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Cover story - Far from the Promised Land
Cover story
John Kampfner
Monday 18th March 2002



Many Britons still see Israel as a Middle Eastern Hampstead, a land of liberal
idealists. But the liberals are fleeing, and being replaced by Soviet "white trash". 
John
Kampfner reports

The serenity was unnerving. I was staying at Mishkenot Sha'ananim, a residence for
visiting artists and musicians. Built on the site of a former almshouse, it is run by 
the
Jerusalem Foundation, a cultural organisation. It is where, it is said, Saul Bellow
began writing To Jerusalem and Back.

Most evenings, after interviewing generals in the Israeli army or after returning from 
a
torrid trip into the West Bank, where my television crew was filming putative
Palestinian suicide bombers, I would come back to this oasis of liberal culture in the
heart of the world's most divided city.

The place is everything Israel was supposed to be - liberal, cultured and tolerant of
other creeds. It is how British Jewry in Hampstead and Highgate and Golders Green
likes to picture the "homeland". The young men and women at the front desk were
not really receptionists, more music and art students earning money to supplement
their study. They, like so many people of their age, now want out of Israel. For the
past 18 months, these young people have not had a single encounter with
Palestinians (apart from training guns on them during national service in the army).

These are neither the children of the Holocaust nor of the battle to create Israel; 
their
values are no different from those of your average twentysomething Londoner. They
are Jews who are proud of their people and their religion, but who no longer see
much hope for the state created in their name.

Israel is haemorrhaging idealism. The second intifada - which has led to clashes that
now claim as many as 40 Israeli and Palestinian lives a day - has changed the
psyche of the country. Downtown Jerusalem is dying on its feet. Only the most
courageous or foolhardy go out to any of its once thriving restaurants or cafes.
Everyone is suspicious of everyone else.

But Israel's crisis predates the latest outbreak of hostilities with the al-Aqsa 
brigades,
Islamic Jihad and Hamas. In fact, the fear and animosity felt towards Palestinians is
perhaps the only glue that is binding Israel together.

Israel is on a one-way demographic path. Fearful of being overwhelmed by Arabs
within and the Palestinians without, the Israelis have taken to logical extremes their
open-door policy for everyone who proclaims themselves a Jew. Just about anyone
is welcome now, and the more imperilled the country becomes, the fewer the
questions asked.

On any day at Ben Gurion Airport, you can see an Aeroflot or Transaero plane
depositing the latest batch of immigrants from the nether reaches of the former
Soviet Union. In the past few months, the numbers are down from the early post-
communist years of the 1990s, but what is remarkable - given the violence - is that
they still want to come at all.

Some of these people bring professional skills with them - computer analysts,
engineers, doctors, videotape editors. But most of them do not. They are, in the
words of several long- established Israelis I spoke to, "white trash".

In Moscow, where I spent several years, there was always a difference between
Russians (or Ukrainians, or Armenians, or whatever they were) and "Sovs" - Soviet
citizens, whose grasping was matched only by their intolerance of others.

Many of the more talented Russians who wanted to get out found their way to the
United States or western Europe. The rest ended up in Israel. To do so under the
country's Law of Return, they have to prove Jewish lineage from one grandparent. In
most Soviet cities, such papers can always be arranged for a fee.

There are now one million Russians - or for the most part Sovs - who have made
aliyah, who have "come home" to Israel. They constitute one-sixth of the total
population. Scarred by generations of Soviet dictatorship and mental mind games,
these Sovs know little about Israel and nothing about Arabs. Instead, they have
brought with them a very Soviet racism. Whereas before, they hated the "blacks" of
Central Asia or the Trans-caucasus south of Russia, they now reserve their hatred
for the Palestinians and the Muslim countries that surround Israel. They have also
imported the "might is right" culture that sustained the USSR after the Second World
War.

The only Sovs who have any day-to-day contact with Palestinians are the organised
criminals, who run the lucrative business of selling on stolen cars and smuggling
weapons into the West Bank and Gaza that Israeli soldiers have offloaded to fund
their drug habits.

Most of the new arrivals are anything but idealistic, and admit that their move to
Israel was prompted by an economic imperative. One man I spoke to, from the
eastern Ukrainian city of Dnepropetrovsk, told me he was depressed about the state
of affairs in his new homeland. So did he regret emigrating? "Have you ever been to
Dnepr?" he asked me. I told him I had; and even by the standard of Soviet towns, it is
miserable. We agreed that, no matter how bad the violence that is engulfing Israel,
he might have a point.

Israel is like home from home for the Sovs. They have their own television stations,
local and beamed in from Moscow, and their own newspapers. They have moved in
to the concrete blocks in the nondescript dormitory towns that pepper the main road
between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv; in many parts of Israel, Russian is spoken far more
readily than Hebrew or English. They also have a strong social safety net, familiar
from Soviet times. They do various jobs on the side, but know - as in their former
country - that they will always be assured a minimum income.

It is not religion that drives them. Most of these Sovs have none. But they have
struck an inadvertent and unholy alliance with other groups in Israeli society that has
changed the political landscape of the country.

The Likud government of Ariel Sharon is being sustained by a combination of
Soviets, Sephardim and the ultra-orthodox (the only group that is reproducing fast
enough to match the Palestinians). These disparate groups have nothing in common
except their hostility towards some form of equitable outcome for the Palestinians.
The Soviets look down on the Sephardim - mainly Moroccans, Ethiopians, Iraqis and
Yemenis; the orthodox Jews look down on the lot. And all these groups look down on
the Israeli Arabs and Palestinians.

These groups together ensured the election of Ariel Sharon - and he is by no means
the most extreme member of the ruling coalition. The only real pressure on Sharon is
coming from those more hardline than he. If they manage to oust him, they will
almost certainly put in his place Binyamin Netanyahu. It is a dreadful prospect.

Israel's Labour Party, meanwhile, is in a complete mess. Its troubles are
compounded by the flight of many of its erstwhile liberal supporters into the shoot-
first-ask-questions-later camp. The demographics have long been working against
Labour. The Ashkenazi Jews, those who fled Europe either before or after the
Holocaust, are diminishing fast as a proportion of the voter population. Some are
leaving in disgust or despair; and among those who remain, the birth rate is falling.
Ehud Barak had to fall back on Israel's Arab minority to ensure an improbable victory
in the 1999 general election. That is not something Labour likes to trumpet.

It is now hard to envisage how Labour will get back into office. Barak's portrait
adorns the wall of the armed forces headquarters in Tel Aviv (he was once chief of
staff of the Israeli Defence Forces). But among many generals, he is now an object
of derision.

One army person to whom I talked spoke of the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, the
only Israeli leader who had the courage to stand up to the virulent lobby of settlers,
who for years have systematically undermined hopes of a peaceful settlement.
"Killing him was a terrible thing to do," said the army man. "But you can understand
the frustrations that might drive someone to do something like that."

The schism at the heart of Israeli society is not lost on the more thinking Palestinian
leaders. "One option we had was to lie low, to do nothing, not to fight and to allow
Israel to self- destruct," Marwan Barghouti, the head of Fatah in the West Bank, told
me. Perhaps an example more of hubris than strategy, but the remark none the less
points to one of the by- products of the intifada - it has allowed Israel to paper 
over its
internal contradictions.

Security and identity have always been the twin axes of the Israeli psyche. The
former has never been guaranteed; now the latter is equally imperilled.

On the steep, winding road into west Jerusalem, you pass the Andrei Sakharov
Peace Garden, a plain but moving monument. Sakharov was an altogether different
kind of dissident, a man who believed that ideals, rather than population or power,
provided the raison d'etre of a nation. What would he have thought about the state
that Israel is now in, and the role his former countrymen are playing in it?

� New Statesman 1913 - 2002
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