Ira Chernus PROFESSOR OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER |
Six Day War Changed Everything Except Jewish Fears
36 years ago, this week,
The number 36 has a very special meaning in
Judaism. 18 is the number that
symbolizes “life.” So 36 is twice life,
or two lives. The Zionist movement and
the state of
In 1948, we gained a state, an army, and means of
self-protection. But before 1967, we
still had reason to feel insecure. Our
state was still a fledgling. Its army
was obviously capable, but not fully proven in battle. All of its neighbors were publicly its
enemies, and they seemed intent on doing
In just six days, in June, 1967, all that
changed.
The last 36 years have shown that
The Six Day War’s impact on the Jewish community was just the opposite of what logic would expect. We showed our preeminent power, yet most of us continue to live as if our power were still unproven and uncertain. We showed how secure we are, yet most of us feel and act as if we were less secure than ever. Our most common shared story of the war is not about a new triumphant confidence. It is about yet another proof of the same old vulnerability and threat.
There are many reason for
this paradoxical reaction. Some day,
serious historians of the Jews in the late 20th century will write
whole books about it. For now, the
essential point is not to explain this paradox but simply to recognize it. Most Jews, in
Readers sympathetic to
This objection shows how Jewish perception has failed
to match the changing reality. It
assumes that nothing has changed in two millennia, that
Jews are still bound to be victims and there is nothing we can do about it. After 1967, there was plenty we could have done
about it.
The recent Israeli elections epitomized the problem. The hard-line leader, Ariel Sharon, defeated a genuine peace candidate because a majority of the voters let their fears override their hopes. This does not mean that the government or the people who support it are evil. It means they are terribly misguided. They are living in the insecurities of the past. Because they are so misguided, they are caught in the clutches of a fear that shapes their whole lives. Therefore, they block their own path to a more secure future.
(The same could be said of the
Israel and its supporters could now start a third life, if only they would acknowledge that they do have power, that they are in charge, that their own actions, more than anything else, determine whether or not they will continue to be victims of violence. The words of the great Jewish philosopher Martin Buber, spoken to the Zionist Congress many years ago, are now truer than ever: “It depends on us whether we appear before the awakening Orient as hated agents and spies or beloved teachers and creators.”
If Jews would recognize their power and stop the finger-pointing blame game, we could reach out to the Palestinians as genuine peacemakers. But first, Jewish perception and belief must finally catch up with the reality that began in 1967.
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