National Post

BEFORE TRUMP, THERE WAS BEGIN

HE RESTORED ISRAEL’S SECURITY, TRUMPETED THE RIGHT TO LIVE IN DIGNITY AND SIGNED A PEACE TREATY WITH EGYPT.

- Daniel Gordis Daniel Gordis is senior vice- president and Koret distinguis­hed fellow at Shalem College in Jerusalem. Author of 11 books, his latest is Israel: A Concise History of a Nation Reborn.

So shocking was the electoral upset that Israeli t elevision created a word for it: mahapakh. Derived from the root that means “revolution” or “turning upside down,” the word was fashioned because Menachem Begin’s 1977 election as prime minister was such a game-changer in Israeli politics that no existing word seemed to suffice. From independen­ce in 1948 until 1977, Israel’s political left had ruled with an iron fist. Begin, a leader of the right widely seen as a “terrorist” because of his decisive role in the Jewish undergroun­d that ultimately forced the British to leave, had languished in the opposition — often in the political desert — for 29 years. Having lost eight consecutiv­e times, Begin was expected to lose again and, at age 63, to exit the political stage.

Yet it did not play out that way. An angry electorate, especially Jews of North African origin, had run out of patience with Labor. They resented the privileged left, out of touch with the economic struggles of the Israeli “man on the street.” The left was hostile to religion in a country in which religion and ethnicity were the raison d’être. The more traditiona­l North African Mizrachi Jews, as they are called, had had enough. So in 1977, they helped elect Begin — the consummate Polish gentleman — as prime minister.

Much of the world reacted with horror. Time magazine, perhaps most memorably, wrote that “His first name means ‘ comforter.’ Menachem Begin ( rhymes with Fagin) has been anything but that to his numerous antagonist­s.” Jews in the U.S. were appalled that the man who had topped the British “most wanted l i st” would now lead the state to which they looked with such pride.

The recent election of Donald Trump to the American presidency reminds me of that stunning upset. Once again, the electorate has re- jected the left. Once again, traditiona­l social values have reasserted themselves. Once again, the peacemakin­g of the left has been cast aside. And once again, much of the American Jewish electorate is beside itself.

Yet there is comfort to be found in that Begin proved his detractors wrong. He restored Israel’s security, by destroying the nuclear reactor in Iraq. He trumpeted the right to live in dignity, saying “We will be no one’s cowering Jews” when he vowed to put a stop to the shelling of Israel’s north by terrorists in southern Lebanon. Yet perhaps most important, it was Begin — ostensibly the radical, right- wing terrorist — who signed a peace treaty with Egypt. No Labor leader had ever managed that. Only someone known for toughness could get that through, the argument now goes. Many see Begin as Israel’s greatest statesman. Might the incoming Trump administra­tion also surprise his detractors?

For now, there are more questions than answers. Trump has shown a fundamenta­lly positive dispositio­n toward the Jewish State. Might the Palestinia­ns, faced with a president who is instinctiv­ely inclined to support Israel, recognize that “the game is up” and that time is no longer on their side? Could that lead them to compromise, to finally recognize Israel’s right to exist, to explore ending the conflict and opening an avenue to peace?

It is important to note that despite certain similariti­es, Trump appears to have different instincts than Begin did on a number of issues.

Begin was a staunch ideologue, and came to power with the express intent of shaking things up. Many of those who voted for him expected a much more open endorsemen­t of the settlement project than the left’s hemming and hawing. Thus, when Israel’s Supreme Court ruled that the Elon Moreh settlement had to be dismantled because it had been constructe­d on private Palestinia­n land, Begin’s supporters were certain he would push back. Yet all he said was “There are judges in Jerusalem” — he accepted the court’s ruling.

Although passionate­ly committed to the settlement project, he was even more committed to democracy, and his demonstrat­ion of that assuaged his opponents’ concerns. Similar indication­s from Trump, reassuring Americans of his belief in the rule of law, might have an analogous effect in the U.S.

With Begin’s election in 1977, Israel had at its helm a man who spoke about the Jewishness of the Jewish state — and its obligation first and foremost to Jews — utterly unabashedl­y. It was a new tone for Israelis and, for some, worrisome. But here, too, Begin surprised his electorate. His first act was to aid several dozen Vietnamese refugees whom an Israeli ship had spotted on the South China Sea. Out of water, they were desperate. Several ships from other countries had seen them and failed to stop, but Begin instructed the Yuvali, Israel’s ship, to take them on board and to bring them to Israel. He provided the refugees with financial support, and made them citizens of the Jewish state. Even U. S. President Jimmy Carter, who despised Begin, noted the extraordin­ary nature of his gesture.

While many Americans are understand­ably not in- clined to open the borders to hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees, Israel is once again doing what it can to help. Israeli field hospitals are treating Syrians wounded in the fighting and assisting them in their return to Syria. Were he to admit even a small number of particular­ly harrowing humanitari­an cases to the U. S., Trump might assure his naysayers that he understand­s that immigratio­n has long been a key dimension of the American experience and that his administra­tion is not deaf to the cry of simple human pathos.

For all his ideologica­l fervour in his undergroun­d years, Begin was fundamenta­lly a pragmatist. He had no doubt that Israel’s Arab enemies were determined to destroy the Jewish state, but when he suspected that there was an opportunit­y to make peace with Egypt, he pursued it and battled the right flank of his own party to get the deal through — agreeing to a significan­t territoria­l compromise in the process. His ultimate commitment was not to his ideology, but to the causes at the root of his ideology: the safety and flourishin­g of the Jewish people. Trump, who takes pride as a deal maker, would do well to consider Begin’s model.

Begin remains a controvers­ial figure in Israel, yet also widely missed. Ultimately, his decency and his respect for law and people ran deeper than his rhetoric or his ideology.

Israelis know a great deal about “cleaning out swamps,” both literally and politicall­y. What they have learned, and what Trump would do well to echo, is that no less important than the power of the electorate to demand radical change is the question of the character of those waiting in the wings to lead.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Israel’s Menachem Begin in 1977.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Israel’s Menachem Begin in 1977.

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