Israeli Best-seller Breaks National Taboo

No one is more surprised than Shlomo Sand that his latest academic work has spent 19 weeks on Israel’s bestseller list – and that success has come to the history professor despite his book challenging Israel’s biggest taboo.

Dr Sand argues that the idea of a Jewish nation – whose need for a safe haven was originally used to justify the founding of the state of Israel – is a myth invented little more than a century ago.

An expert on European history at Tel Aviv University, Dr Sand drew on extensive historical and archaeological research to support not only this claim but several more – all equally controversial.

In addition, he argues that the Jews were never exiled from the Holy Land, that most of today’s Jews have no historical connection to the land called Israel and that the only political solution to the country’s conflict with the Palestinians is to abolish the Jewish state.

The success of When and How Was the Jewish People Invented? looks likely to be repeated around the world. A French edition, launched last month, is selling so fast that it has already had three print runs.

Translations are under way into a dozen languages, including Arabic and English. But he predicted a rough ride from the pro-Israel lobby when the book is launched by his English publisher, Verso, in the United States next year.

In contrast, he said Israelis had been, if not exactly supportive, at least curious about his argument. Tom Segev, one of the country’s leading journalists, has called the book “fascinating and challenging”.

Surprisingly, Dr Sand said, most of his academic colleagues in Israel have shied away from tackling his arguments. One exception is Israel Bartal, a professor of Jewish history at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Writing in Haaretz, the Israeli daily newspaper, Dr Bartal made little effort to rebut Dr Sand’s claims. He dedicated much of his article instead to defending his profession, suggesting that Israeli historians were not as ignorant about the invented nature of Jewish history as Dr Sand contends.

The idea for the book came to him many years ago, Dr Sand said, but he waited until recently to start working on it. “I cannot claim to be particularly courageous in publishing the book now,” he said. “I waited until I was a full professor. There is a price to be paid in Israeli academia for expressing views of this sort.”

Dr Sand’s main argument is that until little more than a century ago, Jews thought of themselves as Jews only because they shared a common religion. At the turn of the 20th century, he said, Zionist Jews challenged this idea and started creating a national history by inventing the idea that Jews existed as a people separate from their religion.

Equally, the modern Zionist idea of Jews being obligated to return from exile to the Promised Land was entirely alien to Judaism, he added.

“Zionism changed the idea of Jerusalem. Before, the holy places were seen as places to long for, not to be lived in. For 2,000 years Jews stayed away from Jerusalem not because they could not return but because their religion forbade them from returning until the messiah came.”

The biggest surprise during his research came when he started looking at the archaeological evidence from the biblical era.

“I was not raised as a Zionist, but like all other Israelis I took it for granted that the Jews were a people living in Judea and that they were exiled by the Romans in 70AD.

“But once I started looking at the evidence, I discovered that the kingdoms of David and Solomon were legends.

“Similarly with the exile. In fact, you can’t explain Jewishness without exile. But when I started to look for history books describing the events of this exile, I couldn’t find any. Not one.

“That was because the Romans did not exile people. In fact, Jews in Palestine were overwhelming peasants and all the evidence suggests they stayed on their lands.”

Instead, he believes an alternative theory is more plausible: the exile was a myth promoted by early Christians to recruit Jews to the new faith. “Christians wanted later generations of Jews to believe that their ancestors had been exiled as a punishment from God.”

So if there was no exile, how is it that so many Jews ended up scattered around the globe before the modern state of Israel began encouraging them to “return”?

Dr Sand said that, in the centuries immediately preceding and following the Christian era, Judaism was a proselytising religion, desperate for converts. “This is mentioned in the Roman literature of the time.”

Jews travelled to other regions seeking converts, particularly in Yemen and among the Berber tribes of North Africa. Centuries later, the people of the Khazar kingdom in what is today south Russia, would convert en masse to Judaism, becoming the genesis of the Ashkenazi Jews of central and eastern Europe.

Dr Sand pointed to the strange state of denial in which most Israelis live, noting that papers offered extensive coverage recently to the discovery of the capital of the Khazar kingdom next to the Caspian Sea.

Ynet, the website of Israel’s most popular newspaper, Yedioth Ahronoth, headlined the story: “Russian archaeologists find long-lost Jewish capital.” And yet none of the papers, he added, had considered the significance of this find to standard accounts of Jewish history.

One further question is prompted by Dr Sand’s account, as he himself notes: if most Jews never left the Holy Land, what became of them?

“It is not taught in Israeli schools but most of the early Zionist leaders, including David Ben Gurion [Israel’s first prime minister], believed that the Palestinians were the descendants of the area’s original Jews. They believed the Jews had later converted to Islam.”

Dr Sand attributed his colleagues’ reticence to engage with him to an implicit acknowledgement by many that the whole edifice of “Jewish history” taught at Israeli universities is built like a house of cards.

The problem with the teaching of history in Israel, Dr Sand said, dates to a decision in the 1930s to separate history into two disciplines: general history and Jewish history. Jewish history was assumed to need its own field of study because Jewish experience was considered unique.

“There’s no Jewish department of politics or sociology at the universities. Only history is taught in this way, and it has allowed specialists in Jewish history to live in a very insular and conservative world where they are not touched by modern developments in historical research.

“I’ve been criticised in Israel for writing about Jewish history when European history is my specialty. But a book like this needed a historian who is familiar with the standard concepts of historical inquiry used by academia in the rest of the world.”

Jonathan Cook, based in Nazareth, Israel is a winner of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His latest books are Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East (Pluto Press) and Disappearing Palestine: Israel's Experiments in Human Despair (Zed Books). Read other articles by Jonathan, or visit Jonathan's website.

7 comments on this article so far ...

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  1. Michael Kenny said on October 9th, 2008 at 8:31am #

    I would take this with a grain of salt. I think what is going on is that both Israelis and Jews worldwide are beginning to realise that Israel is an impossible dream and that, with American power broken, the “one state solution” is the only realistic one. Not all Israelis will want to be Jewish citizens of largely Muslim Palestine and so they are casting around for an alternative. Since many Israelis have European passports in their back pockets and an America that has been destroyed by its alliance with Israel may not be all that welcoming to Jews, they are naturally looking at Europe as an alternative.

    That necessarily involves re-writing the Zionist discourse, in which the Jews, unwelcome in Europe, were to return to the land of their ancestors and there establish a Jewish state. In that logic, the Jews would not be welcome if they returned to Europe as an alien, non-European people. Hence, the Jews have to be “de-peopleised” and turned into a mere religion, to which millions of ethnic Europeans converted at some point. The modern Jews are thus the descendants of those people and not of immigrants into Europe from Palestine. That is essentially the new discourse which Dr Sand is articulating and which was also articulated by Uri Avnery in a recent article.

    Basically, Dr Sand’s theory is just a re-cycled version of the argument that modern Israel was empty land in 1948 and the Palestinians are just camel-riding nomads who drifted in since then. The discourse is still “this land is mine”. They’re just looking at a different piece of land!

    What all this reflects is the deepening panic in Israel, as people come to grips with the end of US hegemony and what it means for them. Like the South African whites, or the Pied-Noirs in Algeria, the Israelis are understandably worried about what will happen to them when the people they have persecuted for 60 years get the upper hand. And with the US economy in the toliet, the unspoken belief that if the worst came to the worst, they could always go to the US also seems increasingly increasingly unrealistic.

  2. lichen said on October 9th, 2008 at 2:35pm #

    Since I actually read this article, I don’t ‘take it with a grain of sand,’ but as a very relevant peice of research. Especially this paragraph:

    “It is not taught in Israeli schools but most of the early Zionist leaders, including David Ben Gurion [Israel’s first prime minister], believed that the Palestinians were the descendants of the area’s original Jews. They believed the Jews had later converted to Islam.”

    Which is a shocking, wonderful revelation to overturn zionist zeal and hopefully create a new, one-state solution.

  3. Phil said on October 10th, 2008 at 9:43am #

    I would take this with a grain of salt. I think what is going on is that both Israelis and Jews worldwide are beginning to realise that Israel is an impossible dream and that, with American power broken, the “one state solution” is the only realistic one.

    Exactly. Good intentions or no, anyone with any awareness of history should have known that a Jewish state would be no different in principle from an Aryan state (with all the self-important arrogance that came with it in both cases). Racism is racism no matter who’s on which side. Sooner or later Israel, like Germany and Britain and Rome in the past and America in the future, will have to accept that they’re not special or exceptional, and (maybe) eventually learn to play well with others. It won’t be easy – and it won’t be the kind of birth pangs Condi and the zealots had in mind – but history has shown what the only alternative is.

  4. bill rowe said on October 10th, 2008 at 8:44pm #

    a relelation. maybe I will see another event like the fall of the Berlin wall, breakup of the Soviet Union, end of SOuth Africa apartheid,,,, in my lifetime

  5. Laura Knight-Jadczyk said on October 11th, 2008 at 12:46am #

    I don’t think Mr. Kenny has been reading either the archaeological research that’s been going on for many years much less the scholarly work in comparative religion and history of Israel among historians of religion. This work is growing in volume and influence and it is rapidly becoming obvious that not only is Israel a fraud, so is Judaism (and by relation, Christianity and Islam.)

    I guess Mr. Kenny also never read Koestler’s “The Thirteenth Tribe” or Douglas Reed’s “Controversy of Zion” where many of these same issues were articulated long ago, in opposition to the Zionist myth. Nor has he read Hannah Arendt’s “The Origins of Totalitarianism” which gives an interesting history of the Jews in Europe though Arendt was abysmally ignorant of Jewish religion and religious history.

    Mr. Kenny writes: “Basically, Dr Sand’s theory is just a re-cycled version of the argument that modern Israel was empty land in 1948 and the Palestinians are just camel-riding nomads who drifted in since then. The discourse is still “this land is mine”. They’re just looking at a different piece of land!”

    Hmmm… did he read the article at all? Did he not notice that it is clearly stated that the Palestinians, if anyone, were the original Jews who never left, but merely converted to Islam and/or Christianity?

    Finally: Is there a “deepening panic” among Israelis? Perhaps among some of them, in the same way there is a deepening panic among some Americans who are beginning to realize – vaguely – that pathological deviants have been in leadership positions for a long time, and pathology never maps a reasonable political agenda for anyone. Based on what I hear from Israel, most Israelis are as ignorant about what is going on and what the potential outcomes are as are most Americans regarding the collapse of the US.

    And, over it all preside the psychopaths – the lunatics who have taken over the asylum.

  6. bozhidar bob balkas said on October 11th, 2008 at 7:25am #

    my post vanished. quickly i’l say this. i am:
    1) for one state sol’n
    2) anyone who’s for twostate ‘sol’n’ is to me a mini zionist.
    3)thus, is rewarding criminal behavior of the euro-asiatic volk
    thnx

  7. antonio da silva said on October 16th, 2008 at 2:17pm #

    Few people have the courge to tell facts that Dr.Sand did. If they say a word against Israel,they will be called anti-semitic etc etc.
    Israel can survive if it gets rid of its fanatic zionists.