Controversial literature. 4. Palestinian Arabs - Israel.
I. Title. II. Series.
D5102.95.S52 1994
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