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  • 8/9/2019 Between Zion and Democracy_Louis Frankenthaler

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    Between Zion and Democracy:

    Confessions of Past Zionism

    Jerusalem 15/5/2010

    Louis Frankenthaler

    Tonight there is a demonstration in Jerusalem's Zion Square. When I first moved to

    Israel, 15 years ago (two months before Rabin was murdered) I went down to Zion

    Square and witnessed a very disturbing demonstration. The left was demonized,

    peace was demonized and with that so too, was democracy. Many of Israel's current

    leadership spoke out at that demonstration. Today we live with its aftermath. When

    I first arrived I thought that Zionism, a progressive Zionism striving for peace, justice

    and human rights was possible. I have since, painfully, come to believe differently.

    This is not a Post/Anti-Zionisteditorial. It belongs to no school of thought, nor to the

    post, progressive, radical, reactionary or settlement entrenched Zionisms either.Rather, this article begs to be extricated from the discursive trap in which we remain

    entangled. It is a call for a new PastZionist discourse. It seems that Zionism, as a

    word, ideology, theology or movement has emerged as the new battlefield between

    those who would claim to be better Zionists: the settlers and their supporters and

    those who say that a "Zionist is not a settler" and that "we" need to end the

    Occupation to save ourselves (of course any call by Jews to end the Occupation is

    welcomed if not demanded). In the meantime ultra-right wing nationalism thrives in

    Israels political system, the domestic human rights movement is under attack,

    settlement and occupation are ever more engrained as Israels civil religion, and

    Palestinian families are cleared out of East Jerusalem to make way for traditionally

    privileged "Zionists, the settlers.

    This is not a criticism of those who would anchor their worldview or politics in

    Zionism. Rather it questions the wisdom and efficacy of such an investment, when

    what we really need is to focus on democracy, human rights and social justice.

    Perhaps, at a later point, Zionism can find its place in the discussion, and Judaism can

    work its way back into democracy. But for now, democracy must be the first priority

    because that is what is being molested at this time.

    When I hear discussions of Zionism on the left, I remain very concerned with the

    tendency to focus on Jewish self-interest in Israel, on the ongoing danger ofnationalism. Yet, as a pragmatist, a progressive, (social) democracy, anti-racist and

    anti-Occupation-oriented Zionism is certainly welcomed. This kind of Zionism seems

    to be the voice of J Street and J Call, two movements that may very well help bring

    the Occupation to a halt. At the very least, advocates of the Occupation seek to

    discredit even these relatively progressive Jewish initiatives, thus indicating their

    concern over a growing global Jewish call to end the Occupation, and the end of

    Diaspora Jewry's uncritical faith in everything the Israeli government says and does.

    What these new initiatives are saying is that there ought to be a limit to demonization

    of the left by the radical right, especially of the Israeli governments critics, be they in

    the university, politics or civil society. Too many Israelis are glad to tell us what,when and how to think. They often root their polemics in a version of Zionism that is

    no more than a thin shield for their devout pro-Occupation political theology. For this

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    reason, it is even more important to get past using the figure of Zionism. Instead of

    saying that the settlements are destroying Zionism (which it seems to have already

    done,) it is more important to think about how to understand the manner in which the

    settlements and their supporters are thrusting Israel into a dangerous process of de-

    democratization.

    Jewish public discourse over the past four decades has been too reactive, and not

    sufficiently reflexive. Do we want democracy or the Occupation? Do we want a

    vibrant civil society and public sphere in which the myriad of issues that ought to

    preoccupy democratic society are discussed, or do we want to continue fostering a

    public sphere that is being increasingly colonized by right-wing demands for political

    conformity? Do we want to remain mired in a banal argument over who is a better

    Zionist, the settler or the non-settler, or do we want to figure out how to create a safe

    public sphere where Zionism is not the litmus test for communal legitimacy?

    And now for my confession: I want to continue living in this space called Israel, with

    my family. Although conservatives may think otherwise, progressives like me careabout and respect this society, more for what it can be than for what it has done for the

    past four decades. I do not love it. To paraphrase something Hannah Arendt once

    said, love I reserve for people. For that reason I went to the demonstration near Zion

    Square in Jerusalem. I listened to the many speakers, some of whom I greatly respect,

    and others who consistently condemn people like me. I was not moved by their

    message. Nothing that was said was particularly new. Rather I was moved by their

    effort to break out of the stupor imposed upon us by the pro-Occupation forces

    currently running amok in Israel.

    The demonstration was an important first step to invigorate a dying movement of

    progressive activism in Israel. The hope is that this initiative will be able to

    effectively join forces with those in the United States and Europe in an effort to

    redefine the nature of Israeli politics.

    My outlook is decidedly sober. It sees Israeli society as almost beyond repair, and

    views the abhorrent Israeli actions in Sheikh Jarrah and elsewhere as an omen of

    worse things to come. Yet my outlook also welcomes the reawakening of Diaspora

    Jews willing to take a stand, alongside their Israeli allies. It may be long overdue.

    However, its the only hope we have for restoring Israeli democracy.