Herzlian dreaming

Australian Zionist leadership converges on Jerusalem

The newly opened Herzl Education Centre saw 20 Australian Zionist community leaders converged for an intensive and fascinating two day leadership conference on 18-19 June.

Nir BarkatThe Zionist Federation of Australia, together with the World Zionist Organisation, presented a smorgasbord of speakers on contemporary issues in Israel.

Highlights of the program included
• Exposition and exploration of issues of Religion and State.
• Deputy Foreign Minister, Danny Ayalon discussing the strategic threats facing Israel.
• A panel on Israel’s place in the media comprising Josef Federman of the Associated Press and Gil Hoffman of the Jerusalem Post. The panelists and participants enjoyed a candid and refreshing discussion, “off the record” of course.
• Mark Regev, PM Netanyahu’s spokesman and ex Australian, spoke on his perspective on media and government.
• Talia Gorodess of the Reut Institute presented a fascinating analysis of the challenges and issues relating to Israeli communities in the diaspora.
• An intimate forum with Rav Rafi Feuerstein was followed by a discussion on Zionist Leadership in our Generation presented by Academic and contemporary Zionist thinker Gil Troy.
• Chair of Diaspora Activities of the WZO and conference host, Gusti Yehoshua Braverman, presented a challenge to Australian Zionist leadership in terms of engaging with Israelis in our community.

Stav Shafir
Conference participants were joined on Monday evening by 150 Australian olim for a brilliant program which featured a panel of eminent Australian-Israelis – Isi Leibler, Tal Becker and DJ Schneeweiss – speaking on contemporary Israel issues as well as reflecting on their aliya experience. Dinner on the balcony of the Herzl Centre was a vibrant and exciting series of reunions, as Aussies reconnected. The evening program included keynote addresses by Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat, and social protest organiser, Stav Shafir.

“The ZFA is committed to enhancing the Israel connection with Australia on every level” said ZFA President Philip Chester. “This seminar exposed our existing and emerging leaders to a brilliant program of speakers and engaged them in discussions on a range of contemporary issues facing Israel and Zionism today. The close cooperation and support from the Diaspora Activities Department of the World Zionist Organisation in the program underscores our strong relationship and further enhances our activities on the ground in Australia.”

Photo captions:
1. Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat (photo courtesy Elahn Zetlin)
2. Protest Leader Stav Shafir (photo courtesy Elahn Zetlin)
3. ZFA President Philip Chester, Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat and ZCV President Sam Tatarka.
4. Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon, Australia Ambassador Andrea Faulkner and ZFA President Philip Chester.

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Philip Chester, Nir Barkat and Sam TatarkaDanny Ayalon, Andrea Faulkner and Philip Chester.

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American Jews’ Cowardly Retreat from the term “Zionism”

By Gil Troy
Published with permission

Gil Troy recently addressed representatives from the Zionist Federation of Australia and from other Australian Jewish community groups in Israel. Following his discussion, he wrote the following:

Gil Troy I recently met with a group of Australian Jewish leaders and discovered that in the land of the kangaroo and the koala they do not fear the word “Zionist.” Not only do eighty percent of Australian Jews embrace the label proudly, they acknowledge how much Zionism has strengthened their community, inspiring many of them personally, while emboldening many of them politically. By contrast, many American Jewish leaders continue to abandon the word “Zionism,” claiming it does not “poll well.”

Abandoning the term Zionism is an act of cowardice. It represents a retreat in the face of the systematic Soviet-choreographed, Arab-fueled, hard left-endorsed campaign to delegitimize Israel which has been going on since the 1970s and has outlasted the fall of the Soviet Union, and the 1991 repeal of the UN’s 1975 Zionism is racism resolution. Running away from the term gives the delegitimizers a victory they do not deserve. It starts the defense of Israel on the defensive. “Zionism” does not poll well because it has been targeted effectively. But pollsters cannot quantify how much credibility American Jews lose when they abandon the term instead of defending it – our allies, our young people, and our enemies can smell the fear.

American Jews’ gutless flight is particularly anomalous because the community is in many ways more Zionist than ever – and primed to accept a robust Zionist message. American Jews are a people-people, more united by ethnic, national, cultural solidarity, than by belief in God. Despite critics’ claims to the contrary, three-quarters of American Jews consistently support Israel, the Jewish state. The most successful program of the last decade, Taglit-Birthright, is a peoplehood project which helps young Jews aged 18 to 26 jumpstart their Jewish journeys by visiting Israel. Moreover, young, idealistic American Jews do not want to retreat or defend, they want to celebrate, dream, improve.

Zionism is the national liberation movement of the Jewish people. Its fundamental assumptions are that the Jews are a people not just a community of faith, and that Israel is the Jewish national homeland. Having established the state of Israel in 1948, the modern Zionist movement is now dedicated to protecting and perfecting the state. Perfecting the state is about an aspirational Zionism, a values-based Zionism, an inspiring Identity Zionism, not just a defensive Zionism. It moves Zionism away from “Israel advocacy” which is mostly about preservation, toward a more expansive conversation about seeking fulfillment. Given that understanding of Zionism, American Jews should embrace Zionism as enthusiastically as Australian Jews too.

Just as Israel’s Foreign Ministry is wisely evolving away from that terrible term “Hasbarah,” with its implication of heavy-handed, propagandistic explanations, American Jews should shift from talking about Israel Advocacy to Zionism. Israel Advocacy suggests that Israel needs legions of defense attorneys working overtime defending the Jewish state. Israel Advocacy gives the Palestinians a propaganda victory they do not deserve by focusing on Israel as a problem, and obsessing about all of Israel’s problems.

Israel exists and it is not on probation. It does not need to be constantly advocated for, justified, legitimized. Talk of Zionism carves out more room for the normal and the exceptional. Zionist normalcy includes my sons’ baseball league, my daughters’ ballet performance, my wife’s art school – all of which testify to the extraordinary achievement of simply living an ordinary life in the Jewish homeland. At the same time, Zionist exceptionalism includes Israel’s miraculous achievements as Start Up nation, Israel’s soaring old-new aspirations as values nation, and Israel’s beautiful 24/7 Judaism as the Jewish state.

Groups committed to “Israel Advocacy” can only do so much – they can defend Israel, they can rebrand Israel, they can deepen understandings of Israel. But, as its best, a revitalized Zionist movement can help improve Israel and help improve American Jewry too. Zionism challenges Jews to criticize themselves and their community. A robust American Zionism will question why so many American Jews feel so alienated by their Jewish upbringing, in their families, their schools, their shuls, that they need the kind of last-minute intervention Birthright Israel provides. A muscular American Zionism will extend the critique from American Jewry to American life itself, asking why so many Americans feels lost, stressed, distressed, despite living in the freest, richest, greatest exercise in mass middle class prosperity the world has ever witnessed. An expansive American Zionism is broad enough to synthesize many American liberal values with Zionist ones, rejecting the caricature of the two ideologies as incompatible. An effective Identity Zionism for American Jews will then use the power of the Jewish story, the richness of Jewish values, the warmth of Jewish solidarity to help ground American Jews – and launch into a lifelong conversation and confrontation with Israel which draws inspiration and strength from Israel, while both defending Israel and refining it.

Zionism has not always resonated with American Jews. For decades, Reform Jews in particular feared the whiff of dual loyalty that may emanate from an American Jewish community too enthusiastic about establishing a Jewish state. But the Holocaust and the establishment of the State in 1948 helped make the Reform Movement Zionist. Israel’s victory in the 1967 war – and the pride it brought American Jewry – made Zionism even more popular in America. That American Jewish support for Israel remains one of American Jews’ defining tenets, 45 complicated years later, represents an impressive accomplishment. Just as most so-called secular Israelis do not begin to fathom how deeply Jewish they are, most Americans Jews do not realize how deeply Zionist they are. They need to stop ignoring the small group of elites trying to sour them on either the Zionist project or the Zionist label, and proclaim to themselves and the world: I am A Zionist.

Gil Troy is Professor of History at McGill University and a Shalom Hartman Engaging Israel Research Fellow in Jerusalem and the author of Why I Am A Zionist: Israel, Jewish Identity and the Challenges of Today. His next book, Moynihan’s Moment: The Fight against Zionism as Racism will be published by Oxford University Press this fall.

Originally published in the Jerusalem Post’s “Center Field” blog.

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StandWithUs/ZFA/AZYC Israel advocacy seminar immerses shnat

Gap-year participants in Israel engage with plethora of experts during the 3-day “Israel in Focus-Australia” advocacy seminar

Geo-strategic tour with Miri Eisin overlooking Jerusalem

They came to Israel out of both curiosity and love. For most of them, their love has only increased as they have known Israel through multiple experiences by volunteering, studying, learning, meeting new people, talking Hebrew, eating, and, for 58 young Australians, becoming advocates to speak in support of Israel in a world that many many fear is becoming increasingly vitriolic toward the Jewish homeland.

On 15-17 April, 58 participants from shnat underwent the first part of “Israel in Focus-Australia,” an advocacy seminar sponsored and organised by StandWithUs, Zionist Federation of Australia (ZFA) and Australasian Zionist Youth Council (AZYC). The 58 participants came from the long-term gap year programs Israel by Choice, AUJS Aviv and Australian Zionist youth movement shnat programs (Betar, Bnei Akiva, Habonim Dror, Hineni and Netzer).

“I don’t think that even the most optimistic of us expected such a great success,” said ZFA Israel Programs Director Yigal Sela. “We were very fortunate for the quality, dedication and hard work not only from the organisations and speakers who planned and led the seminars, but also from the participants. This wouldn’t have been possible without so many people, most especially the leadership of Michelle Rojas-Tal from StandWithUs and Reuben Bolaffi of AZYC in supporting the ZFA. Moreover, we couldn’t have asked for a better calibre of young advocates: They have unbelievable enthusiasm, energy, thoughtfulness and intelligence, all of which augurs well for the Australian Jewish community. Coming from different groups, they compose a cosmopolitan force to defend Israel in different places and for different audiences.”

In all, 12 expert speakers informed the participants about a wide range of issues, including a brief history of Israel territory and maps, multiple inside views of Palestinian society, a geo-strategic tour of Jerusalem, international legal issues. Speakers included McGill University Professor Gil Troy; Ministry of Foreign Affairs legal expert Sarah Weiss-Maudi; former Israeli spokeswoman and retired Col. Miri Eisin; and Prime Minister’s Spokesman Mark Regev, who is originally from Australia.

“We’re really excited about this seminar because it is an important part of their time in Israel and a very important part when they come back to Australia as well,” said AZYC Chairperson Reuben Bolaffi. “The skills and knowledge they are learning on this seminar are invaluable as bogrim of the movement: Being in a youth movement and having ideologies, they know what it’s like to believe in something and stand up for what they believe. When they come back to Australia they will be confronted by the BDS [Boycott and Divestment Sanctions] and de-legitimisation of Israel. The seminar really gives them an opportunity to learn how to respond, and we’re very proud and excited for them to learn.”

During the second round of “Israel in Focus-Australia,” which is scheduled for May (IBC and Aviv) and September (AZYC), the young advocates will be trained to respond to specific types of groups and claims made about Israel.

“We are delighted to partner with the Zionist Federation of Australia and the Australasian Zionist Youth Council to bring this seminar to the Australian community,” said Michelle Rojas-Tal, StandWithUs’s Director of Diaspora Education. “My greatest passion for teaching comes from the overwhelming emotion I receive when I am able to teach, learn and share with a new group of talented and dedicated young adults, and it was a pleasure getting to know all of the participants over the three days they were here, and I look forward to continuing my work with them in the next seminar.”

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Group photo with Mark Regev

Photo captions
1. Col. (retired) Miri Eisin explains the Jerusalem separation line during the “Israel in Focus-Australia” Geo-strategic Walk.
2. Participants from “Israel in Focus-Australia,” advocacy seminar in Israel, with Prime Minister’s Spokesman Mark Regev.

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