Lecture: Social and Ethnic Divisions Among Israeli Jews and the Politics of Palestine

On June 13th about 35 folks gathered at the Friends Meeting Hall in Duluth to hear a presentation by anthropologist and feminist Dr. Smadar Lavie, Hubert H. Humphrey Distinguished Visiting Professor of the Islamic World and the Middle East at Macalester College. To do complete justice to all she covered would be impossible, so let me focus on just two major aspects that are likely to be new to many readers–the nature of the Mizrahim population and why it has pushed Israeli politics to the right.

The Mizrahim are Jews whose origins are North Africa and the former Ottoman Empire margins of Europe. They make up 63% of the Jewish population of Israel and 50% of the total population of the state of Israel when one includes the Palestinian citizens of Israel. Though the majority, they are generally socially and economically at the bottom of Israeli society. On the other hand, the Ashkenazi Jews from Eastern and Central Europe, though numerically a minority, form the economic and cultural elite of Israeli society and represent the familiar European face of Israel typically seen by the rest of the world.

From 1948 till the present, the Mizrahim have been settled in the border zones of Israel by the politically powerful Ashkenazim. The Ashkenazi right wing’s policy of settlements has been a boon to the economically disadvantaged Mizrahim, who have received good affordable housing and other benefits in return for their political allegiance to the right. Thus, they have been the major contributing factor to the rightward drift of electoral politics. According to Lavie, the Mizrahim are considered “true Israelis” only when they become cannon fodder on border zones or pawns to replace expelled Palestinians in order to make impossible their legitimate right of return.

The ultimate irony is that, being of Middle Eastern origin and economically disadvantaged, the Mizrahim have the greatest potential for dialogue–if not coalition–with the Palestinian citizens of Israel and Palestinians at large. It’s their manipulation by the elite Ashkenazi minority that prevents this. Netanyahu’s current government is only the latest manifestation. In Lavie’s view, putting the Mizrahim in settlements is not unlike the movement of poor landless Scots to Northern Ireland by the British.

Much more could be said and sadly I have not at all covered the complexity of how feminism within the various groups figures in the equation. Mizrahi feminism is inspired by US feminists of color while Ashkenazi establishment feminism reflects the limitations of their class status.

Given the circumstances, Professor Lavie’s conclusion is that the clock is ticking on a just solution to the problem of Palestine. For her, a just and lasting peace would only be accomplished through a secular one-state solution because only such a state could encompass all the social class, religious and cultural variation within Palestinian, Mizrahi and Ashkenazi cultures.

In any case, no solution is possible without an understanding of the social class, economic and power disparities between Ashkenazi and Mizrahi Jews. Potential US or European intermediaries have to speak directly to the concerns of the Mizrahim and not just talk to their Ashkenazi manipulators.

T o say the least, the challenges are daunting.

Bob Kosuth, Duluth MN BBC, rkosuth [at] hotmail.com

Related Links

  • Sacrificing Gaza to revive Israel’s Labor party, Smadar Lavie, The Electronic Intifada, 19 January 2009
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    Film Screenings in Northfield

    Three films about Palestine will be shown during July and August in Northfield.

    The dates are:

    July 9 – Anna Baltzer’s Life in Occupied Palestine
    July 30 – Occupation 101
    Aug 20 – Peace, Propaganda, and the Promised Land

    Each of these dates are Thursdays, and the movie will begin at 7 p.m. The location is the Just Foods Co-op, 516 Water Street, in downtown Northfield.

    The films are being presented by Northfielders for Justice in Palestine/Israel. For more information, call (507) 645-7660.

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    Shareholders protest at Caterpillar’s Chicago meeting

    US Campaign to End the Occupation/June 16th, 2009—Last week, Caterpillar’s board members faced shareholders, including our allies from Jewish Voice for Peace, the Sisters of Loretto, and Chicagoans Against Apartheid in Palestine. The US Campaign’s National Organizer attended and spoke at the meeting as well, on behalf of shareholder Boston Coalition for Palestinian Rights.

    Inside the meeting Matan Cohen of Hampshire College Students for Justice in Palestine spoke on behalf of a resolution that would require Caterpillar to report on foreign sales of weapons related products.

    During the Q&A portion of the meeting our allies repeatedly demanded to know why CAT continues to risk legal action and alienate investors by providing Israel with the machinery of occupation and apartheid. Repeatedly, Caterpillar CEO, Jim Owens, told those in attendance that if they don’t like the way Caterpillar operates, then they don’t have to hold on to their stock.

    Repeatedly, Caterpillar CEO, Jim Owens, told those in attendance that if they don’t like the way Caterpillar operates, then they don’t have to hold on to their stock.

    At the end of the meeting, one shareholder who was previously unfamiliar with Caterpillar’s complicity in occupation and apartheid confided that his retirement had already been hit hard by corporations which have made bad P.R. moves or lost law suits. On his way out of the meeting, he stated that he would follow Jim Owens’ advice to divest of Caterpillar stock. We are thrilled by the success of Jim Owens’ endorsement of divestment!

    We got our message to people outside of the meeting through the media and public protest, including stories in the Wall Street Journal, Reuters, Forbes, Democracy Now!, and several local radio stations.

    caterpillar-ceoUnfortunately, after a lengthy exchange, the Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times both rejected our online ad, which we wanted to place on their websites during the CAT shareholder meeting. But we won’t accept this censorship. We’re going to use contributions from supporters like you to place this ad on blogs and Facebook, educating even more people about our campaign.

    Each $50 that you donate will inform 80 targeted Facebook users about our campaign. Every $200 will ensure that our blog ad educates 4500 new people about our effective boycott and divestment campaign, which sheds light on Caterpillar’s complicity in human rights and international law violations in Israel/Palestine.

    US Campaign supporters and member groups rallied outside of the shareholder meeting, educating passersby and the media about CAT’s culpability for war crimes in Palestine/Israel. The Church of England and Hampshire College divesting from Caterpillar aren’t the only recent victories for the global boycott and divestment movement. French company Violia recently bowed to human rights advocates and withdrew from the Jerusalem Light Rail project that would connect West Bank settlements to West Jerusalem via commuter rail. Similar European campaigns forced international financier Dexia to end its support for Israeli settlements on Occupied Palestinian Territory.

    STOP CATERKILLER.

    caterpillar-c-of-eOur blog ads will spread this same message that corporations cannot profit from war crimes. Help us educate savvy investors about the spreading divestment movement targeting Caterpillar through our blog ads. Our Facebook ads will reach students at campuses to be visited on our October Campus Boycott & Divestment Organizing Tour. Help us use Caterpillar’s own words to hold them accountable, make a tax deductible donation to our online advertising campaign.

    You can also continue this campaign’s momentum by clicking below to order a local campaign kit to organize Caterpillar boycott and divestment in your community.

    FOR MORE INFORMATION

    http://endtheoccupation.org/article.php?id=2164

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    Education Action at St Cloud U!

    Students at St Cloud State University organized a funeral procession and education event to highlight the disparity of Palestinians to Israelis killed during Israel’s month-long bombardment of the Gaza Strip in December 08 and January 09. Created on the quad outside the student union, the exhibit consisted of 100 bodies representing Palestinians killed and 1 body representing Israelis killed. This exhibit is available for travel to other MN communities educating on Palestine.

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    Protesting Batsheva Dance Company’s MN performance

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    The University of Minnesota brought the Batsheva Dance Company of Tel Aviv to Minneapolis for one performance on February 18th, 2009. This is a violation of the 2004 Palestinian call to “comprehensively and consistently boycott all Israeli academic and cultural institutions”and the 2005 call of 171 Palestinian civil society organizations for broad boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel.

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    Above: One of the “Blood on your hands” flyers hung in the toilet of Northrop Auditorium during Batsheva’s performance.

    This dance company is funded by the Israeli government and is considered a “leading ambassador” of the Israeli government, by the Israeli government.

    Several of Batsheva’s members are serving Israeli reservist soldiers. An atypically high number of reservist units in the Israeli army were deployed in the Gaza Strip–where an indisputable slaughter was carried out, with terrible stories published even in mainstream sources.

    Bringing Israel government-funded, dancing Israeli soldiers to town after the gratuitous massacre of innocents in Gaza is utterly unacceptable.

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    It was amazing to see people get excited about the protest, not just in Minnesota, but around the country at other protests. There was definitely a really good feeling of coming together to try a new angle. And it worked. It was no small thing to see 60 people at an outside protest of an Israeli dance company in 10°F/-12°C Minnesotan winter weather. It was obvious that Gaza had been the final straw for a lot of people.

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    Star Tribune: Critics urge Sen. Klobuchar to condemn Israeli assault

    She urged aid for Gazans and said, “We need to work toward a cease-fire.” Coleman and McCollum faced small protests. In a tense conference room, protesters urged Klobuchar to condemn Israel for the bombings of Gaza, which she refused to do.

    By RANDY FURST

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    The meeting, which was polite but tense, culminated a day of demonstrations by protest groups that picketed the building on Washington Avenue South in Minneapolis where Klobuchar has her office. Earlier in the day, about 70 people held a rally in the building’s lobby.

    A small protest was held outside Sen. Norm Coleman’s Twin Cities office, said Mary Beaudoin, director of Women Against Military Madness, who was there. And two or three protesters went to U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum’s office and met with her district manager, McCollum spokeswoman Cleve Mesidor said.

    In the meeting at Klobuchar’s office, she listened intently as one activist after another implored her to oppose the Israeli bombings.

    Among those at the meeting were members of a Jewish group that opposes Israel’s military policies toward the Palestinians, the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, and several peace groups, including Women Against Military Madness and the Anti-War Committee.

    One activist placed a large color photo in front of Klobuchar of a man carrying what appeared to be a child who had been badly mutilated by the bombings.

    Klobuchar admitted to being affected by the photo. She said she had sympathy for people on both sides of the conflict and, as a result of the discussion, would push for humanitarian aid.

    Pressed by the protesters to denounce Israel, Klobuchar said, “I am not condemning what Israel has done as you have asked me to do.” But, she added, “We need to work toward a cease-fire and I would like to see a cease-fire in place.”

    LeRoy Coleman, communications director for Sen. Coleman, said, “While Senator Coleman strongly believes that Israel has a right to defend itself, he calls on both sides to quickly work towards a lasting cease-fire. However, a cease-fire cannot just be a short term opportunity for Hamas to regroup.”

    During the afternoon rally, Humaira Afzal, communications director of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations, appealed to Minnesota’s congressional delegation to mount pressure to end the conflict, saying the bombing of Gaza will fuel hatred of America and American interests “and will be used by extremists to recruit more individuals and justify their attacks.

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    Divest for Justice in Palestine!