Gilad Atzmon on the Jewish mindset and Zionists against Zionism
Interviewed by
Lasse Wilhelmson
Al-Jazeerah, March 20, 2006*
Gilad Atzmon
was born in Israel and grew up in a secular Jewish home. He did his military
service during the war on Lebanon in 1982, which became the turning point that
made him sceptical of Zionism and Israel’s politics. Ten years later he
emigrated to London with a one-way ticket. After finishing his philosophy
studies, he chose music over an academic carrier. His album
Exile
was awarded BBC’s “Best Jazz Album of the Year.” His own multicultural group
is called “The Orient House Ensemble.” Atzmon has written two books which
together have been translated into 17 languages (A Guide to the Perplexed and
My One and Only Love) and a number of articles that openly criticise Zionism
and “Jewish identity” from an ideological and philosophical perspective.
Atzmon’s books,
articles and music are available on his website
http://www.gilad.co.uk
Lasse Wilhelmson:
Why did you leave Israel and will you ever return?
Gilad Atzmon:
I eventually managed to realise that living in Israel as a Hebraic subject
means nothing but taking part in the colonisation of Palestine. I decided not
to be a colonialist. I do not have any plans to come back.
LW:
Not even if the Jewish state is dismantled and replaced by a democracy for all
its citizens?
GA:
This would be a major progress and yet, I do not see the Israeli Jews moving
towards such a solution. And besides, I am not a Jew but rather a Hebrew
speaking Palestinian.
LW:
How would you describe yourself? Who is Gilad Atzmon?
GA:
I am a jazz musician, I aim to reinvent myself on a daily basis. Obviously
this is a big task and I fail most of the time. Anyhow, the fact that I am a
jazz musician means as well that I do not take any political assumption very
seriously.
LW:
Not even the good ones? And what about your own assumptions?
GA:
How would I know what good assumptions are? I obviously spend most of my time
criticising and revising my own assumptions. I think that this is what
‘thinking’ is all about, any other forms of thinking should be titled as
acceptance or even approval.
LW:
What is it that you want to achieve with your music and your writing, and how
do these two different art forms affect each other?
GA:
I do believe that beauty can make a change or at least introduce one. In my
previous album Exile
I tried to expose the hypocritical nature of Jewish and Israeli culture and
mindset. I tried to once again raise the question: ‘how come yesterday’s
sufferers have turned into today's oppressors?’. In my writings I do very much
the same, I try to deconstruct the Zio thinking mode as well as Western
righteous discourse.
LW:
And what about those who think your kind of beauty is ugly?
GA:
I think that I should have been more accurate, I don't claim to produce
beauty, I aim towards beauty. I do my very best, whether my music is great or
not is down to others to judge. Some people love my music, some don't. It is
pretty natural. Astonishingly enough, some of those who really hate me still
insist that I can play the saxophone. I would expect them to say about me: not
only is he an idiot, he can't even play the sax.
LW:
Well, I thought about the beauty also of your writings...
GA:
As far as my writings are concerned, I would divide them into two categories:
the fictional and the critical. The fictional is very much like music or any
other form of art, it is significant as long as it is aesthetically
stimulating. My critical writings are there to provoke some thoughts. Beauty
is only secondary here, at least from my point of view.
LW:
You appear to be a very controversial person, who leaves no one unaffected.
Why is that?
GA:
Interesting! I think that I always start by ridiculing myself. In my first and
second book I did deconstruct my own identity, an ex Zio male. Apparently, by
doing that I touched a Jewish nerve. I learn to live with it, they rather
prefer to crucify me. This was always their method, nothing changed.
LW:
So, those who accuse you of being a “self-hater” are in a way right?
GA:
It took me some time to acknowledge it. It was only after re-visiting
Weininger's Sex and Character
I realised that this is the hidden secret behind Jewish dissident writing.
LW:
Could you please elaborate on that a bit more?
GA:
“People love in others the qualities they would like to have but do not
actually have in any great degree. So we hate in others only what we do not
wish to be, and what notwithstanding we are in part. We hate only qualities to
which we approximate, but which we recognise first in other persons… Thus, the
fact is explained that the bitterest anti-Semites are to be found amongst the
Jews themselves” (Weininger, Sex and Character,
p. 304).
Clearly, some Jews are opposing what they despise within themselves. This
tendency is often called anti-Semitism. But Weininger is taking it further. As
we all know Jews are not alone. Some non-Jews find the Jewish tendencies
within themselves: “even Richard Wagner, the Bitterest anti-Semite cannot be
held free of accretion of Jewishness even in his art” (Weininger, p. 305).
Thus, I would allow myself to argue that for Weininger, Jewishness isn’t a
racial category at all. It is clearly a mindset which some of us possess and a
very few of us try to oppose. In other words, the Jewish self-hating is so
crucial in the development of critical thinking.
LW:
And what is this “Jewish mindset” all about?
GA:
I think that if we are really looking for one word I would suggest supremacy.
Supremacy is obviously the outcome of a misinterpretation of the Judaic notion
of chosenness. While Orthodox Jews regard being chosen as a moral duty, the
more secularised forms of Judaism tend to regard chosenness as an inborn gift.
LW: Of all your writings, which one has caused the biggest excitement and why?
GA: Hard to say. Probably the one about
The Protocols of the Elders
of Zion.
I argue there that with the current state of Jewish (political and economical)
power, the debate concerning the truthfulness of the protocols is meaningless.
I think that I may suffer as well because I refuse to denounce Israel Shamir
and Paul Eisen. I find them both intellectually crucial and genuine voices.
Current Jewish left politics is mainly concerned with putting people in the
right boxes. Boxing and demarcation is indeed a Talmudic intellectual
obsession. It is all about the definition of the
Kosher
and the taref.
Unfortunately, I find it rather boring. I just can't join in. Not only do I
argue that Shamir and Eisen are Kosher,
I insist that their critical spirit is the ultimate embodiment of the Judaic
tradition of critical thinking.
LW:
There is another taboo, the one about the Holocaust. What is your opinion on
that?
GA:
This seems to be my next war, it is a very complicated subject. I am just
completing a very long text about the subject. First, I do not buy the
official H narrative, it is full of discrepancies. Second, I am totally
convinced that it isn't a Zio narrative. I pool a major blame on the Anglo
Americans. I think that the H has become the essence of post war liberal
democratic nonsense. As you know the title of my last album is
musiK –
RE-ARRANGING THE 20th CENTURY....
LW:
So the post war imperialists created the H narrative to be able to use Zionism
ideologically and the Jews as a scapegoat?
GA:
In fact it is more complicated. It is the use of personal narrative that is
crucial for the liberal democrat discourse. Allocating the singular subject in
the midst of liberal discourse. Basically it is Auschwitz that allows the
Anglo American to kill in the name of democracy.
LW:
Many would probably find it strange that anti-Zionist Jews have demonstrated
against you when you’ve lectured, even though you consider yourself an
anti-Zionist and call for equal rights for all in Israel/Palestine. How do you
explain this?
GA:
You know Lasse, I thought about it lately. I am not so sure whether I am an
‘anti-Zionist’ anymore, to be an anti-Zionist is to give Zionism too much
credit. Zionism, like racism, is basically a human weakness. It isn’t right to
an ‘anti human-weakness’. In the first half of the 20th century Zionism was a
marginal movement amongst Jews, now this weakness became the voice of Jewish
people. Indeed this is rather alarming.
Anyhow, to your question, the answer is pretty simple. I argue that people who
act politically under the Jewish banner are basically Zionists. They obviously
oppose me because I exposed this very flaw in their worldview.
I argue as well that if Zionism is indeed as bad as they admit than we should
rather oppose it as human beings rather than as Jews.
LW:
Even ALL of those who call themselves
Jews against Zionism
and alike?
GA:
Actually I have no problem with Jewish Orthodox rejection of Zionism. As long
as one fights Zionism with Judaism, one's Jewishness is essential and makes
sense.
LW:
And what about the Marxist Jews against Zionism?
GA:
They are either bad news or just slightly idiotic. If they are indeed truly
Marxists then they are supposed to endorse working class politics… in other
words, they are supposed to be atheists, they are supposed to abandon their
ethnic or racial origin or at least not to capitalise on it... We should ask
ourselves how come Marxist Jews are adopting such a racially oriented
political argumentation. The answer is simple, they are either ‘national
socialists’ i.e. Zionists, or simply ignorant (in most cases they are both).
In a few debates I had with those strange Marxists through the years I have
come across two unique arguments:
1. It is Hitler rather than Moses who made us into Jews. This argument is
obviously silly: a) Hitler has been dead for more than six decades; b) the
Marxist Jew admits being a non-authentic being, it isn't he who is Jewish, it
is a title that is imposed on him by the Other.
2. Jewishness is a cultural heritage (the Bund). I would then ask what is the
Jewish cultural heritage, once you filter out the religious content you are
left with chicken soup and a few dirty jokes. My answer is pretty simple: yes
indeed, chicken soup is a cultural asset and yet it is far from being a
political argument. For instance supporting the Palestinian resistance in the
name of chicken soup is far from being a winning political argument.
LW:
The rumour is that you are now a Christian. Would this make you a Christian
Jew?
GA:
I don't know what Christian Jew means. I am not a Jew, I am an ex-Jew. I was
born a Jew but I left it behind. Being raised as a secular Jew in Israel, I am
familiar with the Judeo-centric worldview and I am good in criticising it.
Anyhow, re my Christian faith: yes, I am fascinated by Christ’s lesson. I am
slightly less overwhelmed by the Church. So I follow Christ in my very own
way.
LW:
What is your view on the political situation in today’s Israel? Is it possible
to change Israel from the inside, or is the first step to put an end to the
support from the U.S. and the Diaspora Jews?
GA:
Very complicated question. Israel is a divided society. I do not see much
chance for a change as long as the Euro-centric Ashkenazi Jewish philosophy is
defining the political tone. The Ashkenazi philosophy, both religious and
secular, is supremacist to the bone. On the other hand, I tend to believe that
the Arab Jews who happen to be the majority of Israeli Jews will eventually
make peace with their Arab brothers sooner or later. I tend to believe that
Amir Peretz is the first crack in the Ashkenazi hegemony. Days will tell
whether I am right...
LW:
How do you get in touch with “The Human” nerve in the Israeli colonialist
mindset?
GA:
I am not so sure whether I understood the question.
LW:
Well, frankly, how do you change the Jewish colonialists?
GA:
You don’t, you let them be defeated by their own doomed philosophy. The big
problem is that their philosophy is now the voice of the west.
LW:
Which of your articles would you recommend to someone who has never heard of
you?
GA:
Probably the interview with
Manuel Talens
and the
The 3rd Category and the
Palestinian Solidarity Movement,
it was translated recently into
Swedish.
LW:
I thought you disliked being placed in boxes, and now you recommend your
article on “the 3rd category” Jew? Isn’t that boxing?
GA:
Good one. To start with I am not putting people in boxes, I deal with
categories, but your question is in place. This is exactly were I need
Weininger on my side. It is exactly the Jew in me that is destructive to the
Jewish and Zionist cause. In general, the list of great Jews that we all love
so much or just love to love includes Christ, Marx, Spinoza, Adorno, etc. They
are all doing the same thing: They apply their Jewish humanitarian insight
against their Jewish heritage. Christ may have invented it, Marx wrote about
it in The Jewish Question
and Adorno exposed the Judeo-centric cultural industry. My method is similar,
I tell my ex brothers, ‘you like to put people into boxes (self-hating,
anti-Semite, Holocaust denier, etc.)’, fine with me, let's see what happens
when we put you into boxes. Basically I use the Zio tactics against the Zios.
And again in this paper I was boxing like a proper Jew. There is an old
saying: ‘you can get the man out of Israel but you can’t get Israel out of the
man’. I certainly left Israel physically yet, I am properly trained in
Israeli, Zionist and Jewish thinking methods.
LW:
When will we see you in Sweden?
GA:
Once I am invited I will be delighted to perform there.
LW:
Both as a musician and a writer?
GA:
For sure.
LW:
Thank you Gilad!
GA:
My entire pleasure.
Peace
Lasse Wilhelmson
lives in Stockholm, Sweden and lived in Israel for a couple of years in the
early 1960's. His writings
Zionism - More Than
Traditional Colonialism and Apartheid
and
“Anti-Semitism” as a
Political Weapon
are available in English.