1 / 56

Key authors

Key authors. Michael Barnett, GWU. Dov Waxman, Baruch College. Israeli sociologist Oz Almog. Creator of People-Israel website. Israeli identity politics and foreign policy. Remember Kehr’s argument that foreign policy has “not only an antagonist in front of it but a homeland behind it”?

Download Presentation

Key authors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Key authors Michael Barnett, GWU Dov Waxman, Baruch College

  2. Israeli sociologist Oz Almog • Creator of People-Israel website

  3. Israeli identity politics and foreign policy • Remember Kehr’s argument that foreign policy has “not only an antagonist in front of it but a homeland behind it”? • This framework may be applied to the internal politics of culture and identity as much as the politics of economic interests. • What is “identity”? • “An identity is an understanding of oneself in relationship to others. Identities, in short, are not personal or psychological; they are social and relational . . . “ (Barnett, p. 62) • Do cultural politics matter for US foreign policy? • “What is Israel’s identity”? This highly contested question “was first raised by Zionist ideologues . . . before Israel’s founding” (Waxman, “From Controversy to Consensus,” 76).

  4. Israeli identity politics and foreign policy • Background on Zionism—YouTube College: • Prof. Z. Lockman, “A Brief History of Zionism” • “A Shamelessly brief history of Zionism.” • “Alfred Dreyfus Affair, Theodor Herzl and Zionism” • Theodor Herzl vs. AhadHa’am

  5. Theodor Herzl, 1860-1904 • Founded the Zionist political movement (in Basel, 1897) • His novel Altneuland, trans. into Hebrew as “Tel Aviv,” envisioned a progressive, secular, culturally-European, multi-lingual society.

  6. AhadHa’am (Asher Ginsberg), 1856-1927 • See Waxman book, 18-19. • Founded “cultural Zionism.” • Envisioned a Jewish, if secular, “spiritual center” in Palestine. • Contra Herzl, he strove for a “Jewish state, not a state of Jews.”

  7. The “Balfour Declaration”

  8. The British Mandate in Palestine, ~1920-1948

  9. Zionism in British Palestine • Since ~1930 the labor movement assumed a hegemonic position in the Zionist movement and among the Jewish “Yishuv” in Palestine. • The “Yishuv” built institutions that would serve the foundation for a future state: communal settlements (Kibbutz, Moshav), a strong labor union, a Hebrew University, paramilitary formations (the Haganah; “Palmach”). See Almog. • The Yishuv’s (labor) leadership was largely drawn from a small cadre of “pioneers” who arrived in Palestine between 1904-1914 (the “second aliyah”).

  10. Degania, the first Kibbutz (b. 1909)

  11. Take David Ben-Gurion, for example (1886-1973) • Emigrated from Russia to Palestine in 1906. • Worked initially as an ag. laborer. • Hebraized his name from “Grün.” Hated speaking Yiddish. • An avid bible reader, yet thoroughly secular. • From ~1930, undisputed leader of the “Yishuv,” then Israel’s first PM

  12. Ze’ev (Vladimir) Jabotinsky, 1880-1940 • “Revisionist Zionism, led by Jabotinsky, was labor Zionism’s chief ideological rival(Waxman book, 20). • Advocated “territorial maximalism, insisting upon the Jewish right to the whole territory of Eretz Israel” (Rynhold and Waxman, 14). • Today’s Likud party is a descendent of the Revisionist movement

  13. Oz Almog, The Sabra: The Creation of the New Jew (U. of Calif. Press, 2000) • Synopsis: “This book provides a comprehensive portrait of the Sabras (the state of Israel's first generation, born between the 1930's and 40's) . . . It's an interesting look at the creation of a new Jewish identity, and the reasons why Israeli Jews have become so different from their Diaspora forefathers.”

  14. Israel’s Identity: from hegemony of the New Jew (“Sabra”) to current “tribalism” • The Other to which the New Jew, the Sabra, was counterpoised was the old “Diaspora” Jew more than the Arab residents of Palestine. • As Almog explains, from the 1930s to the early 1960s the term “Hebrew” (or Israeli) was central to Zionist cultural discourse. “Jewish” was marginalized. • The “Canaanites” were an extreme manifestation of this vision (Almog, 6-7; Waxman book, 27-8)

  15. Poet Yonatan Ratosh, leading Canaanite (Almog, p. 6)

  16. The “Palmach”

  17. Palestine/Israel: the “Green Line” (L); the 1947 UN Partition Plan (R)

  18. The internationalization of the 1948-49 war (Israel’s “war of independence”)

  19. The New Jews: Sabra farmer-warriors epitomized by Moshe Dayan (1915-1981)

  20. Yitzhak Rabin, 1922-1995. Israel’s first Sabra PM

  21. Ariel Sharon, 1928-

  22. Identity politics in Israel • The “New Jew” vision viewed Israel as a largely-secular state of Jews, more Israeli than Jewish. • EX: the “Law of Return”. • From the 1930s to the 1960s, the “New Jew” identity was hegemonic. The swift victory of 1967 was its high tide; its decline was precipitated by: • The shock of the 1973 Yom Kippur war. • Demographic and political changes in Israeli society

  23. The six day war, June 1967

  24. From Sabra (New Jew) hegemony to “tribalism” • Sabra, Labor hegemony gave way to cultural fragmentation or “tribalism.” By the 1990s, “Israeli society was no longer seen as united by as rife with internal divisions (between, for example, religious and secular, Ashkenazim and Mizrahim, Jews and Arabs).” (Waxman, “From Controversy to Consensus,” p. 79) • Who are the major cultural “tribes” of contemporary Israel?

  25. Whatever happened to the old, hegemonic elite? • Tel-AviIt became a “tribe,” epitomized by Tel-Aviv. Largely Ashkenazi. • Tel-Aviv’s state of mind: party time; secular; high tech; looking outward toward Europe and the U.S. • Individualism supplanted Zionist collectivism. The high tech entrepreneur succeeded generals and farmers as the cultural role model. • Identity: a [democratic] state of Jews, a modern, secular, Western state . Or even a “Hebrew state,” a “secular, civic, Israeli melting pot” (Ha’aretz editorial, March 3, 2011) • In the early 1990s, this vision was articulated by then PM Yitzhak Rabin (see Barnett, 75).

  26. HadagNachash, “Zionist” hip hop • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJveW0D5ZfQ&feature=related • Reflects a common theme in “Tel-Aviv’s” contemporary state of mind. The state we have is not what we dreamed of. It has become too militaristic; too religious. We want Paris.

  27. Tel-Aviv, 2004 Gay Pride Parade

  28. Tel Aviv: streetlife and nightlife

  29. Israel’s “tribes: the Arab citizens • Do not fit comfortably within a “state of Jews,” let alone a “Jewish state.” • Might fit more comfortably within: • A communist state • A Canaanite state • A “secular, civic, Israeli melting pot” (Ha’aretz editorial) • “A state of its citizens” (sort of like the U.S.) • An Islamic state?

  30. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y3TTnuCDUa8 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4oTO2pyXKw&feature=relmfu • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fP46pXaPXfY&feature=related

  31. Israel’s “tribes”: the Sepharadi Jews (or Mizrahim)

  32. The Mellah in Sefrou, Morocco

  33. Iraqi Jews arrive in Israel ~1950 (L)“Ma’abara” (R)

  34. Ashdod

  35. The Sepharadim/Mizrahim (See Waxman book, 40-41) • “Mizrahi Jews tended to be more traditional than their Ashkenazi counterparts, and their Jewish identity tended to be stronger.” • “When secular Israeliness . . . dominated in the definition of Israeli national identity . . . the Mizrahim’s ability to belong in this Israeli nation was highly tenuous and conditional” • The Mizrahim gravitated toward the Likud party and were partly responsible for its rise to power in 1977—Menachem Begin’s “emphasis upon Jewishness and the Jewish tradition appealed to the Mizrahi public.”

  36. Israel’s tribes: the “ultra-Orthodox” • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-rQjhNCU-Cw&feature=related • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cc8XwamA1t0 • Historically hostile to Zionism • Were devastated by the holocaust • Were expected by the Zionist leadership to become extinct—expectations were confounded by history • Don’t care for a “state of Jews.”

  37. Knitted kippahs and black hats

  38. Me’a Shearim, Jerusalem

  39. Beitar Ilit, an ultra-orthodox settlement

  40. Israel’s tribes: the national-religious bloc • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mqVDpKYOnIA • Was a junior partner of the hegemonic elite • Became awakened by the 1967 victory • Want a Jewish state in Greater Israel • The core of the settler movement

  41. Settlement of Shilo, near Ramallah

  42. Settlers demonstrating against PM Sharon in 2005

  43. The newest tribe: the “Russians”

  44. The Oslo Peace Process Timeline • July 1992: Yitzhak Rabin (Labor) elected PM • 1993: secret talks begin between Israel and the PLO in Oslo, resulting in the Oslo accords (signed in Washington). Provide for mutual recognition and establishment of Palestinian self-government in parts of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. PLO leadership, headed by Yasser Arafat, allowed to return to Gaza. • Sept. 1995: Arafat and Rabin reach Taba agreement, expanding Palestinian self-rule and allowing Palestinian elections. Arafat is elected president of Pal. Authority. • Nov. 1995: Rabin is assassinated by Yigal Amir, a member of the national-religious “tribe.” • 1996: Binyamin Netanyahu (Likud) elected PM

  45. Oslo Peace Process Timeline (cont’d) • 1996: Binyamin Netanyahu (Likud) elected PM • Jan. 1997: Israel hands over 80% of Hebron to the PA. Israeli-Pal. talks continue but the peace process falters. • 1999: Ehud Barak (Labor) elected PM. • 2000: Barak pushes hard for a summit with Arafat to reach a final peace accord. The Camp David Summit ends in deadlock. • Sept. 2000: the 2nd Palestinian Intifada begins. • Feb. 2001: Ariel Sharon (Likud) elected PM. Would later initiate a unilateral disengagement from Gaza (see Rynhold and Waxman)

  46. Signing the Oslo Peace Accords, 1993

More Related