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How Shlomo Sand Ceased to Be a Jew – or Did He?
By Gilad Atzmon Sand’s latest book, How
I Ceased To Be A Jew, (translated from Hebrew) is a tragic
testimony made by a morally awakened Israeli Jew who comes to realise that
his spiritual, cultural and political existence is contaminated with
Judeo-centric exclusivism and is fuelled by ethno-centric racism. Shlomo
Sand decides to stop being a Jew – but has he succeeded? Sand, as we all know, is a wonderful writer; witty, innovative, poetic
and fluent, his voice is personal, at times funny, occasionally sarcastic
and always genuinely pessimistic. Sand’s writing is scholarly, deep, reflective and imaginative; however,
his scholarship is pretty much limited to French liberal thinking and early
post-modernist theory. The outcome is disappointing at times. How I
Ceased To Be A Jew is a ‘politically correct’ text, saturated with
endless caveats inserted to disassociate the author from any possible
affiliation with anyone who may be viewed as an opponent of Jewish power,
critical of Jewish identity politics or a challenger of the mainstream
historicity of the Holocaust. “I don’t write for anti-Semites, I regard them as totally ignorant or
people who suffer from an incurable disease,” (p. 21) writes the author who
claims to be humanist, universalist and far removed from Jewish exclusivism.* It
all sounds very Jewish to me. When it comes to the Holocaust, Sand uses the
same tactic and somehow manages to lose all wit and scholarly fashion. The
Nazis are “beasts”, their rise to power metaphorically described as a “beast
awakening from its lair.” I would expect a leading historian and ex-Jew to
have moved on beyond these kinds of banal clichés. Sand writes about identity politics and is certainly sensitive to the
complexities of this subject. He argues forcefully that nationalism is an
‘invention’, yet, for some reason he attributes some forensic qualities to
identity and the politics involved. Perhaps Sand fails to realise that
identity politics is actually a form of identification – it is there to
replace authenticity. For example, Zionism was born as an attempt to replace
Judaic authentic orientation with an imaginary sense of national belonging –
Israeli identity is a collection of signifiers set to make the Jew believe
that he or she has a past, present and future. Identity is basically a set
of symbolic identifiers that evoke a sense of collectivism. If you pierce
your right ear, you become a club member, if you sport a kaffiyeh you become
a solidarity activist, if you manage to utter a few Israeli sound-bites you
may become a Zionist. All these identities lack any authentic depth. Little Britain,
a BBC comedy show, provides us with an invaluable insight into this. Daffyd
Thomas (The Only Gay in the Village) exhibits a wide range of gay symbolic
identifiers without ever once being engaged in a single homosexual
intercourse. So Daffyd, while identifying as gay – politically, socially and
culturally – saves himself of the elementary authentic experience as a
homosexual. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KrlzaBNgz-M Sand understands that Jewish identity politics is hollow, but he may fail
to grasp that all identity politics are hollow. On the contrary,
nationalism, which he clearly despises — the bond with one’s soil, heritage,
culture, language, landscape, poetry is actually a cathartic experience.
Though nationalism may well be an invention as Sand and others insist, it is
still an intrinsically authentic fulfilling experience. As we all know,
patriotic national feelings are often suicidal – and there’s a reason for
this – because just sometimes it manages to integrate man, soil and
sacrifice into a state of spiritual unification. On a lighter note, reading Sand’s poetic writing in Hebrew is for me, an
ex-Jew and ex-Israeli, a truly authentic experience that brings me closer to
my roots, my forgotten homeland and its fading landscape, my mother tongue
or shall I simply say my Being. The medium that connect me to Sand’s prose
is not ‘identity’ or politics but rather the Israeliness, that concrete
nationalist discourse that matured into Hebraic poetry, patriotism,
ideology, jargon, a dream and a tragedy to follow. Somehow I believe that
Sand himself understands this point as he refers to those exact kind of
feelings in the end of the book. I also believe that Sand’s pessimistic
inclination is rooted in his realisation of himself being robbed of that
Israeliness which was once to him a home. Sand realises that the Zionist journey has come to an end and that
‘Israeli secularism’ is doomed. From an ethical and universal perspective
Israel is at a dead end. Yet, he still fails to grasp that Israel is only
part of the problem. More and more thinkers are now regarding Israel as a
mere symptom of Jewish identity politics. More and more, commentators are
becoming aware of a tribal ideological and spiritual continuum between
Israel, Zionism, the so-called Jewish anti Zionists and the Left in general.
It is no longer a secret that, like Zionists, Jewish ‘anti Zionists’ invest
most of their political energy chasing the so-called ‘anti Semites’ – those
who analyze Israeli and Zionist politics within the context of Jewish
culture and philosophy. Nevertheless, moral awakening is a slow journey rather than a swift
gestalt switch and it is interesting how Sand’s encounters with Jewish
anti-Zionists led him to adopt a similar criticism to the ones I express in The
Wandering Who. “There are a few who define themselves as secular Jews, they attempt to
protest, either collectively or alone, against (Israeli) segregation and
occupation. Rightly, they grasp that these policies threaten to bring along
Judeo-phobia that may identify all Jews as a separate race and confuse
between Jews and Zionists.” However, Sand continues, “their wish to be a
part of a Jewish ethnic identity while not being able to fill it with
positive cultural content, makes their tactic, in the best case, short lived
that lacks weight and political future, and in the worse case, support
indirectly the sense of (Judeo) tribalism.” (p. 145) Sand clearly detects here an element of intellectual dishonesty inherent
to the Jewish ‘Left’ in general and anti-Zionists in particular. He
continues, “if those who consider themselves Jewish anti Zionists, in spite
of the fact that they’ve never been in Israel, are unfamiliar with the
(Hebrew) language and foreign to the (Israeli) culture, insist upon the
right to criticise Israel, shouldn’t the pro-Zionists enjoy a (similar)
unique privilege in determining the future of Israel?” (p. 146). Sand is
obviously correct here, yet his point could be pushed even further: if the
Jewish anti-Zionists enjoy a privilege due to their ‘unique’ ethnic origin,
they actually affirm that Israel is the Jewish State and in fact their own
very State. When a bunch of righteous Jews criticise the Jewish State ‘as
Jews’ and in the name of their Jewishness, they paradoxically assert that
Israel is indeed the Jewish State while simultaneously asserting their own
choseness and privilege as Jews. It is unsurprising that Sand is impressed with the contribution of Jewish
progressive and radical thinkers. He presents a list of Jewish thinkers who
“made an effort to drift away from (Jewish) egocentric ethical legacy in an
attempt to adopt a universal morality” (p. 114). Sand mentions names such as
Karl Marx, Leon Trotsky, Rosa Luxemburg, Lion Blum, Noam Chomsky and a few
others. “As distant these people and others were from religious heritage, as
close was their affinity to humanist perception and the strong will to
change the living conditions of all people rather than their own.” (p. 115). Unlike Sand, I am less convinced of the pure universalist motivation
behind these progressive Tikkun Olam (fixing the world) heroes. Unlike Sand,
I am convinced that the ‘progressive’ is but a secular extension of Jewish
tribal ‘chosesness’. After all, if you are a ‘progressive’, someone else
must be a ‘reactionary’. In other words, progressiveness is in itself a
non-universal intolerant discourse. Drifting away from Jewishness towards true and genuine universalism can
be realised as the emergence of a unique critical sensitivity towards every
possible aspect of Jewish tribal operation. Such an act involves a certain
amount of self-loathing rather than merely ‘despising’ the ‘Jews around
you’. Sand is not there yet. Instead of hating himself, he actually perfects
his argument against his Jewish neighbours. In practice, he is still engaged
in an internal tribal debate. Jewish identity politics is an emerging critical topic and I take some
credit for such a development. Two years ago, my The
Wandering Who was published, which opened a Pandora box. I
unleashed a critical assault on identity politics in general and also
exposed the deceitful nature that is intrinsic to Jewish-Left thinking.
Following the publication of the book, all hell broke loose, Zionists,
together with their Jewish anti-Zionist siblings joined forces in a
desperate attempt to stop the book and to censor my thoughts — but they
failed — the book became a best seller, translated into many languages and
endorsed by some of the most important humanists
and academics around. Most importantly, it made Jews and their politics
(not just Israel or Zionism) subject to intellectual and philosophical
scrutiny. A few months ago, Judith Butler attempted to rescue Jewish humanism and
progressive identity. But her text, Parting Ways – Jewishness and the
Critique of Zionism, was pretty problematic and intellectually
dishonest. Consequently it received no serious attention. If anything, it
conveys a clear lack of humanist as well universalist thinking at the heart
of the Jewish Left discourse. Sand’s new book is another attempt to deal
with the topic, but unlike Butler, Sand deserves our full attention. Sand is
a man in transition (a quality I myself modestly share with him). Sand is
honest, a superb writer, closely familiar with Jewish historicity and,
though he may be slightly mistaken on some issues, his text provides us with
a unique glimpse into the authentic journey of a pessimistic yet poetic
Jewish soul in search of meaning.
The
Wandering Who? A Study Of Jewish Identity Politics, available on Amazon.com & Amazon.co.uk
*Exclusivism, intolerance, negative dialectic, righteousness, tribal
inclination etc’. This topic is central to my new book. I will elaborate in
depth in the near future.
Shlomo Sand Ceased to be a Jew – or Did He? |
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