Jerusalem Post
 
 
Israel’s  crude discourse on local fascism 
By SETH  FRANTZMAN 
10/12/2011  06:17 

Left-wing  activists stymie debate by throwing around epithets like 
"fascist" and  "anti-democratic."


 
Pronouncements of  doom are especially common in Israel, and warning voices 
are given prominent  platforms to express their woe. To take just a few 
news items that appeared in  one form or another in the Israeli press over the 
past year: 

Sefi  Rachlevsky: “Israel’s government is a grave threat to democracy.”  

Alon Idan: “the slew of anti-democratic laws legislated by the 18th  
Knesset is a slippery slope to fascism.”

Bradley Burston: “Israel’s  boycott law, the quiet sound of going fascist.”

And the list goes on.  Haaretz’s Gideon Levy called Likud Party MK Danny 
Dannon “the new Mcarthy,”  while Aluf Benn wrote that “Israel’s affirmative 
action law is reminiscent of  Hungary’s anti-Jewish laws.” Other writers 
have liberally used phrases like  “anti-democratic” and “fascist hell.” To 
Yitzhak Laor, “Israel is effectively a  one party state,” the loyalty oath 
reminds an unnamed Israeli academic of the  Nuremberg Laws, and former Meretz 
MK Yossi Sarid feels that “fascism is already  here.” There are many, many 
more examples.

Why are there so many canaries  in Israel’s coal mine? Is the Israeli 
intellectual elite’s obsession with the  supposed march towards fascism based 
in 
reality, or does it reflect a sense of  immaturity, radicalism, marginality 
and a deeper soul searching?  


Those who speak about fascism in Israel are not only primarily on the  
political extreme Left, but are also almost exclusively from one demographic  
group; veteran (Israeli-born), secular Ashkenazi Jews. They often claim  
attribute that Israeli “fascism” is caused by other distinct groups, such as  
religious settlers, Russian or Sephardic immigrants.

Is their imagined  community of antifascist freedom fighters partly a 
long-term result of the  Holocaust? 

FASCISM HAS always been part of the rude discourse in Israel.  In the 1930s 
and 1950s the ancestors of today’s labor party often heaped scorn  on the “
fascist” tendencies of Israel’s right-wing Revisionist and Herut  parties.

Menachem Begin’s military parades were “fascist” while  the uniformed 
communist Palmachniks (who had equal love for their military  parade grounds) 
were just good socialist patriots. Later, cries of fascism  became part and 
parcel of the academic discourse, with Israel’s leading  philosopher Yeshayahu 
Leibowtiz referring to some Israeli Jews as  “Judeo-nazis.”

The fear of fascism in Israel should be viewed as an  invented Israeli 
identity, like international studies professor Benedict  Anderson’s notion of 
the imagined community.

Those who oppose fascism  view themselves as part of a minority vanguard, 
lone voices in the prophetic  tradition, a unique element that is warning the 
world. The central element of  the imagined community’s belief is that no 
such community exists.

Even if  every professor in a department at a university is telling 
students to beware of  the anti-democratic slide of the state, each will say: 
“I’m 
one of the only  people who dares to speak the truth.” Even if every column 
on the opinion page  of a newspaper shouts “we are now a fascist state,” 
each author will claim she  or he alone sees the light.

This kind of group-think brings to  mind a George Patton quote: “If 
everyone is thinking alike, someone  isn’t thinking.”

There is, of course, another view; namely, that the  country really is 
sliding towards fascism.

The Spanish Republican  government of the 1930s, while it was busy 
murdering priests and beating up  “capitalists,” always feared a right-wing 
reactionary coup. Eventually the coup  came and the Republicans were thrown out 
of 
Spain, proving that even paranoids  have enemies. Cato the Elder, a Roman 
statesman who lived in the 2nd century  BCE, warned his people about the evils 
of “sensual allurements” and their threat  to the vibrancy of empire 
(although there was no emperor in his time).

He  was right: Rome became lazy and opulent and was destroyed, albeit 500 
years  later.

The central problem with denoting what constitutes “fascism” in  Israel is 
that it is primarily in the eye of the beholder. A loyalty oath  carried 
out by Avigdor Lieberman is considered “fascism,” but the same loyalty  oath 
forced upon Israeli-Arabs in the 1950s by the Ben-Gurion government is  not.

In Israel the resort to the rhetoric of “fascism” more clearly  represents 
a childish view of the world that divides it into Manichean  absolutes. In 
this sense it is an “othering” of the Right and centrist  politicians that 
shuts down discussion and represents inability to engage with  the subject 
at hand. If every bill passed by the Knesset is simply “fascist”  then there 
can be no discussion of the inner workings of the legislation.  Similarly 
when American tea-partiers describe health care reform as “socialist”  they 
scuttle any debate of the reform itself. The view of the enemy as “fascist” 
 is a nice throwback to the leftist rhetoric of the 1930s, but actually 
only  represents the inability of some people on the Left to adapt.

Israel may  be being harmed by its current government, but it is equally 
harmed by the  inability of too many of its academics, intellectuals, writers, 
artists and  journalists to properly engage the issues of the day. There is 
a saying that  “evil thrives when good people do nothing,” but good people 
do not rise to the  challenge simply by shouting “I see evil.”


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to