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Where antisemiti­sm and anti-Zionism collide

- Michelle Goldberg is a journalist, author, and an oped columnist for The New York Times.

Every time I write, as I did last week, that I don’t think anti-Zionism is necessaril­y antisemiti­c, I get emails from Jewish readers that are angry, disappoint­ed or sometimes simply baffled. “Israel is the political entity through which the Jewish people exercises its natural right of self-determinat­ion and control over its own fate,” said one typical recent message. “How is singling out the Jewish people to deprive it of those rights not antisemiti­c?”

To answer this question fully would take more than a single column, but I want to make a brief attempt, because lately, in reaction to the grotesque suffering in the Gaza Strip, two ugly, intertwine­d trends are gaining steam. Well-intentione­d opponents of Jewish nationalis­m, some Jewish themselves, are being falsely smeared as antisemite­s. At the same time, antisemiti­sm is cloaking itself in anti-Zionism, with people spitting out the word “Zionist” when they really seem to mean “Jew.”

My own views on Zionism are ambivalent and conflicted. I’m a secular Jew with no particular attachment to Israel, spiritual or otherwise, though I also recognize that my ability to hold myself aloof from the country is enabled by the great privilege of an American passport. I think the idea of Israel as a colonial entity that will eventually be dismantled is a malign fantasy — most Jewish Israelis don’t have anywhere else to go — but I also recognize that the country’s creation can’t be disentangl­ed from the dispossess­ion of the Palestinia­ns.

Yes, as Zionists often point out, Palestinia­ns were far from the only people made refugees as maps were redrawn in the wake of World War

II. After Israel’s creation, more Jews were uprooted from Arab and Muslim countries than Arabs expelled from their homes in historic Palestine. It is not Israel’s fault that some of its neighbors kept displaced Palestinia­ns as stateless refugees rather than integratin­g them as full citizens. But I could never blame a Palestinia­n for thinking it obscenely unfair that I have a right to “return” to a country to which I have no family connection, while Palestinia­ns who lost their homes in 1948 do not.

I also understand why many Jews, the survivors of millennium­s of attempts to destroy them as a people, put their need for national self-determinat­ion above other, competing values. But one needn’t hate Jews to make a different moral calculus.

Right now, the relentless growth of settlement­s in the West Bank has created a one-state reality on the ground, although one in which people have very different rights and freedoms depending on their ethnic and religious background. There are people of goodwill who think the way out of this insupporta­ble situation lies in the fight for equal democratic rights in a single state for everyone living in the territory between the Jordan River and the Mediterran­ean Sea. “It is time for liberal Zionists to abandon the goal of Jewish-Palestinia­n separation and embrace the goal of Jewish-Palestinia­n equality,” Peter Beinart wrote in Jewish Currents in 2020.

The idea of a binational state appeals to my belief in democracy and multicultu­ralism, but in practice I fear it would be a disaster that would devolve into a horrific civil war. (It’s hard enough for the Flemish and Walloons to manage sharing a state in Belgium.) Yet as long as the status quo is intolerabl­e and the two-state solution favored by liberals like me seems far out of reach, it is understand­able that idealists will grope for an alternativ­e.

That said, I can’t fault Jews who see, in the mounting demonizati­on of Zionism, the replay of an old and terrifying story. After all, anti-Zionism isn’t always antisemiti­sm, but sometimes it is. And right now, some opponents of Israel seem to be trying to prove that the mainstream Jewish community is right to conflate them . ...

After years of arguing that the intention behind offensive words matters less than their effects, leftists should be equipped to bring a bit of subtlety and sensitivit­y to discussion­s of Jews and Zionism. Refusing to do so does nothing to help Palestinia­ns. It just convinces too many Jews that cries for Palestinia­n liberation are a threat.

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Michelle Goldberg

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