The grim ‘logic’ of Zionism
John Molyneux
This article was written for the special Palestine Solidarity issue of Irish Socialist Worker.
Leon
Trotsky once wrote that if the young Stalin had been able to foresee the
monster that he was to become he would have recoiled in horror. Much the same
could be said of those founded the state of Israel.
If we think
of the Jewish people in the 19th and early 20th century
when Zionism took shape the outstanding figures who come immediately to mind
are the likes of Marx, Heine, Einstein, Freud, Proust, Kafka, Rosa Luxemburg,
Trotsky, Niels Bohr, Emma Goldmann, Chagall, Mahler, Schoenberg, Kafka,
Durkheim, Benjamin – intellectuals, artists, scientists, revolutionaries,
predominantly humanitarian and progressive. Of course these are exceptional
individuals but nevertheless their character is neither accidental nor genetic.
It reflects the peculiar position of the Jews as an oppressed people in the
history of Europe, many of whom, in rebelling against
their own oppression became champions of human liberation in a much wider
sense.
The
Zionists who came to Israel as ‘pioneers’ on the early kibbutz and who
established the Israeli state in 1948 were not that far removed in their
consciousness and character, except for being Zionists, from the people listed
above- almost all them would have considered themselves ‘progressive’ or ‘liberal’,
most were secular, many were atheists and some would considered themselves
socialist, even Marxist. It should be remembered that that the kibbutz were
‘communes’, egalitarian and collectivist in their internal regimes and
practice. So how did it come to the horror we now see played out before the
eyes of the world – the bombing of schools and hospitals, the targeting of kids
on the beach, the daily slaughter of children, the hate-filled racism that
calls for ‘death to the Arabs’ and sits on the hillside at Siderot to watch and
celebrate the killing?
It was
precisely the working out of the logic of Zionism. As a political movement
Zionism was simply the demand that the Jewish people should be able to have
their own state. This could be, and was, presented as something entirely
reasonable, fair and just. The French had a state, the British had a state, the
Germans, the Italians, the Dutch etc.,etc, - it seemed that every people had a
state. Why not also the Jews? Surely only a dyed-in-the-wool anti-Semite could
deny the Jewish people this right? And the fact that Jews had suffered
centuries of racist persecution and oppression made this case seem all the
stronger. On this basis millions of liberal, progressive and anti-racist people
round the world supported or sympathised with the Zionist project.
Unfortunately
there were, from the outset, two ‘small’ problems with this project. Where was
the state to be located and how was it actually to be set up? By the time
Zionism established itself as a political movement there was nowhere in the
world to which significant numbers of Jews could be attracted which was vacant.
It was clearly not going to be possible to persuade the Jews of New York or London, Berlin or Vienna or even Kiev and Warsaw to migrate en masse to Northern Siberia or the Greenland icecap. Moreover this was a period
in which, as Lenin kept pointing out in his analysis of imperialism, the entire
world or almost the entire world, had been divided up between a handful of
great powers – Britain, France, Russia, Germany, Japan, USA etc.
The
combination of these two problems meant that there was there was, in practice,
only one way that a specifically Jewish state could be established – that was
as a settler state in a territory occupied by an economically and politically
weaker people. And given the fact that the Jews were a scattered and oppressed
minority in Europe, initially without their own armed forces, this could only
be realised with the backing of one or more of the imperialist states that actually
controlled all possible sites for the projected Zionist state.. This meant that
to achieve its aim Zionism was forced to go cap in hand to imperialism.
But why
should any imperialist power want to support this project? Sympathy for the
oppressed Jewish people? Colonial empires were not based or built on sympathy
for the oppressed and besides the rulers whose backing was required were
precisely the rulers responsible for the centuries of oppression and
discrimination. There was only one way that the forces of imperialism would
facilitate the founding of a Zionist state and that was if they considered it
in their interests and the Zionist leaders understood this. What they had to
offer was to be the loyal outpost and representative of imperialism in the area
in which they settled. As Sir Ronald Storrs, the first Governor of
Jerusalem, at the time of the 1917 Balfour Declaration, said a Jewish homeland
in Palestine ‘will form for England
a little loyal Jewish Ulster in a sea of potentially hostile Arabism.’ And thus
the fate of Zionism was sealed. Whatever the subjective intentions of its
pioneers, whatever the ideals of the early kibbutzim, Israel
would develop as an imperialist settler state and this had built into it a
logic of racist barbarism.
Before returning to how this logic has worked itself out in
the history of Zionist Israel we should remind ourselves that there is nothing
unusual or specifically Jewish about this phenomenon. Racism against
non-Europeans and people of colour as a whole arose from European enslavement
and conquest of the rest of the world beginning at the end of the 15th
century but it was always particularly virulent among settler populations who
were at the sharp end of this process: think of the Boers (Dutch) in South
Africa, the White Settlers in ‘Rhodesia’, the Australians and the Aborigines,
the French Pieds Noir in Algeria and,
of course, the European settlers in America.pushing relentlessly westwards at
the expense of the Native Americans. To the settler the indigenous population –
dispossessed and oppressed- is perceived as a permanent existential threat that
needs to be ‘pacified’, subdued or disposed of and the ideological
justification for this inevitably develops an intense racist dynamic.
Zionism, born out of a (profoundly mistaken) response to
racism, has turned inexorably into one of the most extreme racisms on the face
of the earth. Sometimes people are perplexed by this transformation. How, they
ask, could a people who suffered so much persecution resort to behaviour that
so mimics that of their erstwhile oppressors? Again it has to be said that such
transformations are not rare in history. The Dutch who revolted against Spanish
Habsburg rule in the 16th century establish in the Dutch
Republic the most ‘liberal’,
tolerant and progressive society in Europe at the time
but the moment they became colonialists, in the Dutch East Indies,
Southern Africa etc, they turned into brutal racists. Similarly the Puritans
who went to North America to escape religious persecution
in England
become the initiators of the long genocide of the indigenous population and
later the same fate befell many of the Irish emigrants. Or think of Cromwell
himself – a (bourgeois) revolutionary hero in England;
a monster in Ireland.
Now consider the position and mindset of the Zionist Jewish
settlers in Palestine arriving and
establishing themselves in the first half of the 20th century. This
land is to be their land, their ‘Jewish homeland’ where they will live in
security free of, or protected from, the racist persecution that had been their
lot hitherto. That is their premise, the very principle and goal of the Zionist
movement and their whole reason for being there. But how can this claim be
justified – and people need justifications for others and for themselves?
The Zionists have deployed several justifications – and they
all have directly racist implications. One of the first was to deny the
existence of the Palestinians. This was often expressed in the slogan ‘A land
without a people for a people without a land’[1]. Given
the manifest existence of the Palestinian people and their evident objection to
being dispossessed and colonized this denial inevitably morphed into the claim
that even though they may exist there was something inherently wrong with them.
They were uncivilized, savages, much inferior by nature to the Jews. In other
words the Zionist justification for a Jewish state picked up on and slotted
into the central idea of European racism developed to justify empire. This in
turn fed the notion that it was the Jews who had built up and developed the
country ‘out of the desert’, the condition in which it had allegedly been left
by its Palestinian inhabitants ( who were ‘lazy/savage/uncivilsed etc) and were
therefore entitled to it – a justification which exactly paralleled that used
by White South Africans.
Finally there was the religious justification: Israeli was
‘the promised land’, given to them by God since the days of Moses because they
were God’s ‘chosen people’. This religious claim was not, as is often thought,
the driving forcing or central tenet of Zionist ideology (which was generally
secular rather theological and focused on Jewishness as a cultural/ racial
identity rather on Judaism as a religion) nevertheless it was seized on and
deployed, often cynically, because religion is always useful for justifying
wars and doubtless this myth was particularly useful in parts of America. But
if the Jews were God’s chosen people and God gave Israel
to the Jews then the racist implications for the Arabs were unavoidable: they
were ‘not chosen’ and they should get out of the place.
The situation and role of the Israeli settler state
compounds and exacerbates this racist tendency. Let us take the Israelis at
their word: all they want is to live in peace and security in their homeland.
But they cannot live in peace and security because they are surrounded by
hostile Arabs. Why are the Arabs hostile? Because have they have been
dispossessed and ethnically cleansed. This cannot be admitted so it must be
because Arabs, or is it Muslim, are innately anti-Semitic. But if Arabs are
innately anti-Semitic then every Arab and every Palestinian is an enemy.
Security turns into a requirement to drive out the enemy or crush them to the
point where there can be no more resistance – no more stones thrown or rockets
fired.
Perhaps what they need is secure borders. But the borders
are never secure because beyond them to
Lebanon and Syria in the North, to Jordan in the East, to Egypt in the West are
more than a hundred million Arabs and Muslims with whom it is their role as
imperialism’s watchdog to be in conflict, and millions of Palestinian refugees
who obstinately continue to dream of returning to their homeland. So the
borders must be extended and extended again and the enemy within must be
subdued and subdued again. So there is permanent war. And so the desire creeps
up for some way out: for some ‘final solution’. Thus, in the grimmest of
dialectics, Zionism, born out of racism and confirmed by genocide, itself
becomes ever more racist and genocidal.
Was there an alternative? Yes – the alternative of Marx,
Luxemberg, Trotsky and innumerable other Jewish socialists, leftists and
workers, namely not to set off in search of a Jewish state in a non-existent
vacant place but to stay and fight anti-Semitism and the capitalist society
that gave rise to it as an integral part of the international struggle of the
working class. And essentially that remains the alternative today only,
tragically, it must now also include as part of its perspective the defeat of
Zionism and imperialism in Palestine
and the Middle East by the Arab masses and their
international allies.
John Molyneux
[1] The slogan appears to have been
coined in 1843 by an English Christian ‘restorationist’ [who wanted to restore
‘the Holy
Land’ to
the Jews] but was taken up by many others such as the Earl of Shaftesbury and
echoed by Israeli PM Golda Meir in her
1976 statement in the New York Times. ‘There is no Palestinian people.
There are Palestinian refugees’.
3 comments:
Sir, your article is, in general, sympathetic to my own reading of events, but there are some interesting points.
Kafka obviously impressed you; you list him twice.
First, though you speak of the endless persecutions, the inherent anti-Semitism, you avoid the word Holocaust. This WW2 event was specifically the trigger for the 1948 establishment of the state of Israel. Enormous guilt at the plight of the Jews in the early part of the war, when the Allies did little or nothing to help them during the clearing of the ghettoes, fuelled the support from 'victorious' Europe and the US.
In the chain of events, we might rightly attribute German imperialism and racism, in fact, to have been directly responsible for much of the present Middle Eastern ferment.
Second, you remark: “Racism against non-Europeans and people of colour as a whole arose from European enslavement and conquest of the rest of the world beginning at the end of the 15th century”
I think we might say the racism came first, not as the result of slavery. Seeing black people, a priori, as inferior was the key to accepting them as a subjugated untermensch in the cotton fields.
Third, you write: “…was there an alternative? Yes – the alternative of Marx, Luxemberg, Trotsky and innumerable other Jewish socialists, leftists and workers, namely not to set off in search of a Jewish state in a non-existent vacant place but to stay and fight anti-Semitism and the capitalist society that gave rise to it as an integral part of the international struggle of the working class.”
Well, I believe history records a long record of anti-Semitic activity in ‘communist’ Russia. The 1917 revolution did not suddenly endear Jews to the proletariat. The fact is, Jews were never popular in the diaspora, mostly because they were perceived as hording riches and living ethically exclusive lives. It is a paradox that Hitler's rejection of Jewry as impure from his Aryan (mythic) standpoint ignored the fact they were far purer as a race than the rest of Austro-Germany. And the Jews' skills with money as a response to the 'filthy lucre' attitude of the puritannical Christian indigenous populations around them has been well noted.
But while many Jews in history have been dirt poor, even they were never exclusively socialist - the leanings of intellectuals should not blind us to the reality. Many poor Jews were capitalists, zealously attempting to obtain wealth to grow their businesses from scratch, and some succeeded spectacularly.
No ethnic group has ever more effectively exploited and grown a capitalist ethic than the businesslike Jews. The very 'Jewishness' of Jesus' parable of the talents is a hint of the historicity of this ethic. Very many Jews have been amongst the world’s richest magnates, whose enormous ‘capital’ wealth, exported to the motherland, has been integral to funding the founding and security of the state of Israel from its inception to the present day.
The intellectuals may have provided the conceptual seedcorn, but those powerful mega-wealthy sponsors and their networked political allies made it a reality.
Things are never really neat and tidy in politics, however we might wish them so.
Apologies, I mistyped: "...Jews were never popular in the diaspora, mostly because they were perceived as hording riches and living ethically exclusive lives." I meant, of course, eth-N-ically exclusive lives.
What a rotten little human this man is. A true Jew Hater.
Dozens of Muslim countries with 99% of their population following one sect of one religion surround a small country where Jews make up the majority, but where also Arabs live and take part in the democracy.
If you are a Christian in Pakistan, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Malaysia etc prepared to be murdered.
Can you go to Mecca? No! These are apartheid States, not Israel.
All Muslim countries were stolen by the sword. Does this man care? No!
This Molynueux character wants another holocaust. A true final solution. Just as Hamas sets out in its charters—Death to all Jews!
And it is the left which is organising it.
Typical Academic communist. Stupid and violent Jew Hater.
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