Like many American Jews in the last decade, I first travelled to Israel through the Birthright (Taglit) programme.
In just ten days, the goals of Taglit had been met as far as I was
concerned. Israel’s importance in my life had shifted from a country we
always discussed in the High Holidays’ imaginary roughly the size of New
Jersey to the beacon of pan-nationalist Jewish sentiment.
How could I not be moved by the stories of oppression and victory? The Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum? Or even the climb up Massada
where the guide recounts the tale of how Jewish extremist rebels, known
as the Sicarii, overcame the Roman garrison by committing mass suicide
rather than becoming enslaved to those that had destroyed the Second
Temple in 70 CE. Upon my return to my college campus, Israel advocacy
became a top priority winning me even a few more trips to Israel with
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
I was able to meet analysts, professors, Israeli MPs and even Michael
Oren, who now holds the key office of Israel’s Washington ambassador.
It wasn’t until a few years ago when I lived in Israel that I
realised that the “only democracy in the Middle East” I had fought to
uphold already faced much more of a touch-and-go reality. Palestinian
Israelis were second-class citizens. They received a bottom-tier
education in state schools and had difficulty accessing basic goods and
services. History books were filled with historical revisionism that
negated any narrative about the foundation of the state of Israel that
was not Zionist. The status quo and locked peace process was never our
fault nor did we bear any responsibility. Everything became about “us”
versus “them”. And whilst I understood genuine concerns about another
intifada, it was then that it became crystal clear to me that Israelis
were being short-changed by their government on the type of egalitarian
country those kibbutzniks fought to build.
In the three-year period between the 2006 war with Hezbollah and
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s return to the office of Prime
Minister in 2009, the country operated in complete schizophrenia. On one
hand, Noam and Aviva Shalit held countless rallies to bring their son
Gilad Shalit home on Rabin Square as liberal Israelis condemned their
government’s uselessness. While on the other, settlement building
binged, American Jewish donors threatened to take away the funding from Ben Gurion University
if professors like Neve Gordon didn’t keep quiet about divestment and
Israel’s religious high court pushed to have more weight than the
Supreme Court.
It was obvious to me, as well as my journalist cronies living in
Israel at the time, that the tension could not go on forever. After all,
two-way democracies don’t really exist. The belief that you can only
reap the benefits of equality if you are actually “just like me and
agree with me” is incongruous with a pluralistic society that
establishes checks and balances by way of dissent.
And while we did foresee a clash between a right infused with
religious Zionist (and racist) ideals and a more moderate Israeli
society on the fence about its future, we hoped, or at least I did, that
an increasingly globalised world would stop these precipitating
measures. There was no way a modern country would give up years of
working to solidify democratic institutions in order to maintain
hegemony at the cost of recidivist policies.
Boy, was I wrong.
As Tobias Buck explains in his Financial Times article, three pieces of contentious legislation have passed the Knesset with a few more bills on their way.
“The first is the so-called Nakba Law, banning any state-funded
entity – including schools and theatres – from commemorating the Nakba,
or catastrophe. The term is central to the Palestinian understanding of
recent history: it refers to the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, when hundreds of
thousands of their ancestors were expelled or fled from advancing
Israeli troops.
Critics say the ban is a blatant violation of freedom of speech –
as is the so-called Boycott Law, passed earlier this year. It
introduces a long list of penalties for any Israeli who advocates an
academic, cultural or economic boycott of Israel, including the Jewish
settlements that, contrary to international law, exist in the occupied
Palestinian territories.
A third contentious law again takes aim at Israel’s Arab
minority, which accounts for more than 20 per cent of the population. It
allows small rural communities to have so-called admission committees
to scrutinise potential residents and reject them if they are deemed not
to fit in. The law comes in response to a 16-year campaign by an Arab
family, the Qadans, who were denied permission to buy a property in
Katzir, a Jewish community in Galilee. The community was finally ordered
to let them in, thanks to a ruling by the high court. The new law
circumvents the judges…
…One widely debated bill seeks to clamp down on foreign
government donations to Israeli human rights groups and NGOs that
criticise the government and army; another calls for a massive increase
in damages that newspapers would have to pay in libel cases. It has been
denounced by the press as an attempt to silence critical reporting”.
These measures have even raised the eyebrow of the Anti Defamation
League’s Abraham Foxman. Known for his unequivocal stance with Israel,
Foxman wrote in the Huffington Post
last month that these laws would hurt Israel perception abroad “as
defending democratic values are crucial to Israel’s good name”.
I understood one day there would be a bifurcated path; on one side
there would be the road to consolidating a racist state made for
like-minded people that share your ideals, and on the other the
democracy that political leaders on opposite ends of the spectrum, Rabin
and Begin praised. Unfortunately, it seems like they’ve chosen to go
with the former.
As Hagai El-Ad, the director of the Association for Civil Rights in
Israel said, the future is in the hands of voters. “Eventually, if the
vast majority of Israelis do not want democracy, they will get what they
want”, he said.
And as a diaspora American Jew, that is an Israel I cannot stand to defend.
No comments:
Post a Comment