The Founder of Political Zionism Re-examined
Theodor Herzl was the
founder of Political Zionism. He wasn’t
the first Jewish Zionist. That ‘honour’ belongs with Moses
Hess, a one-time associate of Marx who
wrote Rome & Jerusalem in 1862. But Hess’s work
was published in a void, the time wasn’t ripe. Jews weren’t interested. Hess
was open about his rejection of class politics: ‘race struggle is primary and
class secondary.’ It was a principle that became
fundamental to Zionism.
The
Germans hate the religion of the Jews less than they hate their race- they hate
the peculiar faith of the Jews less than their peculiar noses. Reform,
conversion, education and emancipation - none of these open the gates of
society to the German Jew; hence his desire to deny his racial origin... The
tendency of some Jews to deny their racial descent is equally foredoomed to
failure. Jewish noses cannot be reformed, the black wavy hair of the Jews will
not be changed into blond by conversion or straightened out by constant
combing. The Jewish race is one of the primary races of mankind... The Jewish
type has conserved its purity through the centuries
Hess’s writings can be found in Arthur Herzberg’s compendium of Zionist
writers, The Zionist Idea.
As you can see anti-Semitism was to Zionism what Laurel was to Hardy.
They were Siamese twins. The next major
Zionist figure was Leo Pinsker who wrote Autoemancipation in 1882. He formed the first Zionist
group, The Lovers of Zion and in 1882 the first Zionist
settlers set off for Palestine, the first Aliyah. However they were few in number and became
like traditional colonial planters rather than Zionist settlers. They exploited the natives rather than
excluded them.
The foremost figure in the foundation of Zionism was Herzl. A Viennese journalist he was
irreligious. His only son Hans was not
circumcised. He advocated mass
conversion to Catholicism at first. He
too saw the Jewish Question as a racial not religious matter and he wrote what
was the founding pamphlet of the Zionist movement, The Jewish
State.
Herzl's memorial |
There have been many biographies of Herzl but the best by far is Desmond
Stewart’s Herzl Artist and Politician.
Leon Rosselson above |
The article below by Leon Rosselson is excellent and well worth reading.
His conclusions are impeccable. That whereas Herzl solved the contradiction
between being a Jewish and a democratic state by erasing the Jewishness, Israel
has erased its democracy.
Leon Rosselson |
The future of Israel is that it will become more and more racist and
repressive until it becomes a fully functioning police state. Leon is wrong only in saying it will become a
fascist state. Fascism is a different
model of authoritarian state.
Settler colonialism involves an alliance between different settler
classes but for Palestinians these are distinctions without a difference.
Theodore Herzl |
It is probably ironic that Herzl would probably be the first to throw up
his hands in horror if he saw what his Frankenstein has become. Because, as Leon Rosselsson explains, Herzl
was not much of a Jew. Indeed if he
could have become a non-Jew, a Christian, he would have done. But the point
about anti-Semitism in the late 19th century was that conversion was
no longer enough. Anti-Semitism had
become transformed from feudal religious to racial anti-Semitism.
As Rosselson shows Zionism began from an acceptance of anti-Semitism and
its disdain for the gutter ghetto Jew. Indeed much of what the early Zionists
said about Jews was no different from the anti-Semites said.
Read and enjoy.
Tony Greenstein
Leon Rosselsson
Herzl is everywhere in Israel. It would be difficult to find a town without
a street named after him. He is memorialised in the names of boulevards, parks,
squares, a city (Herzliya), a forest, a sprinkling of restaurants, a museum and
even a national cemetery — Mount Herzl. His portrait hangs in the plenum hall
of the Knesset. His birthday — Herzl Day — is observed as a national holiday.
This is to be expected. After all, was he not the founder of the Zionist
project and the Jewish state?
What, though, does the average Israeli citizen know about Herzl? Not a
lot, I suspect. Do they know he was reprimanded by his rabbi in Vienna for
celebrating Christmas with a Christmas tree? Do they know he refused to have
his son, Hans, circumcised? That his first solution to ‘the Jewish problem’ was
a mass conversion of Austrian Jews to Catholicism? ‘It should be done on a
Sunday, in St. Stephen’s Cathedral, in the middle of the day, with music and
pride, publicly,’ he wrote.
Palestinian refugees |
There’s an amusing youtube video in which a journalist presents a number
of Israeli students with a quote from Herzl and asks who they thought wrote it.
Every one of them says Hitler. They are shocked to discover the truth; the
Herzl they’d learned about in school could not have written such an antisemitic
statement. This is the quote: AN EXCELLENT IDEA ENTERS MY MIND — TO ATTRACT OUTRIGHT ANTI-SEMITES AND MAKE THEM
DESTROYERS OF JEWISH WEALTH.
They didn’t
know the half of it. What would they have said about this quotation from an
article Herzl wrote in the Deutsche Zeitung newspaper?
The wealthy Jews rule the world. In
their hands lies the fate of governments and nations. They start wars between
countries and, when they wish, governments make peace. When the wealthy Jews
sing, the nations and their leaders dance along and meanwhile the Jews get
richer.
This could
have come from the notorious antisemitic forgery The Protocols of the Elders of
Zion. So what is going on here?
Herzl was
born in Budapest in 1860. His parents were secular, assimilated,
German-speaking Jews and he himself admired German culture, philosophy, art,
literature as the acme of Western civilisation. As a student at Vienna
University, he joined the German nationalist fraternity, Albia, whose motto was
Honour, Freedom, Fatherland, though he did later resign in protest at the
antisemitism that he encountered. Like many educated, German-speaking Jews, he
had nothing but contempt for the mass of religious, Torah-abiding,
Yiddish-speaking, shtetl-dwelling Eastern European Jews. There is nothing in
his writings to suggest that he had any great attachment to Judaism or much
interest in or knowledge of Judaic teaching.
And this was
his dilemma. He was educated, cultured, rational, an admirer of Germany’s
enlightened civilisation, a model citizen of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in all
respects except one: he was a Jew, the ‘other’. And even though his Jewishness
meant little to him, he could not divest himself of this label and so could not
be fully accepted. No wonder he found the idea of converting to Christianity so
appealing.
‘I give praise to every Jewish
parent that decides to convert to Christianity,’ he wrote. And again: ‘I
have a son and would sooner convert today to Christianity than tomorrow so that
he would start being Christian as soon as possible to spare him the injuries
and discrimination that I suffered.’
Ben-Gurion reading the Declaration of Israel's Independence |
His son,
Hans, who wasn’t circumcised at birth, seems to have had an identity crisis for
most of his life. He did have himself circumcised when he was 13, after his
father’s death. In 1925 he became a Baptist, then, shortly after that, declared
himself a Catholic. A year or so later, he wrote in a letter to the London
Jewish Daily Bulletin, “I consider myself a member of the House of Israel.”
In 1930, when he was 39, he shot himself.
Ultimately,
Herzl decided that conversion could not be the answer and that, as he wrote in
his diary, it was empty and futile to try and combat antisemitism. In his book,
Der Judenstaat, published in 1896, he explains why: ‘The Jewish
question exists wherever Jews live in perceptible numbers. Where it (i.e.
antisemitism) does not exist, it is carried by Jews in the course of their
migration. We naturally move to those places where we are not persecuted and
there our presence produces persecution…. The unfortunate Jews are now carrying
the seeds of Anti-Semitism into England; they have already introduced it into
America.’
In a later
chapter, he argues that the immediate cause of antisemitism is
‘our excessive production of
mediocre intellects, who cannot find an outlet downwards or upwards — that is
to say, no wholesome outlet in either direction. When we sink, we become a
revolutionary proletariat, the subordinate officers of all revolutionary
parties; and at the same time, when we rise, there rises also our terrible
power of the purse’.
In short,
the responsibility for antisemitism lies with the Jews. They carry its seeds
within them. It’s their fault for being Jews.
Der Judenstadt translates
as The Jewish State but it might more accurately be translated as The State of
the Jews because there is almost nothing that is specifically Jewish about
Herzl’s vision. Much of the book is concerned with the practical arrangements
for transferring Jews to the Jewish state — those who remain behind, he argues,
will soon disappear altogether — and for setting up the structures, physical,
legal, constitutional, of the new state. He envisages a state that more or less
replicates the advanced class-based capitalist societies of Europe. ‘I think
a democratic monarchy and an aristocratic republic are the finest forms of a
State’ but the Jewish state will be an improvement because ‘we shall
learn from the historic mistakes of others … for we are a modern nation
and wish to be the most modern in the world’.
And where
will this state be? He hovers between Argentina, fertile land, plenty of space,
sparse population, mild climate, and Palestine -‘our ever-memorable historic
home’. In Palestine, he writes, ‘we should there form a portion of a
rampart of Europe against Asia, an outpost of civilisation as opposed to
barbarism’. Zionism has always sold its state as an oasis of Western
civilisation in a desert of Arab backwardness — ‘a villa in the jungle’, as
Ehud Barak put it. Or a state that would further Britain’s imperial interests
in a region of great strategic importance, as Weizmann promised Balfour. Or, as
one might put it now, America’s post Six Day War watchdog in the Middle East.
Did Herzl
know Palestine was already populated? Of course he did. In 1895, he wrote in
his diary:
‘We shall try to spirit the
penniless population across the border by procuring employment for it in the
transit countries, while denying it employment in our country. But the process
of expropriation and the removal of the poor must be carried out discreetly and
circumspectly.’
Like many
early Zionists he thought that the views of the Palestinian population could be
discounted and that they had no political rights and should have no say in the
matter.
When he
discusses the language of the new state, he dismisses Hebrew as impractical. As
for Yiddish: ‘We shall give up using those miserable stunted jargons,
those Ghetto languages which we still employ, for these were the stealthy
tongues of prisoners.’ Instead, ‘every man can preserve the language in
which his thoughts are at home’. There will be a ‘federation of tongues’ until
the most useful language wins out. The Jewish religion? In its place and no further.
‘We shall keep our priests within the confines of their temples…. They
must not interfere in the administration of the state…’ There is no
mention of the Sabbath or of celebrating the Jewish festivals. Even the flag
has no Jewish symbolism, no Magen David, only seven golden stars on a white
background.
Herzl
claimed that he was motivated to argue for a Jewish state in order to solve the
problem of antisemitism. But his solution was tantamount to removing the Jewish
people from the countries where they lived, depositing them in Palestine and
erasing as far as possible any expression of their Jewishness.
Herzl's fantasyland |
In 1902,
Herzl published a novel called Altneuland (Old-Newland). It is set in
Palestine where a new Jewish state has been established. He describes this new
state as absorbing all the best ideals of every nation. There is no conflict
with the indigenous Arab population. One of the heroes is an Arab engineer,
Rashid Bey, who says: ‘The Jews have made us prosperous, why should we be
angry with them? We live with them as brothers, why should we not love them?’ A
Palace of Peace is built in Jerusalem to arbitrate in international disputes.
Religion is respected but plays absolutely no part in public affairs. Many
languages are spoken, Hebrew is not the main one. Non-Jews have equal rights. A
fanatical rabbi named Geyer (a bird that eats carrion in German) forms a party
which attempts to disenfranchise non-Jews because ‘this is a Jewish state
and only Jews should have the right to citizenship’. In the end, they are
defeated by the liberal opposition who argue that ‘it would be immoral to
exclude anyone, whatever his origin, his descent or his religion from
participating in our achievements …Our motto must be now and ever — Man
you are my brother.’
Ahad Ha'am |
A fine
example of wishful thinking but Herzl’s utopian fantasy is infinitely
preferable to the dystopia that is Israel today. It was, though, heavily
criticised for imagining a Jewish state that had nothing Jewish about it. Ahad
Ha’am (Asher Ginsberg), the writer and founder of cultural Zionism who opposed
Herzl’s political Zionism, denounced the book.
‘Anyone examining this book
will find that in their state the Jews have neither renewed nor added anything
of their own. Only what they saw fragmented among the enlightened nations of
Europe and America, they imitated and put together in their new land.’
He also
attacked Herzl’s naivety in portraying the Arab population as welcoming
enthusiastically the Jewish colonists.
Ahad Ha’am
So the 1895
Herzl who, in order to bring about his Jewish state, advocated removing the
Arab peasants from their land so that they could be replaced by Jews, seven
years later imagined a Jewish state where the relationship between Jew and Arab
was harmonious and conflict-free and all were equal citizens. Doesn’t this
point to the impossible contradiction at the heart of the Zionist project? The
state that Herzl most admired, his model state, was a European liberal
democracy like Germany. In order to create that model in the state of the Jews,
he had to remove from it anything that was exclusively Jewish. The less Jewish,
the more democratic. The more Jewish, the more it would exclude non-Jews and
therefore the less democratic it would be.
The Zionist
parties that fought for and in 1948 succeeded in creating a state were Jewish
nationalists. Their state would be not only of the Jews but for the Jews: the
nation state of the Jewish people — all of them. They were clear that the state
could only survive in that form by, as Herzl had explained, driving out the
majority of the non-Jews who lived there. Maximum land, minimum Arabs was the
political imperative.
Ze'ev Jabotinsky - leader of the right-wing Revisionist Zionists |
They were
with Herzl also in his contempt for Jewish life in the diaspora and were
determined to create the new pioneering Jew, Hebrew-speaking, self-confident,
healthy, sturdy, everything that they believed the diaspora Jew was not. Chazak
ve-ematz, they said: be strong and courageous. Israel would represent, as
Uri Avnery put it, ‘the total repudiation of all forms of Jewish life in exile,
their culture and their language, Yiddish’. From Ben-Gurion on the left to
Jabotinsky on the right, they expressed a distaste bordering on shame for the
‘ghetto Jew’ and the ‘money Jew’. David Ben-Gurion (born David Grun) said of
diaspora Jews: ‘They have no roots. They are rootless cosmopolitans — there
can be nothing worse than that.’ According to Ze’ev (formerly Vladimir)
Jabotinsky:
Our starting point is to take the
typical Yid of today and to imagine his diametrical opposite … Because the
Yid is ugly, sickly, and lacks decorum, we shall endow the ideal image of the
Hebrew with masculine beauty. The Yid is trodden upon and easily frightened
and, therefore, the Hebrew ought to be proud and independent. The Yid is
despised by all and, therefore, the Hebrew ought to charm all. The Yid has
accepted submission and, therefore, the Hebrew ought to learn how to command.
The Yid wants to conceal his identity from strangers and, therefore, the Hebrew
should look the world straight in the eye and declare: “I am a Hebrew!”
Extract from Herzl's Diaries - showing his clear anti-semitism |
Jabotinsky
In Israel’s
early years, it was possible to believe that it was a democratic state. Of
course, you would have to ignore the fact that the Palestinian minority who had
not fled or been driven out in the 1947/48 war were living under military rule,
subject to curfews, administrative detentions, expulsions and land theft. When
I was in Israel in 1958/59, no-one mentioned the word ‘Palestinians’. As
‘Arabs’, they had no presence in public life. And the secular Israelis who I
mixed with were not greatly concerned about Jewishness. They considered
themselves Israeli first and Jewish a long way after, if at all. For them
Jewishness was the religion and its repressive laws which they resented. No
politician ever called for Israel to be recognised as a Jewish state. It wasn’t
necessary.
But when
military rule was lifted in 1966, Palestinians began to play more of a part in
public life. They began to organise themselves politically. And then there was
the Six Day War and the occupation and the settler movement and over the
decades the number of Palestinians in Israel grew and they started to protest
against land expropriations and house demolitions so that they began to be
viewed as a problem and then as the enemy and as a demographic threat. But a
demographic threat to what? To Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people,
of course, and to its Jewish character, whatever that may be. It’s not that
this self-definition had ever gone away but now it needed to be asserted. And
with the two intifadas, anti-Arab racism grew and religious fanaticism,
particularly among West Bank settlers; and the demand that Israel be recognised
by the Palestinian leadership as a Jewish state became a deliberate political
block on any genuine peace negotiations; and inevitably, inexorably, under
governments of both left and right, Israel grew to be what it is now, a
segregated, racist state where apartheid is enshrined in the recently enacted
Nation-State Law.
Herzl, in Altneuland,
solved the contradiction between a Jewish state — i.e the nation state of the
Jewish people — and a liberal democracy by virtually erasing its Jewishness.
Israel has solved the same contradiction by erasing its democracy.
I wonder
what Herzl would have made of this manifestation of his solution to
antisemitism, this militarised ethnocracy, where the Rabbinate controls the
laws pertaining to marriage, divorce and burial, where 50 rabbis from the
Orthodox religious establishment declare that Halachic law forbids Jews from
renting or selling apartments to non-Jews, where two settler rabbis interpret
the commandment Thou shalt not kill as only applying to Jews killing
other Jews not to gentiles, where 30% of the Jewish population don’t want to
work with ‘Arabs’ and 50% of Israeli Jews would rather not have an ‘Arab’ as a
neighbour and 56% of Israeli Jewish high school students believe that ‘Arabs’
should be barred from becoming members of the Knesset.
Not much
like Altneuland, then. And it will get worse. Because Jews are not a
nation. And if the Israeli nation continues to exclude the quarter of its
population that is not Jewish, it will become more religious, more intent on
Judaizing land and laws and policies, more repressive and more intolerant of
dissident views until it reaches its journey’s end as a fully-formed fascist
state.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please submit your comments below