Despite its Pretensions Socialist Zionism was simply an an attempt to reconcile the irreconcilable – Colonisation and Socialism
On Sunday at 5 pm, I will be giving a talk on my book Zionism During the Holocaust to the Communist Party of Great Britain and I intend to focus in particular on the reactionary and counter-revolutionary role of Zionism amongst the Jews of Europe. You can join using this link
I grew up in a Zionist household
with all the myths of Zionism. I learnt that what we now call the Nakba (a word
never used) was the Palestinians voluntarily leaving in order to make way for
the invading Arab armies.
We were told that far from
expelling the Arabs, the Zionists had begged them to stay! What was never
mentioned was the use of barrel bombs against the Arab population of Haifa and
the fact that they were forced to board ships to flee. Far from wanting to ‘drive the Jews into the sea’ the
opposite was the case. It was the Palestinians who were driven into the sea,
many of whom drowned.
The Idealised View of the Kibbutzim
Israel was seen as an oasis of
socialism in a backward, feudal Arab Middle East. The Kibbutzim were held out as
socialism in action and many were the times I was told that far from taking
part in struggles here I should go and live on a Kibbutz. Of course I was never
told that the Kibbutz was a racially pure institution, which no Arab could
become a member of or that they were established as stockade and watchtower settlements
on confiscated Arab land.
The myths of Zionism could, by
themselves, fill a whole volume. Today
of course people are wiser as the true nature of Zionism has revealed itself
with the ascent to power of the Jewish Nazi Jewish
Power (Otzma Yehudit) and the assorted freaks of Israel’s far-Right.
What is interesting is how it began.
Is it true that when Zionism began amongst the Jewish masses in Czarist Russia
that it was a progressive movement that over time has moved to the right? Was Zionism
a good idea that turned out badly or was it born with the Mark of Cain?
The strategy of the founder of Zionism,
Theodor Herzl, was a simple one. He wanted to establish a Jewish State and from
the start he sought to find a partner from one of the imperialist powers. This
was a strategy that the Zionist movement never deviated.
In 1917 Great Britain agreed to
sponsor the Zionist colonisation of Palestine and it formalised its agreement
in the Zionism Haifa Otzma
Yehudit Balfour Declaration but before then Herzl had traipsed round the rulers
of Europe – from the Ottoman Sultan, the German Kaiser, the Pope, Hungary’s
King Victor Emmanuel and the Ministers of Czarist Russia.
Before the advent of Hitler and the
Nazis the Czar of Russia was seen by most Jews as the symbol of murderous anti-Semitism.
Pogroms against the Jews were seen as a means of diverting the wrath of the
masses away from the Czarist regime and towards Jews living in the Pale of
Settlement where they were confined.
Vyacheslav von Plehve
To this end Czarist Interior Minister Vyacheslav von Plehve organised the Black Hundreds, a group of reactionary, counter-revolutionary, anti-Semitic groups during and after the Russian Revolution of 1905. They were responsible for hundreds of pogroms against Russian Jews and the death of thousands. They were supported by Czar Nicholas II who instructed his ministers to support and fund them.
The Bolsheviks and Russian workers were forced to fight them
militarily. Lenin called them ‘tramps,
rowdies, hawkers, and similar disreputable characters’. See The Black
Hundreds and the Organisation of an Uprising
Brendan McGeever - Revisionist anti-Communist Historian
Russia
had been plagued by pogroms against the Jews. Anti-Semitism was seen as the way
of dividing the opposition to the Czarist regime. This was why, contrary to revisionist
academics such as Brendan McGeever’s Bolsheviks
and Anti-Semitism, the Bolsheviks took anti-Semitism very seriously as it
was a weapon posed over the heart of the revolution.
The most famous pogrom was in Kishinev on 19-
20 April 1903. Nearly 50 Jews were killed and 92 were severely injured. ‘No Jewish event of the time would be as
extensively documented.’ [Zipperstein, Pogrom: Kishinev and the Tilt of
History] Reports in the New York Times and The
Times ensured that it had an
unprecedented impact internationally. [See Jewish Massacre
Denounced’. NYT April 28 1903].
The
attitude of the Hayim Nahman Bialik, the Zionist
national poet, “In the City of
Killing” was to talk of the ‘disgraceful shame and cowardice’ of the
Jewish victims of the pogrom. The Zionists of
course had done nothing to organise self-defence.
The
Czarist regime refused to intervene except when the
Jews defended themselves. The international and the liberal press in Russia were outraged by stories of rape, mutilation
and the murder of children. The anti-Zionist Jewish Bund organised self-defence units here and
elsewhere.
The
Governor of Bessarabia, whose capital
was Kishinev, was replaced
by Prince Serge Urusov, a ‘severe critic of autocracy’. Urusov’s study of the massacre confirmed that it
had been instigated by Plehve.
On
August 8 1903, barely four months after the Kishinev pogrom, Herzl visited Russia, meeting with
Plehve. Herzl was concerned that Zionism should retain its legal status. As he began
explaining the merits of Zionism Plehve interrupted him: ‘You don’t have to justify
the movement to me. Vous prêchez un converti.’ [You are preaching to a
convert].’ [Herzl Diaries, pp. 1522-1525, 10.8.1903]
What
was the response of the Zionists? Did
they condemn the Czarist regime? Not at
all. The 6th Zionist
Congress which met on 23 August 1903 said nothing just as 30 years later in
Prague, it would
remain silent about the Hitler regime. It was more concerned with the Uganda
Project.
Herzl asked Plehve: ‘Help me to reach land sooner and the revolt
will end. And so will the defection to the Socialists.’
[Complete Diaries, p. 1526]
Plehve approved the holding of the second Russian Zionist Conference, the publication
of a Zionist daily, Der Fraind and the legalisation of the Zionist movement
at a time when all other political organisations were banned.
The Jewish Bund
Herzl promised that the revolutionaries would stop
their struggle in return for a charter for Palestine in 15 years. The Bund were outraged. [Henry Tobias, The Jewish Bund in Russia – From Its Origins
to 1905, p. 252] Kishinev created a crisis for the fledgling Labour
Zionist groups, who realised that they could not ignore the struggle against
anti-Semitism.
Herzl had earlier written to the Kaiser describing how:
our movement… has everywhere to fight an embittered battle with the
revolutionary parties which rightly sense an adversary in it. We are in need of
encouragement even though it has to be a carefully kept secret. [Complete Diaries, p. 59, October 17 1897]
Lucien Wolf - Anti-Zionist Spokesman of the Board of Deputies
Later when he came to London, in an interview with Lucien Wolf of the Board of Deputies, Plehve spoke favourably of Zionism as an encouragement to Jewish emigration. For ‘non-emigrants’ he thought that ‘Zionist ideas... might be useful as an antidote to Socialist doctrines.’ [The Times 6.2.04, ‘Mr Lucien Wolf’s Interview with M. de Plehve’].
Sixteen
years later, in February 1920 Winston Churchill wrote
in Zionism v Bolshevism of a ‘worldwide conspiracy for the overthrow
of civilisation’ by Jewish revolutionaries. In 1935 Ben-Gurion described Zionism as a ‘bulwark
against assimilation and communism.’
[ https://tinyurl.com/y269wb72]
Socialist Zionism arose out of the
contradiction between the needs of Jewish workers in Russia to fight anti-Semitism
where they were and the dream of Palestine. Although Zionism had foresworn the
struggle in the here and now, it couldn’t ignore the fact that Russian Jews were
the oppressed of the oppressed. Socialist Zionism arose as a result of the conflict between
Zionism’s support for the existing order and the Jewish proletariats' class
interests. [Lucas, Modern History of Israel, p. 35]
The myth of Zionist socialism in Palestine rested on the belief that the
kibbutzim were socialist. In reality the kibbutzim were
the result of an alliance between the Zionist labour movement and the Zionist
financial institutions. The socialism of the pioneers did not prevent them from
entering into an alliance with the Jewish bourgeoisie.
Collective colonisation was the most
efficient and cost effective means of colonising Palestine. They were not
a means of changing society. They were ‘tools
in forging national sovereignty.’ [Ze’ev Sternhell, Founding Myths of Israel, p. 325]
They fooled though westerners like Hannah Arendt who described them as ‘the most promising of all social experiments made in the 20th
century.’ [Hannah Arendt, The Jew As Pariah, p. 185].
The internal social structure of the
kibbutzim reflected their political role. Personal space
was eliminated in favour of collectivism. They were a Zionist Sparta intended
to produce fighters without personal attachments of affection to each other or
their children. ‘Everything was the
property of the collective including the individual’s thoughts.’ [Bloom,
‘What “The Father” had in mind,’ p. 346].
The kibbutzim were Jewish-only stockade and watchtower
settlements, marking out the borders of a future Jewish State. They provided
the organisational backbone of Haganah, the pre-state
army and Palmach, the Zionist
shock-troops. Although never more than 5% of Israel’s population,
the kibbutzim produced a disproportionately high number of
Israel’s officer corps.
As the pogroms intensified, Labor Zionist parties were drawn
into the fight against anti-Semitism. In Poland Poale Zion split into a Right and Left at its February/March 1919 conference, with Left
Poale Zion emerging as much the stronger. This was the
forerunner of the split at the World Union of Poale Zion’s fifth world
congress in Vienna in 1920. LPZ supported the Bolshevik revolution and attended the second and third congresses
of the Communist International as observers. LPZ opposed the decision by PZ to rejoin the World Zionist Organisation [WZO], viewing it
as bourgeois.
But in Palestine it was the right-wing of PZ which was stronger.
Because of the rhythms of colonisation Palestine PZ gravitated to the right whereas Poale Zion’s
diaspora sections were pulled to the left as a result of the class struggle and
the fight against anti-Semitism.
In Russia the success of the revolutionaries in
overthrowing the Czarist regime in February 1917 lessened the attraction of
Zionism. At their
conference in Petrograd in June 1917 the Russian Zionists omitted all mention of British sponsorship of the Zionists settlement in
Palestine. [Leonard
Stein, The Balfour Declaration. p. 437].
According to the Labor Zionists, the
Jewish and Palestinian workers would unite against the Jewish bourgeoisie at
the very same time that they were calling for a Boycott of Arab Labour! We can see the results in
Israel today where the Israeli Labor Party and Meretz
(Mapam) entered into a coalition government with the far-right. Far from
achieving socialism, the ‘left’ Zionists have almost disappeared.
Great post. Always has me scratching my head when people claim Zionism as a universal ideology in the same vein as socialism. Could you recommend any books on the subject, and what are your thoughts on that 'complaints on a plate' channel thats popped up online ?
ReplyDeleteI don't think there is any one book. Nathan Weinstock's Zionism: A False Messiah is a very good book as an overall description of Zionism. Gabriel Piterberg's Returns of Zionism is another
ReplyDeleteWhat happened to Nathan Weinstock - he went from anti-zionist leftist, to anti-anti-zionist ?
ReplyDelete