Title | : | Israel's Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0521616468 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780521616461 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 258 |
Publication | : | First published January 1, 2002 |
Israel's Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood Reviews
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Israel’s Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood, by Idith Zertal. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Cambridge Middle East Studies 21. 208 pages. Biographies to p. 216. Glossary to p. 222. Bibliography to p. 230. Index to p. 236. $30.00 cloth. Published in Journal of Palestine Studies, vol. 35, no. 3 (139), Spring 2006. p. 123.
In late summer of 2005 on the order of Ariel Sharon’s government, several thousand Israeli settlers departed the Gaza Strip. In protest, some settlers donned Star of David patches, which Jews had been forced to wear under Nazi domination. Settlers, among them Holocaust survivors and their children, contended that withdrawal would lead to another Holocaust.
Such an assertion of persecution and victimization in terms of the Holocaust has a long history, according to Israeli writer, Idith Zertal, in her recently translated book from Hebrew, Israel’s Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood. Zertal’s work explores the growing reliance upon Holocaust discourse in Israel, as she candidly states, “Politicians, journalists, and historians let themselves speak out in the name of the Holocaust dead. They/we all use Holocaust images for their/our purposes. Some of these images are threatening, others are trivial, all are distorting” (197).
Because, as Zertal says, the Holocaust period provides “inexhaustible reservoirs of images, arguments, and assertions,” Israeli political groups have battled one another to monopolize control of interpretation of those reservoirs, thereby gaining an inestimable symbolic power to advance their own agendas (42).
And in seeking to speak for the murdered millions and interpret the significance of their deaths, Israelis have been ready to remember aspects of the European Jewish story and ignore other aspects, which do not suit their purposes. One example of how the Holocaust was deployed in the 1940s and 1950s was the “Zionization” of the Warsaw Ghetto fighters, Zertal argues, “by cloaking the rebels in the mantle of Zionism and transforming them into Palmach fighters, accidentally snared in the spheres of the Diaspora” (30-31).
In the 1950s, the remembrance of the Holocaust gradually became institutionalized in Israel. But it was the Jerusalem trial in 1961 of Nazi bureaucrat Adolf Eichmann that laid the groundwork for the prevalence of Holocaust discourse in Israel. Prime Minster David Ben-Gurion sought a most dramatic pedagogic goal from the spectacle of the trial: to teach the younger generation of Israelis and the world what the Nazi persecution was and, consequently, to establish the legitimacy of the necessity for the Jewish state. At the time of the trial, Moshe Dayan, then Minister of Agriculture, spoke frankly about the connection between the Nazi genocide and Israel: “what is becoming clear at the Eichmann trial is the active passivity of the world in the face of the murder of the six million. There can be no doubt that only this country and only this people can protect the Jews again against a second Holocaust. And hence every inch of Israeli soil is intended for Jews only” (109).
Zertal links that watershed trial with the 1967 war, especially the weeks preceding Israel’s attack, as “the first test and application of this Holocaust discourse in the context of Israel’s wars” (92). Because of the bellicosity of threats coming from Arab leaders in the weeks before the war began, Israelis and many Jews worldwide feared an imminent catastrophe. Israeli commentators regularly equated Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser with Hitler. There was also growing opposition from some Israeli elites to Prime Minister Levi Eshkohl’s seeming vacillation before the threat. Then out of power, Ben-Gurion zeroed in on the neuralgic issue facing the Israelis: “A war of annihilation. None of us can forget the Holocaust that the Nazis inflicted on us. And if some Arab rulers declare day and night that Israel must be annihilated—this time referring not to the entire Jewish people in the world, but to the Jews living in their land—it is our duty not to take these statements lightly” (119-120).
With regularity, the Holocaust horrors from European geography will be transposed to the Middle East conflict, and Israeli leaders will characterize perceived security threats from Arabs and Palestinians as tantamount to the possibility of utter destruction, Nazi-style.
Zertal identifies two different Israeli camps mobilizing the Holocaust for political ends: “Whereas the central, hegemonic Holocaust discourse of the labor movement applied the images of the Holocaust and Nazism in particular to external enemies—mainly for purposes of fostering Israeli power and the ethos of its justice—Holocaust images employed by the opposing right wing were applied to the adversary within, the political rival” (168-169). Israeli settlers mounted furious rhetorical campaigns against any negotiation with their enemies, whether that involved Begin’s departure from Sinai, or Rabin’s participation in the Oslo process after 1993. Rabin’s assassin was seen by some supporters as cut from heroic cloth like the Warsaw Ghetto fighters. About the settlers, Zertal astutely observes, “In their world, where meaning is turned inside out, which projects on to others, the conquerors become the conquered, the persecutor are turned into the persecuted, wrongdoer into the victim, and this inverted order received the supreme seal of Auschwitz” (193).
The book ends with the aftermath of the Rabin murder, as the book was published in Israel in 2002. One hopes for an additional chapter in any future second edition to chronicle the ongoing use of the Holocaust vis-à-vis the Palestinians under the administrations of Netanyahu, Barak, and Sharon.
In a separate chapter, Zertal examines the legacy of Hannah Arendt, who wrote a controversial book on the Eichmann trial. In fact, Zertal sees her own book as a kind of homage to Arendt, whose critical thinking and universalistic ethics were so unwelcome in Jerusalem during the trial and elsewhere thereafter. While Zertal wrote the following in reference to the Rabin assassination, her challenge can be applied to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land as well: “In order to confront evil and overcome it, it was necessary, first and foremost, to be capable of looking it in the eye, and not to stand before it in dazzled awe, nor to fall silent in shame or to invest energies in a search for consoling myths” (206). -
Incredible. Zertal manages to show how political coin was minted from "the experience" of the Holocaust which was cashed by conservative leaders (both religious and political) to bolster the raison d'État for the expansion and conquest of Israel.
"The experience" of the Holocaust included various desperate and trouble threads as Jewish passivity, collaboration, and survival strategies which after the War took on whole new meanings for those who lived through the Camps as well as for those who were seeking to control and centralize "the memory industry."
In the first chapter, Zertal begins, "Where memory and national identity meet, there is a grave, there lies death." The rest of the chapter is devoted to illustrating how the Holocaust became linked to other sites of Jewish defeat and death within the Holy Land. And how those sites transformed into locations of bravery, martyrdom, and heroic refusal. Beginning with the folklore of the defeat of Tel Hai in 1920, Zertal establishes a model by which the marriage of blood and land and memory all become united to elevate the calling for settlement, defense and stubborn heroics. It straight line, she says to how the Holocaust will be recast in such re-imaginings of Jewish Resistance and rebellion against the Nazis. And the institution of Israeli national celebrations like "Holocaust and Heroism Memorial Day" in the 1950s.
Chapter two expands on this theme by taking a closer look at the Nazis and Nazi Collaborators (Punishment) Law and the trials that followed its passage. In particular, the Kastner case is examined as a means to illustrate the complicated and treacherous waters the Israeli courts waded through during these purges. In order to consolidate and unify the Holocaust memorial narrative, collaboration and survival compromises needed to be labeled and exposed. Zertal, also, shows how these trials lead to the final great national undertaking of Ben-Gurion - that of the trial of Eichmann.
Chapter three, demonstrates how the use of the Holocaust would be adapted as a means of justification and excuse for any policy the Israeli government wished to take. Especially examining the events leading to the 1967 War, Zertal looks at how existential threats begin to crop up everywhere. And how the surrounding Arab nations come to be painted as Nazis. There is even the fallacy that the Holocaust was originated, not in Germany by the Nazis, but with former Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin El-Hussenin. The victory over Auschwitz would come only after the defeat of the Egyptians, when the nation proved to itself and the world that another Holocaust was impossible
because this time the Jews would fight with an unprecedented force and vigor to defend themselves.
Chapter Four is a wonderful expose on Hannah Arendt and the way in which Eichmann in Jerusalem was sidelined in Israel. Arendt was ridiculed and her work never translated, for it was thought she challenged the hegemony of the emerging national narrative of state creation and rebirth after the Holocaust.
Chapter five, brings the narrative up to the present day's struggles with the "palestianian question" and the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin. How the Rabin murder solidified the eternal present of Jewish victory in death. How the Messianic threads of Zionism blinded a Nation to the complications of displacing populations and integrating variant belief of its own people. How the Holocaust became a trope for nation building and survival. An excuse to justify even the most outlandish political polices. And how that trend further degrades the memory of the dead. -
One of the only books on Israel/Palestine that didn't make me want to kill myself.
Zertal's unflinching critique of Zionism, the Zionist project, and the psychology of a country build around and defined by genocide is spectacular and worth its weight in gold. A must-read for anyone interested in the subject. -
Fascinating, controversial and well researched.
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where can i find this book?
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Phenomenal book about the impact of the Holocaust upon the sociopolitical dimensions of Israel