BOOK: “Israeli Exceptionalism” by M Shahid Alam 5Feb10 February 6, 2010
Israeli Exceptionalism: The Destabilizing Logic of Zionism
By M. Shahid Alam Hardback: 288 pages
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan (November 10, 2009)
ISBN-10: 0230614841
ISBN-13: 978-0230614840
RRP: ÂŁ55.00
Zionism Laid Bare
Review by Kathleen Christison - MEMO Middle East Monitor - 5 February 2010
The essential point of M. Shahid Alamâs book, Israeli Exceptionalism: The Destabilizing Logic of Zionism, comes clear upon opening the book to the inscription in the frontispiece. From the Persian poet and philosopher Rumi, the quote reads, âYou have the light, but you have no humanity. Seek humanity, for that is the goal.â Alam, professor of economics at Northeastern University in Boston and a CounterPunch contributor, follows this with an explicit statement of his aims in the first paragraph of the preface. Asking and answering the obvious question, âWhy is an economist writing a book on the geopolitics of Zionism?â he says that he âcould have written a book about the economics of Zionism, the Israeli economy, or the economy of the West Bank and Gaza, but how would any of that have helped me to understand the cold logic and the deep passions that have driven Zionism?â
Until recent years, the notion that Zionism was a benign, indeed a humanitarian, political movement designed for the noble purpose of creating a homeland and refuge for the worldâs stateless, persecuted Jews was a virtually universal assumption. In the last few years, particularly since the start of the al-Aqsa intifada in 2000, as Israelâs harsh oppression of the Palestinians has become more widely known, a great many Israelis and friends of Israel have begun to distance themselves from and criticize Israelâs occupation policies, but they remain strong Zionists and have been at pains to propound the view that Zionism began well and has only lately been corrupted by the occupation. Alam demonstrates clearly, through voluminous evidence and a carefully argued analysis, that Zionism was never benign, never goodâthat from the very beginning, it operated according to a âcold logicâ and, per Rumi, had âno humanity.â Except perhaps for Jews, which is where Israelâs and Zionismâs exceptionalism comes in.
Alam argues convincingly that Zionism was a coldly cynical movement from its beginnings in the nineteenth century. Not only did the founders of Zionism know that the land on which they set their sights was not an empty land, but they set out specifically to establish an âexclusionary colonialismâ that had no room for the Palestinians who lived there or for any non-Jews, and they did this in ways that justified, and induced the West to accept, the displacement of the Palestinian population that stood in their way. With a simple wisdom that still escapes most analysts of Israel and Zionism, Alam writes that a âhomeless nationalism,â as Zionism was for more than half a century until the state of Israel was established in 1948, âof necessity is a charter for conquest andâif it is exclusionaryâfor ethnic cleansing.â
How has Zionism been able to put itself forward as exceptional and get away with it, winning Western support for the establishment of an exclusionary state and in the process for the deliberate dispossession of the native population? Alam lays out three principal ways by which Zionism has framed its claims of exceptionalism in order to justify itself and gain world, particularly Western, support. First, the Jewish assumption of chosenness rests on the notion that Jews have a divine right to the land, a mandate granted by God to the Jewish people and only to them. This divine election gives the homeless, long-persecuted Jews the historical and legal basis by which to nullify the rights of Palestinians not so divinely mandated and ultimately to expel them from the land. Second, Israelâs often remarkable achievements in state-building have won Western support and provided a further justification for the displacement of âinferiorâ Palestinians by âsuperiorâ Jews. Finally, Zionism has put Jews forward as having a uniquely tragic history and as a uniquely vulnerable country, giving Israel a special rationale for protecting itself against supposedly unique threats to its existence and in consequence for ignoring the dictates of international law. Against the Jewsâ tragedy, whatever pain Palestinians may feel at being displaced appears minor.

Kathleen Christison
The British knew this as well. Zionist supporter Winston Churchill wrote as early as 1919 that the Zionists âtake it for granted that the local population will be cleared out to suit their convenience.â In a blunt affirmation of the calculated nature of Zionist plans and Western support for them, British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour, like Churchill another early supporter and also author of the 1917 Balfour Declaration, which promised British support for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine, wrote that Zionism âis rooted in age-long traditions, in present needs, in future hopes, of far profounder import than the desires and prejudices of the 700,000 Arabs who now inhabit that ancient land.â It would be hard to find a more blatant one-sided falsity.
Alam traces in detail the progression of Zionist planning, beginning with the deliberate creation in the nineteenth century of an ethnic identity for Jews who shared only a religion and had none of the attributes of nationhoodâneither a land, nor a common language or culture, nor arguably a common gene pool. Here Alam covers briefly the ground trod in detail by Israeli historian Shlomo Sand, whose book The Invention of the Jewish People, appearing in English just months before Alamâs book, shattered the myths surrounding Zionismâs claim to nationhood and to an exclusive right to Palestine. But Alam goes further, describing the Zionist campaign to create a surrogate âmother countryâ that, in the absence of a Jewish nation, would sponsor the Zionistsâ colonization of Palestine and support its national project. Having gained British support for its enterprise, Zionism then set about building a rationale for displacing the Palestinian Arabs who were native to Palestine (who, incidentally, did indeed possess the attributes of a nation but lay in the path of a growing Jewish, Western-supported military machine). Zionist propaganda then and later deliberately spread the notion that Palestinians were not âa people,â had no attachment to the land and no national aspirations, and in the face of the Jewsâ supposedly divine mandate, of Israelâs âmiraculousâ accomplishments, and of the Jewsâ monumental suffering in the Holocaust, the dispossession of the Palestinians was made to appear to a disinterested West as nothing more than a minor misfortune.
Addressing what he calls the âdestabilizing logicâ of Zionism, Alam builds the argument that Zionism thrives on, and indeed can survive only in the midst of, conflict. In the first instance, Alam shows, Zionism actually embraced the European anti-Semitic charge that Jews were an alien people. This was the natural result of promoting the idea that Jews actually belonged in Palestine in a nation of their own, and in addition, spreading fear of anti-Semitism proved to be an effective way to attract Jews not swayed by the arguments of Zionism (who made up the majority of Jews in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries) to the Zionist cause. Early Zionist leaders talked frankly of anti-Semitism as a means of teaching many educated and assimilated Jews âthe way back to their peopleâ and of forcing an allegiance to Zionism. Anti-Semitism remains in many ways the cement that holds Zionism together, keeping both Israeli Jews and diaspora Jews in thrall to Israel as their supposedly only salvation from another Holocaust.
In the same vein, Alam contends, Zionists realized that in order to succeed in their colonial enterprise and maintain the support of the West, they would have to create an adversary common to both the West and the Jews. Only a Jewish state waging wars in the Middle East could âenergize the Westâs crusader mentality, its evangelical zeal, its dreams of end times, its imperial ambitions.â Arabs were the initial and enduring enemy, and Zionists and Israel have continued to provoke Arab antagonism and direct it toward radicalism, to steer Arab anger against the United States, to provoke the Arabs into wars against Israel, and to manufacture stories of virulent Arab anti-Semitismâall specifically in order to sustain Jewish and Western solidarity with Israel. More recently, Islam itself has become the common enemy, an adversary fashioned so that what Alam calls the âJewish-Gentile partnershipâ can be justified and intensified. Focusing on Arab and Muslim hostility, always portrayed as motivated by irrational hatred rather than by opposition to Israeli and U.S. policies, allows Zionists to divert attention from their own expropriation of Palestinian land and dispossession of Palestinians and allows them to characterize Israeli actions as self-defense against anti-Semitic Arab and Muslim resistance.
Alam treats the Zionist/Israel lobby as a vital cog in the machine that built and sustains the Jewish state. Indeed, Theodore Herzl was the original Zionist lobbyist. During the eight years between the launch of the Zionist movement at Basel in 1897 and his death, Herzl had meetings with a remarkable array of power brokers in Europe and the Middle East, including the Ottoman sultan, Kaiser Wilhelm II, King Victor Emanuel III of Italy, Pope Pius X, the noted British imperialist Lord Cromer and the British colonial secretary of the day, and the Russian ministers of interior and finance, as well as a long list of dukes, ambassadors, and lesser ministers. One historian used the term âmiraculousâ to describe Herzlâs ability to secure audiences with the powerful who could help Zionism.
Zionist lobbyists continued to work as assiduously, with results as âmiraculous,â throughout the twentieth century, gaining influence over civil society and ultimately over policymakers and, most importantly, shaping the public discourse that determines all thinking about Israel and its neighbors. As Alam notes, âsince their earliest days, the Zionists have created the organizations, allies, networks, and ideas that would translate into media, congressional, and presidential support for the Zionist project.â An increasing proportion of the activists who lead major elements of civil society, such as the labor and civil rights movements, are Jews, and these movements have as a natural consequence come to embrace Zionist aims. Christian fundamentalists, who in the last few decades have provided massive support to Israel and its expansionist policies, grew in the first instance because they were âenergized by every Zionist success on the groundâ and have continued to expand with a considerable lobbying push from the Zionists.
Alamâs conclusionâa direct argument against those who contend that the lobby has only limited influence: âIt makes little sense,â in view of the pervasiveness of Zionist influence over civil society and political discourse, âto maintain that the pro-Israeli positions of mainstream American organizations . . . emerged independently of the activism of the American Jewish community.â In its early days, Zionism grew only because Herzl and his colleagues employed heavy lobbying in the European centers of power; Jewish dispersion across the Western worldâand Jewish influence in the economies, the film industries, the media, and academia in key Western countriesâare what enabled the Zionist movement to survive and thrive in the dark years of the early twentieth century; and Zionist lobbying and molding of public discourse are what has maintained Israelâs favored place in the hearts and minds of Americans and the policy councils of Americaâs politicians.
This is a critically important book. It enhances and expands on the groundbreaking message of Shlomo Sandâs work. If Sand shows that Jews were not âa peopleâ until Zionism created them as such, Alam shows this also and goes well beyond to show how Zionism and its manufactured ânationâ went about dispossessing and replacing the Palestinians and winning all-important Western support for Israel and its now 60-year-old âexclusionary colonialism.â
Kathleen Christison is the author of Perceptions of Palestine and the Wound of Dispossession and co-author, with Bill Christison, of Palestine in Pieces: Graphic Perspectives on the Israeli Occupation, published last summer by Pluto Press. She can be reached at kb.christison@earthlink.net
Thank You.