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Israel's surprising best seller contradicts founding ideology
Jonathan Cook, The Electronic Intifada, 8 October 2008

Shlomo Sand
No one
is more
surprised
than
Shlomo
Sand
that his
latest
academic
work has
spent 19
weeks on
Israel's
bestseller
list --
and that
success
has come
to the
history
professor
despite
his book
challenging
Israel's
biggest
taboo.
Sand
argues
that the
idea of
a Jewish
nation
-- whose
need for
a safe
haven
was
originally
used to
justify
the
founding
of the
state of
Israel
-- is a
myth
invented
little
more
than a
century
ago.
An
expert
on
European
history
at Tel
Aviv
University,
Sand
drew on
extensive
historical
and
archaeological
research
to
support
not only
this
claim
but
several
more --
all
equally
controversial.
In
addition,
he
argues
that the
Jews
were
never
exiled
from the
Holy
Land,
that
most of
today's
Jews
have no
historical
connection
to the
land
called
Israel
and that
the only
political
solution
to the
country's
conflict
with the
Palestinians
is to
abolish
the
Jewish
state.
The
success
of
When and
How Was
the
Jewish
People
Invented?
looks
likely
to be
repeated
around
the
world. A
French
edition,
launched
last
month,
is
selling
so fast
that it
has
already
had
three
print
runs.
Translations
are
under
way into
a dozen
languages,
including
Arabic
and
English.
But he
predicted
a rough
ride
from the
pro-Israel
lobby
when the
book is
launched
by his
English
publisher,
Verso,
in the
United
States
next
year.
In
contrast,
he said
Israelis
had
been, if
not
exactly
supportive,
at least
curious
about
his
argument.
Tom
Segev,
one of
the
country's
leading
journalists,
has
called
the book
"fascinating
and
challenging."
Surprisingly,
Sand
said,
most of
his
academic
colleagues
in
Israel
have
shied
away
from
tackling
his
arguments.
One
exception
is
Israel
Bartal,
a
professor
of
Jewish
history
at
Hebrew
University
in
Jerusalem.
Writing
in
Haaretz,
the
Israeli
daily
newspaper,
Bartal
made
little
effort
to rebut
Sand's
claims.
He
dedicated
much of
his
article
instead
to
defending
his
profession,
suggesting
that
Israeli
historians
were not
as
ignorant
about
the
invented
nature
of
Jewish
history
as Sand
contends.
The idea
for the
book
came to
him many
years
ago,
Sand
said,
but he
waited
until
recently
to start
working
on it.
"I
cannot
claim to
be
particularly
courageous
in
publishing
the book
now," he
said. "I
waited
until I
was a
full
professor.
There is
a price
to be
paid in
Israeli
academia
for
expressing
views of
this
sort."
Sand's
main
argument
is that
until
little
more
than a
century
ago,
Jews
thought
of
themselves
as Jews
only
because
they
shared a
common
religion.
At the
turn of
the 20th
century,
he said,
Zionist
Jews
challenged
this
idea and
started
creating
a
national
history
by
inventing
the idea
that
Jews
existed
as a
people
separate
from
their
religion.
Equally,
the
modern
Zionist
idea of
Jews
being
obligated
to
return
from
exile to
the
Promised
Land was
entirely
alien to
Judaism,
he
added.
"Zionism
changed
the idea
of
Jerusalem.
Before,
the holy
places
were
seen as
places
to long
for, not
to be
lived
in. For
2,000
years
Jews
stayed
away
from
Jerusalem
not
because
they
could
not
return
but
because
their
religion
forbade
them
from
returning
until
the
messiah
came."
The
biggest
surprise
during
his
research
came
when he
started
looking
at the
archaeological
evidence
from the
biblical
era.
"I was
not
raised
as a
Zionist,
but like
all
other
Israelis
I took
it for
granted
that the
Jews
were a
people
living
in Judea
and that
they
were
exiled
by the
Romans
in 70
AD.
"But
once I
started
looking
at the
evidence,
I
discovered
that the
kingdoms
of David
and
Solomon
were
legends.
"Similarly
with the
exile.
In fact,
you
can't
explain
Jewishness
without
exile.
But when
I
started
to look
for
history
books
describing
the
events
of this
exile, I
couldn't
find
any. Not
one.
"That
was
because
the
Romans
did not
exile
people.
In fact,
Jews in
Palestine
were
overwhelming
peasants
and all
the
evidence
suggests
they
stayed
on their
lands."
Instead,
he
believes
an
alternative
theory
is more
plausible:
the
exile
was a
myth
promoted
by early
Christians
to
recruit
Jews to
the new
faith.
"Christians
wanted
later
generations
of Jews
to
believe
that
their
ancestors
had been
exiled
as a
punishment
from
God."
So if
there
was no
exile,
how is
it that
so many
Jews
ended up
scattered
around
the
globe
before
the
modern
state of
Israel
began
encouraging
them to
"return"?
Sand
said
that, in
the
centuries
immediately
preceding
and
following
the
Christian
era,
Judaism
was a
proselytizing
religion,
desperate
for
converts.
"This is
mentioned
in the
Roman
literature
of the
time."
Jews
traveled
to other
regions
seeking
converts,
particularly
in Yemen
and
among
the
Berber
tribes
of North
Africa.
Centuries
later,
the
people
of the
Khazar
kingdom
in what
is today
south
Russia,
would
convert
en masse
to
Judaism,
becoming
the
genesis
of the
Ashkenazi
Jews of
central
and
eastern
Europe.
Sand
pointed
to the
strange
state of
denial
in which
most
Israelis
live,
noting
that
papers
offered
extensive
coverage
recently
to the
discovery
of the
capital
of the
Khazar
kingdom
next to
the
Caspian
Sea.
Ynet,
the
website
of
Israel's
most
popular
newspaper,
Yedioth
Ahronoth,
headlined
the
story:
"Russian
archaeologists
find
long-lost
Jewish
capital."
And yet
none of
the
papers,
he
added,
had
considered
the
significance
of this
find to
standard
accounts
of
Jewish
history.
One
further
question
is
prompted
by
Sand's
account,
as he
himself
notes:
if most
Jews
never
left the
Holy
Land,
what
became
of them?
"It is
not
taught
in
Israeli
schools
but most
of the
early
Zionist
leaders,
including
David
Ben
Gurion
[Israel's
first
prime
minister],
believed
that the
Palestinians
were the
descendants
of the
area's
original
Jews.
They
believed
the Jews
had
later
converted
to
Islam."
Sand
attributed
his
colleagues'
reticence
to
engage
with him
to an
implicit
acknowledgement
by many
that the
whole
edifice
of
"Jewish
history"
taught
at
Israeli
universities
is built
like a
house of
cards.
The
problem
with the
teaching
of
history
in
Israel,
Sand
said,
dates to
a
decision
in the
1930s to
separate
history
into two
disciplines:
general
history
and
Jewish
history.
Jewish
history
was
assumed
to need
its own
field of
study
because
Jewish
experience
was
considered
unique.
"There's
no
Jewish
department
of
politics
or
sociology
at the
universities.
Only
history
is
taught
in this
way, and
it has
allowed
specialists
in
Jewish
history
to live
in a
very
insular
and
conservative
world
where
they are
not
touched
by
modern
developments
in
historical
research.
"I've
been
criticized
in
Israel
for
writing
about
Jewish
history
when
European
history
is my
specialty.
But a
book
like
this
needed a
historian
who is
familiar
with the
standard
concepts
of
historical
inquiry
used by
academia
in the
rest of
the
world."
Jonathan
Cook is
a writer
and
journalist
based in
Nazareth,
Israel.
His
latest
books
are
Israel
and the
Clash of
Civilisations:
Iraq,
Iran and
the Plan
to
Remake
the
Middle
East
(Pluto
Press)
and
Disappearing
Palestine:
Israel's
Experiments
in Human
Despair
(Zed
Books).
His
website
is
www.jkcook.net.
This
article
originally
appeared
in
The
National
published
in Abu
Dhabi
and is
republished
with
permission.
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