dave (05/06/83)
To put my reply to Martin Taylor (dciem!mmt) in context, here is our previous correspondence: ============================================================================== From dciem!mmt Fri Apr 22 09:39:24 1983 To: utcsrgv!dave Subject: Jewish=Zionist? I don't see why Jewish = Zionist. If it were so, anti-Zionists like me would be anti-Jewish, whiich I am not. I don't think ANY state based on religion should exist, because such states almost always lead to intolerance (Papal Spain, present-day Iran, for example; not to mention what the Moral Majority would like to do to N. America). Let people be who they be, worship how they want. That's my motto. I think the manner in which Israel was born was most unfortunate, and see no historical claim whatever for Jewish ownership of the area now called Palestine. Jews and Arabs had for many centuries got along very well, much better than Jews and Christians, until Zionism got mixed up with Jewishness. I have great sympathy with the Jewish experience in the Holocaust, and with the Goanese experiences in Uganda, and the Cambodians under Pol Pot etc.etc. But I would not have handed Israel over to the Begin terrorists either. Rather, I would have attempted (probably unsuccessfully) to support moderate Jews in the attempt to restore harmony with the Arabs in the Middle East, so that Jews who felt personally threatened in what was left of Europe could have a congenial place to go. Do you really think Zionism will EVER lead to a safe home for Jews? Martin ============================================================================= From dave Fri Apr 22 10:20:36 1983 To: dciem!mmt Subject: Zionism The historical claim of the Jews to Israel is well-documented and goes back a long way. Furthermore, much of Israel was only reclaimed from the desert because Jews settled there. Zionism never aimed at throwing the Arabs out of Palestine. If you recall the UN resolution of 1947 which authorized the creation of Israel, it also authorized the creation of an Arab state. It was the Arabs who rejected that concept. Where were the cries for a Palestinian state on the West Bank from 1948-1967? Your sympathy for Jews who are murdered is not enough, in my book. Jews have been persecuted throughout the world for centuries. Having nowhere to go in 1939 was one of the causes of the magnitude of the Holocaust. Like most Jews, I would much rather be disliked and alive than dead with your sympathy. Saying that states based on religion lead to intolerance and are therefore wrong is a cop-out. Don't look at Papal Spain or present-day Iran. They are different countries and different religions. Look at Israel. Do you have any idea of what rights are given to Arabs in Israel? And Christians? There is complete freedom of religion. When I was there in 1974, our group went to visit Maarot Hamachpeleh, where Abraham and other [pm]atriarchs are buried. We had to wait for a while because the Arab hours weren't over yet, and Arabs were visiting the tomb. (Abraham was a father of the Arabs as well, of course.) Tell me that Jewish holy sites ever got such treatment in Arab countries. (For that matter, tell me the Arab countries aren't "based on religion".) Do you know what happened to Jewish sacred sites in the part of Jerusalem which was under Jordanian control between 1948 and 1967? Your motto may well be "let people be who they be, worship what they want". If that's really the case, you'll be happy to see one small country where Jews can be, and worship. Letting them "be" in other countries, with the exception of those democracies where human rights are carefully protected, just isn't good enough. And that's why Judaism and Zionism go together. Dave From dciem!mmt Fri Apr 22 11:56:17 1983 To: utcsrgv!dave Subject: Zionism Thanks for getting back so quickly. I think (hope) I understand your feelings, but I can't ever be a Jew, so I can't really know. The dilemma is a real one, with no true solution that I can see. Argument from emotion leads to different results from arguments based on logic, and both are valid. Consider: (i) Almost any piece of terrain in the world has been used ("owned?) by a wide variety of peoples over the last 2000 years. Each group that lived there for some time has a legitimate claim to regard that place as a homeland. So regardless of which version of Judaic history is correct, the one time political suzerainty of the Jews over the territory of Israel under the Roman Empire is irrelevant to their present claim. The best claim Israel has is that it NOW exists (like Yugoslavia). (ii) I wonder whether the Arabs in Israel feel they have an equal share in the government, or the Christians, for that matter. I have never been there, so I hesitate to comment on what life is like for different groups, but I have heard that there exist Sabbath laws rather like our Lord's Day Act, which must be offensive to you. I have also heard of political parties claiming that everybody should live by various versions of more or less strict Jewish law. (iii) I think it an exaggeration to say that Jews have everywhere been persecuted throughout the centuries. It has generally been true in Christian countries (under the influence of the gentle Christ), but I thought that Arab countries before 1900 were something of a haven for Jews, who frequently rose to eminent positions in business and government. This is one reason why the present enmity between Jews and Arabs seems so sad. I could understand a deep enmity of Jews for Christians, given the history. Only since 1945 has there been any attempt that I can see for Christian countries to "apologise" to Jews for Hitler. Now I see on the netnews that some kids are growing up not even believing that the Holocaust happened, and I worry that we may live to see anti-semitism become "respectable" again. (iv) If anti-semitism does become respectable, it has to be fought with all weapons, but I don't think an apparently imperialistic (colonialistic?) Israel dominated by a philosophy of lebensraum (I deliberately use Hitler's word) will help in the fight. Neither do I think Jews in or out of Israel should be meek and mild. The world is not a nice place, and everyone has to stand up for their rights. (v) There tends to be a confusion between supporting the existence of Israel and its right to exist, on the one hand, and "Israel cna do no wrong" on the other. The latter is what is often labelled Zionism, and is what I oppose. I would probably have opposed the formation of Israel originally, but it is hard to blame the Western leaders of the day with the horrors of Germany fresh in mind. But as I said above, the best claim Israel has to exist is that it is there and viable if no-one interferes. (vi) Yes, Israel has made the desert bloom in a way that the Arabs never did. But that is irrelevant to the question. I hope you appreciate that I don't like or dislike Jews, Christians, Moslems, or anybody labelled by a group name. I deal with people rather than with groups. I object when one "group" deals with the people of another "group" as if the group label defined the individuals. Martin ============================================================================== From dave Thu May 5 17:19:37 1983 To: dciem!mmt Subject: Zionism, round three I agree that one of Israel's best claims to its land is that it is there now. That goes for just about every other country in the world too. But there is indeed an historical claim, which goes back much further than the Roman Empire. The other powers which occupied the land over time are not around any more. Perhaps Moslems and Christians don't feel they have an equal share in government. But they have rights as citizens. They elect members to the Parliament. They sit in the Parliament. They are also a minority in the country. In how many Arab countries do Jews (or Christians, for that matter) have equal civil rights? The Sabbath laws reflect the fact that, yes indeed, Israel is a state based on a religion. Parts of the country (e.g., Jerusalem) contain large numbers of observant Jews, and in deference to them there are certain restrictions. In those parts of the country where there are fewer observant Jews (e.g., Haifa), there are fewer restrictions. Jews and Arabs may have "gotten along" in Arab countries, but it was always on the basis of the Jews being second-class citizens. Aren't we allowed ONE country where we can come first? Most Arab countries are based on religion as much as Israel is. As you probably expected, I object to your use of the word "Lebensraum" to describe Israel's policies. Let me remind you of a few points: (1) The Begin government HANDED BACK to Egypt, in exchange for a somewhat ephemeral peace treaty, a large expanse of land, complete with oilfields and air bases. This is hardly expansionist. (2) Israel's policy in Lebanon is clear. It needs some guarantees of protection for its own citizens. After years of being shelled across the border, enough is enough. If the Lebanese can't stop it, Israel has to. Israel has never had any intention of "taking over" Lebanon. (3) Kindly recall how Israel came to be in control of the West Bank. In 1967, three days into the Six-Day War, Jordan decided to believe all the glowing reports coming from Egypt about how Israel was being wiped out. Deciding to grab some more land for itself, Jordan attacked Israel. In response, the Israelis repelled the Jordanians and took over the entire West Bank, an area which Jordan had no claim to in the first place. I hardly call that Lebensraum. The situation now is different from what it was in 1966. Why should the 1948 borders mean anything? They happened to be armistice lines which marked where the various parties were when the firing stopped. They have no magical value. Just as Israel was entitled to keep the land it "acquired" in 1948, it is entitled to the land it "acquired" in 1967. The Palestinians who do not like living in the West Bank under Israeli control are welcome to move to Palestine - that is, that country which makes up 77% of the original British territory of Palestine and a majority of whose residents are Palestinian Arabs -- Jordan. Many hundreds of thousands of Jews moved from Arab countries to Israel after 1948. In response to the question in your first letter, as to whether Israel will ever lead to a safe home for Jews, the answer is an unequivocal YES. It already does! Where do you think Jews go, from all over the world? Jews who got out of Iran, out of Russia, out of Syria, and many other places in recent years, have all found a home in Israel. If there were no Israel, we might well be back to 1939. Dave Sherman