The
Hidden History of Zionism
By Annie Zirin
International Socialist Review Issue 24, July–August 2002
(Footnotes at bottom of page)
http://www.isreview.org/issues/24/hidden_history.shtml
The web site of the Anti-Defamation League defines Zionism
as:
[T]he Jewish national movement of rebirth and renewal in the land
of Israel–the historical birthplace of the Jewish people. The
yearning to return to Zion, the biblical term for both the Land of
Israel and Jerusalem, has been the cornerstone of Jewish religious
life since the Jewish exile from the land two thousand years ago….
Zionism, the national aspiration of the Jewish people to a
homeland, is to the Jewish people what the liberation movements of
Africa and Asia have been to their peoples…a vindication of the
fundamental concepts of the equality of nations and of
self-determination. To question the Jewish people’s right to
national existence and freedom is…to deny to the Jewish people the
right accorded to every other people on this globe.1
We need to ask: What kind of national liberation movement allies
itself in every case and at every moment in its history with the
powers of world imperialism? What national liberation struggle
built its very existence on the colonization of another people, on
the obliteration of that people’s history, their culture, and their
land? The founding fathers of Zionism were much more honest about
what they stood for. Over and over, one word appears in their
writing: not national "liberation," but "colonization." Vladimir
Jabotinsky, one of the founding fathers of the Zionist movement,
wrote in 1923:
[It is the] iron law of every colonizing movement, a law which
knows of no exceptions, a law which existed in all times and under
all circumstances. If you wish to colonize a land in which people
are already living, you must provide a garrison on your behalf. Or
else–or else, give up your colonization, for without an armed force
which will render physically impossible any attempts to destroy or
prevent this colonization, colonization is impossible, not
"difficult," not "dangerous" but impossible!... Zionism is a
colonizing adventure and therefore it stands or falls by the
question of armed force. It is important to build, it is important
to speak Hebrew, but, unfortunately, it is even more important to
be able to shoot–or else I am through with playing at
colonization.2
Even among today’s peace activists who call for an end to Israel’s
35-year occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, there is still a
general assumption that Zionism itself is a legitimate movement and
that the State of Israel must be defended. The organization
Americans for Peace Now issued this statement in December
2001:
[C]ontinued Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip
will, within one generation, mean the end to Israel as a democratic
state with a Jewish majority.…
This scenario would be a nightmare for Israel and all of us who
support the Jewish state. It is not the Zionist vision for Israel’s
future for which APN, or the majority of Jews and Israelis, have
fought for generations.3
These activists are right to oppose the occupation. But they fail
to recognize that the current occupation of the West Bank and Gaza
is a continuation of the process of occupation and colonization of
Palestine that began with the first Zionist settlers in the 19th
century. The entire state of Israel occupies stolen land that is
backed up with armed force. Sharon’s military invasions, the
massacres of Palestinians in Jenin, the widespread call for the
"transfer" (i.e. ethnic cleansing) of Palestinians in Israel today,
are not aberrations from the Zionist project but are absolutely
consistent with "the Zionist vision for Israel’s future for
which…the majority of Jews and Israelis have fought for
generations."
The roots of Zionism
Zionism is not a "two thousand year old yearning," but a modern
movement that was born in the last quarter of the 19th century. The
development of Zionism as a political movement was entirely a
product of European society in the age of imperialism and it is
impossible to understand outside of this context. Zionism was one
response–the nationalist response–of a section of Jews to the
resurgence of anti-Semitism in Europe.
Modern Jewish history begins with the French Revolution. In the
wake of its revolutionary ideals of "liberty, equality and
brotherhood," Jews won emancipation throughout Western Europe. The
old ghetto walls were torn down. Jews gained new civil rights, and
were able to join professions that had been closed to them for
generations. The vast majority of European Jews welcomed
emancipation. They wanted to be able to assimilate and participate
as equal members in society.
But emancipation never reached Eastern Europe, where the majority
of the world’s Jewish population lived. In the Tsarist Empire, Jews
lived in poverty and isolation, confined to industrially
undeveloped areas in Poland and the Ukraine called the Pale of
Settlement. There was no heavy industry in the Pale so most Jews
worked in small shops or were part of the permanently unemployed.
Life in the Pale was punctuated by the bloody pogroms–violent race
riots against Jewish communities that were stoked by government
officials and local police. The Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky
described the pogroms of 1905:
A hundred of Russia’s towns and townlets were transformed into
hells. A veil of smoke was drawn across the sun. Fires devoured
entire streets with their houses and inhabitants. This was the old
order’s revenge for its humiliation….4
Everyone knows about a coming pogrom in advance. Pogrom
proclamations are distributed, bloodthirsty articles come out in
the official Provincial Gazettes, sometimes a special newspaper
begins to appear.… To start with, a few windows are smashed, a few
passers-by beaten up; the wreckers enter every tavern on their way
and drink, drink, drink. The band never stops playing "God Save the
Tsar," that hymn of the pogroms….
Patrols armed with police revolvers make sure that the anger of the
crowd is not paralyzed by fear… If any resistance is offered,
regular troops come to the rescue. With two or three volleys they
shoot down the resisters or render them powerless by not allowing
them within range. Protected in the front and rear by army patrols,
with a cossack detachment for reconnaissance, with policemen and
professional provocateurs as leaders, with mercenaries filling the
secondary roles, with volunteers out for easy profit, the gang
rushes through the town, drunk on vodka and the smell of
blood.…
A trembling slave an hour ago, hounded by police and starvation,
[the rioter] now feels himself an unlimited despot. Everything is
allowed to him, he is capable of anything, he is the master of
property and honor, of life and death. If he wants to, he can throw
an old woman out of a third- floor window together with a grand
piano, he can smash a chair against a baby’s head, rape a little
girl while the entire crowd looks on, hammer a nail into a living
human body.… He exterminates whole families, he pours petrol over a
house, transforms it into a mass of flames, and if anyone attempts
to escape, he finishes him off with a cudgel.…There exist no
tortures, figments of a feverish brain maddened by alcohol and
fury, at which he need ever stop. He is capable of anything, he
dares everything. God save the Tsar!5
The rise of industrial capitalism across Europe did not bring with
it an end to anti-Semitism. On the contrary, the system’s violent
economic booms and slumps created a climate in which Jews became
easy scapegoats for the immiseration of the population. The 1880s
saw a resurgence of anti-Semitism in Europe, both East and West.
Over the next three decades, more than five million Jews left
Eastern Europe. Most of these refugees went to Western Europe or to
the United States. Significantly, only a few thousand chose to go
to Palestine. In Western Europe, a prolonged economic crisis in the
1870s also led to a revival of anti-Semitism. Jews who had been
safe and prosperous in those countries for over a generation were
shocked to find themselves targets of this virulent racism. For
many it shattered their faith in the capitalist system and set them
on the road for alternatives. Millions of Jews joined the rising
revolutionary socialist movements. The revival of anti-Semitism
also provided the context for Zionism to grow.
Until the 1880s, the Zionist movement consisted of a handful of
fanatical religious sects. Jews who were enjoying the fruits of
emancipation felt no need for religious utopias. For example, in
1862, Moses Hess, a Marxist-turned-Zionist wrote a book called Rome
and Jerusalem. It’s now considered a Zionist classic, but at the
time of its publication, most Jews, if they heard about Hess at all
dismissed him as a crank. In its first year the book it sold only
160 copies and the publisher had to ask Hess to buy back the
remaining copies!6
The revival of anti-Semitism was epitomized by the Dreyfus Affair,
in which the French government framed and convicted a Jewish army
officer for treason. The 1894 trial of Captain Alfred Dreyfus
launched an international movement against anti-Semitism. But for
an Austrian journalist named Theodor Herzl, who covered the trial
in France, the Dreyfus Affair meant that no matter how assimilated
Jews were in society, they would never be safe until they had a
state of their own. In 1896, Herzl published The State of the Jews,
the manifesto for a new political Zionist movement.
"An outpost of civilization against barbarism"
Herzl’s "political Zionism" was secular and pragmatic. He argued
that the Jewish state could only be built under the patronage of
one of the imperialist powers. Because the Jews would inevitably be
a minority wherever they settled, and since they would incur the
hostility of whatever indigenous population they were colonizing,
they could not succeed without the big guns of a big imperialist
power backing them up. In fact, Palestine was only one of several
territories Herzl considered for colonization. Argentina, Uganda,
Cyprus, and even a couple of states in the Midwest of the United
States were discussed as possible locations for the Jewish state.
But the religious faction in the Zionist movement fought hard for
Palestine and Herzl, never one to miss the power of a symbol,
agreed that the ancient Jewish "homeland" would give the movement
more emotional power.
However, defining feature of Zionism was not the choice of
Palestine, but the Zionists’ willingness to ally with European
imperialism to achieve its goals. Herzl rejected the most
progressive ideals of the 19th century–democracy, socialism,
republicanism–and embraced the most reactionary– monarchy,
nationalism, chauvinism, and racism. Zionism identified with the
imperialist powers who carved up the globe, and accepted racist
ideas about the "civilizing" virtues of colonization and "the white
man’s burden" that made up the ideology of the capitalist class. In
The State of the Jews, Hertzl wrote,
The unthinking might, for example, imagine that this exodus would
have to take its way from civilization into the desert. That is not
so! It will be carried out entirely in the framework of
civilization. We shall not revert to a lower stage, we shall rise
to a higher one. We shall not dwell in mud huts; we shall build
new, and more beautiful, more modern houses, and possess them in
safety.… We should there form a part of a wall of defense for
Europe in Asia, an outpost of civilization against barbarism….
[Europe] would have to guarantee our existence.7
Today the media like to say that Israel is the only democracy in
the Middle East. But democracy was not the political system that
Herzl envisioned for the Jewish State. Even a historian sympathetic
to Zionism admits, "He preferred a democratic monarchy, or an
aristocratic republic. Nations were not yet fit for unlimited
democracy.… Politics would have to take shape in the upper strata
of the new society and work downwards."8
Throughout his career, Herzl was deeply impressed by the power and
authority of kings. After a meeting with the German Kaiser, Herzl
wrote in his diary that the Kaiser "has truly imperial eyes–I have
never seen such eyes. A remarkable bold, inquisitive soul shows in
them."9 And it is clear from his diaries that Herzl saw himself
taking his place among the European rulers at the head of a Jewish
state. He once wrote, with typical humility,
On Sunday, while I sat on the platform…I saw and heard the rising
of my legend. The people are sentimental; the masses do not see
clearly…. A light mist has begun to beat about me, which will
perhaps deepen into a cloud in the midst of which I shall
walk.…[A]t least they understand that I mean well by them, I am the
man of the poor.10
Zionism and the Jews
If one of the defining features of Zionism was its identification
with imperial power, aother was the way Herzl and founders of the
movement viewed the very Jews they claimed to represent. The
writings of Herzl and his colleague, Max Nordau, are littered with
descriptions of European Jews as parasites, social diseases, germs,
aliens. They were frustrated and bewildered that most Jews wanted
to assimilate and live in their countries of birth. To these men
who worshipped power and privilege, the desperate poverty of the
Jews of Eastern Europe was a sign of weakness in the Jewish
character.
Nordau wrote,
I contemplate with horror the future development of this race of
(assimilated Jews of Europe) which is sustained morally by no
tradition, whose soul is poisoned with hostility to both its own
and to strange blood, and whose self-respect is destroyed through
the ever-present consciousness of a fundamental lie.… This is the
picture of the Jewish people at the end of the nineteenth century.
To sum up: the majority of Jews are a race of accursed
beggars.11
Nordau’s repulsive views flowed quite logically from Zionism’s
basic assumptions about Jews. Zionists accepted the 19th century
view that anti-Semitism–in fact all racial difference–was a
permanent feature of human nature. For this reason it was pointless
to struggle against it. The solution for Jews was to form a state
and convince the European world that Jews belonged to the class of
the "superior" colonizers, not to that of the colonized. It was a
very short jump from this belief to concluding that Jews themselves
were the cause of anti-Semitism. Herzl accepted the idea that Jews
were an economic burden on society, that their very presence
provoked violence from the rest of society:
Wherever [the Jewish Question] does not exist, it is brought in
together with Jewish immigrants. We are naturally drawn into those
places where we are not persecuted and our appearance there gives
rise to persecution. This is the case, and will inevitably be so,
everywhere.… The unfortunate Jews are now carrying the seeds of
anti-Semitism into England; they have already introduced it into
America.… [But once Jews go to Palestine] the countries of
emigration will rise to a new prosperity. There will be an inner
migration of Christian citizens in to the positions relinquished by
Jews. The outflow will be gradual, without any disturbance, and its
very inception means the end of anti-Semitism.… Once we begin to
execute the plan, anti-Semitism will cease at once and everywhere.…
It is the relief from the old burden, under which all have
suffered.12
Zionism and imperialism
To acquire the land for his state, Herzl was willing to beg from
the table of every imperialist power, no matter how criminal. He
courted them all–the German Kaiser, the Turks, the Russian Tsar,
and the British Empire. In 1896, Herzl entered into negotiations
with the Turkish Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, which had ruled over
Palestine for more than five hundred years. Herzl offered the
Sultan a deal–in exchange for giving Palestine to the Jews, the
Zionist movement would help soften world condemnation of Turkey for
its genocidal campaign against the Armenians. He even pledged to
meet with Armenian leaders to convince them to call off their
resistance struggle! In his diary, Herzl wrote,
[The Sultan] could and would receive me as a friend–after I had
rendered him a service.… For one thing I am to influence the
European press…to handle the Armenian question in a spirit more
friendly to the Turks: for another, I am to induce the Armenian
leaders directly to submit to him, whereupon he will make all sorts
of concessions to them.… I immediately told [Hamid’s agent] that I
was ready a me mettre en campagne [to start my campaign.]13
As it turned out, the Sultan rejected the offer. But as historian
Lenni Brenner notes,
It would have occurred to no one else in the broad Jewish world to
have tried to hinder or interfere with the Armenians in their
struggle; nor would anyone have thought to support Turkey in any of
its wars, and in the end Zionism gained nothing by its actions. But
what was demonstrated, early in its history, was that there were no
criteria of ordinary humanism that the World Zionist Organization
considered itself bound to respect.14
Herzl never met a butcher he didn’t like, even if they were guilty
of slaughtering Jews. In 1903, he went to the Russian Tsar to see
if he could convince Russia to pressure the Ottomans into handing
over Palestine. In an infamous meeting, Herzl actually sat down
with Count von Plehve, the organizer of the pogroms, the butcher of
Jews. Herzl argued with von Plehve that Zionism was the solution to
Russia’s "Jewish problem," namely, the enormous number of Jews who
were flooding into revolutionary organizations. Herzl later
recalled that he told von Plehve "Help me reach land sooner and the
revolt will end. And so will the defection to the
socialists."15
Herzl kept his end of the bargain. A member of the Russian Social
Revolutionary party, Chaim Zhitlovsky, recalled what Hertzl told
him soon after the meeting:
I have just come from Plehve. I have his positive, binding promise
that in 15 years, at the maximum, he will effectuate for us a
charter for Palestine. But this is tied to one condition: the
Jewish revolutionaries shall cease their struggle against the
Russian government. If in 15 years from the time of the agreement
Plehve does not effectuate the charter, they become free again to
do what they consider necessary.16
Zhitlovsky gave a brilliant response that epitomizes the
revolutionary socialist position on Zionism. He told Herzl,
We Jewish revolutionaries, even the most national among us, are not
Zionists, and do not believe that Zionism is able to resolve our
problem. To transfer the Jewish people from Russia to Eretz-Israel
is, in our eyes, a utopia, and because a utopia, we will not
renounce the paths upon which we have embarked–the path of
revolutionary struggle against the Russian government, which should
also lead to the freedom of the Jewish people…. The situation of
Zionism is already dubious enough by the very fact of its standing
aloof from the revolution. Its situation in Jewish life would
become impossible if it could be shown that it undertakes positive
steps to damage the Jewish revolutionary struggle.17
Herzl’s meeting with von Plehve turned out to be a tactical
disaster, alienating the very Russian Jews he was trying to recruit
to the movement. Chaim Weizmann, president of the World Zionist
Organization, later wrote "I…believed that the step was not only
humiliating, but utterly pointless.… Nothing came, naturally, of
Herzl’s ‘cordial’ conversations with von Plehve, nothing, that is,
except disillusionment and deeper despair, and a deeper division
between the Zionists and the revolutionaries."18 Weizmann wrote to
Herzl with alarm,
In general West European Jewry thinks that the majority of East
European Jewish youth belongs to the Zionist camp. Unfortunately,
the contrary is true. The lions-share of the youth is anti-Zionist,
not from an assimilationist point of view as in West Europe, but
rather as a result of their revolutionary mood.
It is impossible to describe how many became the victims of police
oppression because of membership in the Jewish Social
Democracy–they are sent to jail and left to rot in Siberia; 5,000
are under state surveillance…and I am not speaking only of the
youth of the proletariat.… Almost the entire Jewish student body
stands firmly behind the revolutionary camp…and all this is
accompanied by a distaste for Jewish nationalism which borders on
self-hatred.19
A land without a people?
Herzl’s movement held its first congress in Basel Switzerland in
1897. After that, waves of Zionist pioneers started migrating into
Palestine. They came to colonize, but not along the lines of
traditional colonialism where the big power conquers a land to
create new markets for itself, acquire more resources and exploit
the indigenous population as a cheap source of labor. The Zionists
did not come to exploit the Arabs but to completely replace them.
The goal was to create an exclusively Jewish state with a Jewish
majority. In order to achieve this, the Zionists had to destroy the
Palestinian economy, steal the land, drive the Arabs out of the
labor market, and erase the very memory they’d even been there.
This meant carrying out a war on a number of fronts, reflected in
the three slogans of the pioneer Zionists: "conquest of land,"
"conquest of labor," and "produce of the land."20
By "conquest of land," they meant buy and steal as much Arab land
as possible; by "conquest of labor," they meant force Jewish
landowners to employ Jewish-only labor and organize Jewish-only
trade unions to dominate the labor market; and by "produce of the
land"–boycott and physically harass Arab farms and businesses to
drive them out.
Thus the absurdity of the Zionist saying that Palestine was "a land
without a people for a people without a land." Every Zionist knew
that the main obstacle to founding their state was that the land
they wanted for themselves was already inhabited. Arab Palestine
was a flourishing society with an ancient history and culture.
There were over 1,000 villages, thriving towns, abundant citrus and
olive groves, irrigation systems, crafts, and textiles. Zionists
had to obliterate all traces of this society if they were to build
a new one. As the Israeli minister of defense, Moshe Dayan,
admitted in a speech to Israeli students in 1969:
We came here to a country that was populated by Arabs, and we are
building here a Hebrew, Jewish state. Instead of Arab villages,
Jewish villages were established. You do not even know the names of
these villages and I do not blame you, because these geography
books no longer exist. Not only the books, but all the villages do
not exist.
Nahalal was established in place of Mahalul, Gevat in place of
Jibta, Sarid in the place of Hanifas and Kafr Yehoushu’a in the
place of Tel Shamam. There is not a single settlement…not
established in the place of a former Arab village.21
"The iron wall of English bayonets"
The First World War and the Russian Revolution caused the collapse
of Herzl’s three beloved patrons, the Ottoman Empire, the German
Kaiser, and Russian Tsarism. Though the Zionists played all sides
covertly during the war, the more farsighted leaders anticipated
that Britain would emerge as the dominant imperialist power from
the war. Weizmann stated as early as 1914, "We can reasonably say
that should Palestine fall within the British sphere of influence,
and should Britain encourage Jewish settlement there, as a British
dependency, we could have in twenty to thirty years a million Jews
out there, perhaps more; they would develop the country, bring back
civilization to it and form a very effective guard for the Suez
Canal."22
When the war ended, Palestine became a British colony and the
Zionists found they shared many interests with their new colonial
masters. In 1917 Britain issued the Balfour Declaration, which was
the first official recognition of the Zionist settlements in
Palestine. Under the British Mandate Government, Britain privileged
the small Jewish population over the Palestinians. In 1917 there
were 56,000 Jews in Palestine and 644,000 Palestinian Arabs. Still
Britain gave Jewish capital 90 percent of concessions for projects
like building roads and power plants and by 1935, Zionists owned
872 out of the 1,212 industrial firms in Palestine.23
The British ruling class, which was rabidly anti-Semitic, had its
own reasons for this support. Out of the First World War, Arab
nationalism had emerged as a major threat to domination of the
Middle East and Britain hoped that Zionists could be a useful force
for policing the Arabs. But Winston Churchill gave another reason
for supporting Zionism–defeat of the left wing "International
Jews." In an astoundingly anti-Semitic article titled "Zionism
versus Bolshevism," Churchill wrote,
First there are the Jews who, dwelling in every country throughout
the world, identify themselves with that country, enter into its
national life and, while adhering faithfully to their own religion,
regard themselves as citizens in the fullest sense of the State
which has received them.…
In violent opposition to all this sphere of Jewish effort rise the
schemes of the International Jews.… This movement among the Jews is
not new. From the days of Spartacus…to those of Karl Marx, and down
to Trotsky (Russia), Bela Kun (Hungary), Rosa Luxemburg (Germany),
and Emma Goldman (United States), this world-wide conspiracy for
the overthrow of civilization and for the reconstitution of society
on the basis of arrested development, of envious malevolence, and
impossible equality, has been steadily growing.…
It becomes, therefore, specially important to foster and develop
any strongly-marked Jewish movement which leads directly away from
these fatal associations. And it is here that Zionism has such a
deep significance for the whole world at the present time.…
[S]hould there be created in our own lifetime by the banks of the
Jordan a Jewish State under the protection of the British Crown,
which might comprise three or four millions of Jews, an event would
have occurred in the history of the world which would, from every
point of view, be beneficial, and would be especially in harmony
with the truest interests of the British Empire.24
In 1936, the Palestinians began the Great Uprising against British
and Zionist colonization. The Uprising lasted three years and was
only defeated by savage British repression–drawing in at some
points half the British military.25 It gave the Zionists another
opportunity to prove their worth to England. Zionists organized the
armed militias called the Haganah and the paramilitary units, which
played an important supporting role in crushing the revolt. They
also took advantage of the Arab general strike to gain control of
new sectors of the economy, replacing more Arab owners and workers
with Jews. The British military repression was so severe that it
left the Arab population demoralized and exhausted for many
years.
This cleared the field for the Zionists to focus on the last
remaining obstacle to a Jewish state: the British Mandate itself.
After all, the Zionists were colonizers, and had no intention of
remaining subjects in someone else’s colony. In 1945, they declared
war on the British and drove them out. In 1947, the United Nations
imposed its criminal partition of Palestine, which granted the
majority of the land to the minority of Jewish settlers. For the
Zionists, this was a green light to begin a terrible war of ethnic
cleansing. In 1948, through systematic terror and murder, they
drove 800,000 Palestinians off their land and founded the state of
Israel on the ruins of destroyed Arab Palestine.
"I would not accept Arabs in my trade union"
Many of the leaders like Herzl were extremely hostile to socialism.
But marxism was enormously influential in the Jewish communities of
Eastern Europe. If Zionism was going to build in that kind of
atmosphere, it had to make some accommodation to the mood. Ber
Borochov was the father of the movement called "proletarian
Zionism," which as its name implies, tried to synthesize Marxism
and Jewish nationalism. Borochov’s supposedly Marxist analysis was
that, because the Jewish proletariat of Eastern Europe worked in
economically marginal jobs, they had no social power as workers.
Therefore they were powerless to effect change in Russia. Thus,
Jewish workers needed to go build their own nation where they could
become a "real" proletariat organized in the real centers of
production. Only then could they make a socialist revolution. In
the meantime, they might have to make some alliances, temporarily
of course, with Jewish capitalists. Really this was just giving a
pseudo-Marxist gloss to the same pessimistic message that Zionism
is all about–you can’t fight here at home against oppression, you
must organize to go to Palestine and build the state.
The organization Borochov founded, the Workers of Zion (Po’ale
Zion) actually played a reactionary role in the Russian labor
movement. Zionists in the unions argued against any united action
with non-Jewish workers, which in effect put them in the position
of strikebreakers. Here was a party claiming to represent Jewish
workers that opposed the struggles of Jewish workers! In 1901,
members of the Bund, the Jewish revolutionary organization that was
bitterly hostile to Zionism, organized to drive the Zionists of
their unions, "informing them that, since they lived in Pinsk and
not Palestine, such talk in Pinsk was objectively class-treason, as
the Jewish workers of Pinsk, were, quite definitely, engaged in a
desperate class struggle with the capitalists and the police,"
writes Brenner.26
In Palestine, the "socialist Zionists" built organizations that
were invaluable to the process of colonization. They founded the
Histadrut, the Jewish-only trade union federation, which organized
the exclusion of Arab workers from the job market. They started the
kibbutzim, the agricultural collectives that built exclusively
Jewish settlements on Arab land and defended those settlements with
arms. The reality of "Zionist Marxism" is that it had to stretch
Marxism beyond all recognition to justify its colonial project.
David Hacohen, a Labor Party leader, recalled the ideological
difficulties in 1969:
I had to fight my friends on the issue of Jewish socialism, to
defend the fact that I would not accept Arabs in my trade union,
the Histadrut; to defend preaching to housewives that they not buy
at Arab stores; to defend the fact that we stood guard at orchards
to prevent Arab workers from getting jobs there.… To pour kerosene
on Arab tomatoes, to attack Jewish housewives in the markets and
smash the Arab eggs they had bought; to praise to the skies the
Kereen Kayemet [Jewish Fund] that sent Hankin to Beirut to buy land
from absentee effendi [landlords] and to throw the fellahin [Arab
peasants] off the land–to buy dozens of dunams from an Arab is
permitted, but to sell, god forbid, one Jewish dunam to an Arab is
prohibited; to take Rothschild, the incarnation of capitalism, as a
socialist and to name him the "benefactor"–to do all that was not
easy.27
"The iron wall of Jewish bayonets"
If the Jewish-only trade unions and kibbutzim were the
organizations of the Zionist "left," then Revisionism under the
leadership of Vladimir Jabotinsky formed the right wing of the
movement. Jabotinsky called his faction Revisionism because it
"revised" what he saw as the weaknesses of the movement, its
willingness to negotiate with British imperialism, to accept
concessions on key questions like immigration and land seizure. In
particular, Jabotinsky was quite open and blunt about how Zionists
should deal with "the Arab question":
Thus we conclude that we cannot promise anything to the Arabs of
the Land of Israel or the Arab countries. Their voluntary agreement
is out of the question. Hence those who hold that an agreement with
the natives is an essential condition for Zionism can now say "no"
and depart from Zionism. Zionist colonization, even the most
restricted, must either be terminated or carried out in defiance of
the will of the native population. This colonization can,
therefore, continue and develop only under the protection of a
force independent of the local population–an iron wall which the
native population cannot break through. This is, in toto, our
policy towards the Arabs. To formulate it any other way would only
be hypocrisy.28
To the hackneyed reproach that this point of view is unethical, I
answer ‘absolutely untrue.’ This is our ethic. There is no other
ethic. As long as there is the faintest spark of hope for the Arabs
to impede us, they will not sell these hopes–not for any sweet
words nor for any tasty morsel, because this is not a rabble but a
people, a living people. And no people makes such enormous
concessions on such fateful questions, except when there is no hope
left, until we have removed every opening visible in the Iron
Wall.29
Revisionists were openly sympathetic to fascism. Betar, the
Revisionist youth movement, admired Mussolini. They wore brown
shirts and did the fascist salute.30 The Revisionist newspaper
carried a regular column called "From the Notebook of a Fascist,"
and on one occasion when Jabotinsky came to Palestine, the
newspaper ran a column called "On the arrival of our Duce."31 In
1933 a columnist wrote, "Social democrats of all stripes believe
that Hitler’s movement is an empty shell [but] we believe that
there is both a shell and a kernel. The anti-Semitic shell is to be
discarded, but not the anti-Marxist kernel."32
The Labor Zionists tried at times to distance themselves from the
actions of the extremist paramilitaries. But when the time came for
united action they showed that their squabbles were all in the
family. As Jabotinsky put it, "Force must play its role–with
strength and without indulgence. In this, there are no meaningful
differences between our militarists and our vegetarians. One
prefers an Iron Wall of Jewish bayonets; the other an Iron Wall of
English bayonets."33
It was Jabotinsky who founded the Haganah, and the Revisionists who
formed the paramilitary organizations, the Irgun, as well as the
fascist Stern Gang. In 1945 the Revisionists and the Labor Zionists
united to form the "Resistance Movement" to wage war against the
British and then the Palestinians. The Irgun and the Stern Gang
were responsible for the infamous massacre in the village of Dir
Yassin in 1948. At least until the 1980s, veterans of the Irgun
still returned to Dir Yassin to commemorate their
"heroism."34
Zionism and the Holocaust
Zionism’s most powerful claim to legitimacy is that the State of
Israel is necessary to prevent another Holocaust. The legacy of the
Holocaust is brought out to justify every atrocity committed by
Israel. But it is precisely the record of how the Jewish Agency
(the government of the pre-state Jewish settlements in Palestine)
responded to the Holocaust that provides the most damning evidence
against Zionism.
To the leaders of the Jewish Agency, the rise of fascism had a
definite upside. Menahem Ussishkin told a Zionist Executive
meeting, "There is something positive in their tragedy and that is
that Hitler oppressed them as a race and not as a religion. Had he
done the latter, half the Jews in Germany would simply have
converted to Christianity."35 In 1934, Labor Zionist Moshe
Beilinson went to Germany and reported back to the Labor Party,
"The streets are paved with more money than we have ever dreamed of
in the history of our Zionist enterprise. Here is an opportunity to
build and flourish like none we have ever had or ever will have."36
Specifically, "the opportunity" meant the potential for thousands
of new immigrants and their assets to come flooding into
Palestine.
However, Zionist officials were quite blunt in stating that they
didn’t want all the refugees from Hitler’s Holocaust. They didn’t
want the burden of absorbing millions of impoverished sick refugees
who had no ideological passion for Palestine. The Agency only
wanted young, healthy Jews who could come over and work and fight
and build the state. As Israeli historian Tom Segev writes,
Urban life was, in their [Zionist leaders] eyes, a symptom of
social and moral degeneration; returning to the land would give
birth to the ‘new man’ they hoped to create in Palestine. In
parceling out the immigration certificates, they therefore gave
preference to those who could play a role in their program for
building the country. They preferred healthy young
Zionists.37
The German Immigrants Association in Palestine actually complained
in 1934 that the Zionist organizations in Berlin weren’t being
selective enough about who they were sending. Its letter of
complaint stated in part, ‘The human material coming from Germany
is getting worse and worse."38 It even returned some of the
refugees to Germany who they felt would be too much of a
burden.
The Rescue Committee of the Jewish Agency wrote a private
memorandum in 1943 about the prospects for their work. When this
was written, it still could have been possible to save millions of
Jews from Hitler’s "Final Solution." But they didn’t even
try.
Whom to save: Should we help everyone in need, without regard to
the quality of the people? Should we not give this activity a
Zionist-national character and try foremost to save those who can
be of use to the Land of Israel and to Jewry? I understand that it
seems cruel to put the question in this form, but unfortunately we
must state that if we are able to save only 10,000 people from
among 50,000 who can contribute to build the country…as against
saving a million Jews who will be a burden, or at best an apathetic
element, we must restrain ourselves and save the 10,000 that can be
saved from among the 50,000–despite the accusations and pleas of a
million."39
Was this position unethical? To paraphrase Jabotinsky, this was
their ethic–there was no other ethic. To the Zionists, the needs of
the Jewish State came first, second, and last.
The refugees who did make it to Palestine were treated with
contempt by the press and public. They were seen as passive victims
whose families perished because they failed to stand up for
themselves. Everyone knew that most of the refugees, if they had
had a choice, would never have come to Palestine at all. The Labor
Party newspaper, Davar, published an article saying that the
Holocaust was "punishment from heaven" for the European Jews for
not choosing Palestine.40 One German immigrant wrote into the
German language press, "We have seen Germany’s nationalism gone mad
and we trembled; we are on the road to a similar situation
here."41
The Zionists took these sick, devastated refugees and sent them
into the kibbutzim–on the frontlines of the war against the
Palestinians. Tom Segev describes,
In 1949 David Ben-Gurion toyed with the idea of sending immigrants
to work on development projects under a military or "paramilitary"
regimen, in order to get rid of the "demoralizing material" among
them and to give them occupational training, mastery of Hebrew and
"national discipline".… The plan, never activated, was often
discussed. Eight out of ten Israelis in 1949 said that the
concentration of immigrants in the cities endangered the country’s
economic and social structure; nine out of ten said the immigrants
should be "directed" to the agricultural settlements and slightly
more than half said they should be "forced" to go to the
settlements.… Ha’aretz…contended that the immigrants were "not
taking seriously the obligations they took upon themselves before
their immigration; and accused them of not feeling any ‘personal
responsibility’ for the Zionist enterprise."42
"Why have you done nothing?"
The bottom line was that the Jewish Agency in Palestine had many
opportunities to rescue tens of thousands of Jews and perhaps more.
But they sabotaged proposal after proposal, choosing to spend their
money on land settlements instead of rescue. David Ben-Gurion, the
first prime minister of Israel, said, "It is the job of Zionism not
to save the remnant of Israel in Europe but rather to save the land
of Israel for the Jewish people and the Yishuv."43
Chaim Weizmann, the first president of Israel, was even more blunt:
"The hopes of Europe’s six million Jews are centered on emigration.
I was asked: ‘Can you bring six million Jews to Palestine?’ I
replied ‘No.’… From the depths of the tragedy I want to save…young
people [for Palestine]. The old ones will pass. They will bear
their fate or they will not. They are dust, economic and moral dust
in a cruel world…Only the branch of the young shall survive. They
have to have to accept it."44
In the 1950s, a dramatic court case in Israel revealed that the
Zionists had acted with criminal neglect–if not outright
complicity–in the destruction of Hungarian Jewry.45 Evidence
produced at the trial showed that Rudolph Kastner, a top official
in the Israeli Labor Party, and the person in charge of the Rescue
Committee in Hungary during the war, had actively collaborated with
the Nazis. Kastner negotiated with Nazi official Adolph Eichmann
(the architect of the Holocaust)to get a approval for a "VIP train"
of 1,685 Hungarian Jews to leave Hungary safely. Kastner personally
selected the passengers for the train, which included several
hundred people from his hometown and a dozen members of his family.
He worked with SS Officer Kurt Becher to make the financial
arrangements.
In exchange for the safe passage of the train, Kastner agreed not
to warn the Jews of Hungary (whose rescue was in his hands) about
Hitler’s plans for their extermination and not to take any action
to protect them. Worse, he helped to deceive Hungarian Jews,
convincing them that they were simply being relocated. After the
war, Kastner testified at the Nuremberg trials on Becher’s behalf,
which resulted in Becher, murderer of half a million Hungarian
Jews, going free. Most damning of all, it became clear that Kastner
had not acted alone, but that his plan for the VIP train had the
support of the highest leaders of the Jewish Agency. Segev
describes the findings of the Israeli court that,
Kastner knew the Nazis intended to exterminate Hungarian Jewry but
kept the information from the members of the community. Had he
warned them in time, they might have been able to flee to Romania
or organize armed resistance. Since they did not know what awaited
them, they boarded the death trains without resistance.… He had
been given the VIP train in exchange for his silence.46
Toward the end of the war a staunch anti-Zionist named Rabbi Dov
Michael Weissmandel met with high-level Nazi officials to make a
desperate deal. The Nazis knew they were losing the war and needed
cash. They told Weismandel that the remaining Jews could buy their
freedom for a large sum of money. The Nazis gave Weissmandel a
deadline to come up with that money. Weissmandel flooded the
Zionist organizations with his pleas. But they chose to do nothing.
The deadline passed. In an agonizing letter to the Jewish Agency,
Weissmandel wrote,
Why have you done nothing until now? Who is guilty of this
frightful negligence? Are you not guilty, our Jewish brothers: you
who have the greatest good fortune in the world–liberty?… Twelve
thousand Jews–men, women, and children, old men, infants, healthy
and sick ones, are to be suffocated daily.… Their destroyed hearts
cry out to you for help as they bewail your cruelty.47
The socialist alternative
The Nazis murdered the Jewish revolutionary left in Europe; they
wiped out its best leaders and organizations. It was these
socialists and communists who organized the underground resistance
to fascism in countries across Europe, who fought bravely to defend
the Warsaw Ghetto against the Nazi assault. With the destruction of
these fighters went the memory of what they had accomplished and
stood for. It is vital to start with this fact because Zionism has
profited enormously from our historical amnesia. The destruction of
the strong anti-Zionist tradition among European Jews has meant
that Zionism has been able to claim that it represents the unified
voice of Jews throughout the world and therefore, anyone who
opposes them is an anti-Semite.
We don’t learn that, up until the Second World War, vast numbers of
Jews supported the parties of revolutionary socialism–a tradition
that opposed Zionism. In 1905 Jews were 4 percent of the population
in Russia but formed 11 percent of the Bolshevik Party and 23
percent of the Menshevik Party. In 1905, the anti-Zionist Bund, the
revolutionary organization of Jewish workers, was roughly the same
size as the Bolshevik Party.48 The socialist tradition condemned
Zionism both for its solution to anti-Semitism and for its
colonization of the Arabs. In 1910, the Jewish socialist Karl
Kautsky defined Zionism as a "sport for philanthropists and men of
letters" who wanted to make Palestine "a world ghetto for the
isolation of the Jewish race." Later Kautsky expanded, "It is labor
that gives people a right to the land in which it lives, thus
Judaism can advance no claim on Palestine. On the basis of the
right of labor and of democratic self-determination, today
Palestine does not belong to the Jews of Vienna, London, or New
York, who claim it for Judaism, but to the Arabs of the same
country, the great majority of the population."49
It is not hard to see why many Jews were hostile to Zionism.
Zionism called for a retreat from the struggle against
anti-Semitism. But the socialist movement argued that the fight
against anti-Semitism was central to the revolutionary struggle
against capitalism. Thus on the one side stood the revolutionaries
who organized Jews and non-Jews together to fight the pogroms, lead
strikes, and overthrow the Tsarist regime that perpetuated Jewish
oppression. On the other side stood the Zionists who collaborated
with the Tsar and his butchers, stood aside from the struggles for
self-defense, and sabotaged work in the unions. It was the
revolutionary workers movement–and not Zionism–that offered a
genuine hope for liberation for European Jews. Trotsky described
how the workers of St. Petersberg came to the defense of Jews
during the pogroms of 1905:
The workers made active preparations to defend their city. In
certain cases whole plants undertook to go out into the streets at
any threat of danger. The gun shops, ignoring all police
restrictions, carried on a feverish trade in Brownings. But
revolvers cost a great deal and the broad masses cannot afford
them; the revolutionary parties and the Soviet had difficulty in
arming their fighting detachments. Meanwhile rumors of a pogrom
were growing. All plants and workshops having any access to iron or
steel began, on their own initiative, to manufacture side-arms.
Several thousand hammers were forging daggers, pikes, wire whips
and knuckledusters. In the evening, at a meeting of the Soviet, one
deputy after another mounted the rostrum, raising their weapons
high above their heads and transmitting their electors’ solemn
undertaking to suppress the pogrom as soon as it flared up. That
demonstration alone was bound to paralyze all initiative among
rank-and-file pogromists. But the workers did not stop there. In
the factory areas, beyond the Nevsky Gate, they organized a real
militia with regular night watches. In addition to this they
ensured special protection of the buildings of the revolutionary
press, a necessary step in those anxious days when the journalist
wrote and the typesetter worked with a revolver in his
pocket.50
Lenin and the Bolsheviks took an uncompromising position against
anti-Semitism, seeing it as the key division and source of weakness
in the Russian working class. Lenin argued that socialists must be
the tribune of the oppressed, willing to fight every instance of
anti-Semitism, regardless of what class of Jews were affected. But
Lenin argued with equal force that in the revolutionary
movement
[T]here must be complete fusion [between the Jewish proletariat
and] the Russian proletariat, in the interests of the struggle
being waged by the entire proletariat of Russia.… [W]e must act as
a single and centralized militant organization, have behind us the
whole of the proletariat, without distinction of language or
nationality, a proletariat whose unity is cemented by the continual
joint solution of problems of theory and practice, of tactics and
organization; and we must not set up organizations that would march
separately, each along its own track.51
After the Russian Revolution of 1917, the Bolsheviks abolished all
racist laws against Jews and severely punished incidents of
anti-Semitism. During the Civil War, the imperialist backed White
Army in the Ukraine murdered as many as 60,000 Jews while the
Bolshevik Red Army became the protectors of the Jewish communities
in Poland and the Ukraine. One writer describes:
For the White Cossack cavalry, looting, rape, and murder were a way
of life. Looting was forbidden in the Red Army. Anti-Semitism and
pogroms were rife in the White Armies; anti-Semitic publications
were banned in the Red Army. Pogromists were shot. In the Ukraine
whole Jewish communities lived behind the Red Army lines, advancing
when it advanced, retreating when it retreated.52
We should take pride in the record of the socialist movement and
its principled opposition to anti-Semitism and all oppression.
Today those same principles require us to side wholly with the
Palestinians in their struggle against Israel. Next to the
treacherous, counter-revolutionary record of Zionism, we must
counterpose the best traditions in the workers movement of struggle
and solidarity. Trotsky quotes a socialist observer to the events
of 1905:
Side by side with this nightmare [of the pogroms]… see how
majestically, with what astonishing fortitude, order and
discipline, the workers’ movement developed. They did not defile
themselves with murders or robberies; on the contrary, they came to
the aid of the public everywhere, and, needless to say, protected
the public far better than the police, the cossacks, or the
gendarmes…. The workers’ armed detachments appeared wherever the
hooligans began their foul work. This new force, entering the
historical arena for the first time, showed itself calm in the
consciousness of its right, moderate in the triumph of its ideals
of liberty and goodness, organized and obedient like a real army
that knows that its victory is the victory of everything for whose
sake humanity lives, thinks, and rejoices, fights and
suffers.53
1 "What is
Zionism?" on the Anti-Defamation League Web site, at
www.adl.org/Durban/Zionism.asp
2 Lenni Brenner, The Iron Wall: Zionist Revisionism from Jabotinsky
to Shamir (London, Zed Books, 1984), p. 78.
3 "Policy Statement, December 2001" on the Americans for Peace Now
Web site, http://www.peacenow.org/policy122001.html. The statement
also demands that Arafat "join the world in fighting terror."
4 Leon Trotsky, 1905 (New York: Vintage Books, 1971), p. 131.
5 Trotsky, pp. 133-134.
6 Walter Laqueur, A History of Zionism (New York: Schocken
Books,1989), p. 46.
7 Arthur Hertzberg, The Zionist Idea: A Historical Analysis and
Reader (Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society, 1997), p. 213
and p. 222.
8 Laqueur, p. 93.
9 Laqueur, p. 109.
10 Hertzberg, p. 231.
11 Hertzberg, p. 240.
12 Quoted in Hertzberg, p. 209,214, 225.
13 Quoted in Brenner, p. 39.
14 Brenner, p. 42.
15 Quoted in Brenner, p. 14.
16 Quoted in Brenner, p. 15.
17 Quoted in Brenner, p. 15.
18 Quoted in Brenner, p. 16.
19 Quoted in Arie Bober, ed., The Other Israel: The Radical Case
Against Zionism (New York: Doubleday, 1972) pp. 152-153.
20 Bober, p. 11.
21 Quoted in Ralph Schoenman, The Hidden History of Zionism (Santa
Barbara, Calif.: Veritas, 1988), p. 41.
22 Quoted in Schoenman, p. 20.
23 Schoenman, pp. 27—28.
24 Winston Churchill, "Zionism versus Bolshevism," Illustrated
Sunday Herald, February 8, 1920, online at
www.corax.org/revisionism/documents/ 200208churchill.html.
25 Bober, p. 58.
26 Brenner, p. 21.
27 Bober, p. 12.
28 Vladimir Jabotinsky, "The Iron Wall," 1923, online at
www.marxists.de/middleast/ironwall/ironwall.htm.
29 Schoenman, pp. 24—25.
30 Tom Segev, The Seventh Million: The Israelis and the Holocaust
(New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1991) p. 23.
31 Segev, p. 23.
32 Segev, p. 23.
33 Schoenman p. 24.
34 Brenner, p. 142.
35 Segev, p. 50.
36 Segev, p. 18.
37 Segev, p. 42.
38 Segev, p. 43.
39 Segev, p. 99—100.
40 Segev, p. 98.
41 Segev, p. 57.
42 Segev, p. 172.
43 Segev, p. 129.
44 Quoted in Schoenman, p. 51.
45 See Segev, Part V, "The Kastner Affair" for a description of the
trial. Ironically, the trial was a libel suit initiated by the
Israeli government against Malkiel Greenwald, another Hungarian
Jew, for accusing Kastner of collaboration with the Nazis. But in
substance it ended up being a trial against Kastner. The trial
ended with Greenwald’s acquittal, a decision later overturned by
the Israeli Supreme Court. Kastner, meanwhile, was assassinated in
1957. Some believe he was killed by the Israeli government, which
considered the Kastner affair an embarrassment.
46 Segev, p. 271. Kastner even distributed postcards to Jews
awaiting deportation that said, "I have arrived. I am well."Upon
arrival at Auschwitz, they were forced to send these cards back
home.
47 Schoenman, pp. 52—53.
48 Enzo Traverso, The Marxists and Jewish Question: The History of
a Debate (New Jersey: Humanities Press, 1990) p. 39.
49 Traverso, p. 86.
50 Trotsky, pp. 137—138.
51 V.I. Lenin, Collected Works, Volume 6 (Moscow: Progress
Publishers, 1985) Pp. 332—33.
52 John Rees, "In Defense of October," International Socialism 52,
Autumn 1991, p. 46.
53 Trotsky, p. 137.