Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University -
Lev Grinberg (Dept of Sociology) Demands Israel Stop being a Jewish
State
Why isn't Israel a modern, democratic
nation-state? I suspect that the secular Jews are not ready to
relinquish the special privileges that the Jewish state grants them.
With no other definition for Judaism, they are ready to accept the
yoke of the religious establishment and give up democracy and
equality. In my view, that is the meaning of the continued
impossible defense of a Jewish and democratic state.
Woe to such Zionism: conservative and
complacent, lacking imagination and vision. After such a bitter
failure, we should start thinking of tikkun, of repair. Tikkun is a
kosher concept; it's both Jewish and democratic.
http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/you-can-t-be-a-jewish-muslim-1.309646
You can't be a Jewish Muslim
Instead of bringing about the secularization of Judaism, Zionism
turned religion into the central element of the definition of
national identity, and turned the State of Israel into a tool of the
religious redemption project.
By Lev Grinberg
23.08.10
Just like the story about the late Israeli politician Moshe Sneh,
who raised the tone of his voice because his arguments were not
persuasive, Professor Shlomo Avineri raises the tone in his reply to
Salman Masalha, both of whose opinion pieces appeared on these pages
earlier this month, and paints him as a racist. But Masalha did not
claim that there is no Jewish people or that Jews do not have the
right to self-determination. His argument is simple: If the state is
defined by religion, it cannot treat all its citizens equally, as
required of a democratic system of government.
Its true that from its inception, Zionism intended to turn the
Jewish people from a religious community into a modern nation, but
Avineri ignores the regrettable fact that the project of
secularizing the Jewish people has failed. Israel has no legal
definition for Judaism other than the religious definition, it does
not recognize an Israeli national identity defined on the basis of
citizenship, and it does not recognize a Hebrew nationality that is
culturally defined.
The comparison to other countries where religion and nationality
are linked is irrelevant, because those countries have a secular
definition of the state and citizenship. You can be a Polish Jew or
an Egyptian Jew, but you can't be a Jewish Muslim or a Jewish
Christian.
In the attempt to make the Jewish people a nation like all
others, Zionism strove to unite it through one language and
concentrate it in one territory. There were arguments and struggles
over this, and they were decided in favor of preserving the
centrality of religion in the definition of the national collective.
Instead of picking one of the languages that Jews spoke day in and
day out, Hebrew, the holy tongue, was chosen.
Regarding territory as well, absolute secularists did indeed
think that Jews could be settled in Uganda or Argentina, but the
gravitational pull of the Land of Israel was decisive. The Bible was
transformed from a religious text into Zionism's title deed, the
justification for the demand for ownership of the territory. In
other words, instead of bringing about the secularization of
Judaism, Zionism turned religion into the central element of the
definition of national identity, and turned the State of Israel into
a tool of the religious redemption project, especially after the
capture and settlement of biblical areas since 1967.
Defining the State of Israel solely as democratic and revoking
the special privileges of Jews does not contradict Zionism, and
certainly not Judaism. The connection to Judaism will remain in the
calendar and the Hebrew language, in the name of the state and in
the Jewish majority (if we manage to free ourselves from our rule
over the Palestinians in the territories ).
Democracy is based on universalist Jewish values, such as "Thou
shalt love thy neighbour as thyself" and "Ye shall have one statute,
both for the stranger, and for him that is born in the land." That
requires separation of religion and state, something that will be
good for both. Because in the current situation, not only does
religion corrupt the state, but the state corrupts religion and
pushes it toward nationalistic extremism.
Why isn't Israel a modern, democratic nation-state? I suspect
that the secular Jews are not ready to relinquish the special
privileges that the Jewish state grants them. With no other
definition for Judaism, they are ready to accept the yoke of the
religious establishment and give up democracy and equality. In my
view, that is the meaning of the continued impossible defense of a
Jewish and democratic state.
Woe to such Zionism: conservative and complacent, lacking
imagination and vision. After such a bitter failure, we should start
thinking of tikkun, of repair. Tikkun is a kosher concept; it's both
Jewish and democratic.
The writer is a political sociologist and the author of books
including "Imagined Peace, Discourse of War: The Failure of
Leadership, Politics and Democracy in Israel, 1992-2006" (in
Hebrew). |