The topic of American Jews and Israel growing apart is an omnipresent one in Jewish circles -- a fear I've seen raised for as long as I can remember. Obviously, we're hearing more about it now, particularly as younger Jewish voices become increasingly prominent in protests against Israel and Israel's war in Gaza. But the fear is not new, and there is a familiar rhythm to it.
But while the discussion about the growing gap between American and Israeli Jewry almost inevitably is framed against the backdrop of Gaza and the occupation and settlements, I want to make an entry to this discussion that has nothing to do with Palestine, but whose impact is I think very important and very underrated. Admittedly, given all that's happening in Palestine, that feels almost absurdly self-centered. All I can say to that is that the fraying connection between American Jews and Israel is an important topic, and this is an underdiscussed element of that topic. I offer it not to the exclusion of explanations that are premised on genuine moral or political sentiments about Palestine, but as a complement to them.
So, without further throat-clearing, here is my claim as to one reason American Jews are increasingly distancing themselves from Israel:
The Israeli establishment is increasingly deeply, openly contemptuous of American Jews.
Again, we can bracket everything having to do with Palestine and Palestinians. There's plenty to talk about there, but I won't talk about here. Whenever one talks about diaspora Jewish grievances against Israel, one is immediately met with the claim that the diaspora has no claim to speak on matters of "security" in a country they don't live in. There's plenty one could say to that, but fine, we'll leave "security" aside.
Instead, we'll start with a fact that has nothing to do with security: most American Jews are not Orthodox. We're Reform or Conservative (if affiliated at all). But these denominations of Judaism -- the denomination most American Jews identify with -- are not treated equally in Israel. Indeed, they are subject to heaps of contempt, scarcely recognized as Jews at all.
This has tangible consequences. We talk a lot about interfaith families, but there are many Jewish families whose status as Jews in Israel is in doubt. What happens when their matrilineal lineage might be traced back to a woman who had the temerity to convert under the oversight of the Jewish community most American Jews live in? Non-Orthodox conversions are barely recognized even for purposes of the law of return, and that begrudging acceptance doesn't extend to other aspects of Jewish personhood. How insulting, for American Jews to be told that the way we're Jewish isn't good enough to be fully recognized as Jewish in the eyes of Israel.
Insulting -- that's too mild. I can speak for myself here: my wife is Jewish. Her conversion was done under the auspices of the Jewish tradition through which I've lived my entire life. She lives a Jewish life. She celebrates Jewish holidays. She volunteers for Jewish non-profits. As far as I'm concerned, she's as Jewish as I am. To question her Judaism necessarily -- can only -- be based off a denigration of my Judaism. To hear that my Jewish wife, and through her our Jewish children, would not be treated as fully Jewish in a Jewish state is fury-inducing. Every time I think about it, I am filled with rage. How many of us are in similar circumstances? How many of us see our or our loved one's disrespected as Jews by the state that claims our fidelity on the basis of shared peoplehood?
There's more: half of all Jews are forbidden from praying as equals at one of our religion's holiest sites. Try to hold an important religious rite -- your child's Bar Mitzvah, say -- at the Western Wall, and you risk being attacked by an angry mob. It is very much in the realm of argument that the median American Jewish family would face more official, state-sponsored discrimination as Jews in Israel than they would in America.
And that doesn't get into the constant thumbs in the eye the Israeli government seemingly loves to give to the American Jewish people. Netanyahu's speech before Congress. Bragging that they prefer the support of Evangelical Christians over diaspora Jews. The constant ooze of contempt and disdain is impossible to ignore.
A few days ago, a college friend of mine wrote a post about the increasing gap between American Jewish sentiment and pro-Israel politics leaving Zionism with "nowhere to go". He has always been anti-Zionist, and so was of course delighted at the development. But one observation he made for why the trend seemed to be accelerating was that American Jews were increasingly discovering they simply had nothing in common with Israeli Jews. We're fundamentally two different peoples. There's no special bond between us, no particular reason to care more about them (or them us) beyond whatever general humanistic feeling we might have to any other group of people half the world away.
He said this with triumph. Many others will view it mournfully. And to some extent I think he necessarily overstates the case, if only because familial ties unite many (though not all) of us. Even for the rest of us, the severing of a sense of peoplehood is grave and painful, and won't be done easily. As much as some pretend otherwise, diaspora Jews disassociating themselves from Israel is not a free action. It hurts. The whole point of bonds like this is that they persist and endure through difficult and challenging times; they are not meant to be transitory expressions of instrumental alignment. But when a member of your family (literal or figurative) doesn't treat as if you are special, as if you are a member of a special circle of care and concern, that exerts a continual and powerful centrifugal force. Eventually, it will pull (some of? all of?) us apart.
And this problem is not one that can be resolved by the normal proposed solutions. It isn't a matter of young Jews lacking "education" on what's happening in the Middle East. It isn't caused by Jews lacking connection to their Jewish heritage (unless we buy into the notion that Reform and Conservative Jews Don't Count). It isn't attributable to a desire to "fit in" with the cool crowd or following the latest social media trend. It can't be laid at the feet of "Critical Race Theory" or "intersectionality" or whatever buzzword will be screamed across Algemeiner headlines next week. The brute truth is that American Jews are being hammered, again and again and again, with just how little the Israeli establishment thinks of us.
I'm not saying anything especially new here. Six years ago I wrote in the Forward that "Israel doesn't care what American Jews think." (the median social media response I got from Israelis to that column was "you're damn right we don't, and also, fuck you for saying so."). And again, I'm not trying to discount the degree to which Israel's unjust treatment of Palestinians under occupation genuinely, legitimately, and viscerally offends many Jews.
But what I speak of here is a powerful negative force, and it is not getting better. And at any time, but perhaps especially under times of strain and stress, such a force will have its predictable effects.
4 comments:
I agree with most points you are making on the intellectual level. And things did get bad under Bibi. But personally, my experience is different. As a Soviet Jew, I have any number of friends and relatives in Israel, so that's a familial bond that's always there. Speaking of younger generation, both my kids went through BBYO which is as Zionist as it gets. Then they went on a Birthright trip. I mean, my dentist sent her daughter to medical school in Israel. My nieces-in-law brother lived in Israel for 5 years and served in IDF. The Reform temple to which we belong has annual trips to Israel and leadership is obviously Zionist. On a day to day basis, Israel is as much part of our lives as ever. So, I think it is more of casual Zionism: of course we lover and support Israel, we can't imagine our lives without Israel being there, but no one sits down and thinks deep thoughts about it.
I think this is all clearly accurate. But I think it goes a step further. I think neither the Israeli government nor most Israelis see Israel as particularly a place for Jews, broadly or even narrowly defined. They see it as a place for those that share their (increasingly ethnonationalist) politics.
I remember 7-8 years ago when a certain Yair Netanyahu stirred up something of a storm when he posted very blatantly antisemitic memes on his Facebook page. Based on what I’ve seen, I don’t think his sentiments are unusual either among the Israeli governing coalition or rank and file Israelis.
I think they see Israel as an Israeli nationalist project. A lot of those Israeli nationalists happen to be Jews, but when push comes to shove, endangering “globalist” Jews who aren’t the “right type” just doesn’t matter to them. Terrorist threats against George Soros and Rothschilds and such are a feature to them, not a bug.
Now, when push comes to shove, the leopards they align themselves with are gonna eat their faces— right wing goy ethnonationalists probably don’t have a giant soft spot for Jews who hate globalists almost as much as them— but it certainly seems like the Israeli right wing at best is indifferent to antisemitism targeted at American Jews, and at worst kinda agrees with a big chunk of it. To them, “antisemitism” is synonymous with “critical of the Israeli right’s behaviors,” and the old fashioned antisemitism that sparked pogroms and the Holocaust of the Protocols variety just doesn’t really matter to a lot of them.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/09/10/netanyahus-son-posts-classic-anti-semitic-meme-drawing-praise-from-neo-nazis/
So Israel is an ethnonationalist project. What is Palestine? "Palestine is the homeland of the Arab Palestinian people; it is an indivisible part of the Arab homeland, and the Palestinian people are an integral part of the Arab nation". It doesn't sound very multicultural to me...
I agree with a lot of this. I have this conversation all the time. I'd make three points. First, the comments your antiZionist friends makes tells me not that he's antiZionist, but that he's unconnected to the Jewish community. Because it's not just familial ties that connect us to Israelis - its communal ties. You can't be involved in a synagogue, a Jewish school, a Jewish non-profit, etc and not run into Israelis. They may not understand us, but we are connected. 2) A lot of our issues with Israel our actually our issues with the American Jewish community. American Judaism is its own thing that developed outside of Europe/the Middle East and began before the State of Israel. But we as a community tend not to think of it that way - we view it as an adjunct of either Israel or the "old country" instead of understanding it on its own 3) The story of Jewish observance and religious difference goes much, much deeper than what you mentioned, I was once at a meeting at my synagogue with a representative of an Israeli group. He said to us, that if I went upstairs to your religious school and asked the students to recite the Shema, they would be able to. If I did the same thing with the same age kids at a secular school in Israel, they wouldn't. Jewish observance has cultural and political valences in Israel that it doesn't in the United States. And secular Israelis tend to be completely mystified by American Jews who are Jewishly knowlegable and synagogie attenders, but don't wear kippot or have the other markers of religious Judaism. Even the way we talk about it is different - US has Modern Orthodox, Israel has Religious Zionists. The US has its non-Orthodox streams, Israek has its "Hilonim" and Traditional Jews. They aren't parallel and don't fit neatly into each others categories.
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