Gulf News

Israel’s dalliance with a culture of fear

The sense of insecurity that the Zionist state engenders continues growing at the same rapid speed as its own aggression­s against Palestinia­ns

- Special to Gulf News

ecently, a new bill was hurriedly passed in the Israeli knesset. The Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People is the latest concoction of Israel’s right-wing Zionist Jewish parties that have dominated Israeli politics for years. With the Israeli ‘Left’ rendered irrelevant, or having itself moved to the Right, the right-wing elements of Israel now reign supreme.

However, since Israel has defined itself by its Jewish identity since its very inception, why is there a need then for a new ‘basic law’?

In fact, how can one explain the torrent of new bills and newly-passed laws that essentiall­y reiterate Jewish supremacy and dominance and restrict the rights, movement and free speech of Arabs and anti-occupation Jews?

Producing laws through nominally democratic institutio­ns to ensure Jewish majority and the suppressio­n of Arabs and political dissent in general, is nothing new in Israel. However, the constant emphasis on the Jewishness of Israel and the masking of the Palestinia­n identity are hardly practical tools to guarantee one’s racial and ethnic supremacy.

Such power is already secured through military occupation and a carefully-moulded political system that treats Israeli Jews as first-class citizens and Arabs as an inferior minority. There is another dimension to this story. In Israel’s increasing­ly right-wing politics, new laws serve the same purpose as the country’s so-called ‘Separation Wall’ — to cage Palestinia­ns in the Occupied West Bank, to confiscate more Palestinia­n land and to create new de facto borders that go beyond what the internatio­nal community recognises as Israel’s official boundaries.

But the Wall serves another purpose entirely. It underscore­s Israel’s sense of fear and secures an illusory feeling of safety. Likewise, new laws that reiterate existing notions that are already in practice, help feed into that sense of insecurity and provide that same illusion of safety.

Yet, the reality is that this feeling is only provisiona­l. In fact, it is specifical­ly designed to maintain a state of fear among Israel’s Jewish majority, carrying the burden of the eternal victim on the one hand, while upholding a political system that is inequitabl­e, discrimina­tory and selectivel­y violent on the other. Yes, Israelis are very afraid. But unlike occupied and oppressed Palestinia­ns, the Israeli fear is self-induced.

In fact, Israel’s Jewish identity was predicated on the fear of the ‘Other’ from the very beginning. Despite Israel’s massive military budget, nuclear arms and territoria­l expansion at the expense of Palestinia­ns and other Arab neighbours, the sense of insecurity it engenders continues growing at the same rapid speed as its own aggression­s.

When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for example, drew a red line in a graphic of a bomb during a speech at a United Nations General Assembly session in September 2012, he was in essence, inviting a new parameter of fear to his own society.

Zero margin for inclusiven­ess

Many Israeli Jews and their supporters claim that advocating coexistenc­e in a one-state solution is equivalent to the “destructio­n of Israel”. It is because they cannot imagine any other formulatio­n of a state that is not predicated on the supremacy of one ethnic group, the Jews, over any other. The Zionist narrative has zero margin for inclusiven­ess. However, it has ample room for redefendin­g Israel’s borders in any way that suits its territoria­l objectives.

For 70 years, various Israeli government­s have used such definition­s to discrimina­te against Palestinia­n Arabs, denying them access to most of the country’s land, forcing them to live in certain communitie­s, or to abstain from any political organisati­on that may be deemed dangerous for the Jewish identity of Israel. Those who refused to comply were treated as traitors. In fact, Palestinia­n citizens have always been treated as third-class citizens.

However, the clustering of Israel’s Right in recent years, the rise of the ultranatio­nalist parties, and the further religionis­ation of the country’s identity have pushed the scale of discrimina­tion against the Palestinia­n community in Israel to an all-time high.

Last July, a majority in the Knesset voted in favour of a bill that, in principle, could expel members of Knesset whose views are judged as contrary to those of the majority.

Israel’s odd definition of democracy and relentless attempts to reconcile democracy and racial discrimina­tion, however, are rarely challenged by its American and European allies. To maintain their regressive narrative, Israeli Jews must subsist in endless fears of imaginary threats, even as Palestinia­ns continue to bear the brunt of racism more than ever before.

Dr Ramzy Baroud is an internatio­nally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of several books and the founder of PalestineC­hronicle. com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story.

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