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Wed Mar 09, 2011 5:03 am Why do we need a Jewish state anyway? - By Gil Troy
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Why do we need a Jewish state anyway?
By Gil Troy
Jerusalem Post
March 8, 2011
Newsflash: Theodor Herzl's Europe is gone. Most Jews today live in welcoming, open, civil societies like the US and Canada.
By all indications, Israel Apartheid Week, that intellectual and ideological abomination I call Anti-Israel Week, is a flop.
Apartheid did not mean keeping peoples apart; it separated individuals by race. IAW's institutional infrastructure is as shoddy as its intellectual foundations. Scattered, poorly-attended events by noname political hacks take on global pretensions because a website lists about 60 locations where these events take place in March. Just as you cannot transpose apartheid's color-obsessed racism to the national conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, IAW represents marginal local events, not a mass movement.
Still, as Rahm Emanuel taught, never waste a crisis – or the appearance of one – especially because spreading big lies against Israel has become a global pasttime. But while mocking IAW's failure, and condemning Palestinians' political culture for not identifying this apartheid lie and delegitimization business as obstacles to peace, we need positive messages. Let's ask the real question behind today's Zionist questioning – why do we need a Jewish state, anyway?
Newsflash: Theodor Herzl's Europe is gone. Most Jews today live in welcoming, open, civil societies like the US and Canada. A modern Zionism reacting to anti-Semitism is old-fashioned. Today, even in France, Jew haters like designer John Galliano are disgraced and fired, not lionized.
This good news feeds a growing split among Jews. For Israeli Jews, a Jewish state encourages the natural expression of the Jewish people's right to self-determination. The French have France, Germans have Germany, the Dutch have the Netherlands, Jews have Israel. As Daniel Patrick Moynihan said, Zionism began "as nothing more than the assertion that the Jews were a people and had the same rights to nationhood that other such people were then asserting."
The Jewish state's Jewishness is also normal. Once we understand that Judaism involves a national identity and not just a religious identity, a Jewish state can be democratic yet not theocratic. Such national-cultural expression is not unique to Israel. In most countries the majority culture enjoys the right to shape the public character, yet democratic countries nevertheless protect minorities' full political and civic rights. The UK might have a cross on its flag and a national church at its collective heart, the US has "In God We Trust" on its currency and a national holiday on Christmas, yet atheists and non- Christians enjoy full civil rights in both.
But why should happy American Jews, who have never visited Israel and will never live there, care about a Jewish state; what's in it for them?
TO ANSWER that question, we must define what Judaism is, noting the central assumption shaping the previous paragraphs – that Jews are a people. Judaism is not just a religion. Years ago, my teacher Dr. Steve Copeland compared Judaism to an Oreo cookie – just as the Oreo requires both cream and cookie parts, Judaism entails overlapping religious and national parts.
Is Passover a holiday of religious redemption or national liberation? "Yes." Is the Western Wall a holy religious site or a national historical site? Again, "yes."
Belonging to a people, not just a religion, fills our identity. It roots us in the sweep of history, binds us to a community, connects us to a rich values conversation, ties us to national moments, making us a part of something bigger than our selves. In a world where for most Westerners the physical basics – food, clothing, shelter – are covered, but where we often feel emotionally, ideologically, existentially starved, naked and exposed, we are lucky to have this peoplehood treasure trove.
I am not arrogant enough to claim that Jewish stories, ethics, ideas or ideals are the best; nor am I foolish enough to renounce these wonderful frameworks that deepen my life and my family life – and belong to us.
If you like peoplehood, you should love statehood. "The essence of the Zionist argument is that to express a national identity to its fullest, territory is basic," Prof. Ruth Gavison teaches. "You need a majority culture, not just a minority culture where you are in constant conversation with the host culture."
Especially for nonreligious Jews, but then again, especially for religious Jews, having a national Jewish culture enhances, enriches, encourages and ennobles Jewish identity.
Just this week, another study showed that camps offering 24/7 Judaism build Jewish identity. Having a Jewish state takes 24/7 Judaism to a higher, more natural level, living in Jewish space, not just Jewish time, with a full-time symphony of Jewish sounds, smells, tastes, events, memories, associations, connections, values and dreams. No state is perfect, but our core values can improve it. While Israelis define different forms of political Zionism, Diaspora Jews should cultivate identity Zionism based on four Bs – Being Jewish provides a sense of Belonging, which helps in Becoming a better, more idealistic, more fulfilled person through our home Base.
Any homeland places an individual into a lifelong color movie rather than an occasional black-and-white snapshot; our homeland is consecrated by history. Just as in antiquing a 4,000-year-old jug is infinitely more precious than a four-day-old cup, just as in baseball a hitting streak becomes exponentially more significant with each new plateau, our relationship with Israel is magnified by its age, and by our many-layered connections to this place.
Herzl was right. In what he called the altneuland, old-new land, we can enjoy the best of today and yesterday, creating a dynamic modern identity anchored in tradition. Such dynamism should be embraced and celebrated, which is why our holidays use memories to affirm values, and why we would never devote a week to denigrating others.
The writer is professor of history at McGill University in Montreal, a Shalom Hartman research fellow in Jerusalem and the author of Why I Am a Zionist: Israel, Jewish Identity and the Challenges of Today and The Reagan Revolution: A Very Short Introduction. giltroy@gmail.com
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