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By

Dimi Reider

Opinion

Rights are the key — and they're mutual

September 6, 2012 14:20
8 min read

Over the past few decades, Israel has gradually merged its founding ethos of indigenousness and return with the image of a Western outpost, a villa in the jungle, to use the words of one of its more progressive prime ministers. Throughout the past decade's "War on Terror", Israel advertised itself, to the world as much as to its own citizens, as the West's foremost fortress of freedom against terrorism, the main and principal, front line in this battle - effectively taking an argument long used to justify the construction of settlements as a buffer zone shielding mainland Israel from the Palestinian West Bank, and writing it large across the map of the entire region.

It is not for nothing that the myth of Masada surged in popularity during these years, becoming a fixed highlight of any significant heritage trip for Israeli or diaspora Jewish students. Anyone who has been a participant on such a trip knows the feeling well - baking afternoon sun, the vast void of the desert condensed into the eerie emptiness of the sacked Jewish stronghold, and the tour guide's voice urging you relentlessly: "Imagine yourself in their situation, facing defeat after resisting for so long. How would you feel? What would you do in their place?"

Despite the anti-imperialist appeal and the pride one can easily take in the physical courage of the Masada defenders, there are two key problems with holding up the fortress as an example and a metaphor for the modern-day, beleaguered Jewish state.

The first is the more glaring: On Masada, the Jews lose the war, and everybody dies. If anything, the story shouldn't serve as inspiration, but as a warning. The second is more fundamental. By confining themselves to their land as to a fortress, and by ensconcing themselves further and further in as the region begins to shift its shape around them, Israeli Jews deny their rich Jewish heritage in the Western and especially the Eastern diaspora, and exclude themselves from any discussion of their own rights as Jews in the region.

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