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           |  | The Wandering Who?
 Gilad Atzmon, King of the 
	Jews, Hated by All Jews
 
 a Book Review By Shahram Vahdany
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 12, 2011 
 The magical and yet extremely subtle gift that Gilad Atzmon 
	offers through his personal journeys in The Wandering Who? is the wisdom of 
	disillusionment; the gift of not floating above water, but having to take an 
	insightful dive into a shrouded underworld of appearances and 
	disappearances.
 
 The Wandering Who?: intelligent, bold, unapologetic.
 
 At a certain stage, around 2005, I thought to myself that I might be 
	King of the Jews. I have achieved the unachievable, accomplished the 
	impossible. I have managed to unite them all: Right, Left, and Centre. The 
	entirety of the primarily-Jewish British political groups: the Zionists, the 
	anti-Zionists, Jewish Socialists, Tribal Marxists, The Board of Deputies, 
	Jewish Trotskyites, Jews for this and Jews for that, for the first time in 
	history all spoke in one single voice. They all hated Gilad Atzmon equally.
 
 Gilad begins his book, The Wandering Who? with a brief story of his 
	childhood and the tremendous influence of his grandfather on his 
	adolescence. He writes “my grandfather was a charismatic, poetic, veteran 
	zionist terrorist. A former prominent commander in the right-wing Irgun 
	terrorist organization …” He writes about his attraction to jazz, his 
	enlistment in the IDF (Israel Defense Force), and finally being sent to the 
	first Lebanon war. He writes of his experience in Lebanon saying:
 
 I 
	studied the detainees. The looked very different to the Palestinians in 
	Jerusalem. The ones I saw in Ansar were angry. They were not defeated, they 
	were freedom fighters and they were numerous. As we continued past the 
	barbed wire I continued gazing at the inmates, and arrived at an unbearable 
	truth: I was walking on the other side, in Israeli military uniform. The 
	place was a concentration camp. The inmates were the ‘Jews’, and I was 
	nothing but a ‘Nazi’. It took me years to admit to myself that even the 
	binary opposition Jew/Nazi was in itself as result of my Judeo-centric 
	indoctrination.
 
 This becomes the focal point of the transformation in 
	Gilad’s young character. He writes “This was enough for me. I realized that 
	my affair with the Israeli state and with Zionism was over.” In TheWandering 
	Who?, Gilad divides Jews into three main categories: (1), those who follow 
	Judaism; (2), those who regard themselves as human beings who happen to be 
	of Jewish origin; and (3), those who put their Jewishness over and above all 
	of their other traits. He regards the first two categories as harmless and 
	innocent groups of people. Gilad is not so kind to the third category, 
	however. This group is the primary focus in his book. He goes beyond the 
	what to the how and why. Like a forensic scientist, he dissects them piece 
	by piece historically, economically, philosophically, psychologically, and 
	politically.
 
 Zionism: A Global Network
 
 Israel is not a 
	colonial power and does not function as such. Colonial powers form an 
	equilibrium with the indigenous peoples whose land they occupy. They have a 
	parasitic nature that knows their survival is based on cooperation with and 
	even helping the indigenous peoples, albeit on a very minimum level. We have 
	seen this with the colonization of India by the British, Algeria and Morocco 
	by the French, and South Africa by Afrikana apartheid. Israel’s function is 
	more that of a cancer that consumes its host resources until there is 
	nothing left, consequently destroying itself as a result. As Farid Esack, a 
	South African scholar, writer and political activist, known for his 
	opposition to apartheid, says in his open letter to the Palestinian people, 
	“Israel is not an apartheid, it’s worse.”
 
 Gilad also writes:
 
 Zionism is not a colonial movement with an interest in Palestine, as some 
	scholars suggest. Zionism is actually a global movement that is fuelled by a 
	unique tribal solidarity of third category members.
 
 Zionism: Realm of 
	Hungry Ghosts and Animals
 
 By referring to hungry ghosts and animals 
	the intention is not to dehumanize Zionists but is a reference, from a 
	Buddhist teaching, to two of the six realms of existence, describing states 
	of mind that human beings inhabit at any given time. The hungry ghost realm 
	applies to those who are never satisfied, perpetually discontented no matter 
	what they have. The animal realm refers to those without reason, who 
	function solely by instinct and are incapable of identification with others. 
	As Gilad put it:
 
 Also, considering the racist, expansionist 
	Judeo-centric nature of the Jewish State, the Diaspora Jew finds himself or 
	herself intrinsically associated with a bigoted, enthnocentric ideology and 
	an endless list of crimes against humanity.
 
 Israel is the only 
	country recognized by the United Nations without any roots in the land it 
	occupies. In 1947, the newly formed United Nations brought a group of people 
	from the four corners of the planet and located them in one place and called 
	this ‘chicken soup’ the State of Israel. But more was needed in order to 
	legitimize this newly made nation. They needed national history, which they 
	conveniently borrowed from the Bible. It did not matter how fictional the 
	Biblical story of Jews are. As Gilad put it, “the Jewish people is a made-up 
	notion consisting of an imaginary past with very little to back it up 
	forensically, historically, or textually.”
 
 Zionists’ claim of Jewish 
	ancestral homeland is echoed by the Christian right and Christian Zionists 
	primarily in the historically ignorant United States population, 20% of whom 
	still believe the earth is flat, and 55% regard evolution as a hoax. 
	Furthermore, the majority of people in the U.S. accept the Bible as a 
	historical and factual book.
 
 The magical and yet extremely subtle 
	gift that Gilad Atzmon offers through his personal journeys in The Wandering 
	Who? is the wisdom of disillusionment; the gift of not floating above water, 
	but having to take an insightful dive into a shrouded underworld of 
	appearances and disappearances. He disarms his critics beforehand by saying: 
	“I am a proud self-hating Jew”.
 
 Although Gilad discusses an extremely 
	sensitive phenomenon in every sense of its meaning and implications, nothing 
	is taboo for him; even those subjects which have been expressly forbidden to 
	explore lest one be labeled anti-Semitic or worse. Gilad recalls: “While in 
	the past an anti-Semite was someone who hates Jews, nowadays it is the other 
	way around, an anti-Semite is someone the Jews hate.”
 
 Further on he 
	writes about Holocaust as a religion:
 
 To a certain extent, the 
	Holocaust religion signals the final Jewish departure from monotheism, for 
	every Jew is potentially a little God or Goddess. Abe Foxman is the God of 
	anti-defamation, Alan Greenspan the God of ‘good economy’, Milton Friedman 
	is the God of ‘free markets’, Lord Goldsmith the God of the ‘green light’, 
	Lord Levy the God of fundraising, Paul Wolfowitz the God of US ‘moral 
	interventionism’. AIPAC (the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee) is 
	the American Olympus, where mortals elected in the US come to beg for mercy, 
	forgiveness for being Goyim and for a bit of cash.
 
 Whether or not one 
	agrees with Atzmon’s views, his book would propel Jews and non-Jews equally 
	toward a better understanding of Israel, Zionism, and Jewish identity, 
	beyond news headlines or state propaganda. This book is the odyssey of one 
	man’s transformation within transformation, the end of which is yet to be 
	written.
 
 
	
	http://www.gilad.co.uk/writings/shahram-vahdany-king-of-the-jews.html 
 
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