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Comrade Grumpy

(13,184 posts)
Tue Jul 29, 2014, 09:55 PM Jul 2014

New York Review of Books: "The Liberal Zionists" by Jonathan Freedland

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2014/aug/14/liberal-zionists/?insrc=toc

This is from the current issue of NYRB, which just arrived in my terrestrial mailbox today.

I think it's timely given what's going on in Gaza.

It's also worth noting for its straightforward use of "Zionist" to mean a believer in Zionist ideology. Contrary to some posters around here, the word doesn't imply anti-semitism (which I find kind of a weird claim anyway, given what Zionism is.)

This is a review of three recent titles on the liberal Zionist experience. It's a long read, but pretty chewy.

I'll give you the first four paragraphs here:

The Liberal Zionists

Jonathan Freedland AUGUST 14, 2014 ISSUE

My Promised Land: The Triumph and Tragedy of Israel
by Ari Shavit
Spiegel and Grau, 445 pp., $28.00

Genesis: Truman, American Jews, and the Origins of the Arab/Israeli Conflict
by John B. Judis
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 432 pp., $30.00

Old Wine, Broken Bottle: Ari Shavit’s Promised Land
by Norman G. Finkelstein
OR Books, 97 pp., $10.00 (paper)
freedland_1-081414.jpg

1.

In the toxic environment that characterizes much, if not most, debate on the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, a special poison is reserved for the liberal Zionist. Such a person, who stands by Israel even as he yearns for it to change, is fated to be hated by both camps: hawkish Zionists despise the liberal for going too far in his criticisms, accusing him of a hand-wringing betrayal of the cause that can only comfort the enemy, while anti-Zionists denounce the liberal for not going far enough, for failing to follow the logic of his position through to its conclusion and for thereby defending the indefensible. The liberal Zionist is branded either a hypocrite or an apologist or both.

The treatment meted out to My Promised Land, a personal history of Israel by Ari Shavit, a columnist for Israel’s left-leaning daily Haaretz, is a case in point. The laptop warriors on both sides donned their familiar armor and set about attacking the book from right and left. “Far from self-criticism, this is simply self-debasement,” wrote the former World Jewish Congress official Isi Leibler in The Jerusalem Post, suggesting that among Shavit’s motives was an ingratiating desire to win “endorsement from the liberal glitterati for whom debasement of the Jewish state has become a key component of their liberal DNA.” Meanwhile, the leftist academic Norman G. Finkelstein has devoted an entire, if short, book to taking down My Promised Land. In Old Wine, Broken Bottle he insists that Shavit’s insights “comprise a hardcore of hypocrisy and stupidity overlaid by a tinsel patina of arrogance and pomposity. He’s a know-nothing know-it-all who, if ever there were a contest for world’s biggest schmuck, would come in second.”

Which is not to say that My Promised Land has not won prominent admirers. It has, receiving praise from Thomas Friedman, Leon Wieseltier, Jeffrey Goldberg, David Remnick, and others. That fact is unlikely to trouble the critics. On the contrary, they will see praise for Shavit from that quarter as a simple act of group solidarity, the lions of liberal Zionism huddling together in a pride.


The squeezed nature of the liberal Zionist’s position is hardly new, but in recent years the predicament has become more pronounced. The decline of the peace movement in Israel, along with the serial failures of the Israeli Labor Party, has suggested a cause in retreat. In the United States, the liberal lions have also come to resemble an endangered species, for reasons that reflect those long-term shifts in Israel. As Peter Beinart explained in a much-discussed essay in these pages in 2010, “The Failure of the American Jewish Establishment,” the leadership of US Jewry has adopted ever more hard-line, Likud-friendly positions on Israel, which leave cold the emerging generation of young American Jews, whose views, on domestic issues at least, tend toward the ultra-liberal. With a Netanyahu-ist AIPAC leadership to their right and a new generation increasingly disengaged from Israel to their left, the liberal Zionists can seem beached on a strip of land that is forever shrinking.

At least one aspect of this used to be very different. In Genesis: Truman, American Jews, and the Origins of the Arab/Israeli Conflict, John B. Judis notes that the founding fathers of American liberal Zionism—chief among them the Supreme Court justice Louis Brandeis—seized on the nascent cause of a Jewish homeland in Palestine partly because it helped reconcile two aspects of their identity: their Jewishness and their liberal values. By supporting Zionism, they were not only supporting a beleaguered, oppressed people fleeing Europe, they were also backing an experiment in collectivist living. Brandeis was particularly impressed, as many would be for decades to come, by the then-embryonic kibbutz movement. As Judis writes of Brandeis in the second decade of the twentieth century, “Jews in Palestine were building the cooperative democracy that he wanted to create in the United States.” There is a sour irony to the notion that the cause of Zion once served as a bridge between Jews and the liberal left. These days it drives them apart.
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New York Review of Books: "The Liberal Zionists" by Jonathan Freedland (Original Post) Comrade Grumpy Jul 2014 OP
thank you for this 2banon Jul 2014 #1
And the author's blog post from July 26th: muriel_volestrangler Jul 2014 #2
Oh, I hadn't seen that. Thank you. Comrade Grumpy Jul 2014 #3
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