The
announcement of the New Jewish Congress, which convened in Jerusalem on
November 27, 2007, contained one very meaningful and potentially
powerful statement:
“The Sovereignty of the Jewish Nation over the Jewish State of Eretz-Israel.”
This
statement recalls a policy paper I wrote several years ago entitled:
“Must the State of Israel Perish for Israel to Survive?” By the “State”
I mean, primarily, its political and judicial institutions: the
Knesset, the Cabinet, and, above all the Supreme Court. These
institutions must “perish,” meaning, they must be replaced by radically different ones. They must be replaced by institutions that do not fragment the nation into an absurd multiplicity of rival parties, that render the people powerless between elections, and that undermine Jewish national identity.
The so-called Jewish State of Israel is an institutional catastrophe,
as was known to eminent people in Israel in 1951 after the first two
elections.
What
was not known, and what is not understood to this day, is that very
concept of a “Jewish State” is an oxymoron.
As noted in The Myth of Israeli Democracy:
This
was the fundamental intention of the founders of the state. Like
Herzl—all honor to him— they wanted to relegate the Torah to the home
and the synagogue. The wisdom of the Prophets and the Sages would be
severed from public law and statecraft. To achieve this revolutionary
objective, it would be necessary to disillusion the people about the
prophecies concerning Judea, Samaria, and Jerusalem.
Withdraw
from this heartland and you shatter the historical memory of the Jewish
people. Not security, not peace, not demographics, not democracy—no,
what is at stake is here is nothing less than Judaism.
This
is why the very words “Judaism” and “Eretz Israel” were deleted from
the Soldiers Code of Ethics when Yitzhak Rabin became both prime
minister and defense minister after the June 1992 election.
If further
proof is wanted that the key issue is Judaism and not peace or security
etc., recall the following facts:
●
Rabin appointed Shulamit Aloni, an ultra-secularist, as minister of
education, who proceeded to emasculate the Jewish content of the public
school curriculum.
●
Yuli Tamir, the current minister of education, proposed to have
inductees take their oath on the Declaration of Independence instead of
the Tenach.
● Foreign minister Tzipi Livni supported the Gay parade in the name of “multiculturalism.”
●
The High Priest of multiculturalism, former Supreme Court President
Aharon Barak, ruled that Judea, Samaria, hence eastern Jerusalem and the
Temple Mount, constitute “belligerent occupied territory”—a ruling
contrary to the Court’s own precedence.
To
these secular elites add President Shimon Peres and Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert. Just as Sweden’s government renounced the country’s Swedish
nationality after a large influx of Muslims, so Israel’s ruling elites
want to transform Israel into “a state of its citizens.”
These
elites are well aware that such is the high birthrate of religious Jews
that, unless they take drastic measures, the political ascendancy of
the religious community is inevitable. Today’s ruling elites, however
different from the founders of the state, share the same goal: to make
the Jews a “normal” people, which can only mean that Jews must cease to
being Jewish.
Thus,
Interior Minister Meir Sheetrit proposed to rescind the foundational
law of the State, the Law of Return, which grants automatic citizenship
to Jews. “Israel,” he said, “should become like every other country” (Jerusalem Post,
October 31, 2007, p. 1.) This is tantamount to saying Israel should
not be a Jewish nation and become a multicultural state or scociety.
Fortunately,
most people in Israel want their country to remain Jewish. This being
the case, all patriotic organizations should unite and advocate
institutional reform that EMPOWERS the people, more precisely, that
shifts power from parties to the people. How?
(1) Make members of the Legislature accountable to the people in constituency elections.
(2) Make the Legislature independent of the Executive and endow it administrative oversight.
(3) Replace multi-party cabinet government with a unitary executive in order to fix responsibility on one person—the president—who represents the nation, not the “state.”
(4)
Democratize the mode of nominating Supreme Court judges and have their
nominations confirmed by the Legislature on national television.
Empowering the people is the key to making Israel more Jewish as well as more democratic. Zionist organizations should support the above reforms.
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