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Jennifer Lipman

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

Opinion

Israel is still an ideal to fight for, despite distance

Lately, I’ve found myself distant from Israel, wanting to talk less and less about it and why it matters, writes Jennifer Lipman

September 14, 2017 14:20
Tel Aviv
3 min read

It was subconscious, at first. Asked where I was off on holiday, I found myself saying Tel Aviv, rather than Israel. The former carried with it suggestions of a modern, outward-looking destination — a place of late-night dining, gay rights, hi-tech innovation and cosmopolitanism. The latter — the nation — with its connotations of religious and nationalist strife and an abandoned peace process, risked starting a conversation. And frankly, I found myself lacking the will to get into it.

I am a proud Zionist. Having come through the youth movement production line, spent a gap year in Israel and a summer as a tour madricha, the realisation of the Zionist dream has always been close to my heart. At university and beyond, I was moved to talk about it publicly; rush to Israel’s defence in seminars, attend pro-Israel rallies and Yom Ha’atzmaut celebrations.

Yet, lately, I’ve found myself distant from this, wanting to talk less and less about Israel and why it matters. Not because I don’t think it does, or because I believe any less in its legitimacy and necessity, but because of the trends within Israeli politics, and a feeling that I don’t want to have to defend them.

I’m talking about the intransigence of so many Israeli politicians when it comes to striving for peace, or the unwavering commitment to settlement building. I’m talking about developments that come across as profoundly intolerant, from access to the Western Wall to the Anti-Boycott Law or recent revelations about Bedouins losing their citizenship. And I’m talking about the hawkish Netanyahu Government, with its genuflecting to the religious right, and its willingness to embrace President Trump even as neo-Nazism flared (it took Bibi days to issue even the most lacklustre condemnation).