Zionist self hatred = Anti-semitism against Arabs

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Zionist self hatred = Anti-semitism against Arabs
chachi
10/07/00 at 21:47:54
ZIONIST ANTI-SEMITISM (1)
 

 By Les Levidow
 
  Zionism has always purported to be the prime or ultimate protector
of Jews from anti-Semitism. The proposed solution has been mass emigration
to what the Zionist's term Eretz "Israel", ('the Land of "Israel"'), a
term which means possession of the region for the Jews; this territorial
notion corresponds to Biblical myths rather than to any clear geographical
boundaries. The emigration itself has been termed aliyah ('ascent'). The
term originally described Jews' pilgrimage to Palestine as a duty of Orthodox
Judaism. Zionism appropriated the term for secular-settler purposes:
Through Aliyah, Diaspora Jews regarded as mere 'human dust' elevate
themselves to the status of human beings. As "Israeli" citizens, the Jews
claim their rightful place as 'nation among (European) nations'. Many critics
have shown how advocacy of this solution has undermined any struggle against anti-Semitism. Some critics have even shown how Zionist leaders have collaborated
with anti-Semitic persecutors for the sake of that aliyah (as in Nazi Germany),
or for the sake of "Israel's" arms sales (as during the Argentinean junta).
This essay takes the argument further, to the cultural field, by arguing
that the Zionist mission involved suppressing or denying all Jewish identities
other than the 'New Jew' who conquers Palestine. In practice, this has
meant that: *  Zionist culture 'assimilated' European anti-Semitism
from the very start; * the State of "Israel" eventually extended that discrimination
to Oriental Jews, seen as a Jewish-Arab (or 'Levantine') threat, within
a wider framework of Western colonial racism; * the anti-Arab racism endemic
to Zionism incorporates aspects of European anti-Semitism; and * Zionist
paranoia towards Palestinians expresses internal anxieties about the disintegration
of Jewish identities which Zionism itself has helped to destroy. 'Assimilating' anti-Semitism as largely or potentially assimilated Jews, the early Zionists
of Western Europe came to doubt the possibility - or even desirability
- of their full assimilation, as they encountered prejudice and barriers.
They came to accept anti-Semitic racial concepts of the Jews as inherently
incapable of integrating into the Western nations as full citizens. This
fatalism was expressed by Doctor Leo Pinsker, with a suitable medical metaphor,
when he declared that 'Judeo-phobia is a disease; and, as a congenital
disease, it is incurable' (in Hertzberg, 1966). Early Zionists also accepted
- implicitly or explicitly - prevalent stereotypes of backwards and/or
subversive East European Jews, whose migration to Western Europe (or the
USA) they regarded as a threat to their own hard-won social status. This
perceived threat acted as a motive for affluent Jews in Western Europe
to channel the migration of East European Jews elsewhere. Moreover, many
Zionists perceived their own interests as coinciding with the domestic
interests of Europe's imperial rulers. When Theodor Herzl lobbied the Tsar's
Minister of Interior, who had been responsible for anti-Semitic pogroms,
Herzl argued that Zionism would weaken the revolutionary movement in Russia.
At the same time, Zionists justified themselves in terms of uplifting the
backward East European Jews. Moses Hess, describing the economic structure
of East European Jewry as 'parasitic', described the future Jewish state
as 'the basis on which European Jewry will be able to climb out of the
dustbins' (quoted in Ralevi, p.153). The alliance which Zionism sought
with European imperialism arose from the cultural chasm which they perceived
between Western and Eastern Jews. Indeed, locating their solution in a
Jewish state based on European models, Zionist leaders regarded the Eastern
European Jews' culture as an obstacle. David Ben-Gurion referred disparagingly
to their 'Diaspora mentality' and 'Jewish cosmopolitanism'. With the rise
of fascism in the 1930s, the term 'cruel Zionism' described those who justified
sacrificing the many-especially East European Jews - for the sake of the
few who would establish a Jewish state. Chaim Weizmann (1937) promoted
such a mentality with his poetic flair: The old ones will pass; they will
bear their fate, or they will not. They were dust, economic and moral dust
in a cruel world... Thus, although Zionism arose in response to anti-Semitism,
it did so by assimilating crucial elements of anti-Semitism, while appropriating
the religious connotations of 'human dust' in racist terms. Zionism defined
a secular Jewishness negatively, in terms of the Jews' eternal persecution
by anti-Semitism, seen as the world's main evil, and eventually epitomised
by the Arabs. Just as this ideology saw anti-Semitism as a normal, expected
reaction to the presence of Jews out of place in the Diaspora, so it saw
the Jewish state as fulfilling the normal division of the world's territorial
spaces according to ethnically defined national groups. [Emphasis - E.D.]
Moreover, it incorporated anti-Semitic myths of the Jews as defined by
race or language, and turned these into counter-myths defining the Jewish nation that needed to be built (see Halevi, chapters 5-6). Within this
framework, racist distinctions among Jews were extended into Palestine
itself, where the Zionist movement sought to replace immigrants' Yiddish
culture with a literally fabricated one. As Amos Oz ["Israeli" author]
describes the state's acculturation mission: Even new lullabies and new
'ancient legends' which were synthesised by eager writers.. Folk song and
dances that require the officially trained guides who.... are teaching
the folk how to sing and dance properly! (translated in Bresheeth, p.130
Jewish Arab threat). Shortly after the state of "Israel" was created, the
task of Zionising European immigrants became overshadowed by the 'problem'
of the Oriental Jews. Nearly two million "Israelis", who now constitute
a majority of the country's population, were culturally Arabs in all but
religion; indeed, they were Arab Jews in all but name. The Zionist project
necessarily fractured that reality into two opposed identities - Arab versus Jew. It likewise identified Jew with Zionist, in turn meaning the assimilated
Ashkenazi European type of Jew. When the "Israeli" government realised
in the early 1950s that few Jews would emigrate from Western countries,
it resorted to inducing Oriental Jews to do so. It then used them to populate dangerous settlements along cease-fire lines to consolidate "Israel's"
claims to the disputed territory, and it assigned them to the low-paid,
menial jobs otherwise done by Palestinians. By engineering this physical
and economic conflict between Oriental Jews and Palestinians, "Israel"
manufactured the former's anti-Arab feeling, which Zionism officially attributed
to the persecution that most Oriental Jews had supposedly suffered in Arab
countries. Although the mass emigration of Oriental Jews served several
Zionist purposes, the Ashkenazi establishment saw it as a potential cultural
threat. "Israeli" publications have abounded with racist language - animal
metaphors, savages', 'superstitious', 'diseased', etc. - describing the
Oriental Jews. Official "Israeli" language bans the Yiddish term 'Schwartze'
commonly used in conversation to disparage Oriental Jews as 'blacks'. Yet
the official euphemism for them, Jewish 'people of African and Asian origin',
excludes South African Jews, who are instead categorised along with Jewish
'people of European and American origin' (Halevi, p.207). That anomaly
reveals the racial, rather than geographical, basis for the Zionist categorisation
of Jews. Halevi further notes the irony that "Israel" denounces its Jewish
critics as 'self-hating' yet attempts to integrate the Arab Jews through
a 'system of ideological control and cultural domination wholly built on the self-denial of Arab Judaism, and on a colonial-style mass psychology'
(p.220). The Ashkenazi perception of internal threat has been insightfully
analyzed by Ella Shohat (1988). She quotes Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion,
whose 1964 book described the Oriental Jews as lacking 'the most elementary
knowledge', 'without a trace of Jewish or human education'. Similarly,
Abba Eban warned that "Israel" must infuse them 'with an Occidental spirit,
rather than allow them to drag us into an unnatural Orientalism'. Shohat
describes the Zionist project of turning the Oriental Jews into true Ashkenazi
"Israelis": By distinguishing the 'evil East' (the Moslem Arab) from the
'good' East (the Jewish Arab), "Israel" has taken it upon itself to 'cleanse'
the Orientals of their Arab-ness and redeem them from the 'primal sin'
of belonging to the Orient. (pp.7-8). Despite official proclamations about Jews as 'one people', the Orientals' different culture "threatens the European
ideal-ego which phantasises "Israel" as a prolongation of Europe 'in' the
Middle East but not 'of it. (p.23). The grand project of assimilation has
succeeded in constructing a putatively eternal antagonism between Arab versus Jew, particularly erasing the memory of the original Palestinian
Jews. Likewise it has generated a syndrome of self-hating Oriental Jews,
who can win acceptance only by disavowing their previous cultural identity.
For them, Shohat argues, "existence under Zionism has meant a profound
and visceral schizophrenia, mingling stubborn self-pride with an imposed
self-rejection, typical products of a situation of colonial ambivalence...
In fact, Arab-hatred, when it occurs among Oriental Jews, is almost always
a disguised form of self-hatred. " (p.25) Thus their resentment against
Palestinians expresses an internalised Western racism. When some Orientals
formed the Black Panthers in 1970-1 and declared their solidarity with
the PLO, the "Israeli" government attacked the movement as an expression
of 'neurosis or 'maladjustment'. That is, precisely when Oriental Jews
attempted to overcome the psychopathology induced by Zionist anti-Semitism,
their attempt was labeled pathological and suppressed. Eventually their
resentment became decisive in "Israeli" politics. Having been treated as second-class citizens by the Histadrut ("Israel's" second largest employer
doubling as a 'labour movement'), Oriental Jews directed their hatred against
'socialism' and the Labour Party in particular, to the point of largely
voting for Likud alignment in the 1977 election. Although Oriental Jews apparently support harsher measures against the Palestinians, the repressive
vanguard among the army and settlers has always had an Ashkenazi leadership.
While colluding with the latter, the Labour Party (and others) conveniently
blame the 'backward' Oriental Jews as a major obstacle to peace. As Shohat
argues, this blaming "has the advantage of placing the elite protesters
in the narcissistic posture of perpetual seekers after peace", who must
bear the hostility of the government, the right wing, the Oriental Jews
and recalcitrant Palestinians. In that way, even the most enlightened Ashkenazi
Zionism can absolve itself by blaming less civilised Semitic peoples for
perpetuating irrational conflicts. At the same time, Zionism conceals the
institutional racism which engendered that conflict. Palestinians as persecutors
Zionism often portrays the Palestinians as agents of an international Arab
conspiracy dedicated to destroying "Israel". This mentality can be understood
by analogy to other colonial episodes in which the colonizers experienced
the colonised as persecutors. In the case of Zionism, Haim Bresheeth (1989)
describes how the social identity of the 'New Jew' was created in the image
of the European neo-colonialist model, except that Palestine's original
inhabitants (if acknowledged to exist at all) were to be expelled rather
than merely exploited. Moreover, Zionist paranoia bears parallels to European
anti-Semitism, in two senses. Palestinians are almost racially defined
as anti-Jewish, as persecuted German Jews were labeled 'anti-German'. And
their anticipated attacks on Jews help displace subconscious guilt about
"Israeli" pogroms committed against Palestinians. This displacement or
projection of persecution can be seen in the portrayal of Arabs in Hebrew-language children's literature, as analysed by Fouzi al-Asmar (1986). In these stories
"Israelis" face a mortal threat from Arabs who vent a racial hatred for
the Jews, as a result of being incited by agitators sent by Arab governments.
Of course such fictional Arab characters make no distinction between Jews
and "Israelis". Somehow the State of "Israel" always escapes imminent annihilation
because the irrational Arabs lack effective organisation, and because "Israeli"
supermen-soldiers (or even children) heroically protect the country from
the threat. Despite such reassurance, the threat should be considered paranoid
by virtue of projecting aggression and potential guilt upon the Arabs,
as well as containing anxieties about the "Israelis"' national identity.
El-Asmar observes a change in demonological terminology according to the
period being described. In these stories, pre-1948 Arabs are portrayed as mainly nomadic Bedoums with no particular attachment to Palestine; other
Arabs, likewise primitive, diseased and dirty, are often thieves and murderers.
The Arab-"Israeli" conflict arises only because Arabs refused to live in
peace with Jews; given their refusal and subsequent (unexplained) 'flight',
they lack grounds for claiming Palestine as a homeland. After the 1948
war and the establishment of the state of "Israel", Arabs are portrayed
as fedayin 'infiltrators' - in a period when many of the million expelled
Palestinians attempted to harvest their crops or reclaim other abandoned
property. After the 1967 war, Arabs are portrayed as 'saboteurs' - in a
period when "Israel" sabotaged Palestinian agriculture in the Occupied
Territories through an array of legal restrictions. After the 1973 war, Palestinian characters became 'terrorists' operating world-wide. In all
cases, this children's literature portrays Arab attacks as seeking only
to raid, steal and kill. Apparently they are motivated by jealousy against
Jews who have brought 'human standards' and modern prosperity to the Land
of Israel. A 'good Arab' character is portrayed as lamenting that "these
Jews came to a desert and they made out of it a paradise, and here we come
and convert that paradise into a desert" (p.70). This portrayal lends legitimation
to any "Israeli" measures taken against Palestinians. Thus systematic Zionist
expropriation and killing is concealed or justified by attributing the
real barbarity to its victims. While the "Israeli" characters ultimately
triumph in these children's stories, the omnipotence fantasy becomes somewhat dented by the 1973 war. In one story a child is taking cover from a MIG
bombing. He hears a terrible noise "as if I were a loyal grain ground between
huge millstones, as if the land is trembling under me and I will soon fall
into a deep and black pit" (p.119). In that fantasy of being reduced to
nothingness, the child expresses a widespread 'victim complex', whereby
"Israelis" imagine themselves as facing a perpetual threat of annihilation,
from which they are saved by superior moral character and/or military defence.
The fantasy serves at least two crucial functions. It displaces subconscious
guilt about the persecution of Palestinians; and it externalizes the internal
threat to Jewish identity by the Zionist project itself. The displacement
involves a psychic continuum, in which anxiety over social identity is experienced as a threat to one's physical existence - "falling into a deep
and black pit". The unavoidable anxiety arises in turn from "Israel's"
failed attempt to replace a religious Jewish identity with a secular Jewish
culture (as analysed by Akiva Orr in The unJewish State). Having constructed the 'New Jew' as the born-again goy, Hebrew-speaking gentile, Zionist has
further constructed the Palestinian Arab on the stereotypical model of
the European Jew. Even a humanist, left-Zionist writer like Amos Oz (1983,
pp.157, 164) found himself likening the office of Al-Fajr [a Palestinian East-Jerusalem newspaper - E.D.] to that of an Eastern European Yiddish
newspaper. And in all seriousness he saw the paper as a sinister front
for an anti-Zionist, Islamic, Soviet Communist conspiracy. Thus Arabs are
despised not simply as the enemy 'other', but as a reminder of a hated
and abandoned Jewish identity, 'the suffering Jew'. Moreover, European
anti-Semitic conspiracy theories find their counterpart in "Israeli" fears
of Palestinians: the persecuted are experienced as the persecutors. Projecting
Zionist anti-Semitism a Jewish "Israeli" academic, educationalist Dr. Adit Cohen (Ha'aretz, 30.6.76) once warned about this racist portrayal of Arabs
as "it was in this way that the image of the Jew was presented in anti-Semitic
Christian literature" (quoted in El-Asmar, p.125). Certainly an historical
parallel can been drawn between Zionist paranoia and its anti-Semitic antecedents.
As capitalist market relations destroy autonomous cultural identities,
"people begin not to know who they are" (Kovel, p.238). As a psychic defence
against this threat, modern racism must go further than to project onto
the victim; to protect the self from annihilation, this racism tends towards physically removing or destroying the victim. Given that the Holocaust
and then "Israel" served to destroy 'Diaspora' Jewish identities, in favor
of the New Jew, the Palestinians came to represent a psychic threat to
the very existence of Jews. "We were better off in the ghetto, where we
knew who we were" laments a semi-fictional character of novelist Simon
Louvish (1985, p.144). That wistful nostalgia, apparently innocuous, provides
a way into understanding the persistent demoni sing of Palestinians as
an external threat to Jewish existence, whose Jewish cultural basis has
been suppressed by Zionist nationalism itself. In conclusion, then, Zionism
attempted to substitute a European nationalism for the traditional religious
basis of Jewish identity, as well as for the diverse 'Diaspora' cultures.
While claiming to protect Jews from anti-Semitism, Zionism actually undermined
the basis for any coherent Jewish identity, while attributing the threat
entirely to external enemies of the Jews. Thus, through a self-perpetuating
illogic, Zionism presents itself as the only saviour from a malaise which
it brought about and sustains.


  References * Bresheeth, H. (1989). Self and other
in Zionism. Palestine and "Israel" in recent Hebrew literature, in Khamsin,
14/15. Palestine: Profile of an Occupation, London, Zed Books, pp.120-52
* El-Asmar, F. (1986). Through the Hebrew Looking-Glass: Arab Stereotypes
in Children's Literature, London, Zed Books * Halevi, I. (1987): A History
of the Jews, London, Zed Books * Hertzberg, A. (1966). The Zionist Idea:
A Historical Analysis and Reader. New York, Atheneum; includes a reprint
of Leo Pinsker, Auto-emancipation * Kovel, J. (1983). Marx on the Jewish
Question. Dialectical Anthropology 8: 31-46; reprinted in Joel Kovel, The
Radical Spirit: Essays on Psychoanalysis and Society, London, Free Association
Books, 1988, pp.226-50 * Louvish, S. (1985) The Therapy of Avram Blok.
London, Heinemann. * Orr, A. (1983). The unJewish State:


The Politics of Jewish Identity in "Israel". London, Ithaca Press *
Oz, A. (1983). The Dawn. In the Land of "Israel". London, Fontana * Shohat,
E. (1988). Sephardim in "Israel": Zionism from the standpoint of its Jewish
victims. Social Text 19/20:1-36; available from P.O. Box 1474, Old Chelsea Station, New York, NY 10011. * Weizmann, C. (1937) Dr. Weizmann's Political
Adress -20th Zionist Congress, New Judea, August, p.215.


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