by Naomi Ragen
There is only one right way to support Israel and be Jewish today.
After an emotionally exhausting election campaign in which I found myselfâfor the first time everâterrified that the wrong results might prove an existential threat to Israelâs existence, the moment of truth had come. There, on a large screen in a (literally) cheesy kosher Italian restaurant in Parisâs 16th Arrondissement, I was about to see the results of the straw poll at the close of voting.
I wasnât alone. The place was packed with French Jews, members of Bânai Bârith, who had arranged the dinner for me. I was going to say a few words in Hebrew, which my host would translate. But there was no point. All eyes were on the screen as we held our collective breath.
My host, chauffeur and translator, who had left Israel for France as a child, discussed the election with me on the way over. I was a bit surprised that he was as staunchly in favor of the prime minister as I was, and just as fearful that Chaim Herzog and Tzipi Livni might take his place. âThey are leftists, like Obama,â he declared. âThatâs why Obama wants them in officeâto undermine Israelâs security. He knows they wonât give him trouble on Iran, like Bibi does.â
For French Jews, traumatized by Islamic anti-Semitism and terrifying attacks like the recent massacre in the Hypercacher, a kosher market, Israel is increasingly being viewed as an immediate refuge. Some 5,000 Jews immigrated to Israel in 2014, up from 3,289 in 2013. Everywhere I go in Jerusalem, I hear French. As the screen lit up with the election results, a shout of joy reverberated through the room.
Not everyone in the Jewish world felt that way. Despite the euphoria of a hard-won victory, the aftermath of this bitterly fought campaign has been sobering, highlighting a real, deep and perhaps unbridgeable divide among Jews everywhere. Questions asked during the election have not gone away; they have simply deepened. Do the Arabs want to annihilate Israel, or will they be sincere partners in peace following a two-state solution? Are President Obamaâs Mideast policies a threat to Israelâs existence, or will his proposed framework for a negotiated settlement with Iran prove the best deal possible under the circumstances to prevent a terror-supporting Iran from becoming a nuclear power?
I believe that the sides being taken on these vital issues, both before and after the election, are no whim of the moment that might change tomorrow with new information, but are a deep-seated expression of each individual Jewâs core identity and worldview. They are an insight into whether a JewâFrench, American or Israeliâdefines himself or herself as a practicing Jew and the Land of Israel as God-given, a place to express Jewish identity through adherence to the Torah; or whether one sees oneself as a modern secularist and the State of Israel as a temporary political response to anti-Semitism following the Holocaust, one whose reason for existence might disappear just as quickly. Put this way, these views are admittedly extreme. But as election reactions prove, most Jews incline to one view or the other.
âMost American Jews overwhelmingly support liberal positions and see the idea of two states for two peoples as the only way to avoid a future in which Jews rule over a minority that lacks equal rights. [The election results] will only further the alienation of the majority of American Jewry from Israeli politics and values,â Jewish-American author and sociologist Samuel Heilman told Haaretz. In contrast, the Zionist Organization of Americaâs Mort Klein told Haaretz, âIâm proud that the Israelis chose reality and security over fantasy and a phony hope in change.â
In Israel, reactions were even more extreme. Gideon Levy of Haaretz wrote, âThe first conclusion that arose just minutes after the announcement of the exit polls was particularly discouraging: The nation must be replaced. Not another election for the country’s leadership, but general elections to choose a new Israeli peopleâĤâ Secular playwright Joshua Sobol derided âmezuzah-kissingâ Jews as âfoolsâ and likened Jewish Home party leader Naftali Bennett to the Nazis. His remarks came in defense of secular Israeli painter and political pundit Yair Garbuz, who caused an uproar at a Tel Aviv rally before election day by asserting that âamulet kissers and pagan worshipersâ are controlling the country.
Our newly re-elected prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, responded: âI heard someone speak of people who kiss mezuzot with disdain. Since when is it a crime to kiss a mezuzah?â
He added, âWe know where we came from and we know what country we came back to. We know what we are fighting to keep. We know about our tradition and about our heritage.â
Those who voted for Netanyahu, rooted for him and rejoiced in his victory would certainly agree. Iâm sad to say I donât feel comfortable asserting that is also true about the other side. Thatâs an unbridgeable gap with which we Jews will just have to learn to live.
Naomi Ragen is a novelist and playwright living in Jerusalem.

2 thoughts on “Opinion // Are You For Us or Against Us?”
I don’t understand why a magazine committed to fostering the myriad ways Jews celebrate, live and manifest our Jewishness would publish a piece with the following in its title:
“There is only one right way to support Israel and be Jewish today.”
Really??? Who are the Jews that Naomi Ragen considers the “right” Jews? Who are the supporters of Israel that Naomi Ragen considers the “right” supporters of Israel? Are they the “Price Tag” Jews who attack soldiers, burn churches, and now murder sleeping toddlers? Are they the pious Rabbi’s, steeped in Torah and the blood of a 16 year old girl who attended a parade to support her friends? Or are those just the nutcases who have carried out your ill-considered, narrow and exclusionary views to their logical conclusion? Who are these wonderful Jews who have it so “right”, Naomi? I would really like to know.