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Israel Is No Switzerland |
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| It's easy to be neutral and even-tempered when you're not targeted for destruction | ||
by Shmuel Rosner, April 9, 2008 |
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From: Shmuel Rosner
To: Gregory Levey
Dear Gregory,
Having spent the last two and a half years in America (not to mention my year in Canada twelve years ago) - and being the student that I am of American politics and culture – I think I know what you mean by thanking me “for being direct.” It is really: “get lost, you and your primitive understanding of my book.”
And this scares me, and also makes me a bit uncomfortable (am I now showing signs of being somewhat Americanized?).
So let me backtrack a little and say this: Yes, I think your book does not reveal the true nature of Israel. (You should take into account the fact that I was trying to provoke you as to make our dialog come alive.) And --- I do read your book as an allegory, which you understandably protest. However, I’m afraid that on this point, which I probably didn't make coherently enough in my first letter, I will have to insist. Let me explain why.
Reading your book (and being as “direct” as I was perhaps I should be emphasizing that it was really fun to read), I did not think about you and your personal story. I thought about the conversation we’re about to have. And I also thought about your readers, and how will they interpret the book.
And let me tell you this. I’m pretty sure that what these readers will have in mind --- assuming that many of them will be young Jewish North Americans like you --- is exactly what I had in mind. They will be thinking that your description of your Israel is a description of the actual Israel. Which I think is sometimes true, but sometimes isn’t.
A Kassam missile landing in Sderot: why Israelis sometimes get agitated
Now, I don’t want to spend too much time arguing this point,
as I vividly remember that the instructions I were given by the editors of
Jewcy involved something about “moving the dialogue forward.” But here is one
last attempt I will be making to sum-up our differences:
You think that I failed to understand the book by saying that you failed to reveal the true nature of Israel. I think that you failed to understand the minds of your readers, and ended up with a book (did I say it was fun to read?) that can be somewhat misleading in the sense that instead of helping people understand Israel you’ll be confusing them even more than they are already confused.
Having said all that, I want to go back to the real reason I’ve wanted to discuss this book in the first place: That is, the gap between educated, smart, liberal, young, Jewish Americans – and Israel, if there is such gap. As you probably know by now, this is a matter of some debate (I wrote about it here).
And your letter gave me the perfect example with which to make one of the many arguments that can be made. Here’s what you wrote:
Let me go a step further and suggest that the personal and political are actually interwoven… As they say, people get the government they deserve.
As I see it, the argument you’ve made in this paragraph is almost outrageous. You say that Canada is not asserting itself on the world stage because of the politeness of its people. You imply that Switzerland is neutral as a result of the “quintessential Swiss demeanor.”
“There are underlying cultural forces that help shape both the personal and the political. There are underlying cultural forces that help shape both the personal and the political,” you say. And this sounds misleadingly true until one thinks about it seriously.
Then you go on to say that Israel has the government it has because of what? “The way that the typical Israeli driver navigates the streets of Tel Aviv”? So let me see if I get this: The “underlying cultural forces” of Israel are those responsible for the bad behavior of Israeli drivers which in turn is responsible for improvisational governments (ones that they “deserve”) and their poorly constructed policies?
Please Gregory, tell me again that I did not understand your position.
Because this is how I see it. Canada does not have enemies, and does not have to assert itself anywhere unless it wants to. Its people can be calm and polite because the only thing they really have to worry about is winter weather. No one is threatening Canada, no one is trying to attack it, or to delegitimize it, or to eliminate it. Switzerland, may I remind you, is in Europe, surrounded by the dangerous militaristic Italy, France and Germany (yes, I know it was not always a peaceful neighborhood, nevertheless, it is now).
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Israel, on the other hand, has real enemies, and very real
worries. It is located in a dangerous neighborhood, and has to improvise
constantly, as time is of the essence. Yes, this improvisational ethic has side effects,
not all pleasant. Among them: careless drivers, inventive high-tech engineers, lawless
settlers, courageous fighter-pilots. All these, and many more, are the outcome
of the Israeli condition.
I hope I make this distinction clear because it is an important one. It also sheds new light on your assertion, according to which you’ve developed “reservations about specific governmental policies.” And I want to be clear here: I do not think that the policies of Israel or the Israeli government are always the right ones, or the brightest ones. However, your letter made me doubt your doubts regarding these policies. How can you possibly understand the cause for Israel’s policies, while thinking about it the way one thinks about Canada?
With this in mind --- and moving the dialogue “forward”, always forward --- I would like you to address the question of the “divide,” an area on which we seem to agree (unless that proves to be a mirage).
“I can enthusiastically agree with you that the fundamental divide between Israelis and Americans is a cultural one,” you write. So here is my twofold question: Can it be bridged, and should we even aspire to bridge it?
Looking forward to your response,
Rosner
Atzmon Pappe
I left Israel because no one
I left Israel because no one recognized my innate talents. I found that I could do better in England, where people actually paid me to be anti_semitic. People were greatly amused that an ex-Israeli could say bad things about Jews, such as Jews got what they deserved from Hitler, and that I support Iran nuking Israel. I became an endowed professor at an English university, and my students love me despite the fact that I am never in the classroom but spend all of my time organizing boycotts of England and hang out with Al Mujahiroon. Death to Israel-it pays my salary
naftali
On the Down Side
You are drinking warm beer.
rec
Shorter Shmuel Rosner
I am scared and feel somewhat uncomfortable by things you never said but I imagine you must have meant.
I am also disappointed that the memoir you wrote about your experiences in Israel is not the book I would have written to inform young American Jews about the true nature of Israel as I see it.
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‘Shorter’ concept created by Daniel Davies and perfected by Elton Beard.
Atzmon Pappe
Dear rec I am happy that
Dear rec
I am happy that you are disenchanted with the zionist entity. In fact, it is the duty of every progressive to hate Israel as the worlds last bastion of tribal nationalism. The end of Israel will usher in a golden age of mankind. However, I must warn you that i hold broad copyrights on the criticism of Israel, including traditional motifs such as the IDF is worse than the nazis, the so called Holocaust pales in comparison to Palestinian genocide, all Israels technologic and medical advances were stolen from the Palestinians, that there is no historic Jewish claim to Palestine, and many others. Thus, while we are all duty bound to hate Israel, please dont interfere with my parnassah
jewlicious
Hee hee hee. I'm going to
Hee hee hee. I'm going to ignore Atzmon. But I am developing a man-crush on Shmuel.
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I blog at Jewlicious.com
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