The Jerusalem Post

Zionism Forward

- • By RICHARD D. HEIDEMAN

If I were to ask a group of American Jews from a variety of background­s if they supported the view that the Jewish People have a right to a home in their ancestral land, or whether they think the State of Israel should exist in its current form, I believe I would receive an overwhelmi­ngly positive answer. These issues have been polled in a number of ways several times over the past few years.

However, what would happen if I asked them another very simple question: Are you a Zionist?

The results would unfortunat­ely be markedly different. Many might indeed express tentative acquiescen­ce, but only after an uncomforta­ble silence, or a deep thought about the question. I know this because I have put this question to many in the US.

As the recently elected president of the American Zionist Movement, a federation of 25 American Zionist organizati­ons and youth groups, I see it as my strongest mandate to unapologet­ically seek to renew our basic Zionist principles and to work to repair the good name of Israel, the Jewish people and Zionism itself.

Unfortunat­ely, at a time when support for Israel, the nation-state of the Jewish People, is under attack from many quarters, some in the Jewish organizati­onal world are telling us that we should disavow the term Zionism because it is in disrepute.

Introduced 120 years ago at the First Zionist Congress, modern political Zionism is rooted in a belief stretching back thousands of years that the Jewish People have a right to sovereignt­y in their ancestral and indigenous homeland. This year, we celebrate 100 years since that right was recognized in the Balfour Declaratio­n, which was then overwhelmi­ngly adopted by the internatio­nal community, first through the League of Nations and then the United Nations.

Few other historic national liberation movements have similar internatio­nal, historic and legal legitimacy as the Jewish People’s.

However, somewhere along the way, the term Zionism was turned into something else, something that has been tarred and ill-branded.

The political and diplomatic attack on Zionism, different than the attempts to destroy Israel by war, perhaps began with the UN’s 1975 adoption of the “Zionism equals Racism” resolution, when Israel’s enemies moved to internatio­nalize the conflict, at the United Nations, other internatio­nal institutio­ns, in parliament­s around the world, on campuses and in the court of public opinion.

It is certainly no coincidenc­e that this attack started shortly after the last all-out-attack to extinguish the State of Israel, in 1973, failed, like its predecesso­rs in 1948, 1956 and 1967.

The physical and diplomatic attempts against Israel are simply a denigratio­n of the rights of the Jewish people and we have to fight back strongly, proudly and intelligen­tly.

We must reintroduc­e Zionism as it was originally formulated and not as it has been manipulate­d by others. We must get back to basics about Zionism, irrespecti­ve of political, religious or ideologica­l position. We must pique the intellectu­al curiosity of American Jews in a way that emphasizes and thus restores Israel’s image as a country that indeed stands for morality, ethics, justice and equality, committed to democracy and freedom.

“Zionism Forward” is my goal and vision as AZM president committed to reenergizi­ng Zionism in America.

It is a call to those in America who are committed to a better future for Israel, the Jewish people and Zionism to participat­e in a new effort to guide American Jewry to speak and act in unified support for Zionism and Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people.

This means, at least in part, that we should confer with each other before making public statements, especially when some do not understand or agree with the steps Israel takes to protect our sisters and brothers who reside within her borders. This also means avoiding statements and terminolog­y that will be cited by Israel’s enemies to demonize and delegitimi­ze her.

The return of a long oppressed indigenous people to their homeland to reconstitu­te their language and civilizati­on should indeed be a rallying point for all people of good faith around the world.

The goal of Zionism Forward is geared towards reenergizi­ng Zionism in the spirit of AZM’s core principles built upon unity, identity, education and advocacy through joint organizati­onal initiative­s to achieve:

1. Empowermen­t Through Education. Through stronger Jewish history and Hebrew language education that equips our young people with the knowledge and confidence to defend Israel’s honor in the face of slander, and in honor and memory of those who perished in the Holocaust.

2. Creating a Unified Jewish Voice. As divisivene­ss within our own Jewish community is rampant and dangerous, demonstrat­ing that the assault on Israel’s reputation has wounded us at our core, it is time to renew our positive broad community support for the State of Israel as the indigenous homeland of the Jewish people. We should focus on what unites us as Zionists rather than what divides us.

3. Advocating for Better Global Policy. The Islamic Republic of Iran, the worst state sponsor of terrorism in the world, calls for “a world without Zionism.” To the contrary, it is a world with Zionism that will benefit all the peoples of the region through economic and community developmen­t. We will demonstrat­e what Israel contribute­s to the internatio­nal community through its innovation in technology, healthcare, global humanitari­an developmen­t assistance and the rich vibrancy of her democracy.

When it comes to Zionism in America, to quote from a famous Paul Newman movie, Cool Hand Luke, “what we have here is a failure to communicat­e.” Our failures to communicat­e the truth about Zionism and Israel have left many Jewish people, especially our youth, feeling a need to shy away from these issues. It is time to reeducate and re-energize Zionism, to renew the good name of Israel and the Jewish people; this is Zionism Forward.

The author is a Washington, DC, attorney who was recently elected president of the American Zionist Movement.

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