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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll,

Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

Opinion

Jews just don’t understand each other’s views

Diaspora Jews need to stop making assumptions about life in Israel, says Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll. Just as Israelis need to stop assuming things about Jews in the Diaspora

December 13, 2018 15:43
A religious soldier prays at the Kotel
3 min read

There is an unprecedented crisis between Israel and the Jewish diaspora. The reason is ... assimilation and more and more Jews...don’t care about their Judaism and don’t care about Israel.”

This statement by Naftali Bennett, leaked to the press from a cabinet meeting, set off yet another firestorm among those who took deep offence to his remarks. Comments online retorted that it is the occupation/apartheid/religious intolerance that makes them turn from Israel.

As an American Israeli who interacts with diaspora Jews online and Israeli Jews in daily life, from my perspective, they are both wrong.

There is a crisis between Israeli Jews and diaspora Jews, but it is not apathy and it is not apartheid. It is a simple yet tragic lack of recognition that we come from very different perspectives and an inability to see the issues from the other’s point of view.