Remarks to the American Jewish Committee Luncheon Forum,
In September, 1988, I wrote in the Minneapolis Star and Tribune concerning questions which have arisen regarding the relationship between American Jews and the State of Israel:
This year American Jews confront public issues at home and abroad which threaten to permanently change at least two of this community's long-standing general presumptions.
For the past generation American Jews have consistently supported the State of Israel abroad and the Democratic party at home. Both of these assumptions are now crumbling.
The pattern has been consistently one-sided. Jewish leadership has tried to counter every pro-Palestinian editorial in the newspaper with two or three pro-Israel opinion essays. In synagogues and community centers American Jews rarely fostered or even tolerated serious debate about the propriety of this or that Israeli policy or objective. Israeli politicians and spokesmen, who frequently visited these shores encouraged American Jews to maintain a starry-eyed, romantic vision of the Jewish State in the
That image was blurred over the past year by the Arab uprising on the
Disillusioned with
By and large over the past fifty years Jews have traditionally identified with the platforms and policies of the Democratic party. Three million poor Jewish immigrants from
Today's Jewish leadership has little patience for the past. The grand and great-grandchildren of immigrants are largely alienated from their roots. Organized Jewish life today is not dominated by labor and union organizers, as in past generations, but instead by upwardly mobile middle class business people and professionals.
On the East coast, in the nation's the largest Jewish communities, Democratic party leaders such as Jesse Jackson represent all that makes our country's Jews insecure and uncomfortable. Jackson and his supporters stand for the rights of the poor, the immigrants, the working class, at a time when American Jews have become alienated to these values. Jackson-Democrats seek to represent the rights of oppressed peoples throughout the world, at a time when American Jews have begun to realize that the Israel-Palestinian conflict is much more complex than they had ever imagined.
I posed these questions about two of the most stable norms of the community:
!First, to what degree will American Jews continue to support
!Second, how many Jewish voters will follow in the traditions of their immigrant labor roots and support the Democratic party now that they have to consider preserving and fostering the progress of their current social and economic status?
We have the answer to the second question. George Bush received no more than thirty percent of the Jewish vote despite his strong showing among the general voters.
Bush supporters argued that he was a better friend of
The strategy did not work. Director of research for the American Jewish Committee, Dr. David Singer remarked that Jews have " a deep commitment to political liberalism, for better or for worse." Jews are loyal to liberalism, not necessarily to the Democratic party, Singer argued.
The national affairs director of the American Jewish Congress, Martin Hochbaum said Jews are still strongly attached to the Democratic party. He said, "Jews believe the Democratic party cares about Jews more than the Republican party.
The AJCongress polled 3,881 Jews in 12 major cities as they left the voting booths. 55 percent said they thought Democrats care more about the Jews than Republicans. 5 percent thought the Republicans cared more and 40 said both cared equally, according to a report in the Jewish Week, November 18, 1988.
Bush did attract ultra-Orthodox and Hasidic Jewish voters garnering between 70 and 85 percent of their approval in areas like
NBC polled Jewish voters to see what affect the "Jackson Factor" had on their choices. The network found that for 62 percent of the voters it had no bearing. An AJCongress poll showed that for 41 percent of Jews who voted for Dukakis,
While the Jewish allegiance to the values of the Democratic party remains strong, American Jews continue to question their relation to Israel on account of the dual challenges to the status quo from both outsiders and insiders. The facts that have changed the equation are stunning:
!The Palestinian cause has never had so much international credibility and sympathy as it does now. American Jews have much less certainty about the validity of Israeli claims over those of the Palestinians.
!Naked attempts by the Orthodox in
!The realization that at long last Jews may be split officially along "denominational" lines into three camps by action of the Israeli Kenesset has further disturbed the status quo of world Jewry and unleashed an all-out effort by some American Jewish leaders to realign the power structures in Jewish philanthropic and communal affairs in the country.
The second issue then remains open and will not be easily settled. We can be certain that American Jews will continue to support
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Tzvee Zahavy in 1988 was a professor of Classical and Near Eastern Studies and director of the Center for Jewish Studies at the
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