Prof. Sam Lehman-Wilzig

Prof. Sam Lehman-Wilzig – Israel in the 21st Century: Back to Judea and Israel?

Prof. Sam Lehman-Wilzig – Israel in the 21st Century: Back to Judea and Israel?

The Israelite nation started off as 12 tribes, somewhat unified – and then things went downhill, historically speaking. Is the modern State of Israel going down that same path?

Some academics and intellectuals have begun throwing around proposals for dividing Israel into “cantons” – akin to Switzerland’s confederation that comprises four different language groups. If it has worked there for many centuries, the pundits ask, why shouldn’t it work here? To be sure, their suggestion is not a mere theoretical exercise trying to mimic a successful polity. Rather, it originates from increasingly deep divisions in Israeli society. These are not merely “ideological” but rather profoundly “cultural” i.e., significant lifestyle differences: ultra-Orthodox, secular Jews, Moslem Arabs, Druze, and so on.

Two contradictory statements can be made about this suggested “polity policy”: 1) it’s a very bad idea; 2) it might be slowly happening, nevertheless, without any official, legislative action. Let’s take each in turn.

One doesn’t have to be a political scientist to understand that Israel’s geo-political situation is not similar to Switzerland’s. The latter is not surrounded by enemies declaring their intention to eventually wipe the country off the map. In the (lack of) security environment that Israel finds itself, it needs all the centralized unity that it can muster.

Unfortunately, if the “theory” is bad (at least in the present, national security circumstance), sociological trends are moving in the “canton” direction. Here too, comparison with Switzerland is useful. Although the Swiss speak different languages, they are all by and large of the same religio-cultural background (Christianity). Israel, on the other hand, is 75% Jewish, 20% Muslim, and 5% “other.” Moreover, almost every Swiss citizen today was born there – as were their parents, grandparents, and longer generations of forebears. Israel, on the other hand, is an immigrant society, so that there has been insufficient time for any serious, cultural-sociological “melting pot” process to occur. If anything, Israel’s “melting pot” has morphed into a deeply “mosaic” society, with greater separation than integration of most pieces (the one exception: Ashkenazi and Mizrachi Jews are far more integrated with each other than decades ago).

Such separateness can be seen in numerous ways. If back in the 1950s and 1960s, the ultra-Orthodox had a Poalei [Workers!] Agudat Yisrael party, today we find the ultra-Orthodox trying to pass legislation that would enable them to officially avoid learning anything professionally useful (“core curriculum”). Similarly, back then the National Religious Party (MAFDAL) was comprised mainly of politically moderate and religiously modern Orthodox Jews striving to integrate into mainstream Israeli society. Today’s “successor” 2-headed party (Smotrich and Ben-Gvir) not only have a Messianic ethos, but their prime goal is to build up Judea and Samaria, thus de facto turning that biblical region into “Judeaistan.”

To be sure, they are not the only ones involved in geographic differentiation: Bnei Brak and Jerusalem have become more ultra-Orthodox over the years, whereas Tel Aviv is the unofficial “secular capital” of Israel. Indeed, many Israelis have nicknamed the country’s two main cities: Jerusalem aka Mamlekhet Yehudah (harking back to the 2-tribe Kingdom of Judea) and Tel Aviv aka Mamlekhet Yisrael (ditto regarding the 10-tribe northern Kingdom of Israel).

Moreover, the government’s policy (de facto, if not de jure) is to establish new towns and cities to be populated (exclusively) by the ultra-Orthodox, with the idea that this will reduce “lifestyle” tensions between them and less religious Israelis, especially regarding issues of Shabbat and the holidays in the public space. There might be some actual logic to this, but it does reinforce (or at least maintain) the growing chasm between the ultra-Orthodox and the rest of Israeli society.

In addition, and perhaps as a reaction, a relatively new phenomenon is expanding in Israel: “Acceptance Committees” in the kibbutzim, moshavim, and other small regional areas. These committees “vet” any and all Israelis who wish to live in their midst, and the basic criterion (highly subjective) is “a good fit with the residents.” Israel’s courts by and large have allowed these to flourish – legitimating what in the U.S. would be called “redlining”! Needless to say, such a structure reinforces a localized, unitary sociology, undermining the very idea of residential diversity.

And then there are Israel’s Arabs. Here the news would in theory be positive, as the drastic zoning restrictions placed on Arab towns has led an increasing number (especially the more highly educated) to migrate to Israel’s “mixed” cities. Unfortunately, the general (in)security situation occasionally penetrates these cities as well (Lod, Ramle, etc.), with outbreaks of interethnic violence as occurred a few years ago.

Although history never exactly repeats, the possibility of “rhyming” is there. After King Solomon’s reign, his kingdom split into two, as noted above. The Northern Kingdom became a hotbed of polytheism and idolatry, whereas Judea stayed (mainly) monotheistic in its Temple cult. Sound familiar? Secular Tel Aviv vs. Religious Jerusalem?

Yom Kippur is coming up in a few days. It’s usually thought of as a time for personal soul-searching. Given the developments noted here (and others these past few months e.g., “Judicial Reform”), Israelis would all do well to engage in lots of collective “al khait she’khatanu” (“regarding OUR sins”).

Israel needs more unity – not less. Otherwise, history might well recur – to everyone’s detriment.

 

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