I would not presume to make judgments
about the state of democracy in Israel. I have neither the academic
background nor sufficient direct experience to be able to assess such factors,
but I found this article "Israel’s Fading Democracy" by
Avraham Burg (former Knesset member) to provide some important
perspectives on inclusiveness and exclusivity, on faith and state,
and indirectly on that country's relationship with Iran. Burg is the
chairman of Molad, the Center for Renewal of Democracy; his essay was
published in the New York Times
(8/4/12):
WHEN an American presidential candidate
visits Israel and his key message is to encourage us to pursue a
misguided war with Iran, declaring it “a solemn duty and a moral
imperative” for America to stand with our warmongering prime
minister, we know that something profound and basic has changed in
the relationship between Israel and the United States.
My generation, born in the ’50s, grew
up with the deep, almost religious belief that the two countries
shared basic values and principles. Back then, Americans and Israelis
talked about democracy, human rights, respect for other nations and
human solidarity. It was an age of dreamers and builders who sought
to create a new world, one without prejudice, racism or
discrimination.
Listening to today’s political
discourse, one can’t help but notice the radical change in tone. My
children have watched their prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu,
kowtow to a fundamentalist coalition in Israel. They are convinced
that what ties Israel and America today is not a covenant of
humanistic values but rather a new set of mutual interests: war,
bombs, threats, fear and trauma. How did this happen? Where is that
righteous America? Whatever happened to the good old Israel?
Mr. Netanyahu’s great political
“achievement” has been to make Israel a partisan issue and push
American Jews into a corner. He has forced them to make political
decisions based on calculations that go against what they perceive to
be American interests. The emotional extortion compels Jews to
pressure the Obama administration, a government with which they
actually share values and worldviews, when those who love Israel
should be doing the opposite: helping the American government to
intervene and save Israel from itself.
Israel arose as a secular, social
democratic country inspired by Western European democracies. With
time, however, its core values have become entirely different. Israel
today is a religious, capitalist state. Its religiosity is defined by
the most extreme Orthodox interpretations. Its capitalism has erased
much of the social solidarity of the past, with the exception of a
few remaining vestiges of a welfare state. Israel defines itself as a
“Jewish and democratic state.” However, because Israel has never
created a system of checks and balances between these two sources of
authority, they are closer than ever to a terrible clash.
In the early years of statehood, the
meaning of the term “Jewish” was national and secular. In the
eyes of Israel’s founding fathers, to be a Jew was exactly like
being an Italian, Frenchman or American. Over the years, this elusive
concept has changed; today, the meaning of “Jewish” in Israel is
mainly ethnic and religious. With the elevation of religious
solidarity over and above democratic authority, Israel has become
more fundamentalist and less modern, more separatist and less open to
the outside world. I see the transformation in my own family. My
father, one of the founders of the state of Israel and of the
National Religious Party, was an enlightened rabbi and philosopher.
Many of the younger generation are far less open, however; some are
ultra-Orthodox or ultranationalist settlers.
This extremism was not the purpose of
creating a Jewish state. Immigrants from all over the world dreamed
of a government that would be humane and safe for Jews. The founders
believed that democracy was the only way to regulate the interests of
many contradictory voices. Jewish culture, consolidated through
Halakha, the religious Jewish legal tradition, created a civilization
that has devoted itself to an unending conversation among different
viewpoints and the coexistence of contradictory attitudes toward the
fulfillment of the good.
The modern combination between
democracy and Judaism was supposed to give birth to a spectacular,
pluralistic kaleidoscope. The state would be a great, robust
democracy that would protect Jews against persecution and victimhood.
Jewish culture, on the other hand, with its uncompromising moral
standards, would guard against our becoming persecutors and
victimizers of others.
BUT something went wrong in the
operating system of Jewish democracy. We never gave much thought to
the Palestinian Israeli citizens within the Jewish-democratic
equation. We also never tried to separate the synagogue and the
state. If anything, we did the opposite. Moreover, we never predicted
the evil effects of brutally controlling another people against their
will. Today, all the things that we neglected have returned and are
chasing us like evil spirits.
The winds of isolation and narrowness
are blowing through Israel. Rude and arrogant power brokers, some of
whom hold senior positions in government, exclude non-Jews from
Israeli public spaces. Graffiti in the streets demonstrates their
hidden dreams: a pure Israel with “no Arabs” and “no gentiles.”
They do not notice what their exclusionary ideas are doing to Israel,
to Judaism and to Jews in the diaspora. In the absence of a binding
constitution, Israel has no real protection for its minorities or for
their freedom of worship and expression.
If this trend continues, all vestiges
of democracy will one day disappear, and Israel will become just
another Middle Eastern theocracy. It will not be possible to define
Israel as a democracy when a Jewish minority rules over a Palestinian
majority between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea —
controlling millions of people without political rights or basic
legal standing.
This Israel would be much more Jewish
in the narrowest sense of the word, but such a nondemocratic Israel,
hostile to its neighbors and isolated from the free world, wouldn’t
be able to survive for long.
But there is another option: an iconic
conflict could also present an iconic solution. As in Northern
Ireland or South Africa, where citizens no longer spill one another’s
blood, it will eventually become clear that many Israelis are not
willing to live in an ethnic democracy, not willing to give up on the
chance to live in peace, not willing to be passive patriots of a
country that expels or purifies itself of its minorities, who are the
original inhabitants of the land.
Only on that day, after much anguish,
boycotts and perhaps even bloodshed, will we understand that the only
way for us to agree when we disagree is a true, vigorous democracy. A
democracy based on a progressive, civil constitution; a democracy
that enforces the distinction between ethnicity and citizenship,
between synagogue and state; a democracy that upholds the values of
freedom and equality, on the basis of which every single person
living under Israel’s legitimate and internationally recognized
sovereignty will receive the same rights and protections.
A long-overdue constitution could
create a state that belongs to all her citizens and in which the
government behaves with fairness and equality toward all persons
without prejudice based on religion, race or gender. Those are the
principles on which Israel was founded and the values that bound
Israel and America together in the past. I believe that creating two
neighboring states for two peoples that respect one another would be
the best solution. However, if our shortsighted leaders miss this
opportunity, the same fair and equal principles should be applied to
one state for both peoples.
When a true Israeli democracy is
established, our prime minister will go to Capitol Hill and win
applause from both sides of the aisle. Every time the prime minister
says “peace” the world will actually believe him, and when he
talks about justice and equality people will feel that these are
synonyms for Judaism and Israelis.
And for all the cynics who are smiling
sarcastically as they read these lines, I can only say to Americans,
“Yes, we still can,” and to Israelis, “If you will it, it is no
dream.”
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