October 1996, pg. 12
Personality
A Spokesman For Justice: A Tribute to Rabbi Elmer
Berger
by Grace Halsell
Why, I asked one of the earliest and most vocal of the anti-Zionists,
Rabbi Elmer Berger, do so many American Jews give their total support,
including tax-free dollars, to Israel, yet prefer to stay in the
United States?
I put the question to Dr. Berger soon after our initial meeting.
The year was 1981. I had gone to a Middle East conference in a downtown
Washington, DC hotel. After hearing Elmer Berger was in the audience,
I sought him out. Tall, distinguished, with graying hair, he gave
me a friendly smile: Lets go for a coffee, where we
can talk. Once we found a quiet corner in a cafe, Dr. Berger
began:
Most American Jews dont want to leave America. They
have no intention of seeking normality by expatriating
themselves to live in a Jewish state. But in reality,
it is a Zionist state and Zionism itself is an anomaly, a movement
not to save souls but to seize land and gain power.
Then the rabbi, who was born in 1908 and served congregations in
Michigan, explained that a half-century ago he became convinced
that Zionism was deleterious to Jews and to the long-range
interests of the United States. Through his own personal activities,
for two decades through the American Council for Judaism, and later
through the American Jewish Alternatives to Zionism, Rabbi Berger
has impressed a multitude with the sincerity of his conviction,
his personal courage and the depth of his commitment.
Dr. Berger has long reminded his co-religionists that they, after
the Palestinians, are the second greatest victims of Zionism.
As for American Jews giving their allegiance and dollars to Zionism,
he observed they were subsidizing an operation which has as its
ultimate objective the expatriation of the contributors themselves.
American dollars are not going to support an Israeli democracy,
said Dr. Berger. Israels highest courts have said The
state of Israel was established and recognized as the state of the
Jews. This is the sovereign state of the Jewish people. This
being the case, those for whom the state was created would qualify
as first-class citizens and non-Jews would be relegated to another,
lesser category.
The Zionists did not draft a constitution for their new
Jewish-Zionist state, he continued. Rather, they passed
Basic Laws that protect and elevate those of one religion
and denigrate those of other faiths. The first of these basic laws
states that any Jew, at any time, has the right to immigrate to
Israel. This right is given only to Jews.
The second of the basic laws provides that any Jewish immigrant
automatically acquires Israeli citizenship. This is automatically
given only to Jews. A third law states that it is the central task
of the Zionist state to bring all Jews to the Zionist state. A state
that regards the immigration of Jews as its central task
cannot at the same time allocate its services and resources on a
completely equal basis among its citizens who do not qualify as
part of the Jewish people.
Basic Laws
These Basic Laws mean, Dr. Berger said, that Zionism
constitutes an ethno-centered, exclusivist, aggressive ideology.
Yet, Zionists largely have been successful in selling the American
public on the idea that it is a benevolent, liberating, progressive
movement.
Because this view has been so successfully presented, few dare
speak the truth about Zionism, said Dr. Berger, adding that while
Israel does indeed practice wide-spread and cruel discrimination
against a large segment of people, the U.S. State Department refuses
to deal with Israeli violations of human rights except in a cursory,
bland and shallow manner.
As for the U.S. media role in selling Zionism, Dr. Berger said,
I shudder a bit when someone speaks of Zionist control
of the press. But Zionist influence is something else. The
sheer mass of Zionist handouts does influence the American
media. He mentioned that much of the early Zionist propaganda
convinced many Americans that Arabs were lazy while strong,
industrious Jews had made the desert bloom. As regards Menachem
Begin, There was a flood of news stories whitewashing the
former terrorist and pressing upon his brow the laurel
wreath of statesman. The cumulative effect of all the
releases contributes to the mind-set of the American people."
Concerning The New York Times, much of its coverage, as
well as its lack of coverage, of certain Arab issues, reportedly
is due to the concentration of Jews in New Yorkthere being
more Jews living in New York state than in all of Israel.
Once, Berger related, he and other anti-Zionist Jewish leaders
sought an interview with the Jewish owners of the Times to
complain about its pro-Zionist bias. They promised us the
top management, which would of course be Jewish. But when our group
got there, we were ushered in to talk with a non-Jew, Clifton Daniel,
who was married to [former] President Trumans daughter, Margaret.
And Daniel tried to convince us that the Times owners and
managers were not Zionists so much but that many of their readers
were. He seemed to assume, or at least wanted us to believe, that
a major newspaper such as the Times does not shape public
opinion, which of course it does. The rabbi added that, since
the New York paper carried so much Zionist propaganda, rather
than The New York Times it might well be named the Jewish
Times.
Dr. Berger, who was ordained a rabbi in 1932, is the author of
The Jewish Dilemma, A Partisan History of Judaism,
Judaism or Jewish Nationalism, Who Knows Better Must Say
So, Letters and Non-Letters , Memoirs of an Anti-Zionist
Jew and numerous articles and pamphlets. After the death of
his closest comrade in his anti-Zionism fight, his wife Ruth, Rabbi
Berger retired to live in Longboat Key, Florida. Though now approaching
90 and retired, he has been generous with his time and talents in
making presentations at conventions and talking with small groups.
At one gathering, a listener asked if he had regrets about speaking
out so forcefully on such volatile issues as justice for the Palestinians.
I have few regrets in my life, he said. I owe
the Arabs nothing. And they owe me nothing. Our paths have met or
been parallel when we have both stood upon those great, monumental
rocks of human values which, despite the parochialism of so much
of life, are the genuine universalities.
When one listener spoke of his life as being heroic,
he replied he did not seek that role. Rather, he hoped to embrace
humility, for there is still so much to be done before there
is justice in Palestine and before the universalism of the prophetic
tradition in Judaism and Christianity and Islam dominates the tribalism. |