Jews from Arab Countries and the Palestinian Right for Return: An Ethnic Community in Realms of National Memory
Source: Published in the British Journal of Middle
Eastern Studies, 29(1): 27-56, 2002.
by Yehouda Shenhav
Department of Sociology and Anthropology
Tel Aviv University( 1 )
Tel Aviv 69978, Israel
e-mail: shenhav@post.tau.ac.il
I wish to thank the Forum for Cultural and Social
Studies in Israel, at the Vanleer Institute in Jerusalem and its
members: Hannan Hever, Yossi Yonah,
Aziza Khazoom, Pnina Mutzafi-Haler, Abed Azam, Meir Amor, and Adriana
Kemp. The paper was written within the framework of the Forum's
work. Thanks for Amnon Raz-Krakotzkin for many discussions and
deliberations on the subject. Thanks
also to Nadav Gabay, Haim Hazan, Alexandra Kalev, Shoham Melamed,
Motti Regev for their useful comments. Nadav Gabay and Shirley
Hauser helped me collect and organize the empirical materials.
ABSTRACT: The article examines the World Organization of
Jews from Arab Countries (WOJAC)
as a community of memory, operating
within the realms of Israeli national memory, endeavoring
to refurbish them but dismantling them instead. A central
thrust of the analysis (which refers to the period from 1975
to 1999) concerns the anomalous relationship between nationalism
and ethnicity. WOJAC's aspiration was to operate in the national
arena; to counterbalance the claims of the Palestinian leadership
on the right to the Land and on the
refugee question. But to its chagrin
the state institutions construe its activity as ethnic subversion.
The fluid transition from national to ethnic interpretation
reflects the contradiction that underlies Jewish nationalism
and its ambivalence towards practicing "Mizrahi ethnicity".
Deriving from this contradiction, and from the praxis of
construction and dismantlement that characterizes the activity
of WOJAC, a contingent examination is undertaken of analytical
categories such as "national identity," "Zionism," "history," "place," and "territory" in
the Middle East.
The article also describes the way the State of Israel attempted
to use the Jews from Arab Countries to offset the Palestinian right for
return and their demands to be compensated for the property
confiscated by the state of Israel in 1948.
Where do Jews from Arab lands who live in Israel visit their
past? How do they make contact with their historical sources?
On any given day dozens and hundreds of Israelis visit memorial
sites such as the Diaspora Museum, the Center for the Heritage
of Babylonian Jewry, the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial, the
Israel Museum: places of collective memory - Israeli and
Jewish - that document, preserve, refurbish, and reconstruct
the past. Do these sites allow for a variety of identities,
a multiplicity of memories, or are they only vast malls for
consumers of standard memory? How is the memory of the Jews
from Arab lands in Israel shaped in an era when historical
memory is manifested as national texts?
Pierre Nora views "realms of memory" ( lieux de memoire
) as places where memory is institutionalized as memorial sites, monuments,
textbooks, ceremonies, photo albums, museums, assemblies, or even public
figures (Nora 1992; see also Kritzman 1997). Realms of memory compartmentalize
spontaneous memory and demarcate it in isolated sites; private memory is
appropriated and reformatted as an institutionalized configuration possessing
a logic of its own, generally the national logic. In lieu of the concept "realm
of memory" I use, as an analytical category, the concept of a "community
of memory."( 1 )
A community of memory, as I will argue below, contains a multiplicity of
voices, a cacophony of arguments and counter-arguments, testimonies, and
facts that generate a dynamic memory, receptive to a dialectic of memory
and forgetting. In contrast to a historiographic project that sets out to
conquer the past, to tame and domesticate the unruly voices and squeeze them
into one continuity, a community of memory is chaotic and unconquerable.
In this paper I will use texts and documents produced by
the World Organization of Jews from Arab Countries over a
period of 25 years, in order to examine the organization
as a community of memory operating in Israeli national realms
of memory. The article will show that even though the organization
began its work along ostensibly familiar lines, the historical
and cultural narrative it out forward did not succeed, contrary
to WOJAC's desire, in achieving a synthesis with the Zionist-European
national narrative. Moreover, I hope to show that even though
WOJAC proposed an apparent national agenda (to counterbalance
the claims of the Palestinian National Movement), its activity
was deciphered in the 'internal' ethnic arena. The findings
of the case study indicate the essential contradiction between
ethnicity and nationalism in Zionism, while suggesting how
that contradiction can be used to challenge the national
memory in Israel.
The Status of Ethnic Memory in Realms of National Memory
The construction of collective memory is not necessarily a modern phenomenon.
Ancient as well as modern cultures produced texts, built monuments, or collected
items of display in order to create or remember their past (Geary 1994).
However, mnemonic practices became institutionalized and explicit as part
of the project of modernity. Anthony Smith notes the secularization process
undergone by collective memory and the Gordian knot that was formed between
nationalism, history, and memory: "One sign of the formation of the nation
out of the protonation is the shifting of the center of collective memory
from the temple and its priesthood to the university and its scholarly community" (Smith
1986). In the nation-states historiography became a national project and,
as such, also a locus of battles for representation and interpretation (Wilson
1996). Professional historians began to furnish political legitimation for
national memory and for ethnic struggles over identity and self-determination.
The works of Hobsbawm (1992) and Anderson (1983) in particular have emphasized
the fact that the national past is an imagined one that is selectively represented.
Indeed, from the outset, the Zionist movement shaped the collective memory
of the Israeli nation, forging and constructing images of the past regarding
the nation's origins and its development over time.
The origins of Jewish national organizing
lie in Europe and its political philosophy is European. Europe
was the base of all the thinkers and activists who are considered
the forerunners of the Jewish national movement. The delegates
to the First Zionist Congress were virtually all educated,
middle-class European Jews, who hailed from Eastern Europe
(Russia, Romania, Serbia, Bulgaria, Poland), Central and
Northern Europe (Germany, Austria, England, France, Switzerland),
and the United States. Indeed, of the 246 delegates only
one was from an Arab country (Algeria), and he too was of
European extraction.( 2 )
Furthermore, Jewish-national historiography sprang up in
mid-nineteenth century Europe as a branch of modern European,
and especially German, historiography (Piterberg 1996). Even
if Zionist activity existed in the Middle-East, it was never
expressed in the form of independent political organizing
(e.g., Shohat 1997a; 1997b).
During the Second World War, as the reality of the mass
extermination of Jews in Europe sank in, the Zionist movement
increasingly shifted its view to the Jews in the Islamic
countries. In 1942 Ben Gurion presented to experts and to
leaders of the Yishuv (pre-1948 Jewish community in Palestine)
his 'Plan for Mass Immigration' (Tochnit Ha'Million) which
aimed to bring a million Jews to Palestine. In this project
the Jews in the Islamic lands were accorded a central demographic
role. In practice, the plan to bring Jews from Arab countries
was not implemented until after Israel's establishment. In
Israel the Mizrahim (Jews from Arab countries) were subjected
to a process of de-Arabization. As Ben Gurion put it, "We
do not want the Israelis to be Arabs. It is our duty to fight
against the spirit of the Levant that ruins individuals and
societies" (Shohat 1988:6). The Arab past of the Mizrahi
Jews threatened to affect the coherence of the homogeneous
Israeli nation and to blur the boundary between Jews and
Arabs. The thrust toward modernization that was implemented
as state theory and practice served as a major rationale
for creating a non-Arab "homogeneous public." The negative
status of Arabness among the Israeli-Zionist public induced
the Mizrahim to cooperate with the Israeli modernization
and de-Arabization project. Let us present a telling example.
In 1941 a two-day pogrom (known as the farhud ) was perpetrated
in Baghdad. It was the only pogrom in the history of Iraqi
Jews and it did not spread to other cities: it was confined
to Baghdad alone. Historians agree that this was an exceptional
event in the history of Jewish-Muslim relations in Iraq (see
Cohen 1996). It occurred a few hours before the British entered
Baghdad during the world war, after the pro-Nazi Prime Minister
Rashid Ali al Kilani had fled the country, leaving a state
of political anarchy in Baghdad. For unclear reasons, the
British themselves delayed their entry into the city by 48
hours. According to some testimonies, it is possible that
the British wanted passions to boil over in the city and
actually had an interest in a clash between Jews and Muslims.
Be that as it may, 160 Jews and an unknown number of Muslims
were murdered while the political anarchy lasted. The Jewish
leadership reached the conclusion - which proved unfounded - that
the after-effects of the farhud would facilitate its efforts
to recruit Jews for Zionist activity. Iraqi Jews, however,
did not cooperate with the Zionist agents and it was only
in the 1950s that they were brought to Israel (Shenhav 1999).
Notwithstanding the historical evidence,
the Zionist historiography of Iraqi Jewry treats the farhud
as a watershed event that occurred within the framework of
the Holocaust. It is cited as proof that the life of the
Jews in Iraq was intolerable, that they were persecuted by
the Muslims, and that the inevitable result was their immigration
to Israel. This is the narrative that is validated and ratified
in the canonical academic literature and in texts produced
by the officials in charge of the Israeli memory.( 3 )
Thus Shmuel Moreh, a professor at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem, an Israel Prize laureate, and a leading activist
of the Center for the Heritage of Babylonian Jewry, writes
in the introduction to the book Jew Hatred and Pogroms in
Iraq : "Arguably, the farhud was the cardinal factor in the
Jewish national revival in Iraq, as the Holocaust was the
cause of Israel's establishment. The Jews of Iraq immigrated
to Israel as one person in protest at the pogroms, the betrayal,
and the shame that the farhud brought on them" (p. 9).
The invocation of the Holocaust analogy is not accidental.
It reflects the deep desire of the Mizrahim to be admitted
to the Israeli civil religion in which the Holocaust plays
a crucial role. Within the realms of memory of Zionist historiography
the farhud is a site that ratifies the "from the Holocaust
to the revival" narrative. The event has become a historiographic
zero-point that has expropriated the rich, ages-old history
of Iraqi Jewry in Iraq and subjugated it to the narrative
of "negation of the Diaspora" and to the list of "disasters
that have afflicted the Jewish people since the destruction
of the second temple" (Raz-Krakotzkin 1993).
Pierre Nora (1992) addressed the contradiction between the
occupation with national memory and the ability to remember: "We
speak so much about memory because there is so little of
it left" (quoted in Olick & Robbins 1998: 121). The obsession
with preservation, with developing technologies of preservation,
with organizing and cataloguing archives and then visiting
them has the effect of inflating instrumental means of memory,
producing memory that is routine and frozen. As a result,
commemoration in the realms of memory is an act of obliteration
that expresses the death of memory. Realms of memory bring
time to a stop. They exist because there is no longer any
spontaneous memory. We will use the term "community of memory" in
order to challenge the institutionalized memory that is stored
and captured in the realms of memory.
The term "community" presupposes memory that is carried
by living groups, and as such is constantly developing, being
produced and challenged, is amenable to a continuous dialectic
of remembering and forgetting. Memory in the community is
nourished by a variety of sources, some blurred, which are
interconnected, comprehensive or tenuous, private or symbolic.
Memory in communities of memory reacts to all forms of transmission,
to all the screens on which it appears, to censorship or
to implications. This is a convenient arena for rendering
memory controversial, for the challenge and contestation
of its component parts and its sources. The difference between
communities and realms of memory is that within the former
memory can be updated and exist within history. The existence
of communities of memory obliges us to rethink the connection
between the historiographic project that aspires to a totalization
of the past, and collective memory, which is splintered and
fragmented.
This article treats the World Organization of Jews from
Arab Countries (WOJAC) as a community of memory. WOJAC which
was established in 1974 in order to assist Israel in the
national arena -- to counter balance the claims of the Palestinian
National Movement -- will be defined as a "community of memory" in
an attempt to examine how far that community challenges the
exhibits in the Israeli realms of memory. This is a singularly
promising test case precisely because WOJAC was established
with the goal of inserting the Mizrahi memory on the map
of the Zionist-Israeli national collective memory and not
in order to challenge that memory. Nevertheless, WOJAC's
ambition to invoke claims at the 'national level', were constantly
denied as ethnically subversive voice. This fairly consistent
practice provides a vantage point to examine the anomalous
relationship between nationalism and ethnicity in the Zionist
context.
The World Organization of Jews from Arab Countries (WOJAC)
The World Organization of Jews from Arab Countries (WOJAC) functioned for approximately
25 years (1975-1999). In 1975, then vice-chair of the Knesset, Mordechai
Ben-Porat summoned representatives of the various associations of Jews from
Arab countries to a meeting in Tel Aviv. There, it was decided to establish
WOJAC.
Throughout its existence, the organization was supported
by the Foreign Ministry and the Jewish Agency. During the
years of its existence, WOJAC held international conventions
in Paris (1975), London (1982), and Washington (1987), as
well as four conventions in Israel; it also established branches
in various locations around the world, including New York,
London, Rome and Zurich. WOJAC ceased to function in July
1999, due to the termination of Foreign Ministry and Jewish
Agency support.
WOJAC was extremely conscious of documentation;
all conventions were recorded and transcribed, Executive
meetings were summarized in print, and the organization produced
hundreds of documents, including letters, booklets, books
and articles. This rich collection of material was stored
in an office in Tel Aviv, and at the beginning of 1998, the
process of moving it to the Central Zionist Archives began.
At this point I approached the organization's Executive and
requested access to the material. A copy of the entire archive
was placed at my disposal in March 1998.( 4 )
Ben-Porat, who became one of the leading forces behind WOJAC,
had an impressive record of Israeli public service. He had
worked in the "organization for illegal immigration" ( ha-Mosad
l'Aliya-bet ) and had been the primary architect of the operation
to help Jews leave Iraq and immigrate to Israel. In 1950-1,
he served as the head of the Or-Yehuda Council, and established
and chaired the Center for the Heritage of Iraqi Jewry. He
had been a Knesset member for years, and later served as
Minister without portfolio in the government of Menahem Begin
and as a Mosad emissary to Iran. Some WOJAC activists were
Mapai Knesset members, like Matilda Gez, Ben-Tziyon Halfon,
and Menahem Yedid. Later, other activists joined the organization,
including Shimon Avizemer (Association of Yemenite Immigrants),
Ora Shveitzer, Malka Hilel-Shulevitz and Prof. Ya'akov Meron
(an official of the Ministry of Justice). At points, WOJAC
included researchers and academics, such as Dr. Maurice Roumani
(who was also the organization's Executive Director), Prof.
Yehuda Nini, Prof. Shimon Shitrit, Dr. Shalom Zaki, Prof.
Shmuel Moreh, Dr. Nissim Qazzaz and Prof. Rafael Yisrael.
Despite its support of WOJAC, the Israeli Government was
less than enthusiastic about the establishment of the organization.
When Mordechai Ben-Porat approached then Foreign Minister
Yigal Alon in 1974 (Rabin's first government) and told him
about the idea of establishing the organization, Alon openly
expressed his concern that it would be an "ethnic organization." "We
know you and trust you", Alon told Ben Porat, "but what will
happen if it falls into the hands of someone who exploits
it for ethnic mobilization?" (Personal interview with Mordechai
Ben-Porat, 16/3/98; see also the 2nd Convention of the World
Executive, 11/9/79, p.10) Yigal Alon was troubled primarily
because the organization was established at a gathering that
included representatives of the associations of Jewish immigrants
from Arab countries.
Despite the minor misgivings, it was generally accepted
that WOJAC had been established as a tool to assist the State
of Israel and the Israeli Foreign Ministry in the national
arena. (Meeting of the WOJAC Actions Committee, 11/3/76,
p.13) Upon the establishment of WOJAC, Ben-Porat posited
that the State of Israel had not made effective use of the
past of Jews from Arab countries, and argued that this past
was instrumental in the political arena in which Israel was
active. The organization's Executive formulated three major
political assertions, all of which were intended to offset
the main three claims of the Palestinian national movement;
- One) that of the historic nature
of a Jewish national and religious
presence in the Middle East (the
Primordiality thesis);
- Two) that the Middle East had
witnessed a de-facto mutual population
exchange of Arab refugees and Jewish
refugees (the Population Exchange
thesis); and
- Three) that the property of these
Arabs and Jews could be counterbalanced
due to the population exchange
(the Property Exchange thesis).
These three positions, which were formulated in the mid-1970's,
gained additional validity after the peace treaty with Egypt
and the beginning of the debate regarding the Palestinian
refugees. According to the members of WOJAC's Executive,
these assertions would enable Israel to argue for the legitimate
rights of the Jews in the Land of Israel (the historic nature
of the Jewish presence in the Middle East), against the legitimacy
of a Palestinian right of return (de-facto population transfer)
and for the denial of Palestinian demands for compensation
for property that had been confiscated by Custodian of Absentee
Property. Members of the organization's Executive established
a direct linkage between the establishment of WOJAC and activities
of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). Years later,
Dr. Jaques Barnes declared: "We are the Jewish answer to
the PLO...to the right of return...that is why we exist." (4th
National Convention, Tel Aviv, 16/12/93, p.48)
Ben-Porat argued numerous times in various ways that one
of the primary factors motivating the establishment of the
organization was the need to incorporate the history of the
Jews of Arab countries into the national collective memory: "I
am not comparing what we experienced - the Jews of Arab countries
- to the experience of our brothers in Europe. We were luckier.
Still, the pain is felt by all of us together, and our subject
should have been utilized." (2nd Convention of the World
Executive, 11/9/79, p.4a) WOJAC's work focused on imagining
the past and making use of this imaginary past for the crystallization
and establishment of Jewish nationalism in the Middle East.
Explicit regard for issues of memory was present throughout
the discussions of WOJAC, due, among other reasons, to the
involvement of professional historians in the organization.
At the third National Convention, one of the leaders of the
WOJAC Executive, Shlomo Tusia-Cohen, explained that "History
was meant to eternalize a situation for [the sake of] memory." (3rd
National WOJAC Convention, 5/4/90)
The story of WOJAC - an organization that functioned in
domains with fluid boundaries - is far from homogenous. The
organization does not speak in one voice, rather in a number
of voices. While attempting to construct a Zionist historical
narrative, these voices simultaneously challenged this narrative
and created its own antithesis. As a "community of memory",
WOJAC did not function within a well-constructed site with
a known trail; it functioned, rather, as a heterodox, creating
a spontaneous challenge to the familiar established algorithms
of the rule of collective memory. WOJAC put forward new versions
of the past that ruptured the coherency of the traditional
Zionist narrative and threatened to blur the distinctions
between the internal ethnic sphere and the external national
sphere of action. Representing this spectrum of voices enables
us to challenge existing teleological national narratives
and to bring their 'objective possibilities' to the surface.
As argued above, in the process of imagining the past of
Jews from Arab countries, WOJAC put forward three Zionist
political assertions. Each one of these assertions was meant
to serve the political interests of the State of Israel.
But, as will become clear below, each one disrupted the Zionist
dialogue and deconstructed its traditional basic assumptions.
This unintentional deconstruction was an obstacle for the
further survival of WOJAC. In the next sections I will present
the voices which pertain to these theses.
The Primordiality Thesis: Splitting Up
the Imagined Community
The thesis asserting "the primordiality of the Jewish entity as a nation and
as a religion in the Middle East in general and in the Land of Israel in particular" was
formulated in order to emphasize "the fact of our right to this land" (Feb.
1, 1976, p. 5) in response to the claim of "legitimate rights" advanced by
the Palestinian national movement.( 5 )
As Mordechai Ben Porat put it: "... We want to prove that we are part of the
Middle East. We are not foreigners. We lived here before the arrival of the
Arabs, before their conquests" (June 6, 1975, Beit Sokolov). To that end, Oved
Ben Ozer explained, it is necessary "to implant the awareness of the Jews'
historic and legitimate rights in this region, and their presence here for
more than two thousand five hundred years, before the Arabs and before the
rise of Islam" (WOJAC letter to Foreign Ministry, July 30, 1989).
The narrative presented here imagines a past consisting
of several components. The most important of these is the
affinity of the Jews from the Arab countries with "the region," a
perception that splinters Jewish ethno-national unity by
adducing different pasts for Iraqi Jews and European Jews.
Although the source of the cultural and political rights
of the Jews "in the region" lies in a pre-Islamic (Hellenistic-Christian)
world, those rights were not affected even with the rise
of the Arab empire to greatness or afterward. In this narrative,
Jewish culture remains dominant "in the region" even under
the Arab conquest in the modern era. As opposed to the classic
Zionist account, in the "exilic era" the Jews are described
not as a stagnant community but as an almost Promethean progenitor
of the culture of the Middle East. Relations with the Muslim
world are portrayed in narrative association with the "Golden
Age" that existed (or existed ostensibly) until the expulsion
from Spain. However, in contrast to the Spanish Golden Age,
Jewish culture in the Middle East remained vigorous after
1492 and, indeed, continued to exist in the modern era. It
bears noting that this narrative does not offer a precise
definition of "the region" or "the territory" where the Jews'
legitimate rights are guaranteed. Instead, there is an allusion
to "the old Jewish Yishuv" which existed continuously in
the Land of Israel, particularly in the Jewish centers of
Jerusalem, Tiberias, and Safed. However, the Sephardi community
is not explicitly mentioned, nor is a distinction drawn between
different Jewish communities such as those of Baghdad, Alexandria,
or Marrakech. It is not clear whether the Jews have rights
in the Land of Israel by virtue of being residents of Iraq
(or Babylon for this purpose), Syria (or Aram-sobah for this
purpose), or because of the continuous Jewish habitation
in the Land of Israel itself. One is left with the impression
of "the region", "the Middle East" as a blurred, abstract
entity that is unamenable to concretization in time or place.
The primordiality of the Jewish entity in the Middle East
was cited by WOJAC as a "right" contributed by the Jews from
the Arab lands to the national collective and which, concomitantly,
confirms their inalienable place within that collective.
Ben Porat draws an explicit analogy between this "right" carried
by the Jews from Arab lands and the "rights" that were contributed
by the European Jews in the form of the Holocaust and the
subsequent German reparations:
"The Jews who are not from Arab countries - brought rights with them to Israel,
and those rights are - one right, regretfully, was steeped in blood, the right
of the Holocaust , [in] which 6 million were slaughtered and [which] constituted
one of the bridges for the establishment of the State of Israel. A second right
that the Jews of Europe brought - the reparations . With the help of the reparations
the state could develop here. That is the contribution of Jews who came from
Europe. We, the Jews from the Arab lands, say: We also have to bring our contribution
as a second layer of rights from the Arab countries to here." [Sic] [Emphases
not in the original] (Seminar of WOJAC Information Center, February 1, 1976)
This formulation, which ostensibly affirms the political
right of the Jews from Arab countries "in the region," derives
from an attempt to be included within the national collective,
but simultaneously forges a Zionist-isolationist discourse
that responds to the argument that Zionism is European and
as such has no affinity with the Land of Israel. This was
given explicit expression by Dr. Ya'akov Meron who sought
to underscore the importance of the argument:
"WOJAC's great innovation is... that there is here a group of people who are
inhabitants of the Middle East. An accusation against the State of Israel is
that Jews came from Europe and took over an Arab state. So it seems to me that
the only thing to be said which is politically useful, is to say that the Jews
from the Arab countries are inhabitants of the Middle East [and] like all the
other inhabitants of the Middle East possess political rights..." (Meeting of
WOJAC executive, March 11, 1976, 16-A)
Meron points here to the different past of the European
Jews and even more tellingly to the common history of the
Jews from Arab countries and the Arabs of the Middle East.
The attempt at inclusion is thus proposed by emphasizing
the difference between Jews rather than what they share in
common, a difference that will become increasingly estranged
from the national story to the point where it evolves into
a controversial discourse fraught with distinctly ethnic
overtones. Moreover, the thesis of the primordiality of the
Jewish entity in the Middle East bears seeds that will sprout
to contest the Zionist-European historiography. WOJAC's version
of Zionism is based on a temporal-territorial continuum "in
the region," and as such is polarized into a conception of
continuity (of the Jewish community in the Land of Israel)
and a conception of non-continuity (of the negation of the
Diaspora) as obliged by Zionist history. This approach has
a triple expression: territory, history, and identity.
Territory: The Zionist meta-narrative emphasizes the connection
to the ancient soil as part of the
resurgent national identity. However,
whereas for European Zionism the
Land of Israel bore a transcendent status existing outside
the East, WOJAC proposed a regional version of a movement
within the Arab territory of which the Land of Israel is
a part. If for Europeans the act of Zionization manifested
itself as the transmutation of the "old
Jew" into the "new
Jew," in its Mizrahi version
the Zionist movement does not constitute
an unequivocal binary act because
it involves neither transmutation
of status nor concretization of territory. In the last analysis,
the presence of Jews in Safed or in Baghdad accords them
identical legitimate rights "in the region." If both Safed
and Baghdad entail identical rights,
then the move from Baghdad to Safed
is neither intrinsically important nor genuinely transmutative.
As Mordechai Ben Porat put it: "... We, at
least 41%, ... have resided in the
Middle East for at least 2500 years
and we are part of the Middle East, we simply moved from
one part to another" in "the
region" (conference
at Van Leer Jerusalem Institute,
November 28, 1978).
It is pertinent in this connection to cite a text by the
Jewish-Israeli-Iraqi writer Shimon Ballas which recalls Ben
Porat's "movement within the region" thesis. When asked to
describe his move from Baghdad to Tel Aviv in 1950, he replied: "I
came from the Arab environment, and I remain in constant
colloquy with the Arab environment. I also didn't change
my environment. I just moved from one place to another within
it." (Alcalay 1994: 189).
The Ben Porat and Ballas accounts undercut and refute the
official story, which in the Zionist saga is known as the "Ezra
and Nehemia immigration." The transition to Israel is almost
meaningless, since the rights to it accrue equally from residing
in "Babylon." The mental map of Zionism, like every national
map, created a new, non-linear space of large places and
small places, spaces hidden from the eye and symbolic borders.
On the mental map of Zionism Jerusalem is a larger place
and closer to Baghdad than vice versa. Ballas and Ben Porat
care nothing for the Zionist map. Although the thesis of
the Jewish people's primordiality does not detract from the
status of the Land of Israel, it locates it within an alternative
territorial continuum that exists outside the Europe-Zion
dichotomy. It defines the political entities involved as
homologous. As such, it contests the cosmology of the regional
space in its European-Zionist version and exposes its reification.
The "primordiality of the Jewish entity" thesis disassembles
and strips social objects and their memory from the immediate
and ostensibly natural meaning that inheres in their representation
within the Zionist consciousness. Ben Porat and Ballas have
entirely different biographies. Ben Porat is a politician,
an establishment figure and a dyed-in-the-wool Zionist; Ballas
is a writer, an intellectual, and a dyed-in-the-wool anti-Zionist.
Yet, despite their ideological differences, both find themselves
putting forward similar arguments. Hence also the subversive
potential of WOJAC, which came into being out of life's circumstances
and a common past, not out of an a priori ideological position.
The demarcation of territory with a permanent, clear map
is a necessary condition for shaping a state's spatial sovereignty
(Anderson 1983). The marking of the territory, signifying
its transformation into a "homeland," also implies dissociation
from other spaces (Lustick 1993). WOJAC's thesis is regressive
with regard to the possibility of dissociation and renders
spatial sovereignty ambivalent. The existence of the "region" as
adduced in the thesis of the primordiality of the Jewish
entity blurs the boundaries and therefore also the importance
of the territory. The singularity of Zionism, it should be
emphasized, lies in the fact that it is distinct from the
diaspora yet also represents it; Zionism's ability to represent
the diaspora is conditional on that distinction, which is
in part related to territory. Therefore the blurring of the
territory subverts the Zionist monopoly over the representations
of the collective belonging. It also confuses the (ostensibly)
clear connection between the territory and the diaspora.
Does being in the region (which has an unclear status vis-à-vis
the Land of Israel) mean being in the diaspora?
History and identity: The primordiality thesis undercuts
Zionist historiography, which is
based on "negating the diaspora" and
on the Jewish people's "return to history" with the revival
of nationalism at the end of the
nineteenth century. Negation of the diaspora is a meta-paradigm
that defined the self-consciousness of the Jews in Israel
and shaped their conception of history and their collective
memory (Raz-Krakotzkin 1993:23). According to this paradigm,
the Land of Israel (and the Middle East in general) played
no part during the exilic period and had no history of its
own. Consequently, the negation of the diaspora was also
effectively the negation of the memory of the galuti (exilic,
with a connotation of "ghetto mentality")
Jew, including the Mizrahi Jews,
and of the Palestinian memory (Piterberg 1995; 1996).
The thesis of the Jewish people's primordiality in the Middle
East contests the "negation of the diaspora" paradigm because
it does not allow for the decline of redemption outside the
Land of Israel and in fact posits a narrative in which Jews
flourished and prospered in the "exilic period." It challenges
the basic paradigm of Zionism which holds that the history
of the Jewish people was "frozen" and then the Jewish nation
was reborn out of the negation of the diaspora. The primordiality
thesis proposes a non-legitimate slice of time for Jewish-European
historiography: all those generations that archaeologists
and historians overleaped. In short, it reintroduced what
Zionist historiography wished to nullify.
The primordiality thesis also obliges us to ask whether
the Mizrahim, whose diaspora is not negated, need to return
to history at all. The answer is that they do not, because
theirs has been a continuous history. The Jews of the Middle-East,
according to this thesis, did not go through the history
of Europe and therefore need not return to it. This version
also disassembles the uniform, shared history of all the
Jews (a conception that entails the denial and repression
of other cultures, notably Arab culture) that is posited
by Zionist historiography.
WOJAC's members maintained that their history was the genuine
one and did not oblige any historiographic move of return.
In contrast to the Eurocentric conception, according to which
the history of the Eastern Jews is obscure or was subordinated
to the Jewish-European memory, a more independent narrative
is presented. The primordiality thesis undercuts the historiographic
balance of the united attempt to present a uniform history.
It holds out the possibility of escaping the dichotomy of "East" and "West," "progressive" and "backward." It
portrays the Middle-East as generative, creative, and progressive.
Acceptance of this version means imagining
a nation through separatist "raw materials" (not state-fomented);
it shatters the (ostensible) binary polarity between Jewishness
and Arabness and posits continuity instead. In other words,
it proposes a historical model that is not in conflict with
Arabness and that contests the de-Arabization project of
Jewish nationalism. It is a model that allows other voices
to be heard, too, such as that of the writer Sami Michael: "We
viewed ourselves as Arabs of Jewish extraction, we felt even
more Arab than Arabs... We did not feel we belonged to a
place but that the place belonged to us."( 6 )
However, the thesis of the primordiality of the Jewish entity
and of movement within the region propounded by WOJAC would
be contested by another thesis put forward by the organization
in the form of the exchange of population argument.
The Population Exchanges Thesis: Zionism or Refugeeism
WOJAC adduced the population exchange thesis primarily in order to contest
the claim of the Palestinian national movement to the right of return. The
description of the Jews from Arab lands as refugees was not unreasonable in
the light of the fact that the term "refugee" became a central concept in the
historical and sociological discourse and in international law after World
War II.( 7 )
Thus, for example, U.N. Security Council Resolution 242, of November 1967,
referred to "a just settlement of the refugee problem" in the Middle East,
though in the 1970s the Arab states sought explicit mention of "Arab refugees
in the Middle East." The United States, through its ambassador to the United
Nations, Arthur Goldberg, opposed this. Under Israeli pressure, a working paper
drawn up by Secretary of State Cyrus Vance in 1977 ahead of the possible convening
of the Geneva Conference, stated that a solution would be found for the "refugee
problem" without specifying which refugees. WOJAC ultimately failed in its
attempt to win acceptance of the term "Jewish refugees" and therefore resorted
to a campaign to block the use of the term "Arab refugees" (see also joint
WOJAC-Information Center seminar, February 1, 1976).
It is important to remember that the refugee exchange thesis,
which presupposed the existence of antagonistic relations
between Jews and Muslims, was not fully compatible with the
primordiality thesis. The latter concept sought to demonstrate
that Jews lived under the protection of Islam for thousands
of years, whereas the refugee thesis emphasized the opposite.
Prof. Ya'akov Meron, a Justice Ministry
official and one of WOJAC's most articulate spokesmen from
its inception, put it most bluntly. He took the unequivocal
position not only that the model of Jewish-Muslim relations
was distinctly antagonistic, but that the Jews were in fact
expelled from the Arab countries (Meron 1992).( 8 )
The Zionist saga, he argues, gave rise to romantic labels
such as "Operation Magic Carpet" and "Operation Ezra and
Nehemia," which underscored the positive aspect of Zionist
immigration to Israel and overshadowed the fact that the
Jews emigrated because of "an Arab policy of expulsion" (Meron
1992:37).( 9 )
Meron's approach thus contradicts the Zionist literature
and undercuts its basic assumptions. Refugee status produced
by a coordinated Arab expulsion diminishes the importance
of Zionist activity to remove the Jews from the Arab countries.
Even the more moderate position, holding that the Jews in
those countries were caught up in turbulent events and became
refugees due to historical circumstances, contests the classic
Zionist account by all but eliminating the role attributed
to Zionist consciousness as a reason for Jews to move to
Israel.
Meron's thesis shed a problematic light
on reports by Zionist activists in Arab countries and on
the tremendous difficulty they encountered in their efforts
to bring the Jews to Israel. The genre of Zionist underground
literature emphasized the elements of escape, of Jews being
smuggled out, and of mystery - they do not so much as hint
at the possibility of expulsion.( 10 )
Indeed, the expulsion-refugee thesis within WOJAC generated
strong sentiments and reactions. Already in May 1975, at
a meeting of representatives of immigrants' associations,
Knesset Speaker Yisrael Yeshayahu stated, "... We did not
want to call ourselves refugees. We came to this country
before the establishment of the state, too... We had messianic
aspirations; ... we wanted to see the building of the Temple...
We wanted to restore our days as of old" (May 29, 1975).
Yeshayahu here points to a fundamental contradiction between
the claim of Jewish primordiality and the refugeeism argument.
The major dissenter from WOJAC's refugee argument was the
Tunisia-born Knesset member Mathilda Gez: "I am afraid of
[taking] a certain direction that could trip us up; we are
not only talking among ourselves and we are not only talking
to the Gentiles. There are another twelve million Jews dispersed
in the diaspora. If we appear as refugees, how can we go
before them and talk about immigration based on the Zionist
idea... Do I have to deny my Zionism today because of my
rights to Tunisia? Absolutely not... So I do not want us
to blur the issue..." Gez, then, declined to discard the
Zionist, pan-Jewish interest and viewed the Jewish diaspora
through a proto-Zionist lens, that is, as potentially Zionist
until the anticipated aliyah to Israel. She also addressed
the contradiction between this all-embracing perception of
the world and the "narrow" interest of her claims to Tunisia.
Moreover, Gez shed light on the anomaly generated by WOJAC's
attitude, which produced particularist arguments. WOJAC,
she believed, brought about a separation between the interests
of the entire Jewish diaspora and the interests of the Jews
from Arab countries: "... in regard to the separation of
this organization from the Sephardi organization, this is
certainly the case... In my opinion, the focus should be
Israeli so that we can argue with the Palestinians... If
I have to defend a Jew who is in Brazil, or in North America,
then we have missed the opportunity" (June 6, 1975, Beit
Sokolov).
Ben Porat admitted that the Foreign Ministry was not pleased
with his references to Jewish refugees in the Middle East: "I
will not say that I met with any great enthusiasm from the
Foreign Ministry or from the government concerning the proposal.
Their reply was: It is a two-edged sword..." (seminar with
Information Center, February 1, 1976, p. 4). Ben Porat presented
the dilemma in its entirety in the search for a compromise
formula: "We must not say that the Jews immigrated to Israel
only on account of the suppression... But on the other hand
we must also not say that it was only on account of the yearning
for Israel. Jews immigrated to Israel, so both of those elements
played a part in their immigration to Israel. We must ground
it historically... that the Jews arrived in Israel as refugees...
went through the agonies of absorption... We want to ground
it in documentation, how the Jews who arrived in Israel,
how they lived in transit camps, huts... in order to prove
that it was not only the Arab refugees who lived in camps,
as they describe it, but that our Jews [also] suffered greatly" (June
6, 1975).
It should be noted that the dichotomy between 'refugeeism'
and 'Zionism' raises a discourse that is locked into the
Zionist rhetoric. The point is that the refugee argument,
while obliterating the Zionist memory, in other senses subordinates
itself to another Zionist perception: of the Jews in the
Arab countries as passive (a claim made by the Israeli emissaries,
for example). The Zionism-refugeeism dichotomy leaves only
a narrow space for memory. If a Jew is active (i.e., a Zionist),
he forgoes his separate memory in order to become part of
the hegemony; if a Jew is a refugee, he forgoes the possibility
of being active. The discussion thus falls into a trap between
Zionism and passivity and the activist, regional, non-Zionist
option is lost.
The refugeeism question was placed on the political agenda
of the WOJAC executive in March 1976. Titled "Setting the
Ideological Campaign," this item stated: "A decision must
be made regarding the definition of whether they left the
Arab countries as displaced persons, refugees, or by force
of yearning for Zion" (March 2, 1976). Meeting on March 11,
the executive discussed the subject at length. Ben Porat
opened by acknowledging the limitations of the classic Zionist
argument. His compromised formula re-contested the notion
that the Jews in the Arab lands were "proto-Zionists": "...
No one will persuade me... that if I had given them the choice
of coming with a proper passport, [and coming] whenever [they]
wanted with their property, that 120,000 would have come
from Iraq or that all the Jews of Egypt would have come...
The persecutions played a part here. They definitely expanded
the matter... gave rise to the question of the yearning" (March
11, 1976, p. A-7). Shimon Avizemer accepts the argument about
the limitations of the Zionist case, but also contests the
logic of the refugee thesis: "... When we will say refugees,
that might conflict with the theme of the organization. So
what do they want from the Land of Israel? Refugees can go
anywhere... Let us forget about the motive for the departure..." (meeting
of WOJAC executive, March 11, 1976).
Opposition to refugeeism would intensify. Ora Schweitzer,
the chair of WOJAC's Political Department and an organizer
of the Paris conference, reported to the executive that the
head of the Jewish community of Strasbourg had received threats
stating that if he raised the refugee issue the community
would boycott the planned meeting with the organization's
members. Shlomo Hillel, who was active in the Zionist underground
in Iraq and was the architect of the mass escape action known
as "Operation Meikelberg,", said years later: "I do not regard
the exodus of Jews from Arab countries as refugees. I do
not accept that. The Jews in the Arab countries came because
they wanted to come..." (conference at Tel Aviv University,
June 6, 1998).
In this sense the Palestinian narrative is simpler and more
lucid than the fragmented, confused Mizrahi narrative. Even
though Israel claimed that the Palestinian leaders called
on their people to flee in the 1948 war, Palestinian historiography
is united around the refugeeism narrative. Contestation of
the refugeeism thesis comes from two additional sources:
the ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) discourse and the Arab world.
For example, in response to arguments put forward by WOJAC,
the anti-Zionist Haredi newspaper Yated Ne'eman wrote:
"This talk about 'Jewish
refugees who were expelled from Arab
countries' as opposed to 'Arab refugees
who were expelled from the Land of
Israel' was grating to our journalistic
ears. For decades we were accustomed
to heroic stories about the illegal
immigration, about Zionist underground
in Iraq, Syria, and North Africa,
about longings for Zion in Yemen,
about Israeli emissaries, about 'the
state-in-the-making,' which aroused
yearnings for Zion to the point where
the Jews were ready to give up all
their property and their past if
only they could go up to Zion. We
heard about astonishing operations
of 'Magic Carpet' (from Yemen) and 'Operation
Ezra and Nehemia' (from Iraq) and
operations of illegals ('Egoz') from
North Africa. We knew about entire
communities that were held 'hostage'
and were only released under heavy
Zionist pressure... However, because
of the political struggle in which
Israel is involved, it appears to
be more convenient, as a persuasive
argument, to portray the nearly one
million Jews who arrived in Israel
upon the state's establishment as
refugees who were compelled by force
to leave their places of habitation.
In other words: that the entire aliyah
was simply the absorption of deportees."( 11 )
The refugeeism discourse also generated reactions from
the Palestinian and Arab world. A report compiled by the
Research Division of Military Intelligence that was sent
to WOJAC in June 1975 forecast that at the forthcoming Arab
summit meeting the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
would submit a proposal to allow Jews from Arab states to
return to their home countries - which turned out to be partially
accurate. The report stated: "The Arabs place a special emphasis
on the situation of the 'Arab Jews' in Israel, and there
are many expressions of commiseration and solidarity with
them. The accepted Arab viewpoint sees the Jews from Arab
countries who are living in Israel as a population that suffers
discrimination because of its Eastern origins and lives in
harsh economic conditions. This, according to the Arabs,
demonstrates concretely that Israel is racist not only outwardly
but inwardly as well" (Intelligence Branch/Research 660/0550,
June 1, 1975). In January 1979 Radio Baghdad, in a Hebrew-language
broadcast, called on all Jews of Iraqi origin "to return
home," promising that they would be able to live as citizens
with equal rights in Iraq. The broadcast claimed that people
of Iraqi origin suffered discrimination in Israel at the
hands of the Ashkenazim and that this injustice would be
rectified when they returned to Iraq (January 29, 1979).
With these comments Radio Baghdad broke the Zionist taboo
and smoothly shifted the discussion from the national discourse
to the internal Jewish ethnic discourse. That taboo would
also be broken by the Israeli establishment itself, which
would in part ground its attitude toward WOJAC's activity
in the ethnic arena.
Even though WOJAC set out to bolster the Zionist thesis
and assist Israel's battle against Palestinian nationalism,
it accomplished the opposite by rendering the Zionist position
fragile and fluid. Moreover, although it invoked the term
Zionism, WOJAC actually replaced old content with new and
undermined the term's supposedly immutable meaning.
The Property Exchange Thesis
When WOJAC began functioning in the 1970's, it adopted the theory of "accounting" developed
by the Israeli Government during the 1950's (Shenhav 1999). This theory forestalled
any possibility of individual claims for compensation, and made use of the
assets of Jews from Arab countries as if they were state-property, at the disposal
of the State of Israel. According to this theory, the submission of private
property claims of individuals to the Egyptian Government (within the auspices
of the peace agreement) would weaken the State in future negotiations with
the Palestinians. When WOJAC demanded compensation for the property of Jews
from Arab countries, it did not mean the monetary compensation of Jews from
Arab countries themselves. It was advancing, rather, a demand for rights to
this property, in order to use them to counterbalance claims made by the Palestinian
refugees against Israel. In the words of the attorney Shlomo Tusia-Cohen:
We believe that the day will come when [the sides] will sit down to discuss
the claims of refugees and Arabs that were displaced, in a practical, decisive
manner. A counter-claim for property left in the Arab countries will already
exist, as a sort of counterbalance that will be [in place] when the time
comes to meet. (3rd National Convention, 5/4/90)
Or, as WOJAC Chairperson Oved Ben-Ozer declared: "We are
deeply convinced that the State of Israel - as the defender
of the life, rights and interests of Jews throughout the
world - has full moral right to be charged with responsibility
for the property left by Jews in their countries of origin." (18/7/93)
According to his argument, the State of Israel represented
not only its own citizens, but the entire Jewish people.
The dowry that WOJAC offered the State of Israel was free-use
of the property of all Jews from Arab countries (not just
those who were Israeli citizens) in order not to compensate
the Palestinians for the injustice done to them in the 1940's.
In November 1992, WOJAC drafted a letter to Jews from Arab
countries in preparation for negotiations with the Palestinians.
In part, the letter read as follows: "In light of the political
developments, compensation for Jews from Arab countries is
likely to be brought up for discussion in the near future.
In order to facilitate our organization's preparation, we
have decided to turn to the public..." (Internal letter,
16/11/92) But, due to the policy of vagueness regarding property
value estimates, the organization's Executive changed its
mind and called off the initiative. Ben-Porat expressed his
reservations about exact figures with the following warning: "We
must be careful about numbers, gentleman. People can talk
privately, but the Executive of the organization must not
come out with numbers at the present time." (4th National
Convention, Tel Aviv, 16/12/93) WOJAC members were concerned
that their concrete estimates would encourage Palestinian
counter-claims, and that these would become part of the agenda
at a time when, and in a situation for which, Israel would
be unprepared. It was, therefore, an equation of mutual deterrence,
as Ben-Porat confirmed: "It is better to leave it as an overall
illusion." We know for certain that, until today, a serious
process of registration of this property has not been undertaken,
and that estimates kept in the safe of the Ministry of Justice
(the Division of Arab Law) are based on the registration
of 3,000-4,000 families at most."
In 1999, when interim negotiations with
the Palestinians were underway, another attempt was made
to register Jewish property. This time, the effort was a
joint-initiative of the Prime Minister's Office and the World
Sefardic Federation. This body formulated a property registration
questionnaire and sent thousands of copies to synagogues
of Mizrakhi Jews in North America, Europe and Israel. The
form was accompanied by the following explanation: "As representatives
of Jews from Arab countries, we request that you take part
in the completion of an essential project, the goal of which
is to gather information about Jewish property in Arab countries.
This information will serve as the basis for counter-claims
in the future final negotiations between Israel and the Arab
states."( 12 )
The Palestinian reaction to this effort was quick to emerge.
In response to the form distributed by the Federation, Daud
Barakat, the Palestinian coordinator for negotiations on
the refugee issue, asserted: "There is no linkage. Israel
will need to negotiate directly with Lebanon, Morocco and
Egypt. We do not represent these states."( 13 )
The sharpest challenge to the property
thesis, however, came from within WOJAC, from members who
were not Israeli citizens. Three of them, Prof. Yehezkel
Hadad from New York, Rafaelo Falah from Rome and Na'im Dangur
from London, gave voice to a different opinion than that
of the Executive, at times responding in open rebellion.
They argued that the State of Israel had no right to use
Jewish property in Arab countries for its own political purposes,
by covering-up the fact that some claimants were not Israeli
citizens. The arguments of these non-Israeli Jews are reminiscent
of Dr. Nahum Goldman's protests to Ben-Gurion regarding the
German reparation payments (ha-Shilumim), when he asked the
Israeli Prime Minister to not speak in the name of the Jewish
people, rather only in the name of the State of Israel. Ben-Gurion
regarded Israel's claims against Germany as an opportunity
to establish the State's sovereignty not only over its own
citizens, but over the entire Jewish people as well. These
arguments are also similar, in certain respects, to the voices
of Jews living in Europe (primarily Eastern Europe) that
opposed the representation of their interests by WJRO (World
Jewish Restitution Organization), which was established by
the World Jewish Congress and the Jewish Agency.( 14 )
The issues of rights and citizenship came
to a head at WOJAC's fourth national convention in 1993.
Yihezkel Haddad expressed his position on the question of
citizenship: "We have a problem that there are close to one
million Jews from Arab countries that live outside of the
State of Israel...some of them came to Israel and then left
the country, giving up their Israeli citizenship. Others
went directly - like the Algerians, who all went to France.
These people also have rights, and the State of Israel cannot
control this issue..." (4th National Convention, Tel Aviv,
16/12/93, p.36) Haddad had already experienced a run-in with
WOJAC members in 1978, when he met with Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat on his own initiative, contrary to the position
of WOJAC (Haddad had, at that point, been a member of the
organization's Executive). Haddad wanted to take advantage
of the momentum of the peace process with Egypt in order
to create a new reality. Because of this visit, Haddad was
reprimanded by the WOJAC Executive. (Executive meeting, 1/6/78)
Haddad reconciled himself to this rebuke, and tried to justify
his actions by explaining that he had not actually met with
Sadat about the issue of compensation, rather in order to
obtain his principled acknowledgement of the rights of Jews
from Arab countries in their countries of origin. Haddad's
explanation did not satisfy the Executive; he left the meeting
angrily, and the Executive subsequently resolved to dismiss
him from the forum. (Protocol of Executive Meeting, 20/8/78)
In 1999, when the issue was again raised in preparation for
final status agreements with the Palestinians, Haddad repeated: "[Israel]
has no legal right to represent the Jews from Arab countries
that live outside of Israel, and it has no right to link
our claims to those of the Palestinians."( 15 )
Na'im Dangur, a resident of London and also a member of
WOJAC, began to publish sharp criticism of WOJAC's thesis
of counterbalancing claims in the early 1990's. He accused
Israel of making cynical use of the property of non-Israeli
Jews in order to further aims that were not their own. In
an August 1993 letter to Ben-Ozer, Dangur stressed that Israel
had no right to treat this property as if it were its own.
After receiving no response, Dangur warned that he intended
to consult attorneys both inside and outside of Israel. (Letter
from Dangur, 16/8/93)
In a letter to the WOJAC Executive in October 1993, just
before the upcoming convention, Dangur wrote the following: "The
Jews have an argument for the division of assets in the Middle
East...WOJAC must make it clear that compensation will be
paid to individual Jewish refugees and will not be used solely
to counterbalance the claims of the Palestinians." (5/10/93).
In response to claims of Israeli officials
that the Government had invested many billions in the absorption
of the Jews of Arab countries, and therefore had the right
to make use of their property, Dangur retorted sharply: "They
certainly did not invest those billions on me."( 16 )
When WOJAC Chairperson Oved Ben-Ozer announced the dissolution
of WOJAC on 14/7/99, Dangur responded: "I am sorry to hear
about the dissolution of WOJAC. This step was unavoidable,
as, for the past 15 years, WOJAC has unjustifiably feigned
acting in the interests of Jews from Arab countries, while
it was actually a mere tool in the hands of the Israeli Government."( 17 )
Rafaelo Falah, a member of WOJAC, a resident
of Rome and President of the World Association of Libyan
Jews, was another rebel within the organization. Falah met
with Libyan President Mu'amar Kadaffi in February 1993, in
the presence of former Itlanian Prime Minister Julio Andriotti.( 18 )
Falah reported that Kadaffi intended to set up a joint commission
consisting of representatives of Libya and Italian Jews that
had left Iraq, in order to discuss the issue of paying monetary
compensation to Libyan ex-patriots for property that they
had left in the country.( 19 )
On this occasion, the Libyan Ambassador in Saudi Arabia,
Muhammad 'Ali Ya'ush stated: "There is no room to establish
linkage between Palestinian compensation and compensation
for Jews that left the Arab countries in which they lived."( 20 )
WOJAC's leadership had two reservations regarding the separation
of Jewish and Israeli interests. Firstly, such a separation
threatened to weaken Israel's political position of not being
represented by diaspora Jews, rather only by Israeli citizens.
Secondly, it had the potential to create a Palestinian analogy,
which would open the door to similar individual claims by
members of the Palestinian diaspora. Yehezkel Hadad confirmed
this: ".As a person living in the diaspora...I want to point
out the dangers of raising the arguments and rights of Jews
that do not live in Israel. This was brought to my attention
by Shimon Peres and Yossi Beilin in private conversations,
and by Yossi Hadas and Moshe Raviv as well, in extremely
private conversations. They fear that our persistence regarding
the diaspora issue could open a Pandora's box that would
allow all the Palestinians living outside of the country
to make similar claims." (4th National Convention, Tel-Aviv,
16/12/93, p.41)
Another test of WOJAC's stance took place during the Gulf
War in 1991. Prof. Yoram Dinshtein, President of Tel-Aviv
University and an expert in international law suggested taking
advantage of the opportunity by adding-on compensation claims
of individual Jews for property confiscated in Iraq in the
1950's. Both the Foreign Ministry and WOJAC were opposed
to this proposal because it threatened to weaken Israel's
negotiating position. Dinshtein later explained:
The missed opportunity came with the Iraqi defeat in the Gulf War. I suggested
attempting.on such a festive occasion, to include at least some of the Jewish
claims. (not) Israeli citizens, but there was most certainly a reasonable chance
of adding claims of citizens of the coalition countries that fought against
Iraq.. The opportunity was missed." (p.140) "We had a chance then of including
at least part of the compensation owed to the Jews of Iraq. and, as you know,
opportunities do not repeat themselves. (p.141) (Tel Aviv, 16/12/93)
The battle over property rights was not, and is not, an
economic battle alone. Possibly, it is not an economic battle
at all, as the majority of participants in the discussions
and debates clearly recognized the extremely slim chances
that Arab countries would compensate its former citizens.
It was a symbolic process that reflected the complex relationship
between "Jewish identity" ( Yehudiut ) and "Israeli identity" (
Israeliyut ). The distinction between these two poles, which
actually represent the transition from a "Jewish people" to
an "Israeli" people, was blurred by the classical conception
of Zionism. The power of Zionist practice and historiography
was derived from the non-historical use of both of these
poles, which nourished and validated one another, in a process
of obfuscation and clarification. The objection of non-Israeli
Jews to the symbolic use of their property was regarded by
the Israeli Foreign Ministry and WOJAC as both threatening
the jurisdiction of the State and sharpening the distinction
between the two poles.
From their own perspective, however, these non-Israeli Jews
were struggling to create a private memory not confined to
the frozen narrative of the Israeli "districts of memory" -
a memory that had been deported by the State. In other words,
an Iraqi Jew living in London or New York announced that
he was unwilling to have his personal history told exclusively
in the formative language of the State, while, at the same
time, he wanted to be part of it. This challenge disrupted
the anomaly of Jewish nationalism and its blurring of the
distinction between people and nation, and between nation
and citizenship. It was a battle over memory.
To summarize, we have seen that the three theses formulated
by WOJAC in the national field were problematic. In no case
was WOJAC successful in articulating a clear and uniform
position. On the contrary, it engendered a discourse that
undermined several of the sacrosanct tenets of European Zionism.
Because of their structurally hybrid place in the Israeli
society as Jews whose origins lie in Arab countries, WOJAC's
spokesmen rejected the common foundation on which Jewish-European
historiography and Zionist ideology were established. However,
the problematic character of WOJAC's approach lay not only
in its contestation of the national narrative. WOJAC operated
simultaneously on another front as well: the "ethnic" front.
In other words, WOJAC's activity was deciphered by the state
as ethnic, not national, in character.
From the National Back to the Ethnic Realm
The public discussion in Israel has traditionally rested on a distinction between
two forms of parallel discourse which ostensibly never meet: the ethnic discourse
and the national discourse. The former is perceived as intra-Jewish (i.e.,
the division between Ashkenazim and Mizrahim), the latter as a pan-Jewish
national discourse. The compartmentalization into two rigorously separate
categories of the ethnic and the national discourse has accompanied Zionism
since its inception. As Shafir explained, Zionism was constituted "as a theory
of political legitimacy, which requires that ethnic boundaries should not
cross political ones" (1989/1996:8). The ethnic discourse was perceived as
a threat if it contested the idea of Jewishness as a distinct, sui generis
ethno-national category. In other words, ethnic discourse is permitted as
long as it is defined as an intra-Jewish discourse and perceived as an ephemeral
phenomenon that poses no threat to national solidarity.( 21 )
This was one of the reasons that the alliance between the "Black Panthers" social
movement of Mizrahi activists and the far-left "Matzpen" group in the 1970s
was viewed [by the establishment] as a significant, almost strategic, threat
to the Jewish society.
The division of academic labor also confirms the distinction
between the national and the ethnic field. Whereas historians
are occupied with the external-national question, the internal-ethnic
question is addressed by anthropologists and sociologists
who treat the ethnic division as a given fact that obviates
a possible conjoining of the two fields. Thus, for example,
when the historian Benny Morris analyzes the birth of the
Palestinian refugee problem, he does not mention its connection
with the Jews from Arab countries (Morris 1987). When anthropologists
analyze the heritage of the Mizrahi Jews they consider this
a subject distinct from the national question (Deshen & Shoked
1984). When Yosef Meir discusses the immigration of the Yemenites
who were brought to Palestine by Shmuel Yavnieli in 1908/9,
he does not cite the relevance of this to the Palestinian
issue (Meir 1983), as Shafir does later (Shafir 1989/1996).
Israeli historiography, then, is based on a cultural classification
system that "sees to it" that the "different" forms of discourse
are channeled into separate intellectual-political-cultural
tracks. This system disables the possibility of contesting
the cultural and political arrangement.
This division of labor depoliticizes the "ethnic" issue
and nullifies the possibility of addressing Mizrahi history
and Palestinian history with similar tools, even though both
those groups were forced to cope culturally with the European-Zionist
meta-narrative. The analysis proposed by WOJAC as a community
of memory operating within the national and ethnic alignment
enables the creation of a new point of departure. Its point
is that the "Mizrahi" question cannot exist as an exclusively
intra-Jewish issue, just as the distinction between the external
and the internal is an ideological construction in itself.
WOJAC's analysis reflects the schizophrenia that marked
the organization's activity, as every attempt it made to
reconstruct the materials of the past in the national discourse
forced it to trod deep into "ethnic mire." On the one hand,
WOJAC appealed to the "ethnie" of its members in order to
support Israeli nationalism; but at the same time, it encountered
powerful forces of denial that shunned this "ethnicity".
This cultural trap is the result of the divided identity
of the Jews from Arab countries and of the fact that they
are the close-stranger of European-Zionist nationalism, the
stranger with the power to estrange (Simmel 1903/1950).
From the outset, WOJAC declared its unequivocal refusal
to deal with internal ethnic issues. For example, in the
executive meeting of March 11, 1976, a question was asked
about the organization's association with the Sephardi Federation
in Israel. The reply was definitive: "The Sephardi Federation
deals with internal matters. We deal with state-political
matters. There is a complete separation... They should not
deal with state-political matters... Each to its own part
of the work..." (p. C-15). However, the refusal to address
ethnic issues could not be absolute, and the question occasionally
cropped up on the agenda. In a lecture delivered at a WOJAC
conference in September 1979, Professor Sami Smooha, a Haifa
University sociologist, presented data about "ethnic disparities" in
Israel. Following his talk, Mordechai Ben Porat made WOJAC's
position perfectly clearly: "Dr. Smooha delivered a lecture
with frightening data... But that of course is not WOJAC's
business. We committed ourselves from the beginning not to
become involved in internal matters. That is our moral commitment
within the WOJAC structure, and we will not deal with internal
affairs. True, there is a frame of mind among us - both those
from abroad and also the Israeli participants - that says
that if this is the Israeli society, then let us create a
pressure group in the State of Israel in order to change
the situation. But I say again - that is not WOJAC's concern" (Second
Conference of the World Executive, September 11, 1979, p.
A-3).
The transition from the national to the ethnic discourse
can be described metaphorically as a shift between different
screens of memory. WOJAC intended to display the Jewish-Arab
memory on the national screen, but it was simultaneously
projected on an additional screen: the ethnic screen. I turn
now to illustrate how the theses adduced by WOJAC ostensibly
in the national arena were also concurrently given an ethnic
interpretation. The transition to the ethnic screen explains
in part the reservations about the organization expressed
by the Foreign Ministry and the Israeli establishment in
general.
The thesis of the "primordiality of the Jewish entity in
the region" slid into the "ethnic discussion" because it
proposed that the Mizrahim have a claim to the Land of Israel
simply because they are part of the region. This was perceived
as a separatist thesis, as it heightened the fact that the
European Jews were strangers in the region and accorded priority
to the Mizrahim in fashioning Jewish nationhood. The argument
was not couched explicitly in those terms, but cropped up
in WOJAC discussions in various contexts during the organization's
twenty-five years of activity. Thus, Professor Ya'akov Meron
said, "Once it used to be said, Palestine is Jews. Today,
it is said that Palestine is Arabs. Well, I regret that.
The first issue is legitimate rights... One has to accord
a legitimate right to the Jews from the Arab states... Nowadays
the Ashkenazim have to use the rights of WOJAC to justify
the existence of [Jewish] rights in Israel..." Responding
to the reservations voiced by the Israeli Foreign Ministry
to this argument, which it perceived as separatist, Meron
added, "I... say that it is wrong to call this a trap...
I think this argument has to be put forward... and it is
also good for internal purposes. Mordechai Ben Porat had
a meeting with the Minister of Justice, and we saw that even
among people who have a son who is married to a woman whose
extraction is from an Arab country - even he is afraid about
where the rights of the Ashkenazim lie. Well, then, we also
out the minds of the Ashkenazim at rest concerning that clause" (WOJAC
executive, March 11, 1976, p. B-7).
Meron was not seeking to foment cleavage but to argue for
the Jews' rights in the Land of Israel, but his arguments
were bound to be labeled "ethnic."
Fearful of the emergence of an ethnic discourse (and even
more of a mixed ethnic-national discourse), Mordechai Ben
Porat warned against separatist statements:
"I want to speak in the name of the Ashkenazim as well... What will happen if
we get feedback and the Arabs say, We definitely recognize your legitimate rights
to Israel... but if there is someone smart among them, [he will say] You and
I will live here, now let's throw all the Poles back. I think we have to be ready
for such a possibility, and then we will pushed into a very difficult position.
You will get your legitimate rights to the Land of Israel, you have a right,
they will tell us... Our connection with the rest of the population in Israel
is also essential, we must not appear to have a preferential advantage. I am
only presenting a thesis here. I am not saying that this has the same weight
as the legitimate rights to the point where they are annulled. But I am saying
that we will be ready also to think about that aspect... The Palestinians will
tell us... You are Jews from Arab countries, you too have a legitimate right
to Palestine... They will say that those who came from Europe have to be sent
back" (ibid., March 11, 1976, p. B-15).
Ben Porat, who wanted to repair the damage done by his colleagues,
actually made matters worse by further unraveling the complex
fabric: "If we recognize that the Jews, and let us assume
that only the Jews from Arab countries, have the right to
self-determination, then no one, not even the PLO, has the
authority to dictate... the substance of their right... So,
if the Jews from Arab countries want to host Ashkenazi Jews,
they can also host Ashkenazi Jews..." (March 11, 1976, p.
B-16). Ben Porat's correction was influenced, among other
factors, by a cautionary letter on this subject from WOJAC's
representative in Switzerland, Gittel Littman: "We have to
avoid internal disputes which will enable the Arabs to make
use of the rift between Ashkenazim and Mizrahim. We have
to emphasize the unity of the Jewish people and the Israeli
society" (August 25, 1975).
The primordiality thesis is not merely an abstract argument.
Since it is perceived as a claim that strengthens the legitimate
rights of the Jews in the region, and since those rights
are realized through the Jews from Arab countries, it entails
operative proposals, according to which those Jews should
be in the forefront of the political arena. Indirectly, these
proposals again introduced the ethnic discourse. As Ben Porat
put it, "Here we are trying... to change certain customs
in the State of Israel in order to offer more proof that
we are part of the Middle East. What are those customs? - We
will say it aloud, we have said it until now, and we will
not let the matter rest in the future, either, [namely] that
the representatives of the State of Israel overseas should
not be only of South African origin, or Anglo-Saxons or Irish,
that among them should be some who are a bit dark-skinned,
so they will be seen to truly be part of the Middle East...
That is proof regarding the matter of the Middle East" (seminar
with Information Center, February 1, 1976). Thus the national
discussion collapses into the black hole of ethnicity, ruling
out the possibility of focusing on state-political issues
and locating the WOJAC activists, who are anxious about the
emergence of the ethnic discourse, precisely in the midst
of that discourse.
The refugeeism thesis, too, slid quickly
into the ethnic field. Years afterward, Professor Ya'akov
Meron told a conference at Tel Aviv University that in the
1970s he proposed to the Foreign Ministry that Shlomo Hillel
should take part in the peace talks so that he could say
to a refugee from Jaffa, "Ahalan wasahlan, I am a refugee
from Baghdad." The reply Meron received from the Foreign
Ministry was: "You are introducing ethnicity into Israel's
foreign policy" (discussion on the question of Jewish property
in Arab states, June 10, 1998). Moreover, the refugeeism
concept led WOJAC to create a symmetry between the Jews from
Arab countries and the Palestinian refugees. That gave rise,
among other results, to the contention that in the 1950s
the Mizrahim were absorbed in Israel in refugee camps and
lived like refugees. One of the speakers at a joint seminar
of WOJAC and the Information Center of the Foreign Ministry
stated: "Only those who have experienced transit camps...
and those who saw the conditions in the transit camps from
their outset... can imagine and know that they were no different
from the conditions in the Arab refugee camps. That means
the same conditions, the same troubles in the camps, with
one difference - that difference is the way people were treated.
The State of Israel and the Jewish people treated their brethren
in the right way. I do not say that all the Jewish refugees
in the Land of Israel received the [optimal] treatment - we
are still suffering from the results of the transit camps;
there are serious phenomena in the country as a result of
those hard days in the transit camps - but with all the mistakes,
the Jewish people and the state did far more than the Arab
people did for the DPs in the Arab countries" (February 1,
1976, p. 3). At the beginning of the 1990s, Ben Porat echoed
this: "... There was no difference between those transit
camps and the refugee camps..." (Third National Conference,
April 5, 1990). To underline the symmetry he also called
the refugee camps "transit camps": "Arab refugees left Israel.
About 590,000 Arabs left Israel. Countering that, 600,000
Jews from Arab countries arrived. Those two camps, the two
groups, lived in extremely difficult conditions in transit
camps" (April 5, 1990, p. 18). There is no doubt that these
comments, though uttered within the framework of the national
field, constituted harsh criticism of the Israeli establishment
of the 1950s and later.( 22 )
The lesson, then, is that the sources of the ethnic discourse
lie in the Zionist national discourse, as the sources of
the Zionist national discourse are embedded in the ethnic
discourse. The two constitute one discourse and no attempt
to draw a distinction between them can obscure the connection.
The Different Languages of the Discourse: The Reaction of
the Israeli Establishment
Despite the seemingly productive dowry that WOJAC offered the State of Israel,
the attitude of the establishment remained patronizing and suspicious. As Leon
Tamman described it, "The government treated us like infants, little children.
When an infant cries, people give it a pacifier and say, Take the pacifier
and be quiet. That is how we felt" (December 16, 1989, p. 15). An analysis
of the relations between WOJAC and the Israeli establishment reveals a Tower
of Babel syndrome: parallel languages of discourse that never meet.
Upon WOJAC's establishment, Yigal Allon rightly feared the
emergence of "ethnic organizing" and Ben Porat promised (and
meant it) that there would be no manifestation of ethnicity.
Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, as we saw, also requested the
organization to maintain a low profile. The ethnic aspect
of the Foreign Ministry's concern was not unjustified. Ora
Schweitzer, the chair of WOJAC's Political Committee, relates
that "the people in the Foreign Ministry called our activity
a provincial interest." She explains, "You have to take into
account the paranoia of the party functionaries... Many people
thought it was ethnic. Even some of our activists considered
it ethnic... Some tried to mix Sephardism into the WOJAC
case..." (personal interview, March 10, 1998). WOJAC tried
to operate in the national field, but because of its composition,
the background of its activists, and the content of its arguments
it was unable to escape the ethnic label. Its "ethnicity" was
not deliberate but derived from the existence of a field
of "ethnic" interpretation which is non- dependent on the
speaker, his/her motives, or his/her history. The link between
nationalism and ethnicity set off warning lights, particularly
in the Foreign Ministry.
Even before the Paris conference, two
Foreign Ministry officials, Yosef Hadass and Shlomo Argov,
warned against a public endorsement of the primordiality
thesis. According to the ministry, the threat lay in a schismatic
argument that linked Mizrahi (and not pan-Jewish) ethnicity
with the rights to the Land of Israel. Arab politicians,
too, contended that European Jews had arrived in the region
and from outside and taken it over. The Foreign Ministry
was also apprehensive that the Palestinians would feel obliged
to respond to WOJAC's arguments. However, the organization
ignored the ministry's demands and formulated the primordiality
thesis as its principal argument. The Paris conference issued
a call for recognition of the rights of the Jews from Arab
countries, including their right to the "natural wealth" of
the countries in the Middle East, and their political and
cultural rights in the region.( 23 )
This statement prompted, Farouk Kaddoumi, the head of the
PLO's Political Department, to send greetings to the conference
and urge the Jews from Arab countries to return to there
(i.e., to remain in the region). The Foreign Ministry's worst
fears were thus realized and it immediately reprimanded the
WOJAC executive. The frustration felt by WOJAC at the ministry's
alienation was expressed by Yitzhak Ben Gad, a member of
the organization, in an article he published in Yedioth Ahronoth
: "... Unfortunately, or ironically, it emerges that the
potential strength of WOJAC is clear to the Arab world and
to many bodies in Israel and abroad, but is not sufficiently
clear to our Foreign Ministry. To this day the organization
continues to knock at the door of the Foreign Ministry...
but its efforts have not met with success."( 24 )
At a special meeting of the executive held on April 10,
1977, Dr. Ya'akov Meron, the Justice Ministry official, reported
on the rift with the Foreign Ministry that was caused by
the Paris conference (A/R/ C13/70). It turned out that in
the summer of 1976 Jewish organizations had held a conference
in Jerusalem at which a ministry official, Max Varone attacked
WOJAC's activity. The organization had known nothing about
this until, some time later, its representative Norma Ballas
chanced upon the conference protocol in the office of a Jewish
group in New York. "I must discharge a difficult and unpleasant
duty," Varone had told the gathering. "I wish to make it
clear that the Foreign Ministry had doubts about the World
Organization of Jews from Arab Countries." Meron went on
to quote Varone as saying that the resolutions of the Paris
conference produced undesirable results, notably: the call
by Arab states to Jews to return "home"; the closing of the
way to return to Zion of all the Jews (i.e., including those
of European extraction) in the wake of the claim of political
rights by the Jews from Arab countries to the Land of Israel;
the dependence of all the other Jews in Israel on the Mizrahim,
as the claim to the Land of Israel was based on the continuity
of Jewish habitation in the Middle East; and, finally, "the
demand by the Jews from Arab countries to receive part of
the resources of those countries invites the PLO to put forward
a similar counter-claim against Israel." Summing up, Varone
said that WOJAC "is inclined to think that [it is] not only
a counterweight to the PLO but also a separate entity parallel
to the PLO." The Foreign Ministry, he concluded, would not
permit WOJAC "to become a state within a state" (A/R/ C13/70).
Varone's concern stemmed from the fact that the Eastern
Jews had bifurcated Jewish nationalism. In the past, ethnic
sectarianism, albeit undesirable, had manifested itself within
a predetermined pattern and without undercutting Jewish national
unity. The primordiality thesis undermined the national component
by imagining the nation as being constructed on the foundation
of only one segment of the Jewish people. Prof. Ya'akov Meron
set the matter in perspective many years later: "Until the
[political] turnabout in 1977, the Mizrahi communities were
treated as a joke. And then came Mordechai Ben Porat and
said he wanted to help the state... That anyone would dare
intervene in the [country's] external affairs was slightly
comic and slightly dangerous... Varone, who spoke before
the Conference of Presidents [of Major American Jewish Organizations]
and vilified WOJAC... said that [some] people think it is
possible to create a state within a state, an Israeli PLO..." (personal
interview, March 18, 1998).
WOJAC took fright at the report of Varone's speech. Ora
Schweitzer thought the organization should tone down its
activity since it was "a tool of the state, with the Foreign
Ministry as the chief authority..." (August 22, 1976). Menahem
Yedid was upset that "the organization is being treated as
an alien element by the Foreign Ministry" (August 22, 1976).
Leon Tamman maintained that "a negative position of the Foreign
Ministry is liable to put an end to the entire matter" (executive
meeting, April 10, 1977). Mathilda Gez said "it should be
made clear to the Foreign Ministry again that the organization
was established as an instrument for the State of Israel." David
Hacohen suggested that "the Foreign Ministry be requested
to clarify exactly which points are in contention between
the organization and the ministry." Dr. Tzemach urged that "nothing
be done to heighten the atmosphere of tension." As late as
1992, attorney Shlomo Tussiya-Cohen could state: "I reiterate
the promise to the Foreign Ministry that none of us has any
political ambitions, we have no ambitions for any personal
advancement or anything like that" (meeting of executive
members, Tel Aviv, June 16, 1992, p. 4).
Long before, the Foreign Ministry's Shlomo Argov told Ben
Porat that "the connection between the organization and the
Foreign Ministry will be secret, so it is desirable to keep
correspondence to a minimum" (executive meeting, August 22,
1976). In July 1977 a meeting was held with the newly appointed
Foreign Minister, Moshe Dayan, following which the primordiality
thesis was downplayed and WOJAC's activity received an official
endorsement, primarily with regard to the exchange of populations
thesis. Now "there are no differences and there is no argument," Dayan
summed up (protocol of meeting with the Foreign Minister,
July 22, 1977). In October 1977 Ben Porat showed Simcha Dinitz
the agreement between WOJAC and the Foreign Ministry "in
order to remove any possible doubt about the organization" (Ben
Porat report to WOJAC executive, October 22, 1977). In 1978
the Foreign Ministry rehabilitated WOJAC in the form of a
letter sent by the ministry's director-general to fourteen
ambassadors (including the Washington embassy) proposing
that they take into account the exchange of populations and
property thesis in explaining Israeli foreign policy. However,
WOJAC's status continued to decline over the years as far
as the Foreign Ministry was concerned and it finally ended
its days with a whimper in July 1999.
Conclusion: Mizrahism as a Site with Wide Shoulders
The community of memory I have described enables the hegemonic memory that
is commemorated at the sites of Israeli memory to be estranged in two not
unconnected ways. One is by estranging the story of the European-Zionist
hegemony and its true relevance to the Mizrahim. If European historiography
nullified the Middle-East in terms of time and place, the Mizrahi narrative
proposed here contests it from below. In particular, it renders fluid and
blurred the question of who is a Zionist and what is a Zionist. Second is
the estrangement of the constituent distinction of the Israeli-Zionist discourse
between a national (external) discourse and an ethnic (internal) discourse.
This enables a re-reading of the inter-ethnic relations and their removal
from the arena of economic or cultural discrimination or the folklore arena
into historiographic, philosophical, and political spaces. It proposes a
historiography that refuses to be interwoven into a collective memory that
is alien to it. WOJAC's activity demonstrates that the ethnic-Mizrahi element
is potent as an organizing basis of the social reality and that the attempt
to annul it is problematic. The Mizrahim, in attempting to Judaize the Arab-cultural
space, introduce their Arabness and their estranged place in the Israeli
collective. In certain senses, they represent the "unconscious" of that collective,
an "unconscious" that blurs the concepts of time and space and refuses to
sanctify taken-for-granted distinctions. They enable contraries and contradictions
to coexist and to "pollute" the dominant cultural-political order. This conclusion
is of particular interest in the light of the fact that WOJAC mobilized as
an organization to include the Mizrahi history and memory within the political
Zionism of Israel.
This paradoxical conclusion necessitates a reconsideration
of questions relating to the essence of social criticism
and the politics of protest. The classical critical tradition
tends to divide the social arena dichotomously into critical
groups and conformist groups according to a model of an a
priori position in the political arena. WOJAC's "non-critical" agenda
on national issues, alongside the "critical voices" that
were simultaneously sounded, weakens the force of this kind
of prior division. Consequently, a more complex analysis
is called for of the conditions in which social action occurs.
The neo-liberal German sociologist Ulrich Beck offers a
possible analytical framework for a different analysis of
politics (Beck 1994). Beck maintains that our tools of analysis
are chained to the paradigm of the "first modernity," which
emerged in late nineteenth-century Europe. That paradigm
accustomed us to think about politics in dichotomous terms
and to map it within established structures that are also
part of the same paradigm: political parties, trade unions,
capital-based associations, parliaments, or courts. This
type of politics revolved around similar dichotomies, such
as left or right, capitalism or socialism, idealism or materialism,
radicalism or conservatism, nationalism or anti-nationalism.
The modernist approach does not permit us, Beck says, to
examine politics with sharper tools or to identify it in
other locales where it manifests itself. Instead, he proposes
the concept of the "late modernity" (or the "second modernity"),
which blurs the modernist clarity and refuses to yield to
the categories of the old political map (see also: Bauman
1991). Beck proposes an examination of the individualization
processes of politics and the disassembly of the received
hierarchies, along with organized politics. The politics
of the late modernity is dense and replete with a multiplicity
of participants and positions, politics-from-below, and sub-politics.
We need not accept Beck's hypothesis in full, as it is fraught
with the danger of extreme individualism, possibly implying
the nullification and redundancy of the ideological and moral
map, which in fact is still of great relevance. Still, Beck's
insight enables us to examine the activity of the social
players through the prism of a multiplicity of interests,
some of them fragmented, and through a consciousness that
is not organized and is not coherently and uniformly adjusted.
It proposes that the social division into political categories
is inherently fluid and allows for additional organizing,
fragmentation, multiplicity, and contradictions simultaneously.
Not surprisingly, this conclusion also leads us to a radically
different theoretical polarity, that of the post-colonial
discourse in culture studies. Homi Bhabha takes issue with
the dichotomous approach adduced by Edward Said in his book
Orientalism (Bhabha 1994; Said 1978). He argues that Said's
framework of analysis, which is based on a binary distinction
between East and West, replicates the mechanism of colonial
rule and is thereby self-defeating. It is based on a homology
with the object of the analysis and portrays the "Other" as
an object engendered by the colonial discourse. In other
words, that framework analysis preserves "the locations of
the subject and the object forged by this discourse as permanent
and stable" (Hever & Ophir 1994:141). Edward Said's work
illustrates the deeply problematic status of critical theory
in post-colonial conditions. Bhabha would not only refute
the validity of this binarism, he would also posit it as
an ideological metaphor that overlies conflicts and conflictual
relations that are amenable to additional strategies of action.
In other words, "opposition and cooperation are not mutually
exclusive; they can be engendered from each other and nourish
each other" (Hever & Ophir 1994:143).
In the context of our discussion, the attempt to create
alternative voices to the Zionist discourse based on a priori
definitions of the Zionist hegemony neutralizes the possibility
of extracting a critical interpretation independent of that
discourse. The analysis proposed here enables an escape from
the binarism of opposition/cooperation (in the language of
the Zionist discourse) and the extension of the critique
into new space. It makes possible not only WOJAC's cooptation
into the Zionist discourse but also the reverse: the cooptation
of the Zionist discourse and its insertion into a new ideological
space, the third space in Bhabha's terms (Bhabha 1994). The
third space does not obey the traditional political contour
lines, such as the distinction between national discourse
and ethnic discourse; instead, it simultaneously blurs and
creates the boundaries between them. The third space proposes
that Mizrahiness is not a categorical phenomenon in conflict
with "Ashkenaziness," but a political-cultural, and metaphysical,
boundary line of which all the participants in the discussion
are a part. And it is not a micro-thin line. It is a site
of broad shoulders along a road where manifold, fragmented
activity takes place that brings into being new spaces of
thought and activity. Hence also the potency of the community
of memory that releases itself from established realms and
creates itself.
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Endnotes
( 1 )
Pierre Nora proposes an analysis of the realms of memory
and argues that they exist "because there are no longer any
milieux de memoire" (1992:6). Nora does not explain what
he means by the term "milieu" or what reciprocal relations,
if any, exist between "milieu" and "realm" (lieux). The analysis
in this article makes use of the term "community of memory," which,
as I will show later, will enable the contestation of the
institutionalized and frozen narratives of the realms of
memory. "Realms" and "communities" are two autonomous sociological
praxes between which dialectical reciprocal relations exist.
For example, one can assume that that certain voices from "communities" evolve
into realms in a process of institutionalization and routinization
which induces forgetting. By the same token, one may reasonably
suppose that some communities are engendered as a reaction
to the existence of realms and in order to contest them.
These reciprocal relations will be addressed later in the
article.
( 2 )
A list of the participants at the First Zionist Congress
appears in Orlan (1964/5).
( 3 )
It is difficult to find academic criticism of this genre
of historiography. Among the few who have taken issue with
it are Swirski 1995, Shiblak 1986, and Shenhav 1999; however,
this critical literature is sporadic and has little expression
in the internal Israeli academic discourse. There are, however,
personal testimonies that contest the establishment version,
such as Naeim Giladi, "The Jews of Iraq," The Link, April-May
1998, 31:1-2.
( 4 )
As the WOJAC material has not yet been transferred to any
official archive, the documentation in this article is based
on the notation system used by the organization.
( 5 )
For an orderly presentation of this thesis, see: Roumani
(1983).
( 6 )
From an interview in the army weekly Bamahaneh, March 22,
1989, p. 23.
( 7 )
WOJAC consistently placed this concept in an international
context. For example: Malka Hillel Shulewitz and Raphael
Israeli, "Exchanges of populations worldwide: The First World
War to the 1990s," in Shulewitz (ed.) (1999), pp. 126-141.
( 8 )
This argument appeared in the Israeli press even before Meron
advanced his thesis (e.g., Shimshon Ehrlich, "Jewish refugees
vs. Palestinians," Ha'aretz, September 22, 1974, p. 9), though
the latter's formulation was couched in scholarly, scientific
language.
( 9 )
It is important to note that Meron's expulsion thesis is
exceptional even among the Zionist researchers of Iraqi Jewry
(e.g., A. Meir 1993, 1995; Gat 1989), among researchers of
Jews in Islamic lands in general (Sa'adoun 1995; Stillman
1996), and of course even among the more radical scholars
(e.g., Shiblak 1986).
( 10 )
Nevertheless, such works are nourished by the thesis of antagonistic
relations between Jews and Muslims and in turn nourish it
with additional confirmations and testimonies.
( 11 )
S. Fried, Yated Ne'eman, December 31, 1993.
( 12 )
See also Dayan, Aryeh, "Give a Synagogue, Take a Mosque" in
Ha'aretz, 23/9/99; Hirshberg, Peter, "Private Property, Keep
Out" in Jerusalem Report, 27/9/99, pp.16-23.
( 13 )
Jerusalem Report, 27/9/99, p.17.
( 14 )
For a debate between WJRO and the leadership of the Polish
Jewish community, see: "WJRO vs. The Jews of Poland." Ha'aretz,
25/10/99, p.1a.
( 15 )
Jerusalem Report, 27 September 1999, p.20
( 16 )
Jerusalem Report, 27 September 1999, p.18.
( 17 )
The Scribe: Journal of Babylon Jewry. No.72, September 1999,
p.17.
( 18 )
Yediot Akharonot, 18/4/93.
( 19 )
Yediot Akharonot, 17/12/93.
( 20 )
Hamodi'ah, 16/12/93.
( 21 )
Even within the intra-Jewish discourse ethnicity is shunned
as an organizing factor at the political level (Herzog 1986).
However, it did not represent an existential threat as long
as it did not undermine the ideological coherence of Israeli-Jewish
nationalism and as long as it was considered a temporary
phenomenon that would disappear upon completion of the 'melting
pot' process.
( 22 )
The expression "refugee camps" was subsequently modified,
but, as we saw, to preserve the symmetry, both the refugee
camps and the transit camps were euphemistically referred
to as "hotbeds of distress."
( 23 ) "That
the appropriate share in the natural wealth of the Middle
East countries be allotted to the Jews from Arab countries" and "That
the right of the Jews from Arab countries, including their
political rights, be satisfied in full."
( 24 )
Yitzhak Ben Gad, "The Jews from Arab countries - the neglect
and the damage," Yedioth Ahronoth, July 9, 1976, p. 18. |