On Monday, the Miriam Adelson-funded tabloid Israel Hayom reported some remarks from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that were both frank and frankly insane:
So, Netanyahu understands that the genocide in Gaza—just today, the United Nations commission investigating the war declared it to be a genocide—will result in the isolation of Israel. He has begun to sound like the mad prophet, Meir Kahane, who once declared, “…there are no allies and the United States itself will cut its bonds to Israel as its interests dictate. In the end, Zion and Zionism stand alone with the Almighty G-d who created them.” (Allow me to paraphrase Stalin here and impertinently ask just how many 2,000 lb bombs is Almighty G-d able to produce a year?) But isn’t it a little strange that Bibi would pick the goyim of classical civilization as his chosen examples? After all, there is another ancient Mediterranean people whose history and legends come down to us from the past. They were called “Children of Israel,” and this present state claims to be heir to their Kingdom. That history is maybe not the best to recall at the moment: it is full of divine punishments for arrogance and cruelty, foreign captivity, exile, and a long-suffering people reclaiming their homeland. Its struggles against larger, Imperial powers ended with the destruction of its temple and the 2000-year diaspora of its people. But maybe there is another reason, albeit unconscious, that Athens and Sparta are Bibi’s chosen examples: a recognition that the Israeli people have become, in some sense, something other than the Jews of history. After all, the goal of Zionism was the recreation of the Jewish people, their “normalization,” and their becoming “a nation like all others.” Of course, in Hebrew, the word for nation is “goy.” What immediately struck me, though, was the similarity of Netanyahu’s words to another prophecy, that of Hannah Arendt. As the character of the Zionist movement became clear to her, she went from being a Zionist to a critic of Zionism. During the war in 1948, she wrote:
Netanyahu wants to allay the fears of a culture entirely given to warmaking, which is why he included Athens, but it’s certainly true that it seems that Israel’s “relations with World Jewry” have become “problematical.” And perhaps, it is in the process of developing into a new people. Here in New York, that other Jewish capital, we are less and less taken with our Eastern cousins, as the significant Jewish support for Zohran Mamdani makes clear. Zionist Jews and their Christian Zionist allies like to say Jews like me are “not real Jews.” My response to that is, “Right back at you.” You’re “Super-Spartans” now, I guess. Spartan-Schmartan. You're currently a free subscriber to Unpopular Front. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |