Zionism as a Form of Jewish Anti-Semitism
Amidst all the
nonsense about how anti-Zionism is a form of anti-Semitism and how difficult it
is to tell the difference between the two, it is easy to forget that when Zionism
first arose among Jewish people, it was seen as a form of Jewish anti-Semitism.
Lucien Wolfe,
the Secretary of the Conjoint Foreign Committee of the Board of Deputies no less reacted to the Zionist claim that Jews
were a separate nation, a claim that is still the basis of Zionist ideology (though
most Jews are not aware of the implications) by saying:
‘I have spent most of my life in combating
these very doctrines, [that Jews form a separate nation] when presented to me in the form of anti-Semitism, and I can only
regard them as the more dangerous when they come to me in the guise of Zionism.
They constitute a capitulation to our enemies.’
Theodore Herzl,
the founder of Political Zionism, was a Viennese journalist who wrote the
founding pamphlet of the Zionist movement, The Jewish State or more accurate
the State of the Jews (Der Judenstaat) which was published in 1896. It was written in the wake of the Dreyfus Trial
in which a Jewish Captain Dreyfus was convicted of espionage in December 1894. Herzl
wrote in his Diaries (p.8) that:
The degradation of Dreyfuss - whose sword was broken in two |
‘In Paris... I
achieved a freer attitude towards anti-Semitism, which I now began to
understand historically and to pardon. Above all, I recognise the emptiness and
futility of trying to 'combat' anti-Semitism.’
His pamphlet
didn’t make so much as one reference to the Dreyfus Affair which convulsed France
for the best part of 12 years before Dreyfus was finally exonerated. It led to the open letter ‘J’Accuse from
Emile Zola who was forced to flee to England. It led to the defeat of the
aristocratic-military clique led by Edouard Drumont.
Herzl’s
pamphlet was welcomed and favourably reviewed by Drumont and Herzl was more at
ease with the anti-Dreyfussards than the supporters of Dreyfus including
Bernard Lazarre, who initiated the campaign to overturn Dreyfus’s conviction.
Elected to the Zionist Actions Committee at the first Zionist Congress in 1897 within a
year he had resigned because Herzl was completely indifferent to the Dreyfus
Affair. Yet a myth has grown up, spread by people like the BBC’s tame historian
Simon Schama that Herzl was inspired by the Dreyfus Trial into becoming a Zionist.
Zionism began
as a movement of despair which accepted the inevitability of Zionism. It moved from that to an acceptance that the anti-Semites
were right. Jews didn’t belong in the diaspora
and from there it was but a short step to collaborating with anti-Semites, the Nazis
included.
Alone amongst Jews,
the Zionist leadership welcomed the Nazis to power. In the words of David Ben Gurion, the first Prime
Minister of Israel ‘Hitler’s rise was “a
huge political and economic boost for the Zionist enterprise.’ Other Zionists spoke similarly. Of course the
Holocaust was 8 years away and no one believed that the Nazis would embark on
the systematic extermination of the Jews.
Nonetheless most Jews knew enough to launch a Boycott of the Nazis. The Zionists however broke the boycott with a
trade agreement, Ha'avara, with the Nazis.
They sought to profit from the misery of Germany’s Jews which they
did. 60% of capital investment in Jewish
Palestine between 1933 and 1939 came from Nazi Germany. Hitler literally built
the Jewish state.
This was the
subject of my talk in Stuttgart. The simultaneous translation has been stripped
out.
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