Shattering a
'National
Mythology'
By Ofri
Ilani
15/10/08 "Haaretz"
-- Of
all the
national
heroes who
have arisen
from among
the Jewish
people over
the
generations,
fate has not
been kind to
Dahia al-Kahina,
a leader of
the Berbers
in the Aures
Mountains.
Although she
was a proud
Jewess, few
Israelis
have ever
heard the
name of this
warrior-queen
who, in the
seventh
century C.E.,
united a
number of
Berber
tribes and
pushed back
the Muslim
army that
invaded
North
Africa. It
is possible
that the
reason for
this is that
al-Kahina
was the
daughter of
a Berber
tribe that
had
converted to
Judaism,
apparently
several
generations
before she
was born,
sometime
around the
6th century
C.E.
According to
the Tel Aviv
University
historian,
Prof. Shlomo
Sand, author
of "Matai
ve'ech
humtza ha'am
hayehudi?"
("When and
How the
Jewish
People Was
Invented?";
Resling, in
Hebrew), the
queen's
tribe and
other local
tribes that
converted to
Judaism are
the main
sources from
which
Spanish
Jewry
sprang. This
claim that
the Jews of
North Africa
originated
in
indigenous
tribes that
became
Jewish - and
not in
communities
exiled from
Jerusalem -
is just one
element of
the far-
reaching
argument set
forth in
Sand's new
book.
In this
work, the
author
attempts to
prove that
the Jews now
living in
Israel and
other places
in the world
are not at
all
descendants
of the
ancient
people who
inhabited
the Kingdom
of Judea
during the
First and
Second
Temple
period.
Their
origins,
according to
him, are in
varied
peoples that
converted to
Judaism
during the
course of
history, in
different
corners of
the
Mediterranean
Basin and
the adjacent
regions. Not
only are the
North
African Jews
for the most
part
descendants
of pagans
who
converted to
Judaism, but
so are the
Jews of
Yemen
(remnants of
the Himyar
Kingdom in
the Arab
Peninsula,
who
converted to
Judaism in
the fourth
century) and
the
Ashkenazi
Jews of
Eastern
Europe
(refugees
from the
Kingdom of
the Khazars,
who
converted in
the eighth
century).
Unlike other
"new
historians"
who have
tried to
undermine
the
assumptions
of Zionist
historiography,
Sand does
not content
himself with
going back
to 1948 or
to the
beginnings
of Zionism,
but rather
goes back
thousands of
years. He
tries to
prove that
the Jewish
people never
existed as a
"nation-race"
with a
common
origin, but
rather is a
colorful mix
of groups
that at
various
stages in
history
adopted the
Jewish
religion. He
argues that
for a number
of Zionist
ideologues,
the mythical
perception
of the Jews
as an
ancient
people led
to truly
racist
thinking:
"There were
times when
if anyone
argued that
the Jews
belong to a
people that
has gentile
origins, he
would be
classified
as an
anti-Semite
on the spot.
Today, if
anyone dares
to suggest
that those
who are
considered
Jews in the
world ...
have never
constituted
and still do
not
constitute a
people or a
nation - he
is
immediately
condemned as
a hater of
Israel."
According to
Sand, the
description
of the Jews
as a
wandering
and
self-isolating
nation of
exiles, "who
wandered
across seas
and
continents,
reached the
ends of the
earth and
finally,
with the
advent of
Zionism,
made a
U-turn and
returned en
masse to
their
orphaned
homeland,"
is nothing
but
"national
mythology."
Like other
national
movements in
Europe,
which sought
out a
splendid
Golden Age,
through
which they
invented a
heroic past
- for
example,
classical
Greece or
the Teutonic
tribes - to
prove they
have existed
since the
beginnings
of history,
"so, too,
the first
buds of
Jewish
nationalism
blossomed in
the
direction of
the strong
light that
has its
source in
the mythical
Kingdom of
David."
So when, in
fact, was
the Jewish
people
invented, in
Sand's view?
At a certain
stage in the
19th
century,
intellectuals
of Jewish
origin in
Germany,
influenced
by the folk
character of
German
nationalism,
took upon
themselves
the task of
inventing a
people
"retrospectively,"
out of a
thirst to
create a
modern
Jewish
people. From
historian
Heinrich
Graetz on,
Jewish
historians
began to
draw the
history of
Judaism as
the history
of a nation
that had
been a
kingdom,
became a
wandering
people and
ultimately
turned
around and
went back to
its
birthplace.
Actually,
most of your
book does
not deal
with the
invention of
the Jewish
people by
modern
Jewish
nationalism,
but rather
with the
question of
where the
Jews come
from.
Sand: "My
initial
intention
was to take
certain
kinds of
modern
historiographic
materials
and examine
how they
invented the
'figment' of
the Jewish
people. But
when I began
to confront
the
historiographic
sources, I
suddenly
found
contradictions.
And then
that urged
me on: I
started to
work,
without
knowing
where I
would end
up. I took
primary
sources and
I tried to
examine
authors'
references
in the
ancient
period -
what they
wrote about
conversion."
Sand, an
expert on
20th-century
history, has
until now
researched
the
intellectual
history of
modern
France (in "Ha'intelektual,
ha'emet
vehakoah:
miparashat
dreyfus
ve'ad
milhemet
hamifrats" -
"Intellectuals,
Truth and
Power, From
the Dreyfus
Affair to
the Gulf
War"; Am
Oved, in
Hebrew).
Unusually,
for a
professional
historian,
in his new
book he
deals with
periods that
he had never
researched
before,
usually
relying on
studies that
present
unorthodox
views of the
origins of
the Jews.
Experts on
the history
of the
Jewish
people say
you are
dealing with
subjects
about which
you have no
understanding
and are
basing
yourself on
works that
you can't
read in the
original.
"It is true
that I am an
historian of
France and
Europe, and
not of the
ancient
period. I
knew that
the moment I
would start
dealing with
early
periods like
these, I
would be
exposed to
scathing
criticism by
historians
who
specialize
in those
areas. But I
said to
myself that
I can't stay
just with
modern
historiographic
material
without
examining
the facts it
describes.
Had I not
done this
myself, it
would have
been
necessary to
have waited
for an
entire
generation.
Had I
continued to
deal with
France,
perhaps I
would have
been given
chairs at
the
university
and
provincial
glory. But I
decided to
relinquish
the glory."
Inventing
the Diaspora
"After being
forcibly
exiled from
their land,
the people
remained
faithful to
it
throughout
their
Dispersion
and never
ceased to
pray and
hope for
their return
to it and
for the
restoration
in it of
their
political
freedom" -
thus states
the preamble
to the
Israeli
Declaration
of
Independence.
This is also
the
quotation
that opens
the third
chapter of
Sand's book,
entitled
"The
Invention of
the
Diaspora."
Sand argues
that the
Jewish
people's
exile from
its land
never
happened.
"The supreme
paradigm of
exile was
needed in
order to
construct a
long-range
memory in
which an
imagined and
exiled
nation-race
was posited
as the
direct
continuation
of 'the
people of
the Bible'
that
preceded
it," Sand
explains.
Under the
influence of
other
historians
who have
dealt with
the same
issue in
recent
years, he
argues that
the exile of
the Jewish
people is
originally a
Christian
myth that
depicted
that event
as divine
punishment
imposed on
the Jews for
having
rejected the
Christian
gospel.
"I started
looking in
research
studies
about the
exile from
the land - a
constitutive
event in
Jewish
history,
almost like
the
Holocaust.
But to my
astonishment
I discovered
that it has
no
literature.
The reason
is that no
one exiled
the people
of the
country. The
Romans did
not exile
peoples and
they could
not have
done so even
if they had
wanted to.
They did not
have trains
and trucks
to deport
entire
populations.
That kind of
logistics
did not
exist until
the 20th
century.
From this,
in effect,
the whole
book was
born: in the
realization
that Judaic
society was
not
dispersed
and was not
exiled."
If the
people was
not exiled,
are you
saying that
in fact the
real
descendants
of the
inhabitants
of the
Kingdom of
Judah are
the
Palestinians?
"No
population
remains pure
over a
period of
thousands of
years. But
the chances
that the
Palestinians
are
descendants
of the
ancient
Judaic
people are
much greater
than the
chances that
you or I are
its
descendents.
The first
Zionists, up
until the
Arab Revolt
[1936-9],
knew that
there had
been no
exiling, and
that the
Palestinians
were
descended
from the
inhabitants
of the land.
They knew
that farmers
don't leave
until they
are
expelled.
Even Yitzhak
Ben-Zvi, the
second
president of
the State of
Israel,
wrote in
1929 that,
'the vast
majority of
the peasant
farmers do
not have
their
origins in
the Arab
conquerors,
but rather,
before then,
in the
Jewish
farmers who
were
numerous and
a majority
in the
building of
the land.'"
And how did
millions of
Jews appear
around the
Mediterranean
Sea?
"The people
did not
spread, but
the Jewish
religion
spread.
Judaism was
a converting
religion.
Contrary to
popular
opinion, in
early
Judaism
there was a
great thirst
to convert
others. The
Hasmoneans
were the
first to
begin to
produce
large
numbers of
Jews through
mass
conversion,
under the
influence of
Hellenism.
The
conversions
between the
Hasmonean
Revolt and
Bar Kochba's
rebellion
are what
prepared the
ground for
the
subsequent,
wide-spread
dissemination
of
Christianity.
After the
victory of
Christianity
in the
fourth
century, the
momentum of
conversion
was stopped
in the
Christian
world, and
there was a
steep drop
in the
number of
Jews.
Presumably
many of the
Jews who
appeared
around the
Mediterranean
became
Christians.
But then
Judaism
started to
permeate
other
regions -
pagan
regions, for
example,
such as
Yemen and
North
Africa. Had
Judaism not
continued to
advance at
that stage
and had it
not
continued to
convert
people in
the pagan
world, we
would have
remained a
completely
marginal
religion, if
we survived
at all."
How did you
come to the
conclusion
that the
Jews of
North Africa
were
originally
Berbers who
converted?
"I asked
myself how
such large
Jewish
communities
appeared in
Spain. And
then I saw
that Tariq
ibn Ziyad,
the supreme
commander of
the Muslims
who
conquered
Spain, was a
Berber, and
most of his
soldiers
were
Berbers.
Dahia al-Kahina's
Jewish
Berber
kingdom had
been
defeated
only 15
years
earlier. And
the truth is
there are a
number of
Christian
sources that
say many of
the
conquerors
of Spain
were Jewish
converts.
The
deep-rooted
source of
the large
Jewish
community in
Spain was
those Berber
soldiers who
converted to
Judaism."
Sand argues
that the
most crucial
demographic
addition to
the Jewish
population
of the world
came in the
wake of the
conversion
of the
kingdom of
Khazaria - a
huge empire
that arose
in the
Middle Ages
on the
steppes
along the
Volga River,
which at its
height ruled
over an area
that
stretched
from the
Georgia of
today to
Kiev. In the
eighth
century, the
kings of the
Khazars
adopted the
Jewish
religion and
made Hebrew
the written
language of
the kingdom.
From the
10th century
the kingdom
weakened; in
the 13th
century is
was utterly
defeated by
Mongol
invaders,
and the fate
of its
Jewish
inhabitants
remains
unclear.
Sand revives
the
hypothesis,
which was
already
suggested by
historians
in the 19th
and 20th
centuries,
according to
which the
Judaized
Khazars
constituted
the main
origins of
the Jewish
communities
in Eastern
Europe.
"At the
beginning of
the 20th
century
there is a
tremendous
concentration
of Jews in
Eastern
Europe -
three
million Jews
in Poland
alone," he
says. "The
Zionist
historiography
claims that
their
origins are
in the
earlier
Jewish
community in
Germany, but
they do not
succeed in
explaining
how a small
number of
Jews who
came from
Mainz and
Worms could
have founded
the Yiddish
people of
Eastern
Europe. The
Jews of
Eastern
Europe are a
mixture of
Khazars and
Slavs who
were pushed
eastward."
'Degree of
perversion'
If the Jews
of Eastern
Europe did
not come
from
Germany, why
did they
speak
Yiddish,
which is a
Germanic
language?
"The Jews
were a class
of people
dependent on
the German
bourgeoisie
in the East,
and thus
they adopted
German
words. Here
I base
myself on
the research
of linguist
Paul
Wechsler of
Tel Aviv
University,
who has
demonstrated
that there
is no
etymological
connection
between the
German
Jewish
language of
the Middle
Ages and
Yiddish. As
far back as
1828, the
Ribal (Rabbi
Isaac Ber
Levinson)
said that
the ancient
language of
the Jews was
not Yiddish.
Even Ben
Zion Dinur,
the father
of Israeli
historiography,
was not
hesitant
about
describing
the Khazars
as the
origin of
the Jews in
Eastern
Europe, and
describes
Khazaria as
'the mother
of the
diasporas'
in Eastern
Europe. But
more or less
since 1967,
anyone who
talks about
the Khazars
as the
ancestors of
the Jews of
Eastern
Europe is
considered
naive and
moonstruck."
Why do you
think the
idea of the
Khazar
origins is
so
threatening?
"It is clear
that the
fear is of
an
undermining
of the
historic
right to the
land. The
revelation
that the
Jews are not
from Judea
would
ostensibly
knock the
legitimacy
for our
being here
out from
under us.
Since the
beginning of
the period
of
decolonization,
settlers
have no
longer been
able to say
simply: 'We
came, we won
and now we
are here'
the way the
Americans,
the whites
in South
Africa and
the
Australians
said. There
is a very
deep fear
that doubt
will be cast
on our right
to exist."
Is there no
justification
for this
fear?
"No. I don't
think that
the
historical
myth of the
exile and
the
wanderings
is the
source of
the
legitimization
for me being
here, and
therefore I
don't mind
believing
that I am
Khazar in my
origins. I
am not
afraid of
the
undermining
of our
existence,
because I
think that
the
character of
the State of
Israel
undermines
it in a much
more serious
way. What
would
constitute
the basis
for our
existence
here is not
mythological
historical
right, but
rather would
be for us to
start to
establish an
open society
here of all
Israeli
citizens."
In effect
you are
saying that
there is no
such thing
as a Jewish
people.
"I don't
recognize an
international
people. I
recognize
'the Yiddish
people' that
existed in
Eastern
Europe,
which though
it is not a
nation can
be seen as a
Yiddishist
civilization
with a
modern
popular
culture. I
think that
Jewish
nationalism
grew up in
the context
of this
'Yiddish
people.' I
also
recognize
the
existence of
an Israeli
people, and
do not deny
its right to
sovereignty.
But Zionism
and also
Arab
nationalism
over the
years are
not prepared
to recognize
it.
"From the
perspective
of Zionism,
this country
does not
belong to
its
citizens,
but rather
to the
Jewish
people. I
recognize
one
definition
of a nation:
a group of
people that
wants to
live in
sovereignty
over itself.
But most of
the Jews in
the world
have no
desire to
live in the
State of
Israel, even
though
nothing is
preventing
them from
doing so.
Therefore,
they cannot
be seen as a
nation."
What is so
dangerous
about Jews
imagining
that they
belong to
one people?
Why is this
bad?
"In the
Israeli
discourse
about roots
there is a
degree of
perversion.
This is an
ethnocentric,
biological,
genetic
discourse.
But Israel
has no
existence as
a Jewish
state: If
Israel does
not develop
and become
an open,
multicultural
society we
will have a
Kosovo in
the Galilee.
The
consciousness
concerning
the right to
this place
must be more
flexible and
varied, and
if I have
contributed
with my book
to the
likelihood
that I and
my children
will be able
to live with
the others
here in this
country in a
more
egalitarian
situation -
I will have
done my bit.
"We must
begin to
work hard to
transform
our place
into an
Israeli
republic
where ethnic
origin, as
well as
faith, will
not be
relevant in
the eyes of
the law.
Anyone who
is
acquainted
with the
young elites
of the
Israeli Arab
community
can see that
they will
not agree to
live in a
country that
declares it
is not
theirs. If I
were a
Palestinian
I would
rebel
against a
state like
that, but
even as an
Israeli I am
rebelling
against it."
The question
is whether
for those
conclusions
you had to
go as far as
the Kingdom
of the
Khazars.
"I am not
hiding the
fact that it
is very
distressing
for me to
live in a
society in
which the
nationalist
principles
that guide
it are
dangerous,
and that
this
distress has
served as a
motive in my
work. I am a
citizen of
this
country, but
I am also a
historian
and as a
historian it
is my duty
to write
history and
examine
texts. This
is what I
have done."
If the myth
of Zionism
is one of
the Jewish
people that
returned to
its land
from exile,
what will be
the myth of
the country
you
envision?
"To my mind,
a myth about
the future
is better
than
introverted
mythologies
of the past.
For the
Americans,
and today
for the
Europeans as
well, what
justifies
the
existence of
the nation
is a future
promise of
an open,
progressive
and
prosperous
society. The
Israeli
materials do
exist, but
it is
necessary to
add, for
example,
pan-Israeli
holidays. To
decrease the
number of
memorial
days a bit
and to add
days that
are
dedicated to
the future.
But also,
for example,
to add an
hour in
memory of
the Nakba
[literally,
the
"catastrophe"
- the
Palestinian
term for
what
happened
when Israel
was
established],
between
Memorial Day
and
Independence
Day."