Contrary to democratic reasoning, which would have stabilized ethnic relations after 1948, Israel went on with ethnic colonization, initially within the Green line and afterward in Judea and Shomron conquered in 1967
What is
the cause of the segregation between groups in Israeli society? How should we
cope with this and with the polarization and racism it engenders? In her soul-searching, riveting article, Prof.
Eva Illouz argues that this ostensible regime of separation stems primarily
from the distorted importation here of ethno-religious principles that dictated
the isolationist, self-defensive Jewish existence in the Diaspora.
According
to Illouz, the institutionalization of such principles under the state’s
auspices, led by religious institutions and rabbis such as the late Ovadia
Yosef, is the principal obstacle to the possibility of establishing a
sustainable, liberal and tolerant society in Israel. This separation regime
received salient expression recently when the Supreme Court rejected a petition
filed by 38 Israeli citizens from different religions and groups to register
their national identity as “Israeli.”
As one of
the petitioners, I was disappointed at the ruling, like Illouz. That said, I
take issue with the religious explanation she adduces, which in my view focuses
on the symptoms and not the roots of the disease. Illouz, like most Jews,
ignores the question of Palestine, without which it is impossible to understand
many of the traits of Israeli society. Her analysis also ignores a comparative
perspective that illuminates the character of Zionism as compared with other
national movements. She appears to have fallen into what I have termed the
classic “ethnogratic" trap: attributing inordinate importance to what is
occurring within the Jewish “bubble.”
Refugee chases refugee
If we
lift our eyes a little above the roofs of the synagogues, yeshivas and rabbis’
hats, and examine the formation of society in Israel from a comparative
perspective, we will understand that the religious explanation, despite its
importance, blinds us from seeing the primary cause of the separation regime:
the process of the country’s takeover − namely, its ongoing “Judaization.” This
process, which is imposing a Jewish identity on a land that was largely
Palestinian-Arab in its recent past, “necessitates” Jewish expansion
accompanied by coerced religious, ethnic, cultural, political and, most crucial,
geographic separation. Clearly, if the populations were to intermingle, the
edge would be taken off the Judaizing process and a different − mixed −
identity would be created. In other words, it is the ongoing Judiazation, and
not Judaism per se, which underlies the formation of the separation regime.
Judaization
has constituted the principal project of the ethnocratic state from the day of
its creation, and it is transforming Israel not only into a Jewish state, which
is the conventional argument, but into a Judaizing state. This is a key
distinction, as it adds a dynamic dimension to the ceaseless takeover project
and does not allow the consolidation of egalitarian relations between the
different ethnic communities, particularly Arabs and Jews.
The “Judaization
factor” ceaselessly generates new legislation and policy initiatives which
produce new types of polarization and conflict, such as the annexation of the
Little Triangle of Arab communities – the Arab towns of Baka al-Garbiyeh,
Taibeh and Tira – to a Palestinian state (whose establishment Israel is preventing); the Nakba and the Boycott Laws; the
proposed Prawer Law, the idea of conditioning citizenship on loyalty vows; the
adoption of discriminatory family unification laws and the existence of selection
committees in hundreds of suburban communities.
The
Judaization factor also has intra-Jewish implications, in that it shunts to the
margins weak ened groups, primarily Mizrahim (Eastern Jews), Ethiopians and all
those seen as “Russians,” though the intensity and violence of their exclusion
are significantly less than in the case of the Palestinians.
Many
studies show that a pattern of segregation characterizes almost all the settler
societies in the world that engineered colonization processes in territories
that were dominated by others, irrespective of their religion. Thus, we can
find sharply etched separation regimes possessing deep ethnic or racial
boundaries in the history of the settlement and takeover of British Protestants
in Northern Ireland; French Catholics in Quebec and Algeria; Sinhalese
Buddhists in Sri Lanka; Calvinist Dutch communities in South Africa; and even
Russian atheists in Estonia.
It is
true that the Jewish colonization of Palestine/Israel stems in part from
motives different from those of the other settler states mentioned. The Jews
are not British, French or Russian imperialists who settle in distant lands,
backed by vast military and economic might. They are, rather, a group of
persecuted, expelled communities, first from Europe and subsequently from
Islamic countries, who sought shelter in the land that was the cradle of their
historic and mythical identity.
The Jews
can be said, in effect, to have been “expelled to their homeland.” That is why
part of the colonization process was unavoidable and also rightly received the
moral backing of the international community in the wake of the Holocaust. Like
the Armenians after the expulsion from Turkey, perhaps, or the Boers in South
Africa, who were driven out of the Cape region and took over other regions, the
Jews in Palestine/Israel spawned a process which can be defined as
“colonization of refugees.”
However,
for the native inhabitants of this country − the Palestinians − the process of
the Jewish takeover looked quite similar to other ethnic takeovers, which
almost always assume the form of appropriation, settlement, expulsion and
political subordination of the local population to settlers who come from afar.
This being so, the Palestinians, too – like most of the colonized peoples –
oppose the process with all their might, sometimes violently, and generate a
constant threat to it. This dialectic intensifies the Jewish use of tactics of
territorial expansion, amid an almost total separation from the retreating
local residents.
The
process reached a violent peak in the Israeli War of Independence(the Nakba), when two-thirds of the Palestinians were
forced out and hundreds of their villages destroyed, and have remained refugees
to this day. However, contrary to democratic reasoning – which would have tried
to stabilize ethnic relations after the crisis of 1948 – Israel did not stop
but went on with the ethnic colonization, initially within the Green Line and
afterward in the territories conquered in 1967. At the same time, Israel has so
far prevented forcibly the establishment of a Palestinian state, which could
provide an answer, partial but significant, to the question of the refugees and
Palestinian sovereignty.
creeping apartheid
The
Judaization process assumes concrete forms, such as the establishment of more
than 1,000 exclusively Jewish communities, mostly in former Arab areas, on both
sides of the Green Line. A striking example is playing out now in the Negev,
where the state is attempting, through the Prawer plan, to dispossess Bedouin
of their ancestors’ land and, at the same time, establish a series of new
Jewish communities there. As part of another move, these areas were
subordinated to the control of Jewish regional councils, here too on both sides
of the Green Line. The municipal control ensured that the fruits of the
impressive economic growth entered Jewish pockets almost exclusively.
In
addition, over the years, Jewish migrants were almost the only ones allowed
into the country, and a tremendous effort was made to erase the Palestinians’
history and culture. There were occasional policy changes and even compromises,
such as during the period of the Oslo Accords and the 2005 disengagement from
the Gaza Strip, but those were exceptions that have not changed the general
trend.
Here is
the place to return to the role of religion and ask: Who was responsible for
the Judaization process? Was it not precisely the secular founders of Zionism?
It’s true that their secularism never completely broke with the ethno-religious
vision of redemption, and also true that it used the religious establishment as
the gatekeeper of Israeli citizenship, sometimes cynically. It is also apparent
that the antiliberal religious forces are intensifying their messianic and
racist rhetoric of late, in a move that recalls a Golem that has turned on its
creator. But even here, it is not the Jewish religion but the colonial project
of religious and secular groups that is the driving force of the exacerbation
of the discourse and the policy of separation. This process is creating an
apartheid regime in the territories, which is increasingly creeping gradually
into Israel and threatening the character of the entire regime.
Historically,
secular and religious groups and individuals can be considered allies in the
Judaization project, in which most of them are taking part. This makes it
possible for a national liberal like Yair Lapid to hook up with an ethnocrat
and colonialist like Naftali Bennett in a political alliance of “brothers”
which can be termed “liberal colonialism.” Significant liberal pockets of
resistance exist, of course, as do deep disagreements between the religious and
secular vision for Israel/Palestine. Those disagreements may even threaten
Israel’s political stability. Yet, from a historical and geographical
perspective, the disagreements fade in the face of the Judaization of the
conflicted land.
What
next? As I’ve shown, the greatest obstacle to the emergence of a sustainable
democratic society in Israel is the momentum of ethno-colonialist takeover and
the forced separation it necessarily entails. It is important to point out that
the termination of the Judaization process does not mean the dissolution of the
Jewish-Israeli national project, but quite the contrary: ending Judaization will
place it on legitimate, sustainable foundations − without appropriation,
suppression and expansion at the expense of others.
The true
challenge lies in ending the era of takeover, with all its implications.
A transition of that kind occurred in almost every other settler society
everywhere, and led to recognition of the native groups and their rights, but
also the rights of settlers and migrants. The change was also accompanied by a
fair distribution of resources, including land and political and economic
power. Only thus can the walls of separation start to dissolve, and this
conflicted place can generate a common Israeli identity, which will include
religious and secular, Jews and Arabs, Mizrahim and Ashkenazim − and one day
might even gain the endorsement of the Supreme Court.
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