Jewish History, Jewish Religion
The Weight of Three Thousand
Years
by Professor:
Israel Shahak
CHAPTER
6
Political Consequences
THE PERSISTENT ATTITUDES
of classical Judaism toward non-Jews strongly influence its followers,
Orthodox Jews and those who can be regarded as its continuators,
Zionists. Through the latter it also influences the policies of
the State of Israel. Since 1967, as Israel becomes more and more
'Jewish', so its policies are influenced more by Jewish ideological
considerations than by those of a coldly conceived imperial interest.
This ideological influence is not usually perceived by foreign
experts, who tend to ignore or downplay the influence of the Jewish
religion on Israeli policies. This explains why many of their
predictions are incorrect.
In fact, more Israeli government
crises are caused by religious reasons, often trivial, than by
any other cause. The space devoted by the Hebrew press to discussion
of the constantly occurring quarrels between the various religious
groups, or between the religious and the secular, is greater than
that given any other subject, except in times of war or of security-related
tension. At the time of writing, early August 1993, some topics
of major interest to readers of the Hebrew press are: whether
soldiers killed in action who are sons of non-Jewish mothers will
be buried in a segregated area in Israeli military cemeteries;
whether Jewish religious burial associations, who have a monopoly
over the burial of all Jews except kibbutz members, will be allowed
to continue their custom of circumcising the corpses of non-circumcised
Jews before burying them (and without asking the family's permission);
whether the import of non-kosher meat to Israel, banned unofficially
since the establishment of the state, will be allowed or banned
by law. There are many more issues of this kind which are of a
much greater interest to the Israeli- Jewish public than, let
us say, the negotiations with the Palestinians and Syria.
The attempts made by a few Israeli
politicians to ignore the factors of 'Jewish ideology' in favor
of purely imperial interests have led to disastrous results. In
early 1974, after its partial defeat in the Yom Kippur War, Israel
had a vital interest in stopping the renewed influence of the
PLO, which had not yet been recognized by the Arab states as the
solely legitimate representative of the Palestinians. The Israeli
government conceived of a plan to support Jordanian influence
in the West Bank, which was quite considerable at the time. When
King Hussein was asked for his support, he demanded a visible
quid pro quo. It was arranged that his chief West Bank supporter,
Sheikh Jabri of Hebron, who ruled the southern part of the West
Bank with an iron fist and with approval of then Defense minister
Moshe Dayan, would give a party for the region's notables in the
courtyard of his palatial residence in Hebron. The party, in honor
of the king's birthday, would feature the public display of Jordanian
flags and would begin a pro-Jordanian campaign. But the religious
settlers in the nearby Kiryat-Arba, who were only a handful at
the time, heard about the plan and threatened Prime Minister Golda
Meir and Dayan with vigorous protests since, as they put it, displaying
a flag of a 'non-Jewish state' within the Land of Israel contradicts
the sacred principle which states that this land 'belongs' only
to Jews. Since this principle is accepted by all zionists, the
government had to bow to their demands and order Sheikh Jabri
not to display any Jordanian flags. Thereupon Jabri, who was deeply
humiliated, canceled the party and, at the Fez meeting of the
Arab League which occurred soon after, King Hussein voted to recognize
the PLO as the sole representative of the Palestinians. For the
bulk of Israeli-Jewish public the current negotiations about 'autonomy'
are likewise influenced more by such Jewish ideological considerations
than by any others.
The conclusion from this consideration
of Israeli policies, supported by an analysis of classical Judaism,
must be that analyses of Israeli policy-making which do not emphasize
the importance of its unique character as a 'Jewish state' must
be mistaken. In particular, the facile comparison of Israel to
other cases of Western imperialism or to settler states, is incorrect.
During apartheid, the land of South Africa was officially divided
into 87 per cent which 'belonged' to the whites and 13 per cent
which was said officially to 'belong' to the Blacks. In addition,
officially sovereign states, embodied with all the symbols of
sovereignty, the so-called Bantustans, were established. But 'Jewish
ideology' demands that no part of the Land of Israel can be recognized
as 'belonging' to non-Jews and that 110 signs of sovereignty,
such as Jordanian flags, can be officially allowed to be displayed.
The principle of Redemption of the Land demands that ideally all
the land, and not merely, say, 87 per cent, will in time be 'redeemed',
that is, become owned by Jews. 'Jewish ideology prohibits that
very convenient principle of imperialism, already known to Romans
and followed by so many secular empires, and best formulated by
Lord Cromer: 'We do not govern Egypt, we govern the governors
of Egypt.' Jewish ideology forbids such recognition; it also forbids
a seemingly respectful attitude to any 'non-Jewish governors'
within the Land of Israel. The entire apparatus of client kings,
sultans, maharajas and chiefs or, in more modern times, of dependent
dictators, so convenient in other cases of imperial hegemony,
cannot be used by Israel within the area considered part of the
Land of Israel. Hence the fears, commonly expressed by Palestinians,
of being offered a 'Bantustan' are totally groundless. Only if
numerous Jewish lives are lost in war, as happened both in 1973
and in the 1983-5 war aftermath in Lebanon, is an Israeli retreat
conceivable since it can be justified by the principle that the
sanctity of Jewish life is more important than other considerations.
What is not possible, as long as Israel remains a 'Jewish state',
is the Israeli grant of a fake, but nevertheless symbolically
real sovereignty, or even of real autonomy, to non-Jews within
the Land of Israel for merely political reasons. Israel, like
some other countries, is an exclusivist state, but Israeli exclusivism
is peculiar to itself.
In addition to Israeli policies
it may be surmised that the 'Jewish ideology' influences also
a significant part, maybe a majority, of the diaspora Jews. While
the actual implementation of Jewish ideology depends on Israel
being strong, this in turn depends to a considerable extent on
the support which diaspora Jews, particularly US Jews, give to
Israel. The image of the diaspora Jews and their attitudes to
non-Jews, is quite different from the attitudes of classical Judaism,
as described above. This discrepancy is most obvious in English-speaking
countries, where the greatest falsifications of Judaism regularly
occur. The situation is worst in the USA and Canada, the two states
whose support for Israeli policies, including policies which most
glaringly contradict the basic human rights of non-Jews, is strongest.
US support for Israel, when considered
not in abstract but in concrete detail, cannot be adequately explained
only as a result of American imperial interests. The strong influence
wielded by the organized Jewish community in the USA in support
of all Israeli policies must also be taken into account in order
to explain the Middle East policies of American Administrations.
This phenomenon is even more noticeable in the case of Canada,
whose Middle Eastern interests cannot be considered as important,
but whose loyal dedication to Israel is even greater than that
of the USA In both countries (and also in France, Britain and
many other states) Jewish organizations support Israel with about
the same loyalty which communist parties accorded to the USSR
for so long. Also, many Jews who appear to be active in defending
human rights and who adopt non-conformist views on other issues
do, in cases affecting Israel, display a remarkable degree of
totalitarianism and are in the forefront of the defense of all
Israeli policies. It is well known in Israel that the chauvinism
and fanaticism in supporting Israel displayed by organized diaspora
Jews is much greater (especially since 1967) than the chauvinism
shown by an average Israeli Jew. This fanaticism is especially
marked in Canada and the USA but because of the incomparably greater
political importance of the USA, I will concentrate on the latter.
It should, however, be noted that we also find Jews whose views
of Israeli policies are not different from those held by the rest
of the society (with due regard to the factors of geography, income,
social position and so on).
Why should some American Jews
display chauvinism, some-times extreme, and others not? We should
begin by observing the social and therefore also the political
importance of the Jewish organizations which are of an exclusive
nature: they admit no non-Jews on principle. (This exclusivism
is in amusing contrast with their hunt to condemn the most obscure
non-Jewish club which refuses to admit Jews.) Those who can be
called 'organized Jews', and who spend most of their time outside
work hours mostly in the company of other Jews, can be presumed
to uphold Jewish exclusivism and to preserve the attitudes of
the classical Judaism to non-Jews. Under present circumstances
they cannot openly express these attitudes toward non-Jews in
the USA where non-Jews constitute more than 97 per cent of the
population. They compensate for this by ex- pressing their real
attitudes in their support of the 'Jewish state' and the treatment
it metes to the non-Jews of the Middle East.
How else can we explain the enthusiasm
displayed by so many American rabbis in support of, let us say,
Martin Luther King, compared with their lack of support for the
rights of Palestinians, even for their individual human rights?
How else can we explain the glaring contradiction between the
attitudes of classical Judaism toward non-Jews, which include
the rule that their lives should not be saved except for the sake
of Jewish interest, with the support of the US rabbis and organized
Jews for the rights of the Blacks? After all, Martin Luther King
and the majority of American Blacks are non-Jews. Even if only
the conservative and Orthodox Jews, who together constitute the
majority of organized American Jews, are considered to hold such
opinions about the non-Jews, the other part of organized US Jewry,
the Reform, had never opposed them, and, in my view, show themselves
to be quite influenced by them.
Actually the explanation of this
apparent contradiction is easy. It should be recalled that Judaism,
especially in its classical form, is totalitarian in nature. The
behavior of supporters of other totalitarian ideologies of our
times was not different from that of the organized American Jews.
Stalin and his supporters never tired of condemning the discrimination
against the American or the South African Blacks, especially in
the midst of the worst crimes committed within the USSR. The South
African apartheid regime was tireless in its denunciations of
the violations of human rights committed either by communist or
by other African regimes, and so were its supporters in other
countries. Many similar examples can be given. The support of
democracy or of human rights is there- fore meaningless or even
harmful and deceitful when it does not begin with self-critique
and with support of human rights when they are violated by one's
own group. Any support of human rights in general by a Jew which
does not include the support of human rights of non-Jews whose
rights are being violated by the 'Jewish state' is as deceitful
as the support of human rights by a Stalinist. The apparent enthusiasm
displayed by American rabbis or by the Jewish organizations in
the USA during the 1950s and the 1960s in support of the Blacks
in the South, was motivated only by considerations of Jewish self-interest,
just as was the communist support for the same Blacks. Its purpose
in both cases was to try to capture the Black community politically,
in the Jewish case to an unthinking support of Israeli policies
in the Middle East.
Therefore, the real test facing both Israeli and
diaspora Jews is the test of their self-criticism which must include
the critique of the Jewish past. The most important part of such
a critique must be detailed and honest confrontation of the Jewish
attitude to non-Jews. This is what many Jews justly demand from
non-Jews: to confront their own past and so become aware of the
discrimination and persecutions inflicted on the Jews. In the
last 40 years the number of non-Jews killed by Jews is by far
greater than the number of the Jews killed by non-Jews. The extent
of the persecution and discrimination against non-Jews inflicted
by the 'Jewish state' with the support of organized diaspora Jews
is also enormously greater than the suffering inflicted on Jews
by regimes hostile to the~ Although the struggle against antisemitism
(and of all other forms of racism) should never cease, the struggle
against Jewish chauvinism and exclusivism, which must include
a critique of classical Judaism, is now of equal or greater importance.
COPYRIGHT NOTICE:
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First
published 1994 by Pluto Press
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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
956.94-dc20 94-1596
CIP
ISBN 0 7453 0818 X hardback
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