Reflections
on Israel's 60th
QPI
Note: Rabbi Lerner's insights may
suggest to Friends some avenues for support and healing action that can help
the parties move toward peace.
Reflections
on Israel’s 60th / By Rabbi Michael Lerner / May 5, 2008
ConsortiumNews.com: Guest Editorial
Editor’s
Note: Seldom has the Shakespearian observation that “the evil that men do lives
after them” been more true than with Adolf Hitler and his Nazis, whose genocide
against the Jews created fear, resentment and behavioral changes that have
reverberated to the present day. In
this guest essay, Rabbi Michael Lerner reflects on how the Holocaust and the
failure of the United States and other countries to give refuge to imperiled
Jews shaped the Zionist movement that founded Israel six decades ago this week:
When
I was a child, Zionism was the national liberation struggle of the Jewish
people.
While
the United States and all other countries — including the Christian,
Muslim, Hindu, and Buddhist countries — closed their doors to Jews
seeking refuge from the murder of millions of Jews by the fascists, and while
the Palestinian people’s leadership used their influence with the British to
ensure that Jews would not be able to settle in our ancient homeland both
during and immediately after the Second World War as hundreds of thousands of
survivors languished in displaced persons’ camps in Europe, the Zionist
movement championed the need for a state of the Jewish people with its own army
and its own territory.
For
a people who had been stateless for 20 centuries, who were forced to depend on
the often-absent “good will” of their hosts in Europe, Africa, and Asia, the
prospect of a homeland, prayed for everyday by Jews around the world for 2,000
years, seemed to be at once impossible and yet the only imaginable redemption
from the trauma of the Holocaust and the previous centuries of suffering and
insecurity.
Jews
jumped from the burning buildings of Europe into Palestine not because we were
servants of imperial or colonial interests, but because we were desperate and
because no one wanted us or would protect us.
Unfortunately
and tragically, we landed on the backs of Palestinians who were already there,
and we hurt many of them in our landing.
So
scarred were we by our own pain - having just witnessed the death of one out of
every three Jews alive on the planet - that we were unable to notice or take
seriously the pain that we were causing to the Palestinian people in the
process.
When
our army uprooted Palestinians from their homes and villages, it was in the
midst of a struggle for survival in which Jews were determined to be as
ruthless towards others as others had been towards us.
Yet,
there were alternatives.
We
could have remained a minority in an Arab country and hoped for the goodness of
the Arab people to prevail, particularly if Jews had been able to align with
Arabs in the anti-colonial struggle against the British and French.
The
Zionist movement could have made dramatic overtures to the feudal landlords who
owned much of the land in Palestine and who feared that our ideas of socialism
would lead to a revolution against their interests, though that would have
furthered alienated us from the Arab masses.
We
could have reached out, as Martin Buber and Judah Magnes did, to a growing
Palestinian nationalist movement and tried to create a bi-national state,
though at the time the hostilities and acts of terror from Palestinian
extremists toward the Jewish minority, and by Zionist extremists toward
Palestinian civilians, made this option appear unlikely to a Jewish population
that had unwisely trusted the people of Europe to act with some level of human
decency, and then were betrayed and murdered.
We
could have rejected the Histadrut’s “Jewish only” policy of membership in its
powerful union and its health care system, and those efforts might actually
have paved the way toward a less violent reception by the Palestinian majority.
We
could have put our energies into demanding that the United States open its
gates and let Jews settle here, perhaps resettling Jews in Hawaii and
California, though in so doing they would have had to contend against the
post-WWII conviction of many Jews that only a state of our own with an army of
our own could ever be trusted to provide us with security in light of the
failure of the U.S. and other Western countries to save us from fascism and its
genocide.
Not
to mention the growing conviction of many Jews that with a state of our own we
could create for the first time in 2,000 years a vigorous Jewish culture, a
political polity that reflected our values, and a society in which Jews would
not have our lives subordinated to the will of a non-Jewish majority.
In
retrospect there is much to be said for the Buber/Magnes position of giving far
more attention to attempting to build ties of reconciliation and mutual respect
with Palestinians before establishing a Jewish state.
‘Realists’
Shape Reality
But
the Zionist movement was made up of “realists” who didn’t believe in the
possibility of reconciliation, the Palestinian people were led by similar
“realists” who didn’t believe that it would be possible to live in peace with
Jews, and hence refused to allow Jewish immigrants (although immigrants of any
other religion were welcome), and the British did everything in their power to
set both communities against each other (as it did wherever it held colonial
power, encouraging ethnic clashes so as to undermine anti-colonial unity).
Both
sides had embraced nationalist rhetoric, and both sides had left behind the
loving messages of their respective religions. Both sides were traumatized by
their own history, and by outrageous acts of violence perpetrated by the other.
I’ve
detailed this history in my book Healing Israel/Palestine (North Atlantic Books,
2003). And I’m well aware that partisans on each side have plenty of “facts” to
use to “prove” that it was really the other side that caused all the problems,
and that there is no “moral equivalency” between, for example, the slaying of
Jews in Hebron in 1929 and the slaying of Arabs in Deir Yassin in 1948.
The
list of atrocities is long on both sides, and only those who wish to “win” for
their side continue to insist that it was they who were innocent and the others
were “evil” in intent as well as in action.
The
expulsion of Palestinians from their homes - some by fear of being subject to
terrorist attacks consciously planned to evoke that fear by Menachem Begin,
Yitzhak Shamir, and the Zionist terrorist groups that they led, some (at least
a hundred thousand) by acts of the Israeli army (now fully documented by
Israeli historians), and still others by fear of being caught in a war zone
(but then, Jews had no place to avoid the war zone, no neighboring countries to
which to flee, no more in 1948 than we had when we were being slaughtered by
the millions from 1939-1945, and for us, that was decisive about why we felt we
had a right to stay), intensified angers.
But
these relationships could have been repaired had Israel allowed the refugees to
return home after the armistice was reached in 1949.It did not.
Instead
Israel declared those who had left, whether by force or by fear, as a “hostile
population,” and shot as “terrorists” those who sought to sneak over the border
in ensuing years to return to their homes. Those actions, particularly the
brutal murders by Ariel Sharon and his Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) unit in the
early 1950s, provoked counter-acts of terror by Palestinians. The story has
only intensified in killings of civilians ever since.
Surrounding
Arab states have not helped the matter. Their decision by some Arab leaders
(not that of ordinary Palestinians living in their homeland without democratic
mechanisms to choose the people who spoke for them) led to the 1947-1949 War
and to disaster for Palestinians.
For
at least five decades thereafter, those Arab states, with the exception of
Jordan and Egypt, rejected every attempt by Israel to make peace. Except for
Jordan, all of those states have been wildly insensitive to the needs of their
Arab brothers and sisters, and have used their cause as a political football to
embarrass Israel, whose existence they hoped to overcome.
It’s
only in the last decade that most of these states have come to accept that
there is no military solution likely to yield a better deal for the Arabs than
what they could get through negotiations.
Moreover,
many of those Arab states have treated Palestinian refugees at least as poorly,
and sometimes considerably worse (e.g. Lebanon) than have the Israelis.
Yet,
as the example of Egypt and Jordan shows, those states no longer act as a bloc,
and even the most extreme among them have finally come to accept the reality of
Israel and have given up most of their fantasies that Israel would some day
disappear.
Only
the non-Arab state of Iran still has leadership holding on to that illusion.
National
PTSD
When
I look back and watch the irrational and self-defeating behavior of both sides,
and when I interview people on both sides of this struggle, one concept shouts
out to me: PTSD-Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
The
trauma on both sides has led people to be unable to think rationally about what
is in their own best interests.
For
the Palestinians that trauma led them to reject the proposal of a two-state
solution that was offered them in 1947, and for them to encourage the
surrounding Arab states to reject every offer made by Israel in subsequent
decades even after those states were decisively defeated in the 1967 War.
In
later decades, starting in the 1980s, it was the Jews who rejected reasonable
offers for peace, and instead imagined that their military might would allow
them to crush the Palestinian national movement. Illusion after illusion after
illusion.
Even
today, Israel has been faced with an offer by the Arab states for full
recognition and peace if Israel would simply return to the pre-1967 borders
However, Israel will not accept, though it knows full well that in the
negotiations the Palestinians would allow the Jews to hold on to the Western
Wall and the Jewish Quarter of the Old City and would even consider trading
some close-to-the-border land to allow some of the major Israeli settlements if
Israel gave an equal amount of land back to the Palestinians and made a
credible and serious offer to provide reparations for Palestinian refugees.
If
Israel were to approach this kind of offer in a spirit of open-heartedness, it
could soon work out details that would provide Israel with adequate security.
Arrogance
of power? Subordination to the religious messianism of the West Bank settlers?
Sure, those play a role.
But
in my view, it is PTSD that is decisive in keeping Israelis from looking at
their actual situation: a tiny minority in a world surrounded by Arab and
Muslim states whose power will only grow in the coming decades and whose anger
at Israel grows in intensity as they watch the state that claims to be the
representative of the Jewish people act in horrendous and cruel ways toward
Palestinians.
Any
rational assessment would lead Israelis to accept the terms being offered to
them, and to do so in a way that manifested a spirit of generosity and caring
for those whom it had hurt, tortured, falsely imprisoned, killed, or wounded.
Similarly,
it is PTSD that can best explain how Palestinians would embrace Hamas or Hezbollah
and fantasize that they can eventually destroy Israel rather than work out an
agreement that allows Israel to exist as a Jewish state (that is, as a state
that gives affirmative action in regard to immigration to Jews who have a
reasonable claim to fear of persecution where they are currently living - but
not a state that is run by Jewish religious law except in the cultural sense
that Jewish holidays are given the same official public priority in that state
that Christmas is given in the United States)
How
do you deal with two peoples who are suffering from PTSD? Well, we know what
you don’t do. You don’t try to coerce them into situations in which they
perceive themselves as vulnerable to re-experiencing the insecurity and pain
that caused the trauma in the first place.
This
is why I’ve argued against any attempt to force Israel through coercion into
accepting solutions that make it feel more vulnerable.
It’s
not that using coercion would be wrong or immoral, but that it will have the
exact opposite effect than intended.
Disinvestment
in Israel, for example, would only reconfirm the basic feeling (based on a
great deal of historical reality) that “the whole world is against us, but that
this time we will not be led like sheep to the slaughter in the way that
European Jewry allowed itself to be destroyed” (a false description of European
Jewry, but nevertheless the dominant perception in Israel).
The
Massada Complex remains a central frame through which Israelis experience their
reality: the courageous Jews who preferred death to surrendering to the Roman
imperialists who were seeking to outlaw Jewish life in what the Romans had
named “Palestine.” In this case, the Israelis are armed with hundreds of
nuclear weapons. There is enough willingness on the part of the majority to use
those weapons even if in the process they destroyed themselves.
Thus,
the situation cannot be analogized to that which existed in the 1980s and early
1990s in South Africa. On the one hand, the entire world recognized that
apartheid was fundamentally evil. There is no such consensus about Israel or
its policies.
Apartheid
meant that there was a legal structure preventing blacks from voting,
participating in the same schools or same beaches as whites. There is no such
set of laws within the pre-1967 boundaries of the State of Israel.
There
is certainly deprivation of rights in the West Bank and Gaza, but those
deprivations stem from a political assessment of the alleged dangers that
Israel faces, not from a commitment to degrade all Palestinians (though this
distinction is rapidly losing its force as the settlers become more active in
periodic pogroms against Palestinian civilians).
On
the other hand, the minority of whites in South Africa were not part of a
people who had always suffered systematic persecution, and though they had some
reason to fear what might happen to them as a minority in a black country, they
did not have reasonable claim on the conscience of the rest of the world for
the world’s ignoring them while they were being systematically slaughtered.
Yes,
it’s true that in the West Bank the conditions of oppression and discrimination
are in many respects worse than those which existed in South Africa - but it is
not apartheid, and using that word or thinking that one can use the same
strategies to challenge Israeli policy has proved to be a dead-end.
General
Boycott Opposed
So
while I support boycotts and disinvestment in Western firms that make goods
specifically to help the settlers and the IDF be more effective in enforcing
the Occupation, I oppose any general boycott of Israel itself.
And
there are moral reasons to oppose it as well - after all, the amount of
suffering that Israel imposes on the Palestinian people pales in comparison to
what the United States continues to do to Iraq.
Any
boycott that doesn’t also involve active campaigns for boycotting and
disinvestment in U.S. firms feels like selective prosecution, and something
inappropriate for majority Christian or majority Muslim societies that have not
yet taken full responsibility for their own role in creating the trauma that is
now being played out against Palestinians.
In
fact, this last point should remind us of the larger context. Israel has been
put into the same position internationally that Jews often were forced into
domestically in Eastern Europe: the public face of a system of oppression that
Jews did not control but which they served in part because they received
protection from ruling elites.
History
has shown that this position is precarious, and a bad deal for Jews. But it is
Western imperialism and colonialism that set this up, and Jews are only one of
many peoples who suffer the consequences along with our Palestinian brothers
and sisters.
Yet
this reality should also remind Jews that placing their faith in the allegiance
of the U.S. capitalist class is a terrible strategic error almost certain to
backfire.
The
anger generated by American imperialism around the world, often with the
backing of Israel as its sole loyal ally in disgraceful acts of domination, is
generating huge amounts of anger that will be passed down from generation to
generation among the peoples of the world.
It’s
a story we could have learned from the Book of Genesis in the Torah - Joseph
becomes the prime minister of Egypt, comes up with economic schemes that
deprive many Egyptians of their livelihood, and in future generations the
Egyptians then enslave and oppress the Jews.
This
is not a rational strategy for long-term survival
The
problem with PTSD is that it deprives people of the capacity to think about
long-term survival and instead focuses them on the perceived (and usually
unrealistic) immediate threats to such an extent that they are unable to act
rationally.
What
can one do with such a reality?
The
techniques of psychotherapy have proved of only limited impact with PTSD
clients, but they have some chance. Not so when trying to build a mass
psychology of healing for a whole society, particularly when the society has
not elected to undergo therapy! Those of us who know healing is necessary are
far from being empowered to develop societal strategies that could begin the
healing process. For us, part of the problem is to get the society to recognize
that it could benefit from therapy.
My
own work with the Institute for Labor and Mental Health started on this same
challenge with regard to destigmatizing the use of therapy for working-class
people.
We
developed a campaign to popularize the notion that everyone is facing stress,
that one is not “crazy” if one seeks support for stress-related problems, and
that talking to someone about it would be helpful and not a sign of
self-identifying as mentally ill.
It
was a powerful strategy, and by the mid-1980s we had become so successful that
the term “stress” entered the popular vocabulary with much broader meanings
than it had ever had before.
One
of the goals of the Tikkun Community and the Network of Spiritual Progressives
is to bring together psychotherapists in the West with Israeli and Palestinian
therapists to explore what would be analogous work in those societies.
A
central ingredient in any serious strategy will be the task of reassuring
people in both societies that they are not hated and demeaned by the peoples of
the world, but rather than they are understood in some deep way.
That’s
why in Healing Israel/Palestine I try to tell the history in a way that shows
that both sides have a legitimate story, both sides have been unnecessarily
cruel to the other, both sides need to do repentance and atonement.
Sure,
the story can be told in a blame-oriented way. But that will only make it less
likely that we can heal the two sides enough that they could actually imagine
feeling safe enough to make compromises for a real peace.
Those
who want to advance social healing should begin writing the texts, composing
the songs, and creating the TV and movie documentaries, that have as their goal
the presentation of this kind of balanced and non-blaming compassionate
perspective.
I
don’t underestimate the difficulties in this strategy. The very fact of telling
the story in a balanced way in the Jewish community in the United States has
earned Tikkun the reputation of being anti-Semitic, or run by self-hating Jews.
The
organized Jewish community in the United States, prodded on by the Israel Lobby
(see my discussion in Tikkun Sept/Oct 2007) has been one of the major
impediments to this kind of discourse, or to any peace process that cares
equally for both sides.
Obama
and Clinton
Barack
Obama felt that pressure intensely enough to insert in his now-famous speech on
race in Philadelphia a line about the real problem in the Middle East stemming
not even in part from the clashes and tensions between Israel and its neighbors
and the frustrations of hundreds of millions of Muslims watching as their
Muslim brothers and sisters are subjected to systematic violations of their
human rights,but only from Islamic fundamentalism.
Not
to be outdone,Hillary Clinton warned that were it to attack Israel she as
president would “obliterate” Iran.
These
are only the latest examples of the incredible power of the Israel Lobby to
make clear that loyalty to Israel’s policies is necessary for any American
politician to avoid political suicide in the U.S - one can question U.S. policy
(e.g. in regard to the current war we are fighting in Iraq, Afghanistan and
possibly in Iran), but we dare not question Israeli policy! So what can we who
love Israel, want to see it survive and flourish, and feel that its current
path is self-destructive, actually do politically? At least for the short run,
we’ve found that lobbying Congress is a dead-end, because most of the
congressional leaders who agree with our “progressive Middle Path that is both
pro-Israel and pro-Palestine” feel scared to say so publicly, and will continue
to feel this way until some mainstream political candidate is willing to run
for president and make this Middle Path his or her own.
Similarly,
and for reasons explained above, there’s no point in demonstrations that
one-sidedly fault Israel, even though Israel, at the moment, has far superior
power and hence far superior responsibility to take the first steps to change
the situation. Of course, we’ll work with the “J Street” project to help create
an alternative to AIPAC, but the pressures on that “alternative” to moderate
its message in ways that make it less effective will be huge, and the tendency
to focus only on policy issues and not on the underlying mass psychology that
has contributed to AIPAC’s power is going to be immense.
What
does make sense is to challenge the mass psychology through a politics of
compassion and a discourse of non-violence.
Those
of us who wish to see Palestinians freed from subjugation, and Israel living in
peace with its neighbors, have to begin to apply the wisdom of Martin Luther
King, Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi to the situation in the Middle East.
Efforts
to create dialogue, to learn how to express oneself in ways that are supportive
and not hostile, to learn how to respond to violence with non-violence, must be
coupled with a principled embrace of non-violence and teaching non-violence in
our public schools, churches, synagogues, mosques, and religious schools.
But
there is a deeper change that is needed to heal Israel/Palestine: a change in
our own U.S. conception of what brings security.
The
Network of Spiritual Progressives/Tikkun Community evolved from its primary
focus on challenging Israeli policy to challenging the Domination Strategy (the
view that homeland security comes from imposing our will on others lest they
impose their will on us) in Western societies.
This
evolution occurred not only because of the moral disaster of the Iraq War, but
also because we became increasingly convinced that at the heart of the Middle
East struggle was the need to undermine the Domination Strategy that has become
the common sense, not only of the post 9/11 Western countries but also of the
mass consciousness in Israel and Palestine.
In
place of that slippery slope to violence and war, we propose a Strategy of Generosity:
that homeland security can best be achieved through acts of genuine caring and
generosity toward others, so that we are perceived as (and actually become) a
country that recognizes our fundamental interconnection with all other human
beings on the planet and with the well-being of the planet itself.
It
is that thinking which now leads us to give a priority attention to the Global
Marshall Plan, not only because it is the best way to end global poverty,
homelessness, hunger, inadequate education and inadequate healthcare, but also
because it is the best way to lead by example and to show both Arab and Israeli
peoples the way that could bring them lasting peace.
This,
we believe, is the most important contribution we in the West could make to
healing Israel/Palestine.
More
Generosity
If
we could build a political movement in Western societies that was committed to
the Strategy of Generosity and the Global Marshall Plan, we would help Israelis
feel that acting from generosity was not some utopian fantasy but rather a way
of thinking that was already legitimated in the politics of the more advanced
industrial societies of the West.
In
this way we could re-empower the many decent people in Israel/Palestine who
today avoid politics, certain that there is no point, and that no one would
ever be willing to make the compromises necessary for peace.
Living
in the West, we have an important role, but it is not that of imposing our
solution, but rather that of modeling a way of relating to others that could infectiously
transform the world’s “common sense.” Just as the women’s movement, first
dismissed as “unrealistic,” has had a profound impact on every country on the
planet, so a movement for love and generosity, and for a New Bottom Line, such
as that detailed in our Global Marshall Plan (to read go to www.tikkunorg and
click on “Current Thinking”) and our Spiritual Covenant with America (to read
go to www.spiritualprogressives.org) could have a profound impact on the
process of healing the Middle East.
To
the extent that we can make that happen here, we would be making a huge
contribution toward the possibility of lasting peace for Israel.
In
future writing I will discuss the meaning of the situation in Israel/Palestine
for those who believe in God and who want to keep Judaism alive.
For
now, suffice it to say that the kind of Zionism that has emerged in Israel is
fundamentally incompatible with the highest values of the Jewish tradition, and
must be rejected even as we develop a compassionate attitude toward the Jewish
people of Israel.
For
those who wish to see Judaism survive the twenty-first century, a major first
step is to separate the religion from its current identity with the policies of
a national state that has lots of Jews living in it and that has succeeded in
getting many Jews around the world identifying it as “The Jewish State.” I
personally feel tremendous pride in many aspects of what the Jews in Israel
have accomplished on the fronts of culture, science, and technology, even as I
feel tremendous shame at what they have failed to accomplish in human
relations, ethics, and environmental sensitivity.
But
I carefully separate my sense of family - which for me is tied quite strongly
to the State of Israel - from my understanding of what is required of us to
serve God and to preserve Judaism in the contemporary period.
For
that latter goal, we must be willing to apply the prophetic tradition and ask
Israelis Isaiah’s powerful question: “Who asked you to trample in My Courtyard”
and to defile the holiness of God’s Torah?
Judaism
teaches us to “love the stranger,” (the Other). Thereis no more frequently
quoted injunction in Torah than variations on the following theme: “When you
come into your land, do not oppress the stranger: remember that you were
strangers in the land of Egypt.” A Jewish state that has been unwilling or
unable to live by that command has no religious foundation and can generate no
lasting support from those committed to God and Torah.
Such
a state, failing that central commandment, is unlikely to provide safety and
security for the Jewish people in any long-term way in the twenty-first
century.
Like
every other people on the planet, Jews have a yearning to live in a world based
on love and kindness and generosity. We will respond to those possibilities
just as all peoples will if given half a chance.
The
task of building a Network of Spiritual Progressives is to convince all peoples
that far from being a nave utopian fantasy, building such a world of
open-heartedness, compassion, and caring for others is the immediate survival
task of the twenty-first century.
Rabbi Michael Lerner is editor of Tikkun Magazine www.tikkun.org, Chair of the Network of Spiritual Progressives and rabbi of Beyt Tikkun synagogue in San Francisco and Berkeley. Write to him at RabbiLerner@Tikkun.org.