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Every year
I marvel again at the genius of this ceremony. It unites the
whole family, and everyone - from the venerable grandfather
to the smallest child - has a role in it. It engages all the
senses: seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting and touching. The
simplistic text of the Haggadah, the book which is read
aloud, the symbolic food, the four glasses of wine, the
singing together, the exact repetition of every part every
year - all these imprint on the consciousness of a child
from the earliest age an ineradicable memory that they will
carry with them to the grave, be they religious or not. They
will never forget the security and warmth of the large
family around the Seder table, and even in old age they will
recall it with nostalgia. A cynic might see it as a perfect
example of brain-washing.
Compared to the power of this
myth, does it really matter
that the Exodus from Egypt never took place?
Thousands of Egyptian documents deciphered in recent years
leave no room for doubt: the exodus of masses of people, as
described in the Bible, or anything remotely like it, just
never happened. These documents, which cover in the finest
detail every period and every part of Canaan during this
epoch prove beyond any doubt that there was no "Conquest of
Canaan" and no kingdom of
David and Solomon. For a hundred
years, Zionist archeologists have devoted tireless efforts
to finding even a single piece of evidence to support the
Biblical narrative, all to no avail.
But this is quite
unimportant. In the
competition between "objective" history and myth, the myth
that suits our needs will always win, and
win big. It is not important what was, the important thing
is what fires our imagination. That is what guides our steps
to this day.
THE BIBLICAL narrative
connects up with documented history only around the year 853
BC, when ten thousand soldiers and 2000 battle chariots of
Ahab, King of Israel, took part in a grand coalition of the
kingdoms of Syria and Palestine against
Assyria. The battle, which was
documented by the Assyrians, was fought at Qarqar in Syria.
The Assyrian army was delayed, if not defeated.
(A personal note: I am not a
historian, but for many years I have reflected on our
history and tried to draw some logical conclusions, which
are outlined here. Most of them are supported by the
emerging consensus of independent scholars around the
world.)
The kingdoms of Israel and
Judea, which occupied a part of the land between the
Mediterranean and the Jordan, were no different from the
other kingdoms of the region. Even according to the Bible
itself, the people sacrificed to various pagan deities "on
every high hill and under every green tree". (1 Kings
14:23).
Jerusalem was a tiny market
town, much too small and much too poor for any of the things
described in the Bible to have taken place there at the
time. In the books of the Bible that deal with that period,
the appellation "Jew" (Yehudi in Hebrew) hardly appears at
all, and where it does, it clearly refers simply to an
inhabitant of Judea, the area around Jerusalem. When an
Assyrian general was asked "talk not with us in the Jewish
language" (2 Kings 18:26), what was meant was the local
Judean dialect of Hebrew.
The "Jewish" revolution took
place in the Babylonian exile (587-539 BC). After the
Babylonian conquest of Jerusalem, members of the Judean
elite were exiled to Babylon, where they came into contact
with the important cultural streams of the time. The result
was one of the great creations of mankind: the Jewish
religion.
After some fifty years, some
of the exiles returned to Palestine. They brought with them
the name "Jews", the appellation of a
religious-ideological-political movement, much like the
"Zionists" of our time. Therefore, one can speak of
"Judaism" and "Jews" - in the sense accepted now - only
from then on. During the following 500 years, the Jewish
monotheistic religion gradually crystallized. Also at this
time, the most outstanding literary creation of all times,
the Hebrew Bible, was composed. The writers of the Bible did
not intend to write "history", in the sense understood
today, but rather a religious, edifying and instructive
text.
TO UNDERSTAND the birth and
development of Judaism, one must consider two important
facts:
(a) Right from the
beginning, when the "Jews" came back from Babylon, the
Jewish community in this country was a minority among the
Jews as a whole. Throughout the period of the "Second
Temple", the majority of Jews lived abroad, in the areas
known today as Iraq, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Cyprus, Italy,
Spain and so on.
The Jews of that period were
not a "nation" - the very idea did not yet exist. The Jews
of Palestine did not participate in the rebellions of the
Jews in Libya and Cyprus against the Romans, and the Jews
abroad took no part in the Great Revolt of the Jews in this
country. The Maccabees were not national but religious
fighters, rather like the Taliban in our days, and killed
many more "Hellenized" Jews than enemy soldiers.
(b) This Jewish Diaspora was
not a unique phenomenon. On the contrary, at that time it
was the norm. Notions like "nation" belong to the modern
world. During the period of the "Second Temple" and later on, the
dominant social-political pattern was a religious-political
community enjoying self-government and not attached to any
specific territory. A Jew in Alexandria could marry a Jewess
in Damascus, but not the Christian woman across the street.
She, on her part, could marry a Christian man in Rome, but
not her Hellenist neighbor. The Jewish Diaspora was only one
of many such communities.
This social pattern was
preserved in the Byzantine Empire, was later taken over by
the Ottoman Empire and can still be detected in Israeli law.
Today, a Muslim Israeli cannot marry a Jewish Israeli, a
Druze cannot marry a Christian (at least not in
Israel itself). The Druze, by the way, are a surviving example of such a
Diaspora.
The Jews were unique only in
one respect: after the European peoples gradually moved on
to new forms of organization, and in the end turned
themselves into nations, the Jews remained what they were -
a communal-religious Diaspora.
THE PUZZLE that is occupying the historians is: how
did a tiny community of Babylonian exiles turn into a
worldwide Diaspora of millions? There is only one convincing
answer to that: conversion.
The modern Jewish myth has it that
almost all the Jews are descendents of the Jewish community
that lived in Palestine 2000 years ago and was driven out by
the Romans in the year 70 AD. That is, of course, baseless.
The "Expulsion from the Country" is a religious myth: God
was angry with the Jews because of their sins and exiled
them from His country. But the Romans were
not in the habit of moving populations, and there is clear
evidence that a great part of the Jewish population in the
country remained here after the Zealots' Revolt and after
the Bar-Kochba uprising, and that most Jews lived outside
the country long before that.
At the time of the Second Temple and later, Judaism was a
proselytizing religion par excellence. During the
first centuries AD it fiercely competed with Christianity.
While the slaves and other downtrodden people in the Roman
Empire were more attracted to the Christian religion, with
its moving human story, the upper classes tended towards
Judaism. Throughout the Empire, large numbers adopted the
Jewish religion.
Especially puzzling is the
origin of "Ashkenazi" Jewry. At the end of the first
millennium there appeared in Europe - apparently out of
nowhere - a very large Jewish population, the existence of
which was not documented before. Where did they come from?
There are several theories
about that. The conventional one holds that the Jews
wandered from the Mediterranean area to the North, settled
in the Rhein valley and fled from the pogroms there to
Poland, at the time the most liberal country in Europe. From
there they dispersed into Russia and Ukraine, taking with
them a German dialect that became Yiddish. The Tel Aviv
University scholar Paul Wexler asserts, on the other hand,
that Yiddish was originally not a German but a Slavic
language. A large part of Ashkenazi Jewry, according to this
theory, are descendents of the Sorbs, a Slavic people that
lived in Eastern Germany and was forced to abandon its
ancient pagan creed. Many of them preferred to become Jews,
rather than Christians.
In a recent book with the
provocative title "When and How the Jewish People was
Invented", the Israeli historian Shlomo Sand argues - like
Arthur Koestler and others before him - that most of the
Ashkenazi Jews are really descended from the Khazars, a
Turkic people that created a large kingdom in what is now
South Russia more than a thousand years ago. The Khazar king
converted to Judaism, and according to this theory the Jews
of Eastern Europe are mostly the descendants of Khazar
converts. Sand also believes that most Sephardi Jews are
descendents of Arab and Berber tribes in North Africa that
had converted to Judaism instead of becoming Muslims, and
had joined in the Muslim conquest of Spain.
When Jewry stopped
proselytizing, the Jews became a closed, ethnic-religious
community (as the Talmud says: "Converts are hard for Israel
like a skin disease").
But the historical truth,
whatever it is, is not so important. Myth is stronger than
truth, and it says that the Jews were expelled from this
land. This is an essential layer in modern Jewish
consciousness, and no academic research can shake it.
IN THE LAST 300 years,
Europe turned "national". The modern nation replaced earlier
social patterns, such as the city state, feudal society and
the dynastic empire. The national idea carried all before
it, including history. Each of these new nations shaped an
"imagined history" for itself. In other words, every nation
rearranged ancient myths and historical facts in order to
shape a "national history" which proclaims its importance
and serves as a unifying glue.
The Jewish Diaspora, which -
as mentioned before - was "normal" 2000 years ago, became
"abnormal" and exceptional. This intensified the Jew-hatred
that was anyhow rampant in Christian Europe. Since all the
national movements in Europe were - more or less -
anti-Semitic, many Jews felt that they were left "outside",
that they had no place in the new Europe. Some of them
decided that the Jews must conform to the new Zeitgeist
and turn the Jewish community into a Jewish "nation".
For that purpose, it was
necessary to reshape and reinvent Jewish history and turn it
from the annals of a religious-ethnic Diaspora into the epic
story of a "nation". The job was undertaken by a man who can
be considered the godfather of the Zionist idea: Heinrich
Graetz, a German Jew who was influenced by German
nationalism and created a "national" Jewish history. His
ideas have shaped Jewish consciousness to this day.
Graetz accepted the Bible as if it were a history
book, collected all the myths and created a complete and
continuous historical narrative: the period of the Fathers,
the Exodus from Egypt, the Conquest of Canaan, the "First Temple", the Babylonian Exile,
the "Second Temple", the
Destruction of the Temple and the Exile. That is the history
that all of us learned in school, the foundation upon which
Zionism was built.
ZIONISM REPRESENTED a
revolution in many fields, but its mental revolution was
incomplete. Its ideology turned the Jewish community into a
Jewish people, and the Jewish people into a Jewish nation -
but never clearly defined the differences. In order to win
over the religiously inclined Jewish masses in Eastern
Europe, it made a compromise with religion and mixed all
terms into a one big cocktail - the religion is also a
nation, the nation is also a religion, and later asserted
that Israel is a "Jewish state" that belongs to its
(Jewish?) citizens but also to the "Jewish people"
throughout the world. Official Israeli doctrine has it that
Israel is the "Jewish nation state", but Israeli law
narrowly defines a "Jew" as only a person who belongs to the
Jewish religion.
Herzl and his successors were
not courageous enough to do what Mustafa Kemal Ataturk did
when he founded modern Turkey: he fixed a clear and sharp
border between the Turkish nation and Islamic religion and
imposed a complete separation between the two. With us,
everything remained one big salad. This has many
implications in real life.
For example: if Israel is the
state of the "Jewish people", as one of our laws says - what
is there to stop an Israeli Jew from joining the Jewish
community in California or Australia? Small wonder that
there is almost no leader in Israel whose children have not
emigrated.
WHY IS IT so important to
differentiate between the Israeli nation and the Jewish
Diaspora? One of the reasons is that a nation has a
different attitude to itself and towards others than a
religious-ethnic Diaspora.
Similarly: different animals
have different ways of reacting to danger. A gazelle flees
when it senses danger, and nature has equipped it with the
necessary instincts and physical capabilities. A lion, on
the other side, sticks to its territory and defends it
against intruders. Both methods are successful, otherwise
there would be no gazelles or no lions in the world.
The Jewish Diaspora developed
an efficient response that was well suited to its situation:
when Jews sensed danger, they fled and dispersed. That's why
the Jewish Diaspora managed to survive innumerable
persecutions, and even the Holocaust itself. When the
Zionists decided to become a nation - and indeed did create
a real nation in this country - they adopted the national
response: to defend themselves and attack the sources of
danger. One cannot, therefore, be a Diaspora and a nation, a
gazelle and a lion, at the same time.
If we, the Israelis, want to
consolidate our nation, we have to free ourselves from the
myths that belong to another form of existence and re-define
our national history. The story
about the exodus from Egypt is good as a myth and an
allegory - it celebrates the value of freedom - but we must
recognize the difference between myth and history, between
religion and nation, between a Diaspora and a state, in
order to find our place in the region in which we live and
develop a normal relationship with the neighboring peoples.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008
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