From Guest Blogger: DOUGLAS ARONIN
Shalom
RRW
*****
Israel has enough problems to
deal with right now, so it was hardly an opportune moment to pick a fight
with the institutional leadership of American Jewry. Then again, Israel's
Ministry of Absorption didn't realize it was picking a fight with American
Jewish leaders when it launched an advertising campaign aimed at
persuading Israelis living in the United States to return home. The
ensuing brouhaha reminds us, in case we needed further reminding, that Israelis
and American Jews really don't understand each other.
The ad campaign targeted Israeli
expatriates, commonly known as yordim (literally those who descend), not native
born American Jews, but it apparently touched a raw nerve among
American Jewish leaders. Abraham Foxman, the national director of the
Anti-Defamation League, called it "heavy-handed, and even
demeaning." The leadership of the Jewish Federations of North
America, the national umbrella for local Jewish federations, reportedly sent a
letter of protest to the Ministry, calling the ads
"insulting". Once Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu learned of the controversy, he promptly stopped the ad campaign
and sent Michael Oren, Israel's ambassador to the United States, to do damage
control. Oren asserted that Netanyahu had not known about the ad campaign
in advance and assured American Jews that "[t]he prime minister deeply
values the American Jewish community and is committed to deepening ties between
it and the State of Israel."
What was it about this ad campaign
that caused such a furor? One of the ads depicted Israeli-born parents
and their young daughter talking via Skype to the child's grandparents in
Israel. When the grandparents ask the girl what holiday it
is, she responds "Christmas" as her parents look uncomfortable.
The tag line of the ad follows in Hebrew: before Chanukah turns into
Christmas, it's time to come home to Israel. Another similar ad depicts a
young boy trying to wake his sleeping father, calling him "Daddy"
several times; only when he calls out "Abba" does the
father wake up, as a voice intones in Hebrew the tag line: Before
Abba turns into Daddy, it's time to come home to Israel.
It's easy to understand why some
American Jews found ads like these offensive. Though it was directed at
the yordim,, almost the same ad campaign (without the Hebrew) could have
been used to target American Jews. The message is a familiar one, the same
basic message that has been used to encourage aliyah (immigration to Israel)
among Diaspora Jews since the early days of Zionism. In the Diaspora,
even in America, that familiar message goes, assimilation is
inevitable. Only in Israel can the Jewish future be assured.
That message is a gross
oversimplification, of course, but it contains more than a grain
of truth. The notion that the organized Jewish community is on the
verge of extinction is wildly exaggerated. It's reminiscent of the
famous 1964 Look Magazine cover story, "The Vanishing American Jew",
which predicted that the American Jewish community would disappear by the end
of the twentieth century. When that century ended, of course, the
American Jewish community was still there; it was Look Magazine that had
disappeared. To paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of our demise have been
greatly exaggerated.
But that doesn't mean that the fears of
assimilation are pure alarmism; I only wish that they were. The
experiences of the last half century have taught us that those Jews
who place a high priority on Jewish continuity and build their lives
accordingly can usually succeed in passing their Jewish commitment to the
next generation. But it has also taught us that those whose
lives do not reflect a substantial commitment to the Jewish future -- which
almost always includes some form of religious commitment -- are at
high risk of demographic disappearance.
I suspect that it was the grain of
truth underlying the ill-advised ad campaign, not the exaggeration that many
Jewish leaders found so offensive. Who wants to have their flaws pointed
out to them? How many of the prominent Federation leaders who were so quick
to take offense live lives so infused with Jewish content that they can be
confident of the Jewish continuity of their own family trees? How many of
them, indeed, already have children who have intermarried?
The specific
examples reflected in the ads summarized above are laughable.
Transmitting the notion that Jews celebrate Chanukah, not Christmas, is one of
the few indicators of Jewish identity that many marginally committed Jews
do manage to pass on. It's really not that difficult to teach children to call
their parents Abba and Eema, if that's what the parents want, even if most of
their friends do not. The problem is that such gestures by themselves are
not enough to make transmission from one generation to the next likely, and
many American Jews -- including, I regret to say, a fair number of American
Jewish leaders -- are not willing to do much more than that.
Offensiveness aside, the ad campaign was
probably a waste of money. I say this not because I don't believe
that Israel should be trying to lure back its expatriates; of course it
should. But it's hard to imagine that long-term yordim are likely
to be influenced by an ad campaign that somehow manages to be heavy-handed
and trivial at the same time.. If they were that easily susceptible
to Jewish guilt trips, they probably wouldn't have left in the first place.
While we're on the subject, why are there so
many expatriate Israelis living in North America, and elsewhere? That
question is something of a sociological Rorschach test, telling us more
about the person answering than about the phenomenon he's supposedly analyzing.
A particularly egregious example is an opinion piece published on line by Roger
Cohen of the New York Times, who is (to put it mildly) no friend of
Israel. He claims to know "several Israeli expatriates or would-be
expatriates" and he insists that they are leaving because of "the
illiberal drift of Israeli politics, the growth of a harsh nationalism, the
increasing influence of the ultra religious [and] the endlessness of the
'situation.'" I am sure that some Israeli expatriates are motivated
by such factors, and I have no difficulty believing that all of those with whom
Roger Cohen is acquainted fall into this category. With whom else would
you expect him to be acquainted? But Cohen's analysis, if you can call
it that, ignores the inconvenient fact that the phenomenon of yerida
(emigration from Israel) is not a new one. Large numbers of Israelis have
lived abroad throughout the State's history. If yerida is, as Cohen
appears to believe, primarily the fault of Prime Minister Netanyahu and
Avigdor Lieberman (the foreign minister and head of the Yisrael Beiteinu
party), then how do you explain the large number of Israelis who emigrated
before the current political leadership came on the scene?
The primary reasons for yerida are
really not that hard to figure out. Israel is a small country, and living
there can produce a sort of claustrophobia; that's why in recent years, it has
become de rigueur for secular Israelis, after completing their army service, to
trek to remote parts of Asia for a while before returning home to commence the
rest of their lives. Considering its size and the circumstances in which
it has lived, Israel's economy is remarkably robust, but highly educated
Israelis in many fields can find better professional opportunities outside the
country than inside it -- or at least they could before the onset of the
current recession. (This is not so unusual in our increasingly mobile and
interconnected world. There are plenty of Americans living temporarily or
permanently abroad, and many citizens of other countries as well.) And of
course, while Israelis seem to bear up well under the strain of the
security threats that are a normal part of life there, living in a constant
state of siege with no end in sight can take its toll...
Most Israelis living in the United
States come here intending to stay for a while and then return, or at least
that's what they tell their families and friends in Israel. Some have
gone back, but others, not surprisingly, have found the comfort and relative
safety of the US hard to give up; such is human nature. It is certainly
appropriate for any country to seek to reduce the "brain drain"
resulting from the emigration of highly educated citizens
by encouraging its expatriates to come home. For Israel, there
is the added concern of the demographic balance between Jews and Arabs among
its own citizens. In his opinion peace, Cohen claims that "[t]he
ads play to Israeli patriotism, but it’s not patriotism that expatriates
lack." By framing the issue as one of "patriotism", Cohen
manages to evade the issue that is at the heart of both the ad campaign
and the American Jewish response to it -- the issue of Jewish identity.
If the ad campaign was addressed merely to Israeli patriotism, then why
would American Jews who are not Israeli citizens take offense? But the
risk of Chanukah morphing into Christmas is not a matter of the expatriates'
patriotism, but rather of their core identity as Jews. Maintaining that
identity despite the temptations of assimilation in a pluralistic open society
like ours is a challenge that faces yordim and native born American Jews alike
-- and the implication of the ad campaign is that it can't be done in the
Diaspora, even in America, an implication that many American Jews
understandably find offensive.
Only in a Jewish homeland, classical
Zionists have always insisted, can Jewish identity be sustained in the long run
without dependence on religion. Secular Jewish identity, they have
argued, has no future in the Diaspora. In this argument classical
Zionism was partly right but fundamentally wrong. It was right
that secular Jewishness in the Diaspora is ultimately unsustainable, but it was
wrong in assuming that it was the Diaspora rather than the secularism that was
the problem. What has become apparent over the decades of Israel's
existence is that in the long run secular Jewishness is not sustainable in
Israel any more than it is in the Diaspora. In the absence of
religious commitment, secular Zionism is simply too weak a
foundation on which to build an ideology capable of motivating the sacrifice
necessary to defend a state under siege. It is hardly surprising that
Zionism as a serious ideology, at least among secular native Israelis, has
been weakened almost to the point of disappearance. Indeed, for many, the
very word Zionism has developed pejorative connotations.
I do not mean to suggest that secular
Israelis are not loyal to the State of Israel. The vast majority serve in
the army, often heroically. But allegiance to the country where you were
born and in which you live, and even willingness to risk your life in its
defense, does not require an ideological commitment. It is, rather,
the normal human instinct to which we attach the label patriotism. Most secular
Israelis remain patriotic citizens, who are loyal to the
State. A growing number, however, have little sense of Jewish
identity beyond their identity as Israelis. They know little of
Jewish history before the birth of modern Zionism and have no knowledge or
understanding of the Jewish communities of the Diaspora. They are
patriotic Israelis but they are not Zionists.
The problem with relying solely on
patriotism as the glue holding the people together is that patriotism is not
immutable. Over the course of the last century, after all, many millions
of people have left the lands where they were born and settled in other, often
distant countries. Some came to escape persecution, others to better
themselves economically. Many have retained cultural or nostalgic ties to
the countries of their birth, but after an adjustment period (admittedly,
one of variable length), they have usually shifted their primary political
allegiance -- their patriotism -- to the countries in which they live.
Of course, human experiences are varied, and human emotions are complex.
Not everyone who has emigrated from the countries of their birth has initially
intended that move to be permanent. Many temporary migrants, for a whole
host of reasons, do return to their native countries; others consider it for a
while and ultimately decide, whether consciously or by inertia, to stay where
they are. Those countries who wish to avoid "brain drain" by
enticing their expatriates to return home are far more likely to meet success
during each emigrant's emotional adjustment period, before his or her primarily
allegiance has shifted.
Historically, this basic paradigm of
the immigrant experience has applied to Jews a little differently than to
others. Most Jews had little or no residual allegiance to the countries
from which they had emigrated and little or no temptation to return
there. Indeed, during the largest period of Jewish immigration to the
United States, the so-called Third Wave (1880-1924), most Jewish immigrants
were not native speakers of the languages of their native countries but
instead spoke Yiddish, a language unique to the Jewish communities of Eastern
Europe. Thus there was little adjustment period in the usual sense before
Jews who immigrated to the United States became, in their own estimation,
American Jews, patriotic citizens of the United States. To the extent
that they retained any other residual loyalty, it was to a land they had never
seen, one that their ancestors had left centuries earlier. That residual
loyalty arose not from instinct but from ideology -- the ideology we call
Zionism.
1 comment:
One wonders
If Israel's Government is heavy-handed towards fellow Jews
Then
How does it treat allies such as the USA?
What Kind of Diplomacy does it display to enemies such as Palestinians?
Is it possible that these tactics are infuriating others in that region?
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