Zionism: An “Abnormal” Nationalism - A Singular fact
Engendering History
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29 August 2009
By M. Shahid Alam
The ultimate
goal…is, in time, to take over the Land of Israel and
to restore to the Jews the political independence they
have been deprived of for these two thousand years…The
Jews will yet arise and, arms in hand (if need be),
declare that they are the masters of their ancient
homeland.
— Vladimir Dubnow, 1882
August 26, 2009 "Dissident Voice" -- - Zionism is best
described as an abnormal nationalism. This singular
fact has engendered a history of deepening conflicts
between Israel — leading an alliance of Western states
— and the Islamicate more generally.
Jewish ‘nationalism’ was abnormal for two reasons. It
was homeless: it did not possess a homeland. The Jews
of Europe were not a majority in, or even exercised
control over, any territory that could become the
basis of a Jewish state. We do not know of another
nationalist movement in recent memory that started
with such a land deficit — that is, without a
homeland.
Arguably, Jewish nationalism was without a nation too.
The Jews were a religious aggregate, consisting of
communities, scattered across many regions and
countries, some only tenuously connected to others,
but who shared the religious traditions derived from,
or an identity connected to, Judaism. Over the
centuries, Jews had been taught that a divinely
appointed Messiah would restore them to Zion; but such
a Messiah never appeared; or when he did, his failure
to deliver ‘proved’ that he was false. Indeed, while
the Jews prayed for the appearance of the Messiah,
they had no notion about when this might happen. In
addition, since the nineteenth century, Reform Jews
have interpreted their chosenness metaphorically. Max
Nordau complained bitterly that for the Reform Jew,
“the word Zion had just as little meaning as the word
dispersion…He denies that there is a Jewish people and
that he is a member of it.”
Since Zionism was a nationalism without a homeland or
a nation, its protagonists would have to create both.
To compensate for the first deficit, the Zionists
would have to acquire a homeland: they would have to
expropriate territory that belonged to another people.
In other words, a homeless nationalism, of necessity,
is a charter for conquest and — if it is exclusionary
— for ethnic cleansing. At the same time, the Zionists
would have to start creating a Jewish nation out of
the heterogeneous Jewish colons they would assemble in
their newly minted homeland. At the least, they would
have to create a nucleus of Jews who were willing to
settle in Palestine and committed to creating the
infrastructure of a Jewish society and state in
Palestine. For many years, this nucleus would be
small, since, Jews, overwhelmingly, preferred
assimilation and revolution in Europe to colonizing
Palestine.
A Jewish nation would begin to grow around this small
nucleus only if the Zionists could demonstrate that
their scheme was not a chimera. The passage of the
Zionist plan — from chimera to reality — would be
delivered by three events: imposition of tight
immigration restrictions in most Western countries
starting in the 1900s, the Balfour Declaration of
1917, and the rise to power of the Nazis in 1933. As a
result, when European Jews began fleeing Nazi
persecution, most of them had nowhere to go to but
Palestine.
In their bid to create a Jewish state in Palestine,
the Zionists could not stop at half-measures. They
could not — and did not wish to — introduce Jews as
only one element in the demography of the conquered
territory. The Zionists sought to establish a Jewish
state in Palestine; this had always been their goal.
Officially, they never acknowledge that the creation
of a Jewish state would have to be preceded,
accompanied, or followed by ethnic cleansing.
Nevertheless, it is clear from the record now
available that Zionists wanted nothing less than to
make Palestine “as Jewish as England is English.” If
the Palestinians could not be bribed to leave, they
would have to be forced out.
The Zionists were determined to reenact in the middle
of the twentieth century the exclusive settler
colonialism of an earlier epoch. They were determined
to repeat the supremacist history of the white colons
in the Americas and Oceania. By the measure of any
historical epoch, much less that of an age of
decolonization, the Zionist project was radical in the
fate it had planned for the Palestinians: their
complete or near-complete displacement from Palestine.
A project so daring, so radical, so anachronistic
could only emerge from unlimited hubris, deep racial
contempt for the Palestinians, and a conviction that
the ‘primitive’ Palestinians would prove to be utterly
lacking in the capacity to resist their own
dispossession.
The Zionists faced another challenge. They had to
convince Jews that they are a nation, a Jewish nation,
who deserved more than any nation in the world —
because of the much greater antiquity of Jews — to
have their own state, a Jewish state in Palestine. It
was the duty of Jews, therefore, to work for the
creation of this Jewish state by supporting the
Zionists, and, most importantly, by emigrating to
Palestine. Most Jews in the developed Western
countries had little interest in becoming Jewish
pioneers in Palestine; their lives had improved
greatly in the previous two or three generations and
they did not anticipate any serious threats from
anti-Semitism. The Jews in Eastern Europe did face
serious threats to their lives and property from
anti-Semites, but they too greatly preferred moving to
safer and more prosperous countries in Western Europe,
the Americas, South Africa, and Australia. Persuading
Jews to move to Palestine was proving to be a far more
difficult task than opening up Palestine to unlimited
Jewish colonization. Zionism needed a stronger boost
from anti-Semites than they had provided until the
early 1930s.
The Zionists always understood that their movement
would have to be driven by Jewish fears of
anti-Semitism. They were also quite sanguine that
there would be no paucity of such assistance,
especially from anti-Semites in Eastern Europe.
Indeed, now that the Zionists had announced a
political program to rid Europe of its Jews, would the
anti-Semites retreat just when some Jews were
implicitly asking for their assistance in their own
evacuation from Europe? This was a match made in
heaven for the anti-Semites. Once the Zionists had
also brought the anti-Semites in messianic camouflage
— the Christian Zionists — on board, this alliance
became more broad-based and more enduring. Together,
by creating and continuing to support Israel, these
allies would lay the foundations of a deepening
conflict against the Islamicate.
Zionism was a grave assault on the history of the
global resistance to imperialism that unfolded even as
Jewish colons in Palestine laid the foundations of
their colonial settler state. The Zionists sought to
abolish the ground realities in the Middle East
established by Islam over the previous thirteen
hundred years. They sought to overturn the demography
of Palestine, to insert a European presence in the
heart of the Islamicate, and to serve as the forward
base for Western powers intent on dominating the
Middle East. The Zionists could succeed only by
combining the forces of the Christian and Jewish West
in an assault that would almost certainly be seen as a
new, latter-day Crusade to marginalize the Islamicate
peoples in the Middle East.
It was delusional to assume that the Zionist challenge
to the Islamicate would go unanswered. The Zionists
had succeeded in imposing their Jewish state on the
Islamicate because of the luck of timing — in addition
to all the other factors that had favored them. The
Islamicate was at its weakest in the decades following
the destruction of the Ottoman Empire; even a greatly
weakened Ottoman Empire had resisted for more than two
decades Zionist pressures to grant them a charter to
create a Jewish state in Palestine. The first wave of
Arab resistance against Israel — led by secular
nationalists from the nascent bourgeoisie classes —
lacked the structures to wage a people’s war. Taking
advantage of this Arab weakness, Israel quickly
dismantled the Arab nationalist movement, whose ruling
classes began making compromises with Israel and its
Western allies. This setback to the resistance was
temporary.
The Arab nationalist resistance would slowly be
replaced by another that would draw upon Islamic
roots; this return to indigenous ideas and structures
would lay the foundations of a resistance that would
be broader, deeper, many-layered, and more resilient
than the one it would replace. The overarching
ambitions of Israel — to establish its hegemony over
the central lands of the Islamicate — would guarantee
the emergence of this new response. The quick collapse
of the Arab nationalist resistance in the face of
Israeli victories ensured that the deeper Islamicate
response would emerge sooner rather than later. As a
result, Israel today confronts — now in alliance with
Arab rulers — the entire Islamicate, a great mass of
humanity, which is determined to overthrow this
alliance. If one recalls that the Islamicate is now a
global community, enjoying demographic dominance in a
region that stretches from Mauritania to Mindanao —
and now counts more than a billion and a half people,
whose growth rate exceeds that of any other
collectivity — one can easily begin to comprehend the
eventual scale of this Islamicate resistance against
the Zionist imposition.
In the era preceding the rise of the Nazis, the
Zionist idea — even from a Jewish standpoint — was an
affront to more than two millennia of their own
history. Jews had started migrating to the farthest
points in the Mediterranean long before the second
destruction of the Temple, where they settled down and
converted many local peoples to the Jewish faith. Over
time, conversions to Judaism established Jewish
communities farther afield — beyond the Mediterranean
world. In the 1890s, however, a small but determined
cabal of European Jews proposed a plan to abrogate the
history of global Jewish communities extending over
millennia. They were determined to accomplish what the
worst anti-Semites had failed to do: to empty Europe
and the Middle East of their Jewish population and
transport them to Palestine, a land to which they had
a spiritual connection — just as Muslims in
Bangladesh, Bosnia, and Burkina Faso are connected to
Mecca and Medina — but to which their racial or
historical connections were nonexistent or tenuous at
best. Was the persecution of Jews in Europe before the
1890s sufficient cause to justify such a radical
reordering of the human geography of the world’s
Jewish populations?
A more ominous implication flowed from another
peculiarity of Zionism. Unlike other white settlers,
the Jewish colons lacked a natural mother country, a
Jewish state that could support their colonization of
Palestine. In the face of this deficiency, the career
of any settler colonialism would have ended
prematurely. Instead, because of the manner in which
this deficit was overcome, the Zionists acquired the
financial, political, and military support of much of
the Western world. This was not the result of a
conspiracy, but flowed from the peculiar position that
Jews — at the end of the nineteenth century — had come
to occupy in the imagination, geography, economy, and
the polities of the Western world.
The Zionists drew their primary support from the
Western Jews, many of whom by the middle of the
nineteenth century were members of the most
influential segments of Western societies. Over time,
as Western Jews gravitated to Zionism, their awesome
financial and intellectual assets would become
available to the Jewish colons in Palestine. The
Jewish colons drew their leadership — in the areas of
politics, the economy, industry, civilian and military
technology, organization, propaganda, and science —
from the pool of Europe’s best. It can scarcely be
doubted that the Jewish colons brought overwhelming
advantages to their contest against the Palestinians
and the neighboring Arabs. No other colonists,
contemporaneous with the Zionists or in the nineteenth
century, brought the same advantages to their
enterprise vis-à-vis the natives.
Pro-Zionist Western Jews would make a more critical
contribution to the long-term success of Zionism. They
would mobilize their resources — as well-placed
members of the financial, intellectual, and cultural
elites of Western societies — to make the case for
Zionism, to silence criticism of Israel, and generate
domestic political pressures to secure the support of
Western powers for Israel. In other words, the Zionist
ability to recruit Western allies depended critically
upon the peculiar position that Jews held in the
imagination, prejudices, history, geography, economy,
and politics of Western societies.
The Jews have always had a ‘special’ relationship with
the Christian West; they were special even as objects
of Christian hatred. Judaism has always occupied the
unenviable position of being a parent religion that
was overtaken by a heresy. For many centuries, the
Christians regarded the Jews, hitherto God’s ‘chosen
people,’ with disdain for rejecting Jesus.
Nevertheless, they incorporated the Jewish scriptures
into their own religious canon. This tension lies at
the heart of Western ambivalence toward Jews; it is
also one of the chief sources of the enduring hatred
that Christians have directed toward the Jews.
In addition, starting in the fifteenth century, the
Protestants entered into a new relationship with
Judaism and Jews. In many ways, the Protestants drew
inspiration from the Hebrew bible, began to read its
words literally, and paid greater attention to its
prophesies about end times. The theology of the
English Puritans, in particular, assigned a special
role to the Jews in their eschatology. The Jews would
have to gather in Jerusalem before the Second Coming
of Jesus; later, this theology was taken up by the
English Evangelicals who carried it to the United
States. Over time, with the growing successes of
(Jewish) Zionism, the Evangelicals slowly became its
most ardent supporters in the United States. The
obverse of the Evangelical’s Zionism is a virulent
hatred of Islam and Muslims.
Most importantly, however, it was the entry of Jews
into mainstream European society — mostly during the
nineteenth century — that paved the way for Zionist
influence over the politics of several key Western
states. The Zionists very deftly used the Jewish
presence in the ranks of European elites to set up a
competition among the great Western powers —
especially Britain, Germany, and France — to gain
Jewish support in their wars with each other, and to
undermine the radical movements in Europe that were
also dominated by Jews. Starting with World War II,
the pro-Zionist Jews would slowly build a network of
organizations, develop their rhetoric, and take
leadership positions in important sectors of American
civil society until they had gained the ability to
define the parameters within which the United States
could operate in the Middle East.
Serendipitously, it appears, pro-Zionist Jews also
found, ready at hand, a rich assortment of negative
energies in the West that they could harness to their
own project. The convergence of their interests with
that of the anti-Semites was perhaps the most
propitious. The anti-Semites wanted the Jews out of
Europe, and so did the Zionists. Anti-Semitism would
also become the chief facilitator of the Jewish
nationalism that the Zionists sought to create. In
addition, the Zionists could muster support for their
project by appealing to Western religious bigotry
against Muslims as well as their racist bias against
the Arabs as ‘inferior’ non-whites.
The Zionists would also argue that their project was
closely aligned with the strategic interests of
Western powers in the Middle East. This claim had lost
its validity by the end of the nineteenth century,
when Britain was firmly established in Egypt and it
was the dominant power in the Indian Ocean. Indeed,
the insertion of an exclusionary Jewish colonial
settler state into the Islamicate geographical matrix
was certain to provoke waves of resistance from the
Muslim peoples. Western interests in the Islamicate
were not positively aligned with the Zionist project.
Yet, once Israel had been created, it would provoke
anti-Western feelings in the Middle East, which,
conveniently, the Zionists would deepen and offer as
the rationale for supporting and arming Israel to
protect Western interests against Arab and, later,
Islamicate threats.
Israel was the product of a partnership that seems
unlikely at first blush, between Western Jews and the
Christian West. It is the powerful alchemy of the
Zionist idea that produced and sustained this
partnership. The Zionist project to create a Jewish
state in Palestine possessed the power to convert two
historical antagonists, Jews and Gentiles, into allies
united in a common imperialist enterprise against the
Islamicate. At different times, the Zionists have
harnessed all the negative energies of the West — its
imperialism, anti-Semitism, Crusading zeal,
anti-Islamic bigotry, and racism — and focused them on
a new project, the creation of a surrogate Western
state in the Islamicate heartland. At the same time,
the West could derive considerable satisfaction from
the success of the Zionist project. Western societies
could take ownership of, and revel in, the triumphs of
this colonial state as their own; they could
congratulate themselves for helping ‘save’ the Jewish
people; they could feel they had made adequate amends
for their history of anti-Semitism; they could feel
they had finally paid back the Arabs and Turks for
their conquests of Christian lands. Israel possessed a
marvelous capacity to feed several of the West’s
egotistical needs.
As a vehicle for facilitating Jewish entry into the
stage of world history, the Zionist project was a
stroke of brilliance. Since the Jews were influential,
but without a state of their own, the Zionists were
going to leverage Western power in their cause. As the
Zionist plan would unfold, inflicting pain on the
Islamicate, evoking Islamicate anger against the West
and Jews, the complementarities between the two
ancient adversaries would deepen, and, over time, new
commonalities would be discovered or created between
these two antagonist strains of Western history. In
the United States, the Zionist movement would
encourage Evangelical Christians — who looked upon the
birth of Israel as the fulfillment of end-time
prophecies — to become fanatic partisans of Israel.
The West had hitherto traced its central ideas and
institutions to Rome and Athens; in the wake of
Zionist successes, it would be repackaged as a
Judeo-Christian civilization, drawing its core
principles, its inspiration from the Old Testament.
This reframing would not only underscore the Jewish
roots of the Western world: it would also make a point
of emphasizing that Islam is the outsider, the eternal
adversary opposed to both.
Zionism owes its success solely to this unlikely
partnership. The Zionists could not have created a
Jewish state in Palestine by bribing the Ottomans into
granting them a charter to colonize Palestine. Despite
his offers of loans, investments, technology, and
diplomatic expertise, Theodore Herzl was repeatedly
rebuffed by the Ottoman Sultan. It is even less likely
that the Zionists, at any time, could have mobilized a
Jewish army to invade and occupy Palestine, against
Ottoman and Arab opposition. The Zionist partnership
with the West was indispensable for the creation of a
Jewish state.
This partnership was also fateful. It produced a
powerful new dialectic, which has encouraged Israel —
as the political center of the Jewish diaspora and the
chief outpost of the West in the heart of the Islamic
world — to become ever more aggressive in its designs
against the Islamicate. In turn, a fragmented, weak
and humiliated Islamicate, more resentful and
determined after every defeat at the hands of Israel,
has been driven to embrace increasingly radical ideas
and methods to recover its dignity, wholeness, and
power, and to seek to attain this recovery on the
strength of Islamic ideas. This destabilizing
dialectic has now brought the West itself into a
direct confrontation against the Islamicate. This is
the tragedy of Israel. It is a tragedy whose ominous
consequences, including those that have yet to unfold,
were contained in the very idea of an exclusive Jewish
state in Palestine.
M. Shahid Alam is professor of economics at
Northeastern University. This is an excerpt from his
forthcoming book, Israeli Exceptionalism: The
Destabilizing Logic of Zionism (Palgrave Macmillan,
November 2009). He may be contacted at: alqalam02760@yahoo.com.