Our Approach to Zionism - JVP                                                                                    https://www.jewishvoiceforpeace.
org/resource/zionism/
                                                                                                                                        News
                                                                                                                        Subscribe to the Wire
              URGENT: Demand a ceasefire now.
              We must stop U.S. support for Israel's genocide.
                                                                                                                       ACT NOW
                                                                      TAKE ACTION
                                                                         THE WIRE
                                                                                                                            CONTRIBUTE
                                                                           ABOUT
                                                                           JOIN US
              Home / Resources / Guides / Our Approach to Zionism
                                                                                                                        Search                 
              Our Approach to Zionism                                                                                EXPLORE
                                                                                                                     RESOURCES
                                                                                                                          First Steps To
                                                                                                                          Stand For
                                                                                                                          Palestinian
                                                                                                                          Freedom
                                                                                                                          On Antisemitism:
                                                                                                                          Solidarity And
                                                                                                                          The Struggle For
                                                                                                                          Justice
                                                                                                                      Curriculum On
                                                                                                                           Antisemitism
                                                                                                                           From A
                                                                                                                           Framework Of
                                                                                                                           Collective
                                                                                                                           Liberation
              “Solidarity is the political version of love.”                                                              Diaspora Podcast
              – Melanie Kaye/Kantrowitz,
                                                                                                                          Project48
              Jewish American lesbian feminist, author and activist (1945-2018)
                                                                                                                      Solidarity T-
              Jewish Voice for Peace is guided by a vision of justice, equality and freedom for all people. We            Shirts:
                                                                                                                          Ceasefire Now
              unequivocally oppose Zionism because it is counter to those ideals.
              We know that opposing Zionism, or even discussing it, can be painful, can strike at the deepest
1 de 6                                                                                                                                                  9/6/2024, 9:53
Our Approach to Zionism - JVP                                                                                          https://www.jewishvoiceforpeace.org/resource/zionism/
              trauma and greatest fears of many of us. Zionism is a nineteenth-century political ideology that
              emerged in a moment where Jews were defined as irrevocably outside of a Christian Europe.                              JOIN JVP
              European antisemitism threatened and ended millions of Jewish lives — in pogroms, in exile, and
              in the Holocaust.
                                                                                                                                 CONTRIBUTE
              Through study and action, through deep relationship with Palestinians fighting for their own                                 
              liberation, and through our own understanding of Jewish safety and self determination, we have
              come to see that Zionism was a false and failed answer to the desperately real question many of
              our ancestors faced of how to protect Jewish lives from murderous antisemitism in Europe.
              While it had many strains historically, the Zionism that took hold and stands today is a settler-
              colonial movement, establishing an apartheid state where Jews have more rights than others. Our
              own history teaches us how dangerous this can be.
              Palestinian dispossession and occupation are by design. Zionism has meant profound trauma for
              generations, systematically separating Palestinians from their homes, land, and each other.
              Zionism, in practice, has resulted in massacres of Palestinian people, ancient villages and olive
              groves destroyed, families who live just a mile away from each other separated by checkpoints and
              walls, and children holding onto the keys of the homes from which their grandparents were forcibly
              exiled.
              Because the founding of the state of Israel was based on the idea of a “land without people,”
              Palestinian existence itself is resistance. We are all the more humbled by the vibrance, resilience,
              and steadfastness of Palestinian life, culture, and organizing, as it is a deep refusal of a political
              ideology founded on erasure.
              In sharing our stories with one another, we see the ways Zionism has also harmed Jewish people.
              Many of us have learned from Zionism to treat our neighbors with suspicion, to forget the ways
              Jews built home and community wherever we found ourselves to be. Jewish people have had long
              and integrated histories in the Arab world and North Africa, living among and sharing community,
              language and custom with Muslims and Christians for thousands of years.
              By creating a racist hierarchy with European Jews at the top, Zionism erased those histories and
              destroyed those communities and relationships. In Israel, Jewish people of color – from the Arab
              world, North Africa, and East Africa – have long been subjected to systemic discrimination and
              violence by the Israeli government. That hierarchy also creates Jewish spaces where Jews of color
              are marginalized, our identities and commitments questioned & interrogated, and our
              experiences invalidated. It prevents us from seeing each other — fellow Jews and other fellow
              human beings — in our full humanity.
              Zionist interpretations of history taught us that Jewish people are alone, that to remedy the harms
              of antisemitism we must think of ourselves as always under attack and that we cannot trust
              others. It teaches us fear, and that the best response to fear is a bigger gun, a taller wall, a more
              humiliating checkpoint.
              Rather than accept the inevitability of occupation and dispossession, we choose a different path.
              We learn from the anti-Zionist Jews who came before us, and know that as long as Zionism has
              existed, so has Jewish dissent to it. Especially as we face the violent antisemitism fueled by white
              nationalism in the United States today, we choose solidarity. We choose collective liberation. We
              choose a future where everyone, including Palestinians and Jewish Israelis, can live their lives
              freely in vibrant, safe, equitable communities, with basic human needs fulfilled.
              Frequently Asked Questions
2 de 6                                                                                                                                                        9/6/2024, 9:53
Our Approach to Zionism - JVP                                                                                           https://www.jewishvoiceforpeace.org/resource/zionism/
              What is Zionism? Where did it come from?
              Zionism is a form of Jewish nationalism, and is the primary ideology that drove the establishment
              of Israel. Zionism began in the late 19th century in the context of a set of huge changes in
              political, cultural, social landscape of Jewish life in Europe, along with the general rise of
              nationalist movements and nation-state political forms. For Jews in Europe, this meant a sharp
              rise in violent antisemitism. Jewish people – even though they had lived in Europe for centuries –
              were fundamentally excluded from the ways European nations defined themselves. This resulted
              in violent, targeted, anti-Jewish massacres in Russia, known as pogroms; the development of anti-
              Jewish conspiracy theories like Protocols of the Elders of Zion; and the re-emergence of older
              antisemitic tropes, like blood libels, which claim that Jewish people use the blood of Christian
              children in rituals.
              Some Jewish people responded to this antisemitism by attempting to assimilate into the
              European countries they lived in; this often proved impossible. Many Jewish people – over 2.5
              million – left as refugees, coming to the United States or other parts of Europe. Others, most
              famously the Bund, rejected the concept of nationalism altogether or turned to revolutionary
              socialism. And some, notably Theodore Herzl, often seen as the founder of Zionism, thought that
              Jews themselves constituted a separate people, and should therefore have a state of their own.
              Herzl and other early Zionist thinkers were also very influenced by European settler colonial
              thinking, often explicitly making the case that a Jewish state in Palestine would be a European
              colony similar to the British presence in India.
              It is important to note that people who consider themselves Zionist have different interpretations
              of what that label means in the present political moment, to them personally, and historically.
              Moreover, over time, multiple strains of Zionism have emerged, including political Zionism,
              religious Zionism, and cultural Zionism.
                   • Political: When people refer to “Zionism” today, this is often what they mean. Founded by
                     19th Century thinker Theodore Herzl, it sees the “Jewish problem” as having a solution in a
                     “Jewish state.” As nationalism rose in Europe, many, including Herzl, saw Jews as outsiders
                     to the nation, unable or unwilling to assimilate or be fully accepted as members of the
                     nation-state. According to Herzl, this “problem” should be solved by a community of nations
                     by establishing a Jewish state in Palestine.
                   • Religious: Many, but not all, forms of Zionism have their roots in theological interpretations.
                     It is important to note that this form of Zionism is not exclusive to Jewish religious
                     traditions. For example, some evangelical Christian denominations believe that in order to
                     facilitate the second coming of Christ, Jews must “gather” in Israel as part of Biblical
                     prophecy.
                   • Cultural: Most often attributed to Herzl’s contemporary, Ahad Ha’am (Asher Ginsberg), this
                     form of Zionism called for a spiritual and cultural center for Jewish people in Palestine, but
                     not for a “Jewish state” in the same way Herzl did. Instead, this form of Zionism calls for Jews
                     to share a national language and culture.
              The political ideology of Zionism, regardless of which strain, has resulted in the establishment of a
              Jewish nation-state in the land of historic Palestine. In 1948, 750,000 Palestinians were expelled
              as part of that process, their homes and property confiscated. Despite recognition of their rights
              by the United Nations, their rights to return and be compensated have long been denied by the
              US and Israel. In 1967, Israel occupied what is now known as the Occupied Palestinian Territories,
              putting millions of people under military rule. Longstanding systemic inequalities privilege Jews
              over Palestinians inside Israel and in the Occupied Territories.
3 de 6                                                                                                                                                         9/6/2024, 9:53
Our Approach to Zionism - JVP                                                                                            https://www.jewishvoiceforpeace.org/resource/zionism/
              For more, please see this speech by former JVP Deputy Director Cecilie Surasky, “Settler
              colonialism, white supremacy, and the ‘special relationship’ between the U.S. and Israel”
              What is anti-Zionism?
              “Anti-Zionism” is a loose term referring to criticism of the current policies of the Israeli state, and/
              or moral, ethical, or religious criticism of the idea of a Jewish nation-state. There has been
              debate, criticism and opposition to Zionism within Jewish thought for as long as it has existed.
              Jewish anti-Zionists span a political and religious spectrum, from religious and secular
              progressives who view opposition to Zionism as an anti-racist praxis, to ultra-Orthodox Jews who
              oppose Jewish dominion until the time of the Messiah, to anarchist Jews who oppose the very
              concept of nation-states, Jewish or otherwise. There are also many non-Jewish anti-Zionists
              whose perspectives may be informed by moral criticism of the policies of the Israeli government,
              problems with the impact of Zionist thinking in Israel on non-Jewish residents, and/or a criticism
              of ethno-nationalism more broadly. Many Palestinians take anti-Zionist positions or identify as
              anti-Zionist because of the current and historical practices of the Israeli state.
              Criticism of Zionism is not to be conflated with antisemitism. States such as Israel and the United
              States are openly criticized in public life, and their political beliefs and policies are subject to
              critical debate, in accord with our basic First Amendment rights.
              For more on the history of Jewish alternatives to Zionism, please see this blog post by former JVP
              staffer Ben Lorber.
              For more on the problems of conflating antisemitism with anti-Zionism, please see this op-ed by
              NY Times columnist Michelle Goldberg.
              For more on criticisms of Zionism, please see these excerpts from “Zionism from the Standpoint
              of its Victims” by Edward Said.
              Why and how did we clarify our position on
              Zionism?
              At its founding, JVP made a conscious choice as an organization to abstain from taking a position
              on Zionism, because we felt it closed off conversation in the Jewish community. Palestinian
              partners had long theorized Zionism as the root cause of the Palestinian condition, and more and
              more of our members not only agreed, but understood Zionism as damaging to Jewish identity
              and spiritual life. In 2014, it became clear that we needed to clarify our position in order to
              effectively continue doing our work.
              We started by creating a committee through an application process that was purposely designed
              to represent the breadth of JVP membership. This group of staff, members and board met
              regularly over the course of two years to design a curriculum on Zionism. Over 700 members
              attended the webinars presenting the curriculum, and throughout the process, chapters met and
              discussed the ways JVP’s approach to Zionism impacted their work locally and nationally.
              In addition, we held conversations about Zionism at the 2017 National Member Meeting, surveyed
              individuals who attended the webinars, and had our constituency groups – including Rabbis,
              artists, and students – hold independent discussions on Zionism, notes of which were shared with
              the JVP board.
              We also gathered feedback from JVP staff, Palestinian members, activists and thinkers, along with
4 de 6                                                                                                                                                          9/6/2024, 9:53
Our Approach to Zionism - JVP                                                                                         https://www.jewishvoiceforpeace.org/resource/zionism/
              feedback from Jewish people of color and Sephardi & Mizrahi Jews.
              The board met over the summer and fall of 2018 to draft and finalize this statement.
              What do you see as the harms of Zionism
              against Jewish people? Isn’t Zionism a
              movement for Jewish self-determination?
              While Zionism is often referred to as a movement of “Jewish self-determination,” the Zionist
              movement defined this term in a narrow political sense, rejecting the diaspora as inherently toxic
              and unhealthy for Jews. The Classical Zionist concept known as shlilat hagalut (“negation of the
              diaspora”), demeaned centuries of a rich Jewish spiritual and cultural history – often to the point
              of using anti-Semitic imagery. For instance, famed Zionist journalist/ writer Micah Josef
              Berdichevsky claimed diaspora Jews were “not a nation, not a people and not human.” Hebrew
              literary icon Yosef Hayyim Brenner called them “gypsies, filthy dogs and inhuman,” while Labor
              Zionist AD Gordon referred to diaspora Jews as “a parasitic people.”
              Zionism, as a political ideology and as a movement, has always hierarchized Jews based on
              ethnicity and race, and has not equally benefited or been liberatory for all Jewish people in Israel.
              Zionism is and was an Ashkenazi-led movement that othered, marginalized and discriminated
              against Jews from across the Middle East and North Africa that it termed Mizrahim (the ‘Eastern
              Ones’).
              In the early 1950s, starting two years after the Nakba, the Israeli government facilitated a mass
              immigration of Mizrahim. Unlike their Ashkenazi counterparts, the new Mizrahi immigrants were
              not permitted to settle in the central cities or live in housing they could eventually come to own.
              Instead, the Israeli police were deployed to compel Mizrahi immigrants to remain in the transient
              camps and later development towns in Israel’s periphery, as a means to expand the state territory
              and prevent Palestinian return. During the 1950s Mizrahi immigrants were also subject to medical
              experimentation facilitated or performed by the Israeli government, and several thousand babies
              and toddlers were forcibly taken from their parents by the Israeli government. These children, two
              thirds Yemeni and a third from Tunisian, Moroccan, Libyan, Iraqi and Balkan families, were taken
              by physicians and social workers and given up for adoption by Ashkenazi families.
              From the first waves of immigration in the 1980s, Ethiopian Jews have experienced racism on the
              part of the government and the Israeli public, exclusion from the public sphere, discrimination in
              education and employment, and exposure to physical and verbal violence. They also remain
              unrecognized as Jews by the Israeli religious establishment and religious councils because of
              racial prejudice. Ethiopian mobilization for racial justice consolidated since 2015 has called for an
              end to institutional discrimination, police harassment, arrests without cause, false accusations
              and indictments about assaulting police officers, and the denial of due process, all of which have
              long been experienced by the Ethiopian community.
              For more, please see “Zionism from the Standpoint of its Jewish Victims” by Ella Shohat, and
              “They didn’t want Ethiopian Jews in Israel, either” by Efrat Yerday.
5 de 6                                                                                                                                                       9/6/2024, 9:53