November 18, 2013  
 
Israel's Vitality and Vulnerability
By  _Peter  Berkowitz_ 
(http://www.realclearbooks.com/authors/peter_berkowitz/) 


It's rare enough these days for an American to write a thoughtful book 
about  U.S. politics that transcends partisan vituperation and casts light on 
political  complexities. It is even rarer for an Israeli to pull that off when 
writing  about _Israel_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/israel/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 

. 
But in a feat that should be applauded, Ari Shavit has done just  that. 

 
For all of the bad blood, the issues that divide Americans do not involve  
near-term threats to our very existence. Despite the bombast surrounding 
health  care policy, immigration, and taxes, these issues do not endanger 
America's  survival--at least not anytime soon. Even the deadly attacks of 
Sept. 
11 did not  leave Americans worried that our country would disappear. 
In Israel, by contrast, threats to the survival of the nation have been a  
constant feature of life since the country declared independence in May 
1948. In  its first 19 years, Israel fought two wars--the War of Independence 
and the June  1967 Six-Day War--in which the avowed aim of the surrounding 
Arab countries was  to destroy Israel. 
In 1973, surprise attacks in the south by _Egypt_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/egypt/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=r
cwautolink) 
and in the north by _Syria_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/syria/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
   nearly 
overran the Israel Defense Forces before the IDF regrouped, took the  battle 
into Egypt and Syria, and threatened to march on Cairo and Damascus.  
Israel is the only country on the planet whose right to exist is questioned at  
the United Nations and in the elite international press. And Israel confronts 
a  foe, the Islamic Republic of _Iran_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/iran/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 
,  that has openly called for its annihilation and which, as negotiations 
plod  along, continues to make progress toward constructing a nuclear weapon. 
With pressures so intense and stakes so high, it is little wonder that  
political debate in Israel sometimes resembles mixed-martial-arts caged  
combat. 
Ari Shavit's achievement in "My Promised Land: The Triumph and Tragedy of  
Israel," therefore, is especially laudable. His new book weaves together  
autobiography, telling moments in the making and maturing of Israel--from  
wide-eyed and innocent 19th century Zionism to bustling, always on-the-make and 
 always-on-the-edge contemporary Tel Aviv--and incisive reflections on the 
harsh  paradoxes that shape Israel and Israelis. 
Shavit provides a vivid portrait of the nation's astonishing birth and  
growth: the miracle and the misery; the tremendous economic, technological,  
cultural, and political accomplishments, along with the excruciating price 
paid  by both Jews and Arabs. He gives voice to Israelis' pride in the creation 
of a  free, democratic, and Jewish state in the Middle East after nearly 
two millennia  of statelessness and the hovering unease, however much rooted 
in security  concerns, that comes from those endowed with a free, democratic, 
and Jewish  conscience exercising political control over another people. 
A former paratrooper who in his day job is a columnist for Israel's 
highbrow  newspaper, Haaretz, Shavit forthrightly presents himself as a man of  
the 
left, a long-standing and passionate critic of what he regards as the  
catastrophe of Israel's occupation of territories seized in the Six-Day War.  
While conservatives will have cause to quarrel with some of his shadings,  
selections, judgments, and occasional tendency to the hyperbolic, Shavit  
emphatically does not belong to the increasingly dominant school of  
journalism--in the _United  States_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/united_states/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
  as 
well as in Israel--according to which one's political ends  justify the means. 
Shavit's journalistic means are exemplary. He is keen to leave his desk,  
immerse himself in the world, and talk to the people he writes about. He 
gives  their voices generous room in his analysis. He highlights the moral 
dimension of  politics without slipping into cheap moralizing or special 
pleading. Perhaps  most impressively, he is a searing critic of his own side, 
laying 
bare the  illusions and self-delusions that have increasingly marginalized 
the Israeli  left. His book proves that passionate political engagement is 
compatible with  journalistic integrity. 
Shavit begins his epic tale with his great-grandfather, the Right Honorable 
 Herbert Bentwich, a prosperous British Jew. Having concluded that between  
discrimination on the one hand and assimilation on the other, Jewish 
survival as  Jews demanded a return to the ancient Land of Israel, Bentwich in 
1897 laid the  groundwork for members of his family to emigrate by leading a 
tour of Zionist  pilgrims through what was then called _Palestine_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/palestine/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=l
ink&utm_campaign=rcwautolink) . 
Shavit describes the naive wonder through which Bentwich and his fellow  
Jewish pilgrims saw possibilities for draining swamps, cultivating deserts, 
and  creating a moral political order--while somehow not seeing the Arab towns 
and  villages that stood in the path of Zionism's noble aspirations. It 
might be  argued that Shavit overstates Zionism's overlooking of the indigenous 
Arab  population, while understating the extent to which Zionists were 
forced to take  up arms because segments of the Arab population responded to 
gestures of  goodwill and cooperation with violence. 
But that does not diminish Shavit's ability to capture the pre-state  
pioneering spirit by portraying its variety. 
He chronicles the founding in the 1920s of Kibbutz Ein Harod in a  
mosquito-infested valley in northern Israel by a group of young, fiercely  
determined Jews from Eastern Europe imbued with the spirit of an austere  
Zionist-inflected socialism. He tells of the creation of a flourishing orange  
grove in 
the 1930s on the outskirts of Rehovot by a gentleman Jewish owner and  the 
Arab laborers with whom he worked in mutual respect. 
He describes the Arab uprisings of 1936 in which attacks on Jewish 
civilians  were supported by Arab national leaders and much of the Arab public 
while 
 retaliatory attacks by Jews on Arab civilians were condemned by mainstream 
 Zionism. 
He relates the transformation in the 1940s of Masada--the mesa overlooking  
the Dead Sea where in A.D. 73 more than 900 Jewish men, women, and children 
 rebelling against the Roman Empire took their own lives rather than  
surrender--into a site where young Jews were instilled with martial valor. And  
he narrates the forced exodus in July 1948, after Arab governments ignored 
the  U.N. call for a truce, of tens of thousands of Arabs by Israeli soldiers 
from  the strategically important town of Lydda near Israel's primary 
airport. 
Statehood brought enormous challenges and audacious undertakings. In 
Israel's  first 3½ years, new immigrants, most of whom had been expelled from 
the 
Arab  countries in which their families had lived for generations, flowed 
into Israel  at a staggering pace: "the number of immigrants absorbed 
(685,000) surpassed the  number of those absorbing them (655,000), a percentage 
comparable to what would  happen if twenty-first-century America took in 350 
million immigrants in three  and a half years." 
In response to an unprecedented challenge for a modern nation, Israel fed,  
housed, educated (including the teaching of Hebrew), and incorporated into 
the  work force and military a group of immigrants larger than its 
population. Shavit  conveys the immigrants' dislocation and degradation as well 
as 
the new normalcy  they created and the opportunities they seized. 
No less astonishing was Israel's decision in 1956, before it was capable of 
 manufacturing transistor radios, to produce a nuclear weapon. This was at 
a time  when only the U.S., the Soviet Union, and Great Britain possessed 
such arms.  Despite the state's continuing refusal to confirm or deny claims, 
knowledgeable  observers believe Israel achieved its goal by the mid-1960s. 
Episode by well-chosen and grippingly told episode, Shavit brings Israel of 
 2013 into focus. In contemporary Israel, Sephardi Jews hailing from North 
Africa  and the Middle East, after decades of discrimination by the 
Ashkenazim (Jews of  European descent), exercise substantial political power. 
Today, 
Tel Aviv has  emerged as a premier Mediterranean beach town. The formal 
rights of Israel's  Arab minority--approximately 20 percent of the 
population--are well-protected  but many of their social and economic 
discontents are 
legitimate and desperately  in need of government attention. 
An engaged citizenry is demanding that government ease the harshness of  
economic privatization and deal with sclerotic remnants of the original  
socialist economy. The left has not adequately reckoned with the collapse of 
the  
1993 Oslo peace accords, failing to see that its critique of Israel's 
occupation  of the West Bank, no matter how morally sensitive, does not imply 
that the  Palestinians are willing or able to make peace. 
Religious Zionists cling to the belief that preserving and indeed 
increasing  the Jewish presence beyond the Green Line is a strategic and 
religious  
imperative. Threats to Israel come from Iran-armed Sunni Hamas in the Gaza 
Strip  and Iran-armed Shia Hezbollah in southern _Lebanon_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/lebanon/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_ca
mpaign=rcwautolink) ,  as well as from civil war-torn Syria and 
economically distressed Egypt. Looming  over all is the strategic threat posed 
by the 
potential for a nuclear-armed Iran  to trigger a nuclear arms race in the 
Middle East. 
Ari Shavit discloses an Israel of amazing vitality and alarming  
vulnerability. And, he eloquently shows, one cannot fully understand one 
without  the 
other.

-- 
-- 
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

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