The new citizenship law recently proposed by the Government once again raises the question of why Israel should define itself as a Jewish state and what this definition means in the first place.
According to the proposed law, naturalized citizens will have to pledge their allegiance to Israel as a “Jewish and democratic state.” Imagine if France would pass a law stating that France is a French state, if Japan would pass a law stating that Japan is a Japanese state, or if Sweden would pass a law stating that Sweden is a Swedish state. This would sound both silly and unnecessary. Far from being ridiculed for stating the obvious, however, Israel is being taken to task for stating the odious.
When the United Nations Special Committee on Palestine (UNSCOP) recommended in September 1947 that the British Mandate in Palestine be divided between a Jewish state for the Jews and an Arab state for the Arabs, everyone understood that this meant each nation would have its own nation-state (though many opposed the idea). In May 1948, Israel’s Declaration of Independence clearly proclaimed the establishment of a “Jewish state” and specified that this state would both be the nation-state of the Jewish people and respect the civil rights of the country’s non-Jewish minorities.
In recent years, the very legitimacy of Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people has been under attack. Sophisticated people realize that they cannot logically question the legitimacy of the Jewish nation-state without doing the same for every nation-state (indeed, most countries in the world today are nation-states). Hence their claim (itself stated in the PLO charter and recently popularized by Prof. Shlomo Sand), that the Jews do not constitute a nation but only a religion, and thus that a Jewish state is not a nation-state but a religious state. Therefore, its legitimacy can be challenged without questioning the principle of self-determination.
But who are those people to decide whether or not the Jews constitute a nation? Scholars have been debating for at least a couple of centuries about what makes a nation a nation (Ernest Renan called it “a soul, a spiritual principle”). In recent years, many attempts have been made to “deconstruct” the very concept of national identity (Benedict Anderson comes to mind). But the bottom line is that if people define themselves as a nation and are ready to fight in order to preserve their national independence or identity (whether this identity is real or “imagined” as Anderson would put it), then they obviously do constitute a nation.
How people define their national identity is also their own business. Japan’s definition is ethnic, while America’s is ideological, and France’s is cultural (though this is a hotly debated issue in France). Moreover, religion is central to the national identity of many nations. Catholicism is intrinsically linked to the national identity of Poland, Ireland, and Italy. Shinto is indissociable from Japan. The Queen of England is both Head of State and Head of the Anglican Church. Afghanistan, Iran, Mauritania and Pakistan, are all “Islamic Republics.” Surely, the fact that there is a religious dimension to the Jewish definition of national identity is no exception.
Instead of saying that Judaism does indeed constitute part of Jewish identity and that there is nothing wrong with that, many Israelis feel the need to be apologetic about the religious component of Jewish national identity and therefore suggest redefining this identity in purely secular terms. Such is the essence of Amnon Rubinstein’s recent article in Azure (“The Curious Case of Jewish Democracy,” Azure 41, Summer 2010). He suggests a purely “national-cultural reinterpretation” of Jewish identity.
Though a professed liberal, Rubinstein is suggesting something illiberal: that the state should choose, institutionalize and favor one specific definition of national identity despite the will of many citizens. A true liberal, however, would say that it is not the state’s business to define and impose a definition of its national identity over all its citizens.
Rubinstein, however, has the merit of addressing the core issue: can and should the Jews keep their national identity and rights while abandoning the traditional Jewish definition of nationhood? In the Biblical narrative, Jewish faith is intrinsically connected to Jewish identity and nationhood. Until Emancipation, Jews defined their identity in purely religious terms. Zionism tried to undo that link by redefining Jewish identity based on territory, language, and history. The problem is that it is the non-Jews who won’t take it.
The same way that Jews, as individuals, were not left alone in Europe after assimilating, Israel, as a state, was never left alone when it was established as a secular nation-state. No matter how hard the Jews tried to stop being Jewish in Europe, they were still perceived and reviled as such by the gentiles. And no matter how secular Israel was when it was established, it was opposed by the Vatican and by the Muslim world on religious grounds. Jewish “rationality” won’t rid the world of its irrationality. Even if Israel were to officially declare itself a purely secular nation-state and retreat to the armistice lines of 1949, it would still be reviled and hated (as it was before 1967) by a plethora of zealots –from devout Muslims to leftist Europeans.
This is a point that Rubinstein, with all his brilliance, does not seem to get.
It says in the Book of Deuteronomy: "And among those peoples, you shall not find any rest for the sole of your foot." Rabbi Yitzhak Arama writes in his book Akedat Yitzhak that this verse teaches us that the Jews will never be able to completely assimilate among the nations, and will never be able to forget who they are. No matter how hard Jews try to forget and to be forgotten, the nations will always remind them that they are Jewish. The Midrash (Bereshit Rabah) says there is a connection between the above verse and the one in Genesis describing the return of the dove to Noah's Arch ("And the dove did not find any rest for the sole of her foot, so she came back to the ark").
The Midrash teaches us that we can turn the curse of "There shall be no rest for the sole of your foot" into a blessing. For if the Jews had found a rest for the sole of their foot in Exile, they would never have come back to the Ark, both physically and spiritually.
The Jews came back to the ark physically. Only when they do so spiritually as well will they not only be left alone, but also be respected and admired.
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6 comments:
Drop this nonsense of Israel being a "democratic state" - which is a sop to Jew-hating world opinion - and define Israel as a Jewish State. And this has the virtue of forcing the Arabs to decide if they want to remain in it. If it gets rid of them voluntarily, all the better.
Israel was meant as the homeland of the Jewish people. It was never meant to be shared with any one else. Of course the world will still hate Israel regardless but Jewish sovereignty will be grudgingly respected.
There should never be any need for the Jew to apologize for it.
UN Resolution 181 of 1947 unambiguously calls what was to become Israel a year later “The Jewish State” (with a protected Arab minority).
In recent years, the concept of “The Jewish State” has suffered in Western public opinion for a variety of reasons – some nefarious, but mostly because of a distrust of mixing religion and government.
In the process of negotiating with the Palestinians, it has become clear that this issue is as core to Israel as West Bank settlements are to the Palestinians, but Israel has done a remarkably bad job of articulating this message so that it resonates with public opinion.
And this half-cooked gesture politics will only make matters worse.
Firstly, it doesn’t impact the Israeli Arabs who are already citizens – who are really the object of the populist anger in Israel.
Second, it just exacerbates Israel’s perennial problem of defining: Who is a Jew? And what does Jewish mean?
Third, if anyone thinks this will become the basis for deporting 2.5 million West Bank Palestinians they are in fantasy land.
So, what does this draft legislation actually accomplish? Well, nothing substantive beyond the gesture. And I predict that, ironically, the people who will be affected by this when it backfires will be the natural constituents of Yisrael Beiteinu.
Now, in regard to your soliloquy about national identity, I observe that while the UK does have an established religion; and while the monarch is the nominal head of both Church and State, their naturalization oath does not reference religion or ethnicity:
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Oath of allegiance
I (name) swear by Almighty God that on becoming a British citizen, I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second, her Heirs and Successors, according to law.
Or, Affirmation of allegiance:
I (name) do solemnly, sincerely and truly declare and affirm that on becoming a British citizen, I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second, her Heirs and Successors, according to law.
And Pledge
I will give my loyalty to the United Kingdom and respect its rights and freedoms. I will uphold its democratic values. I will observe its laws faithfully and fulfil my duties and obligations as a British citizen.
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Israel has something similar already.
UN Resolution 181 of 1947 unambiguously calls what was to become Israel a year later “The Jewish State” (with a protected Arab minority). In recent years, the concept of “The Jewish State” has suffered in Western public opinion for a variety of reasons – some nefarious, but mostly because of a distrust of mixing religion and government.
In the process of negotiating with the Palestinians, it has become clear that this issue is as core to Israel as West Bank settlements are to the Palestinians, but Israel has done a remarkably bad job of articulating this message so that it resonates with public opinion. And this half-cooked gesture politics will only make matters worse.
Firstly, it doesn’t impact the Israeli Arabs who are already citizens – who are really the object of the populist anger in Israel. Second, it just exacerbates Israel’s perennial problem of defining: Who is a Jew & what does Jewish mean? Third, if anyone thinks this will become the basis for deporting 2.5 million West Bank Palestinians they are in fantasy land.
So, what does this draft legislation actually accomplish? Well, nothing substantive beyond the gesture. And I predict that, ironically, the people who will be affected by this when it backfires will be the natural constituents of Yisrael Beiteinu.
As far as I know, Jews tend to define themselves as a Nation until the emancipation.
They were talking about the Jewish Nation, the Spanish Portughese Nation.
It's only by the Emancipation, Napoleon's Consistoire that has asked Jews to abandon the National dimension of their Jewish Identity, in other words, their Legal/Juridictionnal independance.
This is what happened and drove succesfully Jews to assimilation.
Today Jews from France are still living in this identity of hearth, not of fact, then an identity of appearance, as the Beth Din is not effective as not legal, not used, not legitimacy to power and no legitimacy at all but to alieante Jewish devoted divorced women.
So now that the strategy has been set, no matter how clumsy its implementation, Israel must put all the wood behind one arrow; as the Palestinians have done with the settlement issue.
It seems to me that the key points are:
UN Resolution 181 in Nov 1947 explicitly called for the partition of Palestine into independent Arab and Jewish states. 63 years later the Palestinians and the Arab world continue to reject this principle which is as crux a final issue as ensuring the eventual Palestinian state has contiguous land mass and a viable geographical linkage to Gaza.
There is a deal to be had, but it requires the partition of the land into 2 viable independent states, each with a minority population whose rights are protected de-jure and de-facto: A Palestinian State and a Jewish State. Not a Palestinian State and a Jewish/Palestinian State.
It is standard operating procedure for negotiators to bank wins and then go back for more. If Israel were to agree to an agreement with the Palestinians without this issue being explicitly addressed, the Palestinians will simply come back as members of the UN and signators of the ICC demanding the “right of return” which would then set in motion the undoing of The Jewish State.
Therefore, the final status agreement must include recognition of Israel as The Jewish State and renouncing any further claims or “right of return” to the Jewish state beyond whatever is negotiated in the agreement with the Palestinians.
All the wood behind one arrow!
let me first say that my perspective is "non-jewish american", and that i am still forming my understanding of this complicated conflict.
i see how it would appear to most that a formal recognition of israel as a jewish state makes perfect sense, an obvious request. why shouldn't palestine concede that, right?
but given the history of israel, it's birth, the warring, and the "negotiations" by which palestinians have lost so much, and given that war and "negotiations" are still as fierce as ever today, its unfair for palestine to have to make this concession now. it's an insult, not to mention a big step toward the solidification of an all around unfair deal for palestine.
i wonder if netanyahu is not fully aware of this perceived obviousness on the part of the international community for the demand of a "jewish state" recognition. Is this is a calculated move at a time when international perceptions of israel are sharply declining, as a result of atrocities such as west bank settlements and the flotilla murders?
what i mean is that netanyahu must know he cannot at this moment demand something more concrete, like lifting the settlement freeze. the more abstract demand for the recognition of a jewish state seems more palatable to the average american, but it is still just as much a gain for israel. it's a legitimization and a "locking in" of israel's past unfair bargaining. and what is palestine getting in return for it, really? a temporary 1 or 2 month settlement freeze extension? bad deal.
do you see how israel appears to be a bully in this situation? they attack and encroach, then demand recognition and legitimization in return for a temporary, tenuous agreement to abate encroachment. that is neither sensible nor obvious. It is further insult, and should be viewed as such.
let israel offer a permanent end to settlements, return to a much older agreement on borders, then apologize for its wrongdoings, and finally ask for recognition as a jewish state. that sounds like a good deal to me. if the conversation went more along those lines, i think we would have a real peace talk happening.
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