July/August 1994, Page 19
From the Hebrew Press
Poverty, Religious Instruction Breed Xenophobia
in Israel
By Dr. Israel Shahak
One of the best-kept secrets in the U.S. is the existence of Jewish
xenophobia in Israel and the extent of its political influence.
Dr. Baruch Goldstein's massacre of Muslim men and boys at prayer,
although it didn't change American attitudes, prompted an in-depth
discussion of this problem in Israel.
All of the polls taken in Israel after the massacre have shown
a disturbing level of approval for Goldstein's action. Breakdowns
of who approve and who disapprove reveal much about the evolution
of contemporary Israeli Jewish society.
A poll taken 10 days after the massacre by Eliyahu Hassin and published
on March 11 by Shishi weekly was based upon a representative
sample of all Israeli adults, which means that it included Arab
holders of Israeli citizenship. The respondents could choose among
three options: justifying the massacre, "understanding"
without justifying it, and condemning it in no uncertain terms.
The national result was: justifying, 6 percent; understanding, 30
percent (total of first two responses 36 percent); and condemning,
63 percent. Since the answers of Israeli Arabs, who constitute about
14.5 percent of Israeli adults, were included in these totals, we
can infer that about 40 percent of Israeli Jews either justified
or at least "understood" Goldstein's massacre.
This should be the point of departure for any serious analysis
of Israeli Jewish attitudes, and the significant variations among
various segments of the Jewish population. The most meaningful variation
was between younger and older Israelis. Among Israelis (including
Arab Israelis) aged 18 to 29, 8 percent justified the massacre,
35 percent understood it (for a total of 43 percent who did not
condemn it), and 56 percent condemned it. Thus, overt or covert
approval for the massacre was higher among this youngest segment
of adults than the national average. By contrast, among respondents
aged 50 to 65, only 3 percent justified it, 18 percent understood
it (for a total of 21 percent who did not condemn it), and 78 percent,
far more than the national average, condemned it.
The breakdown by age shows that on issues involving the Palestinians
in the territories, younger Israelis are more chauvinistic than
older Israelis. The opposite is true on issues not directly involving
the Palestinians in the territories. On freedom of the press, the
younger Israelis turn out to be more liberal than the elderly.
If the young are the most xenophobic group among Israelis, the
most xenophobic group among young Israelis are the young religious
(which in Israel means Orthodox) Jews. Yael Fishbein, a veteran
education correspondent, makes this point in a carefully documented
article in Davar of March 3. "The youth's support for
Kahane and his views is no news," she wrote. "The Van
Leer Institute surveyed this phenomenon in the mid-1980s, using
the Dahaf Institute, to find that the percentage of Kahane supporters
among the youth stood at about 9 percent. When Kahane's name was
not mentioned, however, support climbed to about 33 percent...
The young are the most xenophobic group among Israelis.
"The Van Leer survey also showed that support of religious
youth for Kahane was three times as large as that of secular youth,
and that the former tended to profess that support in much more
extremist terms, stressing explicitly such tenets of Kahanism as
hatred of Arabs, the denial of their rights or the demand to expel
them from the Land of Israel."
Those findings, Fishbein wrote, sparked an extensive debate but
"the religious Jewish community firmly opposed any education
for democracy and co-existence in the name of the double standard
prescribed by the Jewish religion for attitudes toward the Jews
and the Gentiles. This double standard applied with particular force
against the Arabs, whom many religious Jews perceived as the 'offspring
of Amalek' which they were duty-bound to exterminate.
"The Education Ministry once again researched the attitudes
of youth toward Kahanism in 1990, through a survey carried out by
Prof. Ze'ev Ben-Sira. Support for Kahanism was then found to have
increased. Of the youths surveyed, 39 percent said that they identified
or agreed with Kahane's views. When Kahane's name was not mentioned,
support for his ideas climbed further. Sixty-six percent either
supported or strongly supported "encouraging the Arab residents
of the territories to emigrate! Fifty-three percent supported "restricting
the human rights of people who did not fulfill the duties of the
state's residents, such as military or national service." (With
the exception of Israeli Druze and some bedouin, Muslim and Christian
Palestinians are barred from military service.)
"The Ben-Sira survey also revealed an enormous difference
between the attitudes of secular and religious Jewish youths. The
overall percentage of those who expressed their preference for the
domination of the territories over human rights was about 60 percent.
But in secular educational institutions the idea commanded the support
of only 35 percent, compared to as many as 74 percent in the religious
institutions.
"In secular vocational schools (i.e. attended mostly by children
of parents with below average incomes), 61 percent expressed that
preference, compared to 71 percent in the religious vocational schools."
The Impact of Poverty
In addition to documenting the formidable influence of religious
institutions in Israel upon the formation of xenophobic attitudes,
the Ben-Sira survey noted the impact of poverty. This finding was
recently corroborated by Eliyahu Hassin, who found that among respondents
with below average incomes, 7 percent justified Goldstein's murders,
40 percent "understood" them (for a total of 47 percent
who did not condemn them), and 51 percent condemned them. Condemnation
was far higher among respondents with incomes above average. Of
these,' 4 percent justified Goldstein's actions, 20 percent "understood"
them (for a total of 24 percent who did not condemn them), and 75
percent condemned them.
These findings, which are consistent with a wealth of other data,
demonstrate that Jewish religious teachings in Israel and poverty
(especially if caused by unemployment) are two major factors explaining
Jewish xenophobia. While not ignoring either, I would attribute
more importance to the influence of religion.
This is my conclusion from numerous surveys and other research
into the causes of Kahane's election to the Knesset in 1984. It
was demonstrated conclusively at that time that Kahane's support
was the heaviest in localities or neighborhoods which were both
religious and poor. Neither of those variables alone sufficed to
explain the massive vote for him. Jointly, however, these variables
relate more closely to Kahane's support than does any other variable.
The silence of not a few Jews about the influence of Jewish Orthodoxy
always strikes me as pernicious in its political effects. Perhaps
not incidentally, for all the difference between the conditions
under which the Palestinians live as compared to the Jews, the combination
of extreme poverty with religious influence appears to generate
religious extremism among Palestinian Arabs, just as it does among
Israeli Jews.
The pernicious influence of Jewish religious education was also
discussed by another veteran education correspondent, Nilli Mandler,
in Ha'aretz of April 5. She reports that Jewish religious
educators recently began to use the term "Amalek" as referring
to "all Gentiles who can be presumed to hurt the Jews."
As an example, she quotes a new book, Adey Ad ["Forever
and Ever"], authored by Dr. Dov Ehrlich. It contains "essays
in education and philosophy" published by the Ministry of Education's
autonomous Department of Religious Education for the use of its
teachers.
Since Bible study is a central subject in religious education,
both teachers and their students can be presumed to know the biblical
verses commanding the Jews to exterminate the Amalekites, e.g. "now
go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and
spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling,
ox and sheep, camel and ass" (I Samuel, Chapter 15, verse 3).
But, Ehrlich continues: "Amalekites now can be found all over
the world, but especially within the borders of the Greater Land
of Israel which the Lord, blessed be His Name, gave to us, the Jews.
The Amalekites are fated to hate us forever and ever, so we are
justly commanded to hate them twice as strongly. The Bible commanded
us to exterminate the Amalekites. Just as we obeyed the command
by exterminating the ancient Amalek, we now must do the same to
the modern Amalek."
Dr. Ehrlich then explains that "it is always important to
disclose where the hatred of the nations toward the Jews comes from.
But the hatred of modern Amalekites toward the Jews cannot be logically
explained, because they suck it with their mothers' milk. Such hatred
toward the Jews can be contested only by our reciprocal hatred toward
them."
Mandler also shows how two formerly separate and even mutually
hostile Jewish religious education networks, one autonomous butstill
belonging to the state and the other totally independent and managed
by the ultra-pious Haredim, are now coordinating their endeavors.
Coordination between them already has produced a book for religious
teachers which posits the construction of the Third Temple as an
urgent necessity, and "notes with astonishment that instead
of building it, the Jews who returned to their own land didn't even
put at the top of their priorities the purification of the Temple
Mount from the abominations now standing there" [i.e. the Dome
of the Rock and the Al Aqsa mosque, comprising the third holiest
site in the world to one billion Muslims]. I would anticipate a
repeat of the 1984 attempt to demolish the Temple Mount mosques
as a near inevitable effect of the politics of education under this
discussion.
A Direct Political Effect
Let me end by pointing to one direct political effect of the increasing
Jewish xenophobia. Penetration of the Israeli Security System by
the religious zealots has enabled them to directly influence Israeli
policies toward Palestinians. For example, a few weeks ago, after
the Shabak (Israeli internal security police) commander of the Ramallah
district, Noarn Cohen, was killed by Hamas activists, his parents
were interviewed. The interviews revealed that he had been deeply
religious and regarded his service in Shabak, and before this in
the top elite unit of the Israeli army, "The General Staff
Patrol," as a sacred duty.
He was told by his spiritual mentors that if he were killed while
serving in Shabak, he would attain martyrdom and his soul would
be instantly transported to paradise. His pious father, Dr. Yehezkel
Cohen, a well-known religious educator, told the press that this
must actually have happened. Dr. Cohen also told the press that
his son often had assured him that Shabak activities were perfectly
humane and beneficent to the Arabs, and that Jews "who slander
Shabak" were traitors.
Some of Ramallah's Palestinian inhabitants appear to hold religious
views eerily similar to Dr. Cohen's. After one of Noam Cohen's assailants
was killed by the Israeli army, the assailant's father told a Hebrew
paper that it was his martyred son who was in Paradise, since he
had "relieved Ramallab's inhabitants from a despot terrifying
everybody." It appears that a holy war is waged in the West
Bank in which Shabak, penetrated by Jewish religious zealots, is
hardly different from Hamas, representing Palestinian religious
extremists.
Dr Israel Shahak, a Holocaust survivor and retired professor
of chemistry at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, is chairman
of the Israeli League of Human and Civil Rights. |