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Written by Ben Ehrenreich Ben Ehrenreich
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Category: News News
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Published: 17 March 2009 17 March 2009
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Last Updated: 17 March 2009 17 March 2009
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Created: 17 March 2009 17 March 2009
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It has been argued that Zionism is an anachronism, a leftover ideology
from the era of 19th century romantic nationalisms wedged uncomfortably
into 21st century geopolitics. But Zionism is not merely outdated. Even
before 1948, one of its basic oversights was readily apparent: the
presence of Palestinians in Palestine. That led some of the most
prominent Jewish thinkers of the last century, many of them Zionists,
to balk at the idea of Jewish statehood. The Brit Shalom movement --
founded in 1925 and supported at various times by Martin Buber, Hannah
Arendt and Gershom Scholem --
argued for a secular, binational state in Palestine in which Jews and
Arabs would be accorded equal status. Their concerns were both moral
and pragmatic. The establishment of a Jewish state, Buber feared, would
mean "premeditated national suicide."
The fate Buber foresaw is upon us: a nation that has lived in a state
of war for decades, a quarter-million Arab citizens with second-class
status and more than 5 million Palestinians deprived of the most basic
political and human rights. If two decades ago comparisons to the South
African apartheid system felt like hyperbole, they now feel charitable.
The white South African regime, for all its crimes, never attacked the
Bantustans with anything like the destructive power Israel visited on
Gaza in December and January, when nearly1,300 Palestinians were killed, one-third of them children.
Israeli policies have rendered the once apparently inevitable
two-state solution less and less feasible. Years of Israeli settlement
construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem have methodically
diminished the viability of a Palestinian state. Israel's new prime
minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has even refused to endorse the idea of
an independent Palestinian state, which suggests an immediate future of
more of the same: more settlements, more punitive assaults.
All of this has led to a revival of the Brit Shalom idea of a single,
secular binational state in which Jews and Arabs have equal political
rights. The obstacles are, of course, enormous. They include not just a
powerful Israeli attachment to the idea of an exclusively Jewish state,
but its Palestinian analogue: Hamas' ideal of Islamic rule. Both sides
would have to find assurance that their security was guaranteed. What
precise shape such a state would take -- a strict, vote-by-vote
democracy or a more complex federalist system -- would involve years of
painful negotiation, wiser leaders than now exist and an uncompromising
commitment from the rest of the world, particularly from the United
States.
Meanwhile, the characterization of anti-Zionism as an "epidemic" more
dangerous than anti-Semitism reveals only the unsustainability of the
position into which Israel's apologists have been forced. Faced with
international condemnation, they seek to limit the discourse, to erect
walls that delineate what can and can't be said.
It's not working. Opposing Zionism is neither anti-Semitic nor
particularly radical. It requires only that we take our own values
seriously and no longer, as the book of Amos has it, "turn justice into
wormwood and hurl righteousness to the ground."
Establishing a secular, pluralist, democratic government in Israel
and Palestine would of course mean the abandonment of the Zionist
dream. It might also mean the only salvation for the Jewish ideals of
justice that date back to Jeremiah.
Ben Ehrenreich is the author of the novel "The Suitors."