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Josh Glancy

ByJosh Glancy, Josh Glancy

Opinion

Ed got it wrong. Zionism is about more than ‘support

March 31, 2013 13:00
3 min read

Last week I conducted an experiment. I was one of several partygoers being subjected to a long and tedious sermon on Middle Eastern politics by a Tehran-based journalist. As his references to Zionism became increasingly vicious (and his tone increasingly tiresome), I decided to change the direction. “I’m a Zionist”, I said.

A shocked silence followed. The other members of the group stared into their wine glasses, mildly embarrassed to have ended up in conversation with such a mindless zealot. They quickly drifted away. Our Tehrani journalist was, it is fair to say, less than pleased. “How can you possibly consider yourself a moral person and a Zionist at the same time?” he asked. With three short words, I had transformed myself into a social pariah. I’d almost have been better off arguing that Jimmy Savile was a tragic victim of the obsessive anti-paedophile movement.

Ed Miliband encountered a similar problem recently. At a question and answer session, the Labour leader told the audience that he was a Zionist because he was”a supporter of Israel”. A day later, after strong criticism, his office beat a hasty and pusillanimous retreat, issuing a statement saying that Miliband had “not used the word Zionist to describe himself”. Even if you are a Zionist, it seems, it is political dynamite to admit as much, particularly for those on the left.

The prescribed liberal Zionist response to this dilemma is simple. “Ah, but you see that doesn’t necessarily make me a supporter of the current Israeli administration. All it means is I support the existence of a Jewish state in in Palestine”.