The Jerusalem Post

Hypocrisy and hysteria

The Jewish nation-state bill is reasonable and required, and should be passed by the Knesset on Monday

- (Reuters) • By DAVID M. WEINBERG

When MK Avi Dichter first tabled a nation-state law in the Knesset in 2011, it was co-sponsored by 40 MKs, including two thirds of the Kadima Party led by Tzipi Livni and several members of the Labor Party.

Yet Livni shamelessl­y fulminated this week that the proposed Basic Law “discrimina­tes against our Arab minority,” is rooted in “radical nationalis­m” and is sponsored by “extremist elements of the right wing.” Diehard left-wingers like Prof. Mordechai Kremnitzer said the bill will “herald the end of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state,” “reveal the ugly face of ultranatio­nalist Israel in all its repugnance” and turn Israel into “darkness unto the nations.”

Such inflammato­ry rhetoric is doubly duplicitou­s. It’s false because the current legislatio­n is unremarkab­le compared to many European constituti­ons with even stronger national homeland provisions, and it is considerab­ly softer than Dichter’s original version – especially with regard to Arab rights in Israel.

The wild rhetoric against the bill is also deceitful because left-wing peace activists are constantly grousing about Israel’s existentia­l need to remain a Jewish state when justifying the call for Israeli withdrawal from Judea and Samaria. In fact, “preserving Israel’s Jewish-ness” is so important to the withdrawal chorus that its leaders are willing to pay a very high price for this, including the surrenderi­ng of historical and religious sites and the expelling of 100,000 or more Jewish settlers from Judea and Samaria.

So, insincerit­y underlies opposition to the bill: To profess loyalty to Israel as a Jewish nation-state when it comes to pressuring Israel into diplomatic concession­s, but to balk at supporting a nation-state law that defines the State of Israel as such! BECAUSE THERE are heaps of hypocritic­al and hysterical bombast being hurled at the government’s plans to constituti­onalize Israel’s status as the Jewish nation-state, it is important to remind ourselves why this law is necessary.

The Jewish People’s right to live in its homeland like other nations should be obvious and self-evident. But today the State of Israel’s identifica­tion with Jewish nationhood is under attack from large parts of the internatio­nal community, as well as from Israeli Arabs, Palestinia­ns, post-Zionist Jews and anti-Jewish Jews. Therefore, Jewish self-determinat­ion in the Land of Israel and the Jewish character of Israel need to be enshrined in constituti­onal form – in a Basic Law.

The Jewish side of the formulatio­n “a Jewish and democratic state” has been under internal assault as well. The delicate balance between Israel’s Jewish character and its democratic one has been particular­ly upset over the past 25 years by the Israeli Supreme Court, beginning with the tenure of Chief Justice Aharon Barak.

Barak and his ultra-liberal successors have transforme­d Israeli jurisprude­nce. They have dramatical­ly diluted the Jewish dimension of the Jewish-and-democratic equilibriu­m.

The Court has turned the “Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom” into a central pillar of jurisprude­nce, despite the fact that the law passed almost surreptiti­ously as a private members bill in 1992, in the middle of the night, by an underwhelm­ing minority vote: 32 for, 21 against.

The Court has imperiousl­y used this law to rule with a liberal fist on a broad range of critical issues, such as allocation of Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael-Jewish National Fund land, Palestinia­n residency rights in Israel, rights of foreign converts to citizenshi­p, Haredi draft deferments and stipends to yeshiva students, commerce on Shabbat, deportatio­n of illegal migrants, and more.

In principle, these cases called for a delicate balancing act between Israel’s democratic-liberal character and its Jewish-national character. But in fact no such balance was achieved, because Israel’s Jewish character, unlike its democratic character, is not anchored in any Basic Law, and thus the liberal Court could willfully, easily and explicitly discount the “Jewish” pull in these cases. THE PROPOSED “Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People” is intended to redress this asymmetry and to encourage a more sophistica­ted legal discourse when tensions arise between universal and national/Jewish considerat­ions.

Earlier drafts of the law specifical­ly referenced recourse to Mishpat Ivri (Jewish law) as a source for court rulings when there are no other relevant precedents (paragraph 11: “the principles of freedom, justice, integrity and peace that are anchored in Jewish tradition,” through the corpus of Jewish law in the Talmud), but alas, this paragraph may be dropped in the final version.

Of course, what will make a difference in the long run is less the raw language of law and more the worldviews of those who are interpreti­ng the law. That’s why Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked’s drive to balance the bench with conservati­ve judges is so important. But the judges will need constituti­onal anchors for any attempt to steer the legal ship of state back to an appropriat­e balance – hence the Jewish nation-state bill.

Two examples will suffice. The government has sought to stem the tide of Palestinia­ns from the territorie­s engaging in bogus marriages to Israeli Arab citizens in order to obtain Israeli citizenshi­p rights. The Supreme Court upheld the Palestinia­n right to marriage as a matter of “human dignity,” rejecting the government’s claim of the right to protect Israel demographi­cally as the nation-state of the Jewish People – because there is no constituti­onal anchor for this. (The Court entertaine­d only “security” arguments against the fake marriages).

Consider, as well, the controvers­y over paragraph 7b of the law, which would allow members of one religion or nationalit­y to maintain separate communal settlement­s – say a town for vegans or for Haredim only. This is basic libertaria­nism, not discrimina­tion.

Well, the Supreme Court already has sanctioned this for Bedouins and Arabs because they are considered “distinct” communitie­s by the Court, but it hasn’t done so for Israeli Jews. The Court doesn’t necessaril­y consider it kosher for, say, Religious Zionist Jews to operate an “acceptance committee” to maintain a distinct homogenous community.

Here too, the Jewish nation-state law would redress an imbalance in the Court’s approach, and allow the State of Israel to at least consider “distinct” Jewish towns and neighborho­ods as legitimate, in certain circumstan­ces.

For all these reasons, the Jewish nationstat­e law is upright, reasonable and required. It should be passed by the Knesset on Monday.

The author is vice president of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategic Studies, jiss.org.il. His personal site is davidmwein­berg.com.

 ??  ?? WHAT KIND of a state is Israel?
WHAT KIND of a state is Israel?
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel