Zionism at the GA

by Samantha

The General Assembly of Jewish Federations of North America is one of the largest annual gatherings of Jews in the Diaspora. It brings together Jews from all points on the spectrums of political affiliation, religious observance, and opinions on Israel. There are many issues that are emphasized at the GA, with specialty tracks focusing on Jewish leadership, the Middle East and Israel, community building, and new and innovative tactics, among others. The diversity of the GA participants marks the tones of the various sessions, with conversations taking place on all of the issues facing the Jewish community, ranging from intermarriage to engaging the younger generation.

With so many issues on the table for the North American Jewish community to deal with and discuss, it is interesting to note the prevalence of Israel in the conference. Israel is an issue that is central to Jewish identity and the Jewish people, and it is heartening to see it being treated as such. In GA sessions, it has been noted that lately, Israel and Zionism are often treated as separate from the rest of Jewish communal life, but at this conference, the centrality of Israel is represented in the number of discussions and speakers that have focused on it.

Zionism, and the relationship that the Jewish people have with the Jewish national movement, has been a pivotal part of Jewish identity for generations. The connection that generations past had with Israel came from religious affinity and national identity. Today, the connection that Jewish communities around the world have with Israel is different than it has ever been before. The younger generations have never lived in a world without the State of Israel. Having grown up with the security that a sovereign Jewish State provides, they are able to take for granted the success of the Zionist movement without keeping in mind that Zionism is still alive today, and did not end in 1948 with the formal establishment of the modern State of Israel.

Sessions at the GA regarding Israel have ranged from conversations about the Assault on Israel’s Legitimacy to The Negev from Now to 2020 to Turning Israel Program Alumni into Advocates and Activists. These sessions touched on issues relating to Israel, but while focusing on the issues of Israel advocacy and legitimacy, neglected to truly address Zionism. Zionism, Jewish nationalism, is a word and a concept that has come under assault in recent years, one of the main targets of the movement to delegitimize Israel. While many participants have talked about their personal connections with Israel and their pro-Israel leanings, often identifying as a Zionist isn’t heard.

It is imperative that the Jewish community addresses this glaring omission. To identify as a Zionist is to identify with a movement that is as diverse as the Jewish community itself, with numerous ideologies and forms of expression. It is to voice affiliation with the belief that the Jewish people have a right to self-determination in their historic national homeland, the place that has been at the core of Jewish identity through generations of exile and dispersion.

As the North American Jewish community continues to explore its strengths and weaknesses at the GA, hopefully Zionism will come into question, in the various Israel discussions and in the collective conversation as well.

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