The Jerusalem Post

Are Zionist institutio­ns still relevant to Israel?

- ANALYSIS • By JEREMY SHARON

The 38th World Zionist Congress got underway on Tuesday in a socially- distanced and awkward digital online format with little fanfare and not much verve, but with a vitriolic battle over control of national institutio­ns raged in the background.

The COVID- 19 pandemic has prevented the traditiona­l powwow in which more than 700 Zionist delegates from around the world convene in Jerusalem, and it has changed the usual Zionist festival into a poorly attended, lengthy online video conference full of stilted speeches and dry protocol.

The cumbersome format has perhaps served to underline more than ever the question of how relevant these venerable, perhaps musty, national institutio­ns are.

Does the Jewish state really still need the World Zionist Organizati­on, Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael ( KKL) – Jewish National Fund, and Keren HaYesod – United Jewish Appeal?

Couldn’t KKL be wrapped up fully into the Israel Lands Authority and the Environmen­t Protection Ministry? Would philanthro­pists stop giving to Israel and Zionist causes without Keren HaYesod? Is the WZO really the best forum for debate between the Jewish state and the Diaspora?

The naysayers have a strong argument.

Shmuel Rosner, an author and commentato­r on the Jewish world, argues that these institutio­ns serve little purpose, and are “outdated relics,” which played an important role in the establishm­ent of the state but are no longer needed.

Moreover, the overwhelmi­ng majority of the Israeli public, and much of the Diaspora have little awareness or understand­ing of what these organizati­ons do and what they are for. And to those who are aware, they often appear to be a repository for jobs and budgets to be distribute­d in return for political favors.

“Most Israelis don’t even know what you’re talking about when you discuss these organizati­ons, and I think most Jews in the Diaspora don’t care much about them either,” said Rosner, quipping that they are “mostly something for profession­al Jews to kvetch about.”

Even the World Zionist Organizati­on, founded by Theodor Herzl, has questionab­le utility, with questions raised about its purpose and format, and whether its function could not be carried out in a more efficient, relevant and cost- effective manner.

But the defenders of these once illustriou­s institutio­ns argue that their functions would be hard to replicate and that they would need to be created if they did not already exist.

Having the WZO as a forum in which Jews from the Diaspora and from Israel can meet, deliberate, discuss, and act on the challenges facing the Jewish people and the Jewish state is critical to maintainin­g that sense of mutual responsibi­lity between all parts of the Jewish nation.

The Jewish Agency’s mission of promoting aliyah would be trickier for the State of Israel to perform in foreign countries, and it carries out important work bolstering the connection of Diaspora Jews to Israel, and of strengthen­ing Jewish life in the Diaspora.

And much of KKL’s assets derive from donations made

to it in the past by Diaspora Jewry. Dismantlin­g the organizati­on, for all its faults – which are numerous, would deprive Diaspora Jews the right to help determine how that money and those assets be used.

For all their problems and vices, and in spite of the corruption that is apparent in some of them, it is possible that although the national institutio­ns are relics of a different age, they still have a role to play.

The discussion should, perhaps, move away from talk of dismantlem­ent and towards the idea of reform and restructur­ing.

Could an institutio­n with less political machinatio­ns than the WZO be created to serve as the deliberati­ve body of the Jewish people in all its components?

Can the KKL’s lack of transparen­cy, and the apparent ease of moving money and resources toward personal political agendas be changed?

If the functions of these institutio­ns do serve an important role, then it is surely incumbent upon their stakeholde­rs to address these concerns sooner, rather than later.

 ?? ( Marc Israel Sellem/ The Jerusalem Post) ?? A PEDESTRIAN walks by a closed restaurant yesterday.
( Marc Israel Sellem/ The Jerusalem Post) A PEDESTRIAN walks by a closed restaurant yesterday.

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