Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - David Newman's (Dept of Political
Science) latest Smears of Israel - Claims Undemocratic Israel has
mere Democratic "Veneer"
Does BGU's Dean of Social Science have mere Academic Veneer, as
well?
In the Jerusalem
Post, Newman claims that Israel is filled with three anti-democratic
populations: Russian immigrants, Orthodox Jews, and low-income
Sephardim. Why are these anti-democratic? Because they are all
hostile to the Far Left!! David Newman's test of "democratic" is
whether someone agrees with the anti-Israel post-Zionist Left!
"What is fast
becoming an anti 'others' tsunami, is an internal kulturkampf taking
place between the declining and politically inactive old elites, and
those groups who were, for a long time, at the socio-political
periphery.
OVER THE past 20
years, the country has experienced substantial demographic and
political change. This is reflected in the absolute growth of
formerly peripheral groups such as the haredi and national-Orthodox
communities, immigrants from the former Soviet Union and the poorer
Mizrahi groups. These diverse groups now make up more than half the
Jewish population, and hold many key positions in the Knesset and
other decision-making institutions.... The convergence of these
groups at this specific juncture, despite the internal
contradictions and even mutual animosities between their respective
beliefs and interests, has for the first time created a critical
mass which is challenging the democratic ethos of the state."
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=211039
Israel's
democratic veneer
What is fast becoming an anti
"others" tsunami, is an internal kulturkampf taking place between
the declining and politically inactive old elites, and those groups
who were, for a long time, at the socio-political periphery.
By T. HERMANN AND D.
NEWMAN
06/03/2011
Much has been written
about the weakening of Israel's democratic culture. Events of the
past few months have posed serious questions in this regard: the
Knesset decision to examine the functioning and funding of
human-rights and peace NGOs, attacks on academic freedom by
right-wing think tanks, rabbis issuing public statements against the
renting of property to Arab citizens, the rabbis' wives' warnings to
Jewish girls not to associate with gentiles, as well as
demonstrations in Tel Aviv against foreign workers from Third World
countries.
Taken individually,
each event may be seen as no more than an aberration by a deviant
group. But taken together, we are witnessing a "climate change" in
Israeli Jewish public opinion, raising serious concerns about the
long-term viability of our democracy.
The conventional
explanation for the increase in these anti-democratic attitudes is
as a spillover of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But laying the
blame at the door of the conflict is too simplistic. Such an
explanation is often motivated by political correctness and other
agendas which tend to deny the structural and perceptual changes
which are taking place within Israeli Jewish society.
What is fast becoming
an anti 'others' tsunami, is an internal kulturkampf taking place
between the declining and politically inactive old elites, and those
groups who were, for a long time, at the socio-political periphery.
OVER THE past 20
years, the country has experienced substantial demographic and
political change. This is reflected in the absolute growth of
formerly peripheral groups such as the haredi and national-Orthodox
communities, immigrants from the former Soviet Union and the poorer
Mizrahi groups. These diverse groups now make up more than half the
Jewish population, and hold many key positions in the Knesset and
other decision-making institutions.
The group which has
experienced the most significant demographic growth is the haredim,
who now constitute 9 percent of the adult population and almost 15%
of our youth. For this group, Western values of democracy are
associated with the secular Zionist regime, and are an antithesis to
"pure" Judaism.
Religious law takes
precedent, as does their subservience to unelected rabbinical
authority. Their attitudes toward the "non-Jewish other" are
determined by the scriptural understandings of the Chosen People
narrative, an exclusive narrative which places the Jewish people on
a higher plane than all other nations.
Also growing has been
the national-Orthodox community, large sections of which display
ultranationalist sentiments. Like the haredim, the settlers and
their followers draw on religious sources for their political
justification, but focus on anti-Arab and anti-gentile ideologies.
For them, universal values as expressed by university academics and
secular thinkers are not sufficiently Jewish, and should not be
allowed to get in the way of the nation's "genuine interests."
In their role as
self-appointed patriots, the land and the regime should be
exclusively Jewish, while those supporting peace and human rights
are perceived as misguided at best and traitors at worst.
A third group is the
Russian-speaking population, numbering almost 1 million, most of
whom arrived from the former Soviet Union during the past two
decades. One would have thought this population, having experienced
tyranny, would display an authentic commitment to the democratic
creed.
But recent public
opinion surveys have shown that large segments of this group favor
authoritarian power, while displaying a reticence toward the
perceived inefficiencies of the democratic decision-making
procedures. They profess a strong support for Putin-type leadership,
while having little regard for the human and civil rights of
minorities. They also blame the old elites for the negative stigmas
they suffered on arrival, and which are still current in much public
discourse about the role of the Russian immigrants in Israeli
society.
The fourth group is
composed of the low-income, low-education sectors, often
Orthodox-light, mostly Mizrahi Jews. Not only do they hold the old
elites responsible for their dismal situation, they are also
resentful of the foreign workers and refugees who compete with them
for employment and cheap housing. The recent mobilization of
middle-class, educated, secular, mostly Ashkenazi activists on
behalf of the foreign workers and refugees is often interpreted by
this embittered group as an act of almost virtual betrayal, pushing
them even further into taking part in the anti-immigrant
demonstrations.
EACH OF these groups
is influenced by different factors – the Mizrahim by their perpetual
feeling of disenfranchisement; the haredim by their belief in the
superiority of religious law; the Russians by their feelings of
cultural superiority, even toward Western European elites; and the
national Orthodox/ settlers by their belief that the national
interest is being sacrificed on the altar of universal values.
The convergence of
these groups at this specific juncture, despite the internal
contradictions and even mutual animosities between their respective
beliefs and interests, has for the first time created a critical
mass which is challenging the democratic ethos of the state.
This has not been
helped by the fact that the traditional supporters of liberal
democracy have left a political and social vacuum. Today's members
of the educated, middle-class and secular groups have not only
experienced relative demographic decline, but have switched their
primary focus to the construction of the "hi-tech nation" within the
"Tel Aviv state" enclave, and emphasize personal achievement at the
expense of their former political involvement.
Although they are
active in civil society organizations and NGOs, they are less
inclined to become involved in institutionalized politics (which
they were largely responsible for creating). Their withdrawal from
public involvement has left the door open for the other groups to
enter and empty liberal democracy of much of its content, while
leaving theveneer of a democratic state.
Tamar Hermann is
professor of political science at the Open University and
senior fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute. David Newman is
dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at Ben- Gurion
University, and editor of the
International Journal of Geopolitics.
|