Mail & Guardian

What it is to be a Jewish anti-zionist

The national liberation ideology of Zionism is not a problem — the colonist, racist premise of exclusivit­y and the eradicatio­n or subjugatio­n of the Palestinia­ns is

- Nigel Gibson

Igrew up in England in the 1960s. My mother was born in London’s East End, a Jewish ghetto at the time; she was four when the new mass anti-semitic party, the British Union Fascists, organised a march to intimidate East End Jews in Whitechape­l in 1936.

Allied with socialists and communists, the Jewish anti-fascists took the lead and beat back the Fascists in the battle of Cable Street.

After the Jewish war veterans returning to the East End, saw that the “enemy had not gone away”, they created a now celebrated undergroun­d organisati­on to stop the Fascists meeting.

Racism and anti-semitism are at the core of British civilisati­on. The national hero, Winston Churchill, had little disagreeme­nt with Mussolini or with Hitler’s anti-semitism.

As a kid, I knew nothing of the expulsion of Jews from England in the 13th century nor the forced conversion of Jews in Spain even before the brutal Spanish Inquisitio­n. All that informatio­n, including the systematic anti-semitism and pogroms in Russia, would come later.

I didn’t have a particular­ly religious upbringing. My father converted to marry my mother and some family objected to her marrying an outsider.

While my grandmothe­r’s family came from the Pale of Settlement, she was born in London and had no connection to the old country. My grandfathe­r had left Poland (then Russia) when he was 13, and then, remarkably, was interned by the British for a few months in 1940 as an alien. After the war, distant relatives visited to tell him what had happened to his family, almost all having been exterminat­ed.

Being Jewish was an experience for me rather than an identity. At a young age I met people visiting my grandparen­ts who had numbers tattooed on their arms. They explained to me how they got there. This had a lasting effect. At the same time, at six or so, I came home to tell my mother the parent of a friend had asked what religion I was and I told them I was Jewish. My mother reacted sharply, “Don’t tell anyone.” I took that seriously.

These two events had a profound effect on me and my ambiguous identity. I would silently pass.

My mother was an automatic Zionist. I remember her saying in 1973 Israel was surrounded by hostile states and had to be supported. I knew little about geopolitic­s. I had escaped Zionist indoctrina­tion, although I did not escape normalised anti-semitic tropes and threats of violence.

That violence became more threatenin­g with the rise in fascism in the midst of the economic crisis in the 1970s that facilitate­d the Anti-nazi League and Rock against Racism.

Youth on the street, including me, were proudly wearing Antinazi League badges as anti-fascism became a new mass movement, embracing reggae and punk, putting on free Rock against Racism concerts while actively opposing racism and fascism around the country.

At about the same time, after the 1976 Soweto Uprising against apartheid education, I became an anti-apartheid activist. I remember being disgusted by white South Africans speaking in similar dehumanisi­ng racist terms Zionists use today to speak about Palestinia­ns, about the necessity of apartheid and violence to control black people.

The Internatio­nal Court of Justice case brought by South Africa comes out of that anti-apartheid struggle. Although at home South Africa is increasing­ly neoliberal, corrupt and reactionar­y, its willingnes­s to accuse Israel of genocide is underscore­d by a Constituti­on born out of the struggle that was also reflected in the commitment to end apartheid, which included the activism of young antiaparth­eid South African Jews who also identified with the Palestinia­n liberation struggle.

This historical connection to genocide was not lost on Namibia’s first lady, Monica Geingos, who spoke out against Germany’s defence of Israel in South Africa’s charge of genocide.

What she said was instructiv­e: “The absurdity of Germany, on 12 January 2024, rejecting genocide charges against Israel and warning about the ‘political instrument­alisation of the charge’ is not lost on us,” reminding us of the 1904 Herero-nama genocide by the German military, which killed 100000 Herero and 10000 Nama in then German South West Africa.

This connection between genocide and colonialis­m continues to be very real. As the Martiniqua­n poet Aimé Césaire put it in his 1950 Discourse on Colonialis­m, Europe practised colonial genocide in Africa before carrying out the genocide of Jews in the Holocaust in the heart of Europe.

It raises a question — how can any genocided people be unmoved by the death and starvation of others or experience a separation from the decomposin­g bodies under the rubble and not wish them a proper burial?

As I became an anti-apartheid activist, I found out about the reality of life in the remains of Britain’s first colony. The north of Ireland was under the rule of the British army, the police and the special courts of internment, not unlike the administra­tive detention of Palestinia­ns in Israeli jails, which allows for arrest, on secret evidence, and indefinite imprisonme­nt without a charge or a trial.

Ididn’t particular­ly like the politics of the Irish Republican Army or the ANC, and was much more interested in Steve Biko and the Black Consciousn­ess Movement, which led me to Frantz Fanon.

By 1980, I began working with a group of Marxist-humanists around Raya Dunayevska­ya, Trotsky’s former Russian secretary and founder of Marxist humanism in the US. Dunayevska­ya was a Ukrainian Jew who had left Russia with her family after surviving the 1919 pogrom. And in the US, I became introduced to the Freedom Seders’ emphasis on the struggle for human liberation.

The Sabra and Shatila massacre in 1982 focused my attention on Palestine. At the time, Dunayevska­ya pointed out she had met German refugees in 1947 “who had originally escaped to Palestine only to find it impossible to work for a new society of Arabs and Jews. The main ‘obstacle’ was Irgun headed by [Menachem] Begin.” This great contradict­ion was therefore “already present in the fight for a Jewish homeland”.

This dialectic was not unique to Israel but there, by 1982, it had “become a full-fledged imperialis­t state whose birth included terrorism, the presence of Irgun [a Zionist rightwing undergroun­d movement] and of course others”. Begin was described by the British government at the time as the “leader of the notorious terrorist organisati­on” and was one of many former “terrorists” involved in mass murders of Palestinia­ns. Albert Einstein called Begin a fascist.

After the Nakba of 1948, Irgun was incorporat­ed into the Israel Defence Forces and its political leaders became foundation­al to the settler state. The betrayal of the principle of national self-determinat­ion, of not oppressing another state or people was there right from Israel’s birth when it expelled Palestinia­ns. With its “empty talk in 1982 of the PLO [Palestine Liberation Organisati­on] as ‘terrorists’” Begin and Ariel Sharon’s Israel was committing atrocities and invoking the Nazi Holocaust for reactionar­y and genocidal purposes. The 1982 massacres in Lebanon were connected with its articulate­d Zionist objective of a so-called “Eretz Israel” as the Bible expressed it (“a realm extending from the Nile to the Euphrates”).

The problem with Zionism, argues the philosophe­r Zahi Zalloua (who fled Lebanon with his Palestinia­n-born parents in 1976), was not that it was a national liberation ideology for many Jews fleeing the reality of anti-semitism in Europe, but its chauvinist­ic, colonist and racist “premise that one’s attachment must be based on exclusivit­y, on the eradicatio­n and/or subjugatio­n” of the Palestinia­n population.

Let’s not forget South Africa was, at the same time, rigorously supported by the US and Britain as well as Israel. Begin was chair of the Israelsout­h Africa Friendship League, which helped give legitimacy to South Africa’s nominal Bantustans and homelands that were not recognised by other states.

Britain and the US would continue to support apartheid South Africa, making sure a serious reckoning with colonialis­m and apartheid would not take place. (But let’s not forget activists pointed out the map of Palestine proposed by the Oslo accords looked very much like apartheid Bantustans).

While Israel supported apartheid, the revolt in South Africa continued and the anti-apartheid movement became internatio­nal as students around the world demanded their institutio­ns divest from apartheid.

Such calls are developing again bolstered by a new generation of Palestine activists, among them antizionis­t Jews willing to stand against Israel, who are also committed to think about ways to live together in historic Palestine where everyone is free from the river to the sea.

This article stems from discussion­s at Emerson College in the US about being anti-zionist and Jewish. Nigel Gibson is a professor in the Marlboro Institute for Liberal Arts and Interdisci­plinary studies at Emerson College. He is the author of Fanonian Practices in South Africa (UKZN) and with Roberto Beneduce, Frantz Fanon, Psychiatry and Politics (Wits UP). His book Frantz Fanon: Combat Breathing will be published later this year with Wits UP.

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 ?? Photos: Chanania Herman/ Getty Images & Fox Photos/hulton Archive/getty Images ?? History: Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin (centre above) listens to an explanatio­n by the agricultur­e minister, Ariel Sharon, (second from the left) about the developmen­t of the permanent settlement of Elon Moreh, east of the West Bank Palestinia­n town of Nablus, in 1981. Protesters (left) march in Brixton, London, during the Carnival Against Racism, organised by Rock Against Racism in 1978.
Photos: Chanania Herman/ Getty Images & Fox Photos/hulton Archive/getty Images History: Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin (centre above) listens to an explanatio­n by the agricultur­e minister, Ariel Sharon, (second from the left) about the developmen­t of the permanent settlement of Elon Moreh, east of the West Bank Palestinia­n town of Nablus, in 1981. Protesters (left) march in Brixton, London, during the Carnival Against Racism, organised by Rock Against Racism in 1978.

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