Shalom
RRW
*****
The dangers of extremism: a reflection on recent events in Israel
I trust that all of us, despite differences in our religious and
political perspectives, have been dismayed by recent events in Beit
Shemesh, an Israeli city between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv whose
population spans the religious spectrum, from secular to chareidi. In recent years, as the chareidi enclaves in Jerusalem and Bnai Brak have become increasingly overcrowded, a growing number of chareidim have moved into Beit Shemesh, generally residing in all-chareidi enclaves within the city.
In case you missed the recent news reports, the current controversy began when a group of chareidim
who call themselves the Sicarii (a name taken from a group of first
century zealots whose unabashed fanaticism helped bring about the
destruction of the Second Temple) began harassing students and parents
as they walked to a religious (but not chareidi) girls' elementary school that borders a chareidi
neighborhood. Although the students were dressed modestly by Western
standards (long skirts and long sleeves), they apparently fell short of
the increasingly stringent modesty standards demanded by some of the
more extreme chareidi subgroups in the area. (Foreign media tend to treat chareidim
as if they were all identical, but in fact there are wide differences
among them.) A news story by an independent Israeli television station
featured an eight-year-old girl who had been
cursed and spit at by chareidi men and was so traumatized that she was afraid to walk to school, even accompanied by her mother.
Not surprisingly, that story provoked widespread outrage in Israel,
resulting in government pledges to take strong action against chareidi
harassment and culminating in a Beit Shemesh rally against religious
coercion, which attracted secular and religious Israelis from all over
the country, even including some chareidim.. When the police tried to protect students and parents entering the school from harassment and removed signs that some chareidim had put up demanding modest dress for women on the public streets around the school, some of the chareidim
responded by throwing stones at the police and calling them Nazis, an
epithet that not surprisingly provoked further outrage. (The "Nazi"
label in this context is self-disproving. If the chareidim really thought that the police were behaving like Nazis, they would never have dared to confront them as
they did.)
The unrest in Beit Shemesh comes on the heels of an unrelated
series of incidents perpetrated by a group of militant, predominantly
religious Israeli settlers in the West Bank who have engaged in a
series of reprisals that go under the name "price tag". Those
operations have the dual purpose of retaliating for indiscriminate
violence against Jewish civilians living in the West Bank by
perpetrating indiscriminate violence directed against Arab civilians
living nearby and distracting the Israel Defense Forces from dismantling
illegal settlement outposts. Needless to say, the IDF, which is
responsible for maintaining order in the West Bank, has sought to stop
these "price tag" militants, resulting in clashes between the militants
and IDF soldiers. The simmering conflict reached a climax of sorts a
few weeks ago when a group of the militants invaded and vandalized an
IDF base, throwing
rocks at the brigade commander, who fortunately was unhurt, though
another officer was reportedly injured. That incident was unequivocally
condemned by the mainstream settler leadership and provoked widespread
outrage across the country, resulting in renewed government promises to
crack down on future "price tag" activities. (According to a report in
this morning's New York Times, which I saw after this post
was almost complete, Israeli prosecutors have arrested and filed charges
against five of the "price tag" militants.)
Both factually and ideologically, the activities of the Beit Shemesh chareidim and those of the "price tag" militants are unrelated. The chareidim
of Beit Shemesh, who want to seal themselves off into enclaves where
they are free to insist on their increasingly fanatical version of
female modesty, have no affinity with the militant settlers of the West
Bank, whose overarching goal is to hold Israeli foreign policy hostage
to their militant outlook by making the prospect of evacuating settlers
from any part of the West Bank as part of a future peace agreement all
but unthinkable. Though the Western media sometimes obscure this
distinction by using the term "right wing" to refer to both groups, in
reality the chareidim of Beit Shemesh, who are at best
ambivalent toward Zionism, and the militant religious Zionist settlers
of the West Bank are wholly different
religious and political phenomena.
Yet for all the profound differences between these two
groups, there is an underlying thematic similarity that is hard to
deny. Each group insists that its own religiously based value
system trumps not merely the laws of the State but also the most basic
concepts of democratic governance and civic morality. In their minds,
the importance of the goals they seek -- promoting enhanced female
modesty on one hand and preventing the cession of territory to Arab rule
on the other -- is increasingly seen as justifying virtually any means
of achieving those goals. And it appears that some of the more extreme
members of each group have taken the fight to implement their
goals farther than their leaders anticipated or desired.
As far as I know, no respected chareidi leader has
condoned spitting at an eight-year-old girl or throwing stones at the
police. The leadership of the settler community, for its
part, was genuinely horrified by the attack on an IDF base and condemned
it in unqualified terms. Yet while I would not suggest that the
leadership of either group intended or condoned their followers' most
extreme actions, that doesn't let them off the hook, When you
continually emphasize to your followers that their value system comes
directly from God and thus takes precedence over the man-made laws of
the State and encourage them to resist the State's encroachment on their
values by unlawful and undemocratic means, can you really be shocked
when some young hotheads take that resistance further than you intended?
Both of these phenomena risk serious harm to Israel, but the risks
in the two cases are different. In the short run, the actions of the
militant settlers are more dangerous since they could increase tensions
with the Palestinian Arabs, further damage Israel's international
standing and potentially prevent Israel's democratically elected
government from pursuing the policies that it believes, rightly or
wrongly, to be in the country's best interests. In the long run,
however, the settlers' militancy is inherently self-limiting. Militant
Zionism is about maintaining Jewish sovereignty in the Land of Israel
and is thus unavoidably intertwined ideologically with the institutions
of the State, especially the IDF. That's why the settler leadership was
so quick to condemn the attack on the IDF base, and it's why, for the
most part, even the more militant factions among the settlers are
unlikely to
equivocate about attacks on IDF facilities. Whether that consensus
would hold in the face of an actual evacuation order may be less
certain, but it's worth recalling that, in the 2005 evacuation of the
settlements in Gaza, the understandable fears of unrestrained violence
against Israeli soldiers were not fulfilled; the bonds of civic cohesion
strained but ultimately held. In any event, given the moribund state
of negotiations with the Palestinian Authority, that scenario is not an
immediate concern.
On the surface, the chareidi conflict in Beit Shemesh
appears less dangerous, at least in the short run. Sure, the press
attention was embarrassing, but given the public's limited attention
span, it will soon be forgotten. The chareidi harassment is obviously unpleasant for those who live in Beit Shemesh -- or in immediate proximity to chareidi
neighborhoods elsewhere -- but will have little or no direct effect on
the country's citizens as a whole. The outrage that led to such
widespread support for the rally from those living outside Beit Shemesh
did not indicate a generalized fear that such demands for hyper-chareidi modesty standards will spread to the country as a whole, since the chareidi extremists
as a rule favor isolation over coercion. Rather, the reaction from
secular and religious Israelis alike bespeaks a frustration that has
built up over the course of years as a result of a combination of
issues, among them the yeshiva draft exemptions, gender-segregated
public buses serving chareidi neighborhoods, and the perception that chareidim make excessive claims on the Israeli social welfare system and do not contribute economically to the country as a whole.
These perceptions may be oversimplifications, but they are rooted
in reality. They are close enough to the truth to feed the ongoing
secularist resentment and contempt for the chareidim. So
when events like those in Beit Shemesh provide an opportunity to express
the growing resentment of secular Israelis toward the chareidim, it is hardly surprising that many will jump at the opportunity.
To be sure, many Israelis of what is often referred to as
the "peace camp" are also resentful of what they perceive as the
political power of the settlers and are rightly fearful of the
potential consequences of the "price tag" militants. There is a
fundamental difference, however, between that fear and the
resentment felt toward the chareidim -- which is why the chareidi conflict
in the long run may be more dangerous to Israel than the conflict with
the "price tag" militants. There may be widespread anger at those
militant settlers who go over the line in relation to the IDF, but even
those in the peace camp cannot completely ignore the fact that the
militant settlers serve in the army, contribute to the economy and on
the whole share the costs and risks of Israeli life. The conflict among
Israelis as to the appropriate contours of their relations with
the Arabs has existed since the beginning of the Zionist movement and
may well be inevitable in a country facing the kind of existential
threats that are an unfortunate but unavoidable part of the Israeli
reality. Indeed, over the last few years, mainstream Israeli opinion
has moved closer to that of the militants -- not because of anything the
militants have done, but rather because events have heightened
Israelis' ingrained skepticism of the Arabs' desire for peace.
When it comes to the chareidim, however, the feelings of
resentment among secular and even many religious Israelis is different.
They are seen as freeloaders who don't participate constructively in
the economy, don't serve in the army, make excessive claims on the
welfare system and insist on educating their children in a
government-funded but independently run school system that perpetuates
their economic marginalism and does not teach loyalty to the State or
respect for its institutions. And underlying those resentments is the
fear that since their birthrate makes the chareidim the fastest
growing segment of the Israeli population, their political power and
thus their ability to obtain the government largess that underwrites
their way of life is likely to grow over time.
The fact that these perceptions are oversimplifications of a more complex reality is almost beside the point. The chareidi demand for increased stringency and isolation and the unrestrained contempt expressed by some secularists toward the chareidim are mutually reinforcing. The greater the expressed anger of many secularists toward the chareidim becomes, the stronger is the chareidi desire to isolate themselves from the non-chareidi world, which is facilitated by creating ever greater and less rational stringencies. And the more isolated the chareidim become, the greater is the anger that secular Israelis express toward them.
Despite the vast ideological differences between the price tag militants and the Beit Shemesh chareidim,
the two groups inadvertently reinforce each other. They have vastly
different visions of Israel's future, but they share an ambivalence
toward the normative democratic principles that are the foundation of
the State. Common sense suggests, and modern history confirms, that
when the hold of democratic norms is weakened, the ultimate
beneficiaries may be groups ideologically distant from those who
initially did the weakening.
There is another, distinctly Israeli sense in which militant settlers and chareidi
militants have reinforced each other. Over the course of the last four
decades, those two groups between them have essentially destroyed
religious Zionism as a meaningful political force. Prior to Israel's
independence, and for three decades thereafter, religious Zionism, and
its primary political manifestation, the National Religious Party,
pursued an unapologetic vision of Jewish statehood informed by Jewish
religious values, and its religious citizens as full participants in the
life of the State. Beginning with the Six Day War in 1967, and
accelerating after Likud's victory in the 1977 elections, the retention
and settlement of the captured territories came to dominate the
political agenda of the religious Zionists to the extent of crowding out
all other issues. The purely religious issues that had once been
central to
the National Religious Party's vision were left to the chareidi
parties, whose vision focused on isolation from rather than
participation in Israeli society. Even the chief rabbinate, once seen
as a religious Zionist institution, came to be dominated by the chareidim,
while the National Religious Party shrank until it eventually merged
into a far-right party focused almost exclusively on protecting the
interests of the settlers.
Within this context, it is hardly shocking that secular Israelis
have become more inclined to tar religious Jews as a whole with the
brush of religious extremism. It is in a sense fortunate that the
eight-year-old girl whose tribulations sparked the furor in Beit Shemesh
came from a religious family, making it somewhat harder for secularists
to impute chareidi attitudes to the religious population as a whole . Nevertheless, the chilul Hashem (desecration of God's name) resulting from the inexcusable actions of the chareidim
of Beit Shemesh have created a burden that all observant Jews must
bear. At the same time, they have also created an opportunity to
demonstrate to the Israeli public that intolerance and isolationism are
not synonymous with a life of Torah. Whether Israel's remaining
religious Zionists -- and their counterparts in the Diaspora -- will
take advantage
of that opportunity remains to be seen.
Douglas Aronin
1 comment:
Yes, the ends always justify the means.
Better to be a mean winner than a gracious loser. I mean, who gets the nice hotel room and champagne in the end?
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