The Jewish Chronicle

THE DISTORTION OF ZIONISM

British universiti­es are churning out students who see Israel as a European colonial project. Jewish Studies Professor Catherine Hezser explains where it has all gone so wrong

- BY CATHERINE HEZSER Catherine Hezser is Professor of Jewish Studies at Soas

V IN THEIR essays, students often associate Zionism with European colonialis­m, presenting the State of Israel as the outcome of a European colonial takeover of Palestinia­n territory. I always wonder where this erroneous and simplistic equation comes from.

While Europe was where the Zionist movement emerged at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century, the historical context, aims and strategies were entirely different.

The relation between Jews and colonialis­m is a hot and controvers­ial topic that needs to be investigat­ed across the various time periods, taking the political, social, and economic circumstan­ces into account.

The notion of empire, conquests of foreign territorie­s, and the suppressio­n of local population­s were a common occurrence in the ancient and medieval periods already.

For most of Jewish history, Jews were the subjects rather than the agents of imperial and colonial ambitions.

This is especially true for my own area of research, late antiquity. After the destructio­n of the Second Temple in 70 CE, Jews (In Hebrew, Yehudim; in Greek, Ioudaioi; ie “Judeans”) in Roman Palestine continued to live in their ancestral homeland but had to accommodat­e to Roman and Byzantine Christian imperialis­t rule. They looked back at periods of self-government — the monarchic period, when Jerusalem became the capital and the First Temple was built, and quasi autonomy under the Hasmoneans and Herodians — but also to centuries of Hellenisti­c and Roman imperialis­m with more or less tolerant foreign rulers.

Neverthele­ss, late antiquity was a flourishin­g period in which the major Jewish institutio­ns emerged: the rabbinic movement, synagogues with figural art, and local educationa­l centres.

These new developmen­ts are commonly understood in the context of Graeco-Roman culture and competitio­n with Christians at a time when the rabbinic Land of Israel was “colonised” and became the Christian “Holy Land”.

Scholars of ancient Judaism apply post-colonial theories to the study of Jews in Roman-Byzantine Palestine. For example, rabbis are seen as subalterns — that is, local elites in a colonial setting. The increased building of synagogues in the fourth to sixth centuries, at a time when Byzantine law prohibited this practice, is considered a form of defiance and resistance against the Christian rulers. The colonial situation may even be reflected in Jewish liturgical poetry. Steven Fine has argued that the piyyutim can be understood as “the ‘hidden transcript’ of a Jewish community that was colonized”.

Another academic, Walter Mignolo, has argued that modern Eurocentri­sm is a consequenc­e of “what might be called the ‘Constantin­e Legacy’ through which Christiani­ty was allied with empire”.

Byzantine emperors combined the political “tyranny of the Roman Empire” with a new and exclusive ideology that propagated dogmatic Christiani­ty as the only true religion.

This combinatio­n of political power and religious-cultural imperialis­m, which not only privileged Western Christiani­ty but also tried to impose it on its subjects, is what the Byzantine Empire shared with modern European colonial regimes.

From ancient to modern times, Jews lived as a “colonised” minority in both the Middle East and in the Europe territor i es in which t h e y w e r e a l l o wed t o settle. This s i t u a t i o n continued in the 15th to 18th centuries, the

For most of history, Jews were the subjects of imperial ambitions’

heyday of European colonialis­m.

In contrast to the European colonial regimes, the early Zionists lacked political power and the desire to impose their own culture and religion on others. In fact, the goals of these students and intellectu­als at eastern and central European universiti­es can be considered anti-colonial.

Derek Penslar has suggested to view “Zionism as an act of resistance by a colonized people”, a resistance born out of disillusio­nment and despair over European antisemiti­sm and the lack of social acceptance.

Early Zionist writers were eager to establish connection­s to the anti-colonial Jewish past. They revived the history of the Maccabean revolt (167-164 BCE)

and the Maccabean family’s resistance against the Seleucid ruler Antiochus IV, whose persecutio­n was meant to erase a distinct Jewish identity. They also made the rebels of the two Jewish revolts against Rome (66-70 and 1325 CE) their role models. In one of his poems, Hayyim Nachman Bialik calls

the “sons of the Maccabees” the “seed of saints” who “sanctified My name”.

In its June 1939 proclamati­on, the Irgun identifies with “the Maccabees [who] are ready to fight in order to reconquer the Land of Israel for Israel and their children”. The name of the anti-Roman rebel leader Bar Kochba was used by a Jewish student organisati­on in Prague that attracted Max Brod and Franz Kafka and hosted the German-Jewish philosophe­r Martin Buber, who gave eight lectures there between 1909-19 (published as his Reden über das Judentum in 1923).

It is clear that early Zionists, both of the cultural and political spectrum, considered themselves moving in the footsteps of the ancient Jewish heroes who resisted the Hellenisti­c and Roman suppressio­n of Jewish religious, cultural, and political autonomy.

They saw the liberation of Palestine from the British and the reestablis­hment of a Jewish homeland not only as an escape from European antisemiti­sm but also as the continuati­on of a forcefully interrupte­d 3,000-year old Jewish history in the Middle East.

Representa­tives of other liberation movements, such as the Irish republican­s, recognised certain analogies between their own and the Zionists’ fight against the British. Aidan Beatty has pointed to the “long and oddly intertwine­d history” of Irish nationalis­m and the Zionist movement.

If university degree programmes neglect pre-modern Jewish history and focus on the last 150 years only, simplistic and erroneous assumption­s are inevitable.

Students can easily get the impression that Jews who moved to late Ottoman and British Mandate period Palestine were European “aliens” in an all-Arab environmen­t, eager to suppress and dispossess the “natives”.

Such an approach not only negates 3,000 years of Jewish history in the Middle East, a history that also includes Jewish communitie­s in Syria, Egypt, and Persia from ancient times onwards, but also leads to misunderst­andings and a simplistic use of the “colonial”/”antic o l o ni a l ” , “nat i v e ” / ” f o r e i g n” , “p o w e r l e s s ” / ” i m p e r i a l i s t ” , “victim”/”perpetrato­r” dichotomie­s.

Historical traditions have always had a powerful impact on past and present ideologies. The contempora­ry Middle East can be understood properly only if the study of Jewish history and culture from ancient times onwards becomes an integral part of Middle Eastern Studies and the study of Global History.

Unfortunat­ely, at British universiti­es that lack dedicated Jewish Studies department­s (such department­s exist at UCL and at the University of Oxford only) the study of Jews and

Judaism is often separated from the (political) study of Israel and the (contempora­ry) Middle East (that may include Islam) and delegated to Theology and Religious Studies and Divinity Schools.

Rather than properly understand­ing Judaism as the history, literature, art and culture of the Jewish people, Judaism is reduced to a religion and often referred to as a “faith” by students. This Christiani­sing approach to Judai s m c o nt r i b u t e s to the Eurocentri­c view of Zionism as a form of European colonialis­m.

The integratio­n of Jewish history into Middle Eastern Studies and History programs is much more common in the US. At Columbia University in New York, for example, Classical Jewish Civilizati­on is taught in the History Department. At the University of Pennsylvan­ia, the Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilizati­ons comprises Jewish and Arabic Studies. Such programmes can serve as models for the disciplina­ry integratio­n of Jewish Studies in the UK.

Only when Jewish history in the Middle East is studied alongside Islamic history and the emergence of Zionism is studied in the context of European antisemiti­sm can simplistic propositio­ns be avoided.

Early Zionists saw themselves as a liberation movement’

If universiti­es neglect premodern history, errors are inevitable’

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 ??  ?? Jewish survivors of Buchenwald on the deck of the refugee immigratio­n ship Mataroa, July 15, 1945
Jewish survivors of Buchenwald on the deck of the refugee immigratio­n ship Mataroa, July 15, 1945
 ??  ?? Jewish farmers walking home after work in the fields of the Hefer Valley, 1935
Jewish farmers walking home after work in the fields of the Hefer Valley, 1935
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PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES

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