6 Friday, January 1, 1982 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Between Right and Right' —Yehoshua's Israel View By BETTE ROTH Aleph Bet Yehoshua is one of Israel's foremost literary artists. His novel, "The Lover," has been translated into at least four languages and places him among writers of interna- tional aclaim. "Between Right and Right: Israel: Problem or Solution?" (Doubleday) is a collection of five essays written within the past 15 years. It is a polemic for Zionism and the right of the state of Israel to exist. Yehoshua, a sabra born and nourished on Israeli soil, is as comfortable with his biblical past as he is with the exigencies of mod- em Israeli life. His essays carry one message: that the Golah or Diaspora experi- ence is abnormal — that the Jew can only be truly whole in Israel. With this sentiment he strongly believes that all Jews must accept Israel as a political state with all of the imperfections of any other political state, that she should not be expected to be somehow DeLorean=mn ROLLS _Rolls Royce World Class cars. Now available at a world class car dealer. Ta ROYCE ME1712: R ,, Buick =1111C Honda RcTa 28585 Telegraph Rd. Across From Tel-Twelve Mall Southfield, Mich. (313)353-1300 a perfect social system made up of perfect human beings. Implicit in this feeling is of course the concomitant idea that Jews and non-Jews do in fact place unrealis- tic requirements and ex- pectations on the Jewish state, fearing that if she is flawed she will somehow not be permitted to sur- vive. His essay "The Golah: The Neurotic Solution," ex- pands upon this idea in a presentation of a theologi- cal mythic paradigm so original that it holds our minds in utter fascination. Yehoshua says that the Jew has always been able to return to his homeland, Eretz Yisrael, but has con- tinually followed the same path as did Abraham, the first Oleh, and his grandson Jacob, both of whom were yordim. Jacob, he reminds us, asked that his bones be brought back to Eretz Yis- rael for burial. And the author asks, "Is that the secret destiny of the land, to be a burial ground for Jewish bones, or is it also a land of life?" Yehoshua goes on to re- member that the Jewish people was created in the Golah, the Torah was given • • •••••••eose•••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 • • • BEDSPREADS • BLANKETS • • • • DRAPERIES (Cleaned or 'Laundered) • • WINDOW SHADES LAMPSHADES PILLOWS • • • • I • • VENETIAN BLINDS (Cleaned, retaped & re-corded) If you're moving we can remake and re-install • • so • O your existing draperies to fit another windoW or room • • • • 0 A 41 ■ .^ .• • • We Remove & install I I • • • • • • DRAPERY CLEANERS • • Suburban Call Collect • • nAll- that the name VISA & MASTERCHAROE f•••••••••••••••• ii--•••••••• • •••••••••••: i 891-1818 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • — RENT THESE MOVIES OR CHOOSE • • FROM 100's OF OTHER GREAT MOVIES • • • $35.00 Membership Fee • • • • 569-2330 • 12 Mile at Evergreen • Open 7 Days • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,••••••S BEST RENT IN TOWN SUPERMAN II PRIVATE BENJAMIN ALTERED STATES • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A. B. YEHOSHUA' to us not in Israel, but in the desert in "no-man's land." And he says that the Jew always reseeks the desert for spiritual renewal in preparation for- re-entry into "the land." "The entry into the land," he tells us, "has tremendous significance. It is not only the physical conquest of the land by a nation of nomads, it is also a conquest imbued with spiritual signifi- cance. "Stringent conditions are laid down together with the promise of the land, for might alone cannot assure retention of it. The nation can maintain its hold on the land only if it pays heed to the voice of God and ob- serves His commandments. "If it does not meet these conditions it will be subject to the harshest punish- ments, the ultimate of which is expulsion from the land, Exile. "The land is conceived of as sacred; the sins of the nation will defile it and then the land will vomit up the people from it. In these early texts (bi- blical) the fundamental principle is already es- tablished: The people takes precedence over the land in every sense." Monotheism was achieved by the image that it was God whO gave birth to the people, or "put differently, that the father alone and exclu- sively, and not the mother, gave birth to the people." And he found Abraham purposefully because "He had to as- sert his supremacy over the feminine element, the homeland, by picking out an individual from out- side Eretz Israel and up- rooting him from his natural and true home- land," Canaan. The same story, he says, recurs at the nation's incep- tion: "The nation is born in the Golah, not in its homeland. Its natural homeland (Egypt) is not its true home- land. That will be given it by the father after an exclu- sive covenant is sealed with him. "How great is the sym- bolism that the covenant is made in an intermediate region between the Golah and the true homeland, in a place that is no place, that cannot be identified physi- cally and be linked as a place, as a land, to the cove- nant. And all that to estab- lish the father's absolute supremacy over the mother "When the relationship between the son and the mother deepens, the jealous father immediately inter- venes and claims not only that 'they abandoned him' but that they are 'desecrat- ing' the mother . . . Noth- ing is more abominable in the sight of the prophets than the cult of the earth. "All the agricultural rites had to undergo transformation, screen- ing, and sublimation by the godhead system. The word homeland itself is very little used in Jewish terminology. It is one of Judaism's more neg- lected concepts." (2) Yehoshua sees the Golah as both the neurotic solu- tion to the mythic domi- nance of the father over' the mother in Judaism and a the cause for anti-Semitisi And he echoes both Pinskei - and Herzl when he says that only a return to the home- land can cause the non-Jew to see the Jew as "normal" and can cause the Jew to act with dignity and self- respect. In the Golah, the Jew both despises himself and is despised. Yehoshua's essays all ad- dress the problem of "nor- malcy" in Jewish life. In fact, the literal translation of the Hebrew title to this- collection, is "For Nor- malcy." He feels that Jews can become liberated from the fears of "indepen- dence" only by returning to "the land" and living as normal human beings, and he encourages us to give up the idea of cho- senness or uniqueness in an effort to become nor- mal citizens of a political state. His collection of essays is a significant contribution to modern Jewish thought for he presents an Israeli Wel- tanschauung which pro- vides needed insight into the workings of the modern Israeli mind and gives the reader an understanding of the dynathics of decision making in the modern Jewish state. :75z- The Story of Entebbe Hero Is Published in Paperback For Yehoshua, the Jewish people's relationship to Is- rael is one of fear, fear that "it will not be •able to The story of the Entebbe live up to the difficult condi- rescue operation by Israel tions God places on its will remain memorable in existence in the land." Jewish and world history. Yehoshua shows in this At a time when many na- essay a thorough knowledge tions cringed in fear of ter- of both biblical and Dias- rorists, Israel dared the re- pora Jewish history and this scue mission at Entebbe, combined with his extraor- the airport of Uganda. dinary imagination pro- The hero of that opera- duces the thought that Jews tion, the only fatal Israeli have always experienced a casualty, was Lt. Col. Yona- conflict between the de- tan Netanyahu. mands of statehood and the He had written the classic demands of religion and letters which created a sen- that the solution has been to sation in the volume "Self- absent themselves from the Portrait of a Hero," which land in an effort to achieve became a best seller when the ideals inherent in any published in hard cover by religious system of beliefs, impossible in a real political JNF Planning context. Arts Festival He goes even further to NEW YORK — In cele- give the problem a psychoanalytic interpreta- bration of its 80 years of tion: land reclamation and af- God is seen as equal to the forestation in Israel, the Department of Education of concept of "father" and "the the Jewish National Fund is homologous concepts sponsoring the first JNF `earth-land and mother- land' are parallel to the con- _National Art Festival. cept 'mother. The phenom- Scheduled to open on erev Tu b'Shevat — Feb. 7 —the enon of the Golah is," in his festival exhibit in New view,"a disturbance of the York will feature the origi- proper and harmonious bal- ance in the consciousness of nal artwork of students a people between God and from nearly 300 Jewish homeland." schools across the country. C) YONATAN NETANYAHU Random House in 1980. Paperbacked, pub- _ lished by Valent4 Books, the volume draws attention of all English readers who have the manuscripts in translation from the Hebrew by his brothers, Benjamin and Iddo Netanyahu. The text is annotated by the trans- lators; The introduction by Herman Wouk adds signifi- cance to this deeply-moving book which reveals the high-calibered character of the martyred hero.