Ira Chernus PROFESSOR OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER |
Although Israeli leaders insist they want a secure peace with all their neighbors,
their frustrated desire for security is now blocking the path to peace.
As the latest round in the Israeli-Palestinian battle nears its one-year anniversary,
the violence mounts with no end in sight. Israel's prime minister Ariel Sharon
has yet to offer a clear vision of how it might end. Perhaps he is in no rush
to sketch a final peace settlement because security, not peace, is Israel's paramount
goal.
Israel's concept of security came from the founders of Zionism, who began promoting
a Jewish state in the late 19th century. When they spoke about security for the
Jews, their intention was just as much psychological as political. This legacy
goes a long way towards understanding Israeli policy today.
The first great Zionist writer, Leo Pinsker, set the pattern in 1881. Anti-semitism
"can never die," he maintained. Wherever Jews live among foreigners, they will
be hated. But he charged that the Jews themselves were the real problem. After
centuries of anti-semitism, they had "no real self-love and no national self-respect."
They would feel good and right about themselves only when they took control of
their own fate by creating their own nation.
Pinsker's followers agreed that there was something abnormal about Jewish life.
Two millennia of political powerlessness had taught the Jews to accept and even
embrace their weakness, the early Zionists lamented. Jews had learned to accept
insecurity as a permanent fact of life. The Zionists aimed to overcome that psychological
infirmity by making the Jews a "normal" nation. For them, that meant not merely
having a land and government of their own, but exercising a "normal" degree of
national power on the stage of world history. They expected that power to bring
psychological as well as political security.
The horrors of the Holocaust underscored their argument. Never again, Jews vowed,
would they be victims. Perhaps more importantly, never again would they let themselves
feel like victims. In Israel's early years, its schoolchildren were taught to
be ashamed of the Holocaust, because it was the height of Jewish powerlessness.
They were urged to show the world that this shameful era had ended forever. Yet
even the great Israeli military victories of 1967 and 1973 did not set the psychological
fears at rest.
The renowned Holocaust theologian Emil Fackenheim once told an audience that
Israel might be destroyed by its enemies. Still, he said, Zionism would have
fulfilled its goal because then the Jews would go down fighting. Today, many
Jews continue to see a show of power as the only route to "real self-love" and
"national self-respect."
Five Israeli-Arab wars and 34 years of Jewish rule over the Palestinians have
proven that when Israel fights, it will not "go down." Militarily, its existence
is secure against every plausible threat. Yet the old idea of insecurity still
triumphs over present reality. The early Zionists assumed that Jews in conflict
with non-Jews would always be insecure. They could not imagine a Jewish state
with such predominant power that its existence would be absolutely assured, even
if it remained in conflict with its neighbors. Most Israeli Jews today, haunted
by a fear of powerlessness, still can not believe in that assurance.
Surely not all Israelis seek a sense of security and normality through the
exercise of power. But the majority, who do, block the path to peace. The Palestinian
people want a fully sovereign and viable state on the West Bank and in Gaza.
When the former Israeli prime minister, Ehud Barak, went to Camp David in the
summer of 2000, many Israeli Jews wanted him to meet that demand in return for
peace. But most did not. They saw it as a surrender, a return to political powerlessness,
and thus a fatal blow to their psychological sense of security and self-worth.
Barak knew that a meaningful peace deal would have meant political suicide. So
he offered the trappings of sovereignty and the appearance of a viable state.
When it was clear that he would, or could, move no further, the Palestinian uprising
(intifada) broke out again. For Israel, the only alternative to real compromise
was to show more power. The tanks and missiles we see on our TV screens, bearing
the Star of David, show clearly the choice that Israel has made. The foundations
of Zionist thought made that choice predictable, if not inevitable.
The history of Zionism helps explain why so many Israeli Jews can feel secure
only when Israel is demonstrating its power. That history helps explain why so
many support their government's use of military power, even when the rest of
the world cries out that genuine compromise is the only safe course ¾
the only road to peace ¾ and that only peace
will bring genuine security.
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