Sun, Sep 07, 2008

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A Yankee Jew In Sharon's Court

How Israel's cultural strengths have become political deficiencies
 

From: Gregory Levey
To: Shmuel Rosner

Dear Shmuel,

Thank you for being direct.

I’m sorry if my book hit a nerve. I’m not sure how to address this whirlwind of questions, but I’ll begin by saying that I’m disappointed to hear that you think I “failed” to write a book “supposedly revealing of the true nature of Israel” --- mostly because I had no intention of doing any such thing. I “failed” only in the sense that you have failed to become America’s greatest lawn bowler (as far as I know). In other words, that’s just not what I was trying to do.

To imagine that I could reveal “the true nature of Israel” would have been grossly presumptuous of me. All I could hope to do was tell my own story of being a particular North American thrown headfirst into the Israeli government. Life is messy, and memoirs are messy. The tidy categorization you’re stretching for is the kind of product journalists sling --- not the stuff of memoir.

The Israeli Spirit: On the beach?The Israeli Spirit: On the beach? So while I’m delighted to discuss my book with you, I’m reluctant to turn it into an allegory. With that in mind, I can address some of your other inquiries, such as whether I cut off my time in the Israeli Government for personal or political reasons.

It was both. I believe that Israel’s existence and security are moral imperatives and I remain wholeheartedly supportive of the country, but I did develop reservations about specific governmental policies --- along with severe “doubts that the country’s problems would ever be solved,” as you mention. I also, however, quickly tired of Israelis’ “directness” and of many aspects of the Israeli worldview. “Was it just because you didn’t feel at home?” you seem to be asking, as if this should be some kind of accusation. But of course I never felt at home, and I can’t imagine why I would have. I wish those living in Israel only the best, but my home is North America, and I’m entirely happy with that.

Let me go a step further and suggest that the personal and political are actually interwoven. I grew up in Canada, and I think that the sometimes paralyzing “politeness” of Canadians and their government’s tendency not to assert itself on the world stage might not be unrelated. My Swiss friends, meanwhile, have always agreed with me when I have proposed that the quintessential Swiss demeanor is of a piece with their country’s historic neutrality. There are underlying cultural forces that help shape both the personal and the political. So, for example, the way that the typical Israeli driver navigates the streets of Tel Aviv – hopping onto the curb, driving between two lanes in order to use whichever one is faster, parking in the middle of the street while going for a coffee --- jibes with how his country sometimes conducts statecraft. As they say, people get the government they deserve --- particularly in a democracy as vibrant as Israel’s.

On the battlefield?On the battlefield? I’ll obviously grant you that my experience of being a fish out of water in the government didn’t give me any kind of typical experience of Israeliness. Most immigrants to Israel don’t get off the plane and head straight to the Prime Minister’s Office. Nor do most get on the plane in the first place because of an invitation from that office. I didn’t go to Israel to “make the deserts bloom,” to participate in the “ingathering of the exiles,” or because I was on a mission from God. I went because a job offer from Prime Minister Ariel Sharon when I was twenty-six-years-old would have been a hard thing to turn down.

It’s in that context that I can enthusiastically agree with you that the fundamental divide between Israelis and Americans is a cultural one. As an example of this, you rightly point to my surprise at the amount of improvisation in the Israeli government. You say that an Israeli put in my shoes --- say, voting at the UN General Assembly with no idea how he should vote --- would “have no problem making the decisions” that I was asked to make. On this point I totally agree with you. My concern, though, is that this is not a good thing.

The Israeli spirit of improvization is admirable and has often served the country well, especially in the early days of the state. Even now, the willingness to think creatively and break through rigid rules is certainly responsible for the mind-blowing innovations and successes that Israel has produced in fields including technology, medicine, business, and the arts. In these areas, improvisation can do wonders.

But is it really how a government should operate?

Many thanks,

Gregory



 

naftali


In One Word

Yes. That is how all governments do operate. On one level it is pure comedy if it weren't so tragic. There are different varieties and types of incompetence. There is the Russian model, which tends to completely destroy anything it touches. There is the European model, which ends up paralyzing all that it touches. There is the American version, which is more or less incompetent, but the ability of the citizens to invent manages to keep things working fairly well--at which point the government then takes the credit.

This of course doesn't address the moral issues which government raises. For instance, what constitutes a crime? In China one's thoughts can be criminal, and it seems that Canada is headed in the same direction. There seems to be great momentum to criminalize thought. These are other issues.

There are no governments in the world that have constantly faced an existential problem on a daily basis, save one, the Israeli government. The question is how does this variable affect the daily workings and daily management of things? Do you think your experience would have been different if you were working in a country without such an existential threat. What effect does this threat have on the basic psyche of each person living there?

I don't know if you addressed these questions. But just from your essay above, those questions are raised.





Yaakov


The American system

"There is the American version, which is more or less incompetent, but the ability of the citizens to invent manages to keep things working fairly well--at which point the government then takes the credit"

Exactly the way our founders designed the system. If you don't trust the government or the mob, but recognize that some law and order is needed, the best solution is a rube goldberg form of government.

That said, even the best government struggles during wartime.

"There are no governments in the world that have constantly faced an existential problem on a daily basis, save one, the Israeli government." 

Good point, especially when considering how democracies balance civil rights versus protecting the populace during wartime.  The US camps for Japanese during WWII provides one example.





Anonymous


naftali said: "...There

naftali said:

"...There are no governments in the world that have constantly faced an
existential problem on a daily basis, save one, the Israeli government..."

That may be a large part of the issue right there. Perhaps Diaspora Jews feel that daily existential angst is too much when added to the family, work, political angst they already have. It doesn't mean they don't support Israel.  It may just mean they don't choose to live there.





Nimrod Tal


Part of Israel's problem

Part of Israel's problem today is it wants to be part of Europe. Between its founding and 1993, Israel was a plucky country whose rudeness was charming because it was a novelty to see Jews defend themselves, and be good at it. Todays Israelis want to grovel back to Europe. They have forgotten the imperative from G-d to settle the land, and want to appease Europeans who are very grateful for the ethnic cleansing that the Germans performed 60+ years ago. Todays Israelis lack pride and self respect and feel the need to apologize for existing. Olmert finds ways he can justify not defending Sderot and hopes that Israel gets admitted to the EU before he has to respond to the shelling of the Negev. Israelis today talk in the language of Palestinian activists, noting that living in Tel Aviv is a form of occupation. Guess what-Europe doesnt want you, and you have no where to go. Wake up





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