After World War II, it was discovered that the Nazis had murdered six million Jews, virtually all the
Jews of Europe. A tiny remnant remained and wanted to immigrate to Palestine, but the British would not allow it. The
Jews turned against the British and using guerilla warfare, forced them to relinquish their hold on Palestine, which was
partitioned by
UN General Assembly Resolution 181 into a Jewish state and an
Arab state. The Arabs did not accept the decision of the UN. Open warfare broke out. After the
Declaration of Independence of the State of Israel on May 15, 1948, neighboring Arab countries invaded the
new state. 600,000 Jews fought off the armies of four Arab states, backed by others who had declared war, but did not
send troops, in the
Israel War of
Independence. The creation of the state did not end the mission of Zionism, since
the new Jewish state was surrounded by enemies and since most Jews still did not live in Israel.
Achievements of Zionism - Zionism is the ideological success story of the twentieth century, overcoming seemingly insuperable obstacles to
realize an impossible dream.
The story of Zionism challenges the imagination. Zionism revived a dying people and
brought them back to their land. Zionism changed the image of the land and of the people.
Zionism in Israel - Zionism
brought water to a thirsty country. The Israel national water carrier pumps more water in a day than was consumed in
all of Palestine in 1948. Thanks to Zionism, glass and steel towers rose from
sand dunes; the forgotten and disease ridden armpit of the Ottoman Empire became the most technologically advanced
society in the
Middle East, where both Arabs and Jews enjoy a higher standard of living than anywhere else in the Middle East, except
the petroleum sheikhdoms, the highest literacy rates in the Middle East, and the lowest infant mortality. Zionism benefited Jews and Arabs. The average Israeli Arab enjoys a higher standard of
living than the average citizen of oil-rich Saudi Arabia.
Zionist Revolution -
Zionism was more than a political movement to obtain a homeland for the Jewish people. Zionism proposed, and carried
out, a revolution within Jewish thought and culture. Zionism gave a new life to the ancient Hebrew language.
Zionism changed the image of the Jewish people. Thanks to Zionism, merchants and
students and peddlers came out of the ghetto to become Jewish mechanics, Jewish farmers, Jewish engineers and Jewish
soldiers. Zionism made the "impossible" into reality. Zionism ended
"the longest occupation in history" - the occupation
of the land of Israel.
Benefits of Zionism - Zionism benefited Diaspora Jews as well as those living in Israel, Zionists and anti-Zionists, because it gave a
different meaning to the reviled word "Jew." Zionism helped
to save people and salvage the vestiges of the dignity and honor of the Jewish people in the Holocaust, bringing
boatloads of immigrants to Mandate Palestine in the "illegal" immigration, sending parachutists behind enemy lines to
save Jews and help the allied war effort, and leading ghetto revolts and partisan groups. By creating and defending the
state of Israel, Zionism ended the 2,000 year nightmare during which Jews were despised and persecuted by almost every
nation in the world, through no fault of our own.
Anti- Zionism
What is anti-Zionism?
The basic premise of Zionism is that Jews have the same rights to nationhood as any other people. Anti-Zionism is
based on the racist thesis that Jews are somehow different.
Zionism is opposed by a variety of groups:
Jewish anti-Zionism
Jewish
religious anti-Zionism arose out of fear that a secular ideology would supplant religion as the mainstay of Judaism
and a phobia of change.
Jews had "always" lived in ghettos in the Diaspora, and therefore Jews must continue the tradition, according to
religious anti-Zionists. Anti-Zionist ultra-orthodox Jews like the
Neturei Karta regularly meet with and praise
anti-Semites and Holocaust deniers like Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, agreeing with him that the
Holocaust was exaggerated, and lending "legitimacy" to
anti-Semitic myths. In practise, anti-Zionist Jews tend toward paradoxical
Anti-Semitism. Assimilationist Jews were afraid that Zionism, with its insistence on Jewish nationhood, would hinder acceptance
of Jews as equals in European nation-states. Marxist Jews and non-Jews opposed Zionism as a "reactionary"
nationalist tendency, but later, paradoxically, came to support every "national liberation movement" except Zionism.
Anti-Semitism, Marxism and anti-Zionism
The largest recruiting base for Anti-Zionism is simple racist
anti-Semitism. Neo-Marxist radicals denounce Zionism as racism, starting from the premise that Zionism was a colonialist
movement, and that all colonialism is racism. The notion that
Zionism is racism was probably spawned by the Soviet doctrine of "Zionology," an anti-Semitic ideological invention that
was aimed as much at bolstering state-sponsored anti-Semitism as it was intended to support the anti-Israel policies
of the Soviet government.
Arab anti-Zionism
Most Arabs oppose Zionism because they believe that the entire Middle East belongs to them, and they encouraged the
development of an opposing Palestinian (Arab) national identity. The creation of a Jewish national home and later, of the state of Israel, was increasingly opposed by the Arab states, and by
the Arabs of Palestine.
Muslim and Islamist anti-Zionism
Most Muslims oppose Zionism and the existence of Israel, for
different reasons. Some believe that all land that was once part of the Muslim territory (Dar al-Islam) must remain
Muslim. For that reason, those opposed to Zionism sometimes also want to retake al Andalus (Spain). Some
associate Zionism with the Christian Crusades, which conquered Palestine briefly and were viewed as an intrusion and an
insult. Many Muslim leaders are afraid of Western ideas of progress and human rights, such as equality for women and
homosexuals, that are transmitted through Zionism, as well as scientific doctrines that they view as pernicious such as
evolution.
Anti-Zionism today
Current attitudes to Zionism, and the current image of Zionism, are influenced by the Israeli occupation of lands
conquered in the Six day War,
including the Golan Heights and the West Bank (Judea and Samaria). Anti-Zionism often insists that Zionism is identical
with "Greater Israel" and "Likud" ideology, though Israel has repeatedly offered to withdraw from conquered territories
in return for peace, and most Zionists support a two state solution for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Some advocates
of the Arab cause insist that the conflict began in 1967. However, Arab opposition to Jewish presence and settlement in
Palestine began long before the creation of the Jewish State in 1948, and violent attacks on Israel are still initiated from
Gaza, though Israel, under Likud party leadership, withdrew from Gaza.
False claims of anti-Zionism
Contrary to the claims of anti-Zionists, Zionism did not seek to set up a "Jewish exclusivist" state in the land of
Israel, or plot to expel the Arabs of Palestine, nor was Zionism ever a militaristic, fascist type movement, though
there were militaristic Zionists. Zionism was a non-militaristic movement in its foundation, rather
pacifist in orientation. Early Zionists ignored the claims of Arab nationalism, because there was no Arab nationalism
evident in the land of Israel, and because of their own ignorance of actual conditions in the land. Beginning about 1905, Zionists took cognizance of Arab nationalism, but usually assumed
that Zionism and Arab nationalism could work together, and that Zionism could benefit the Arabs of Palestine. Theodor
Herzl's utopia,
Altneuland, described the future Jewish state as a
multipluralistic democracy where Jews and Arabs lived as equals.
The enemies of Zionism tend to identify "Zionism" with the worst and most
unfortunate acts of misguided extremists. They insist that Zionism is racism, and accuse Zionism of crimes ranging to
deliberately planning to expel the Arabs to instigating the French Revolution. They often paint all
Zionists as religious fanatics from Brooklyn intent on rebuilding the third temple, murdering or expelling the Arabs of
Palestine and creating a "Jewish exclusivist" state that encompasses huge areas of the Middle East. They depict Zionism
as a "pernicious plot" that controls European and American governments, just as anti-Semites depicted Jews as plotting
to subvert governments and achieve world domination. They insist, nonetheless, that they are not anti-Semitic, though
they deny the right of the Jews to self-determination.
The Zionism
Controversy