oints of view >> Send letters to: letters@thejewishnews.com Essay Israel Already Is A Jewish State p alestinian leaders won't acknowl- And such a law, alone, isn't going edge it, but Israel is a Jewish state to get Palestinian Authority President by self-determination Mahmoud Abbas to recognize and international declaration. that Israel, a strategic neighbor Importantly, it's also a demo- to Palestinian-controlled areas cratic state with Western ide- of the West Bank, indeed is a als and values when it comes Jewish state. to individual liberties. Despite a now-dormant bill History Echoes tilting in favor, Israel doesn't Affirming Israel's right to lay need to enshrine itself as a claim to being a Jewish state Jewish state. The ancestral are the U.N. General Assembly's homeland of the Jewish peo- 1947 Israeli statehood declara- Robert Sklar ple is in no danger of losing tion and the 1948 Proclamation Contrib uting its Jewish character. The con- of Independence shaped by Edit or tentious bill is more a political Israel's People's Council, which football than a necessary act held internationally recognized to preserve the integrity of the belea- governing authority as Zionism turned guered land we so love as a people. from a dream to reality. Israel received There's nothing wrong with the idea of instant stature when U.S. President Harry giving Israel a constitutional-like mandate Truman recognized Israeli statehood. to bolster its status as a Jewish state and Statehood also triggered a five-army Arab deter future Israeli governments from invasion. diminishing Israel's Jewish soul. Israel has no constitution. What it has But a nation-state law isn't necessary to are 11 Basic Laws that serve as a constitu- Israel's wellbeing and it could irreparably tional-like guide for Israel's legal system harm it. and are harder to repeal than regular 11111111,""' laws. Supporters of the nation-state bill, politically divisive as it is, envision it becoming a Basic Law. Detractors worry the bill would erode Israel's democratic infrastructure and undermine Israel's Arab minority. There's growing evidence and outrage that passage would cause just such erosion. Statehood Standards The Proclamation of Independence is crystal clear about Israel being a sovereign Jewish state, rooted in freedom, justice and peace, and with "complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhab- itants irrespective of religion, race or sex" Notably, the proclamation "guarantees freedom of religion, conscience, language, education and culture It also vows the new nation would "safeguard the holy places of all religions:' So while the nation-state bill might deepen the enshrinement of Israel's Jewish character, the Jewishness of Israel has been espoused ever since statehood was declared. The 1948 proclamation bore witness to the First Zionist Congress's 1897 decree of "the right of the Jewish people to national rebirth in its own country" That right drew support from the Balfour Declaration of 1917 and, later, affirmation from the Mandate of the League of Nations, which gave explicit international recognition to the historic bond between the Jewish people and Eretz Yisrael — the biblical Land of Israel, which today encompasses the State of Israel as well as Judea and Samaria, which make up the West Bank. The Mandate set the "right of the Jewish people to rebuild its national home The nation-state bill arises at a time when Israel's democratic nature already is being tested by religious edicts that limit the rights of non-Orthodox Jews and gov- ernment-backed practices that effectively discriminate against women in the name of religious tradition. Lost in the drama surrounding the nation-state bill's content and timing is the Palestinian hypocrisy of seeking to establish a Palestinian national state while refusing to recognize the legitimacy of the Jewish national state. ❑ Editorial Arab Lands Tourism Requires Culture Change W ashington, indeed Jerusalem and the West, should have an interest in growing the Palestinian economy, staggered by years of conflict with Israel, internal corrup- tion and terrorist underpinnings. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry spoke hopefully about boosting pros- pects for economic growth. But sadly, his wish remains a fantasy given the fractured leadership on both Palestinian fronts – in the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip. Still, his core message is worth blar- ing with the faint chance it might echo among ordinary Palestinians weary of their plight hewn by repressive leaders. Addressing the Middle East Commerce Center, a regional alliance of private business groups, on Dec. 8 in Washington, Kerry shared State Department prospects for lifting the Palestinians' standing economically. "We looked at infrastructure. We looked at education. We looked at hous- ing. We looked at the communications, at energy, at agriculture," Kerry said. "And above all, we looked at tourism, the remarkable possibilities of this unbe- lievable area, all of it – Jordan, Syria, Israel, the West Bank, a future Palestine, Egypt, all through the region. Imagine if that were free and open to the tourists 20 'anuary 1 • 2015 of the world." That's great imagery, but a pipe- dream. Seeds Of Discontent For starters, a future Palestinian state of Palestine is hardly a given despite European parliaments lining up with support in the form of nonbinding resolutions. Tourism might fly in parts of Jordan – for example, in Aqaba and Petra. But Egypt is fighting instability and Syria is saddled with a civil war. Even tourism in Israel is hampered by the tenseness of Israeli-Arab relations. As for the Palestinian territories, anti-Zionist hatred and anti-West vitriol emanating from Ramallah and Gaza City have obstructed any hope of tourism there. Kerry's comment about the role of regional tensions is hinged against Israel, further distancing peace pros- pects. In saying the Palestinians have been more victimized by such tensions, he conveniently ignored the unceasing violence and terror that have pelted Israel from a Palestinian culture incul- cated to hate. "Despite the fighting this summer in Gaza and recent violence in Jerusalem," Kerry said, "the United States remains hopeful about growing the Palestinian economy and creating more jobs for its forums outside of the parameters of people." peace talks with Israel. The new law is hollow, however, unless The Palestinian people deserve a bet- ter life through an improved economy; it's enforced. —I their leadership has to demonstrate it wants that, too. But to force their leaders into progres- sive change, Kerry should have vowed on behalf of the WE AGREED TO U.S. government to dramati- CALLING THE REWRITE cally slash the $400 million ARABS IN JUDEA HISTORY BY in U.S. annual foreign aid to AND SAMARIA the Palestinian Authority, "PALESTINIANS" which governs Palestinian- controlled areas of the West Bank, until the Palestinian unity government cleans up its destructive act toward its own people as well as toward Israelis. The massive spending BELIEVING THAT bill Congress passed in late GIVING THEM A December with tightened "NATIONAL oversight of P.A. funding is IDENTITY" an important start. The P.A. WOULD BRING now faces less or no fund- PEACE. ing should it not actively work to combat incitement; should Hamas have "undue influence" over it; and should Palestinian repre- sentatives gain statehood Fight the history rewriting, go to: igg.me/at/drybones recognition in international Dry Bones