My main goal in this blog is to present a view of the reality of daily life in Israel. Here are some insights from the late Saul Bellow that relate directly to the subject.
Bellow spent several months in Israel in late 1975. He published his insights under the title "To Jerusalem and Back" (The Viking Press) in 1976. I read it then and have recently rediscovered it. It's a treasure well worth reading.
This segment is from Pages 25/26. What is so remarkable is that it could have been written yesterday rather than almost 30 years ago, Somethings do not change here.
He is reflecting about the Israeli need to talk, to constantly engage in conversation. Here's what he wrote
"The subject of all this talk is, ultimately, survival-the survival of the decent society created in Israel within a few decades. At first this is hard to grasp because the setting is so civilized. You are in a city like many another-well, not quite, for Jerusalem is the only ancient city I've ever seen whose antiquities are not on display as relics but are in daily use.
Still, the city is a modem city with modern utilities. You shop in supermarkets, you say good morning to friends on the telephone, you hear symphony orchestras on the radio. But suddenly the music stops and a terrorist bomb is reported. A new explosion outside a coffee shop on the Jaffa Road: six young people killed and thirty-eight more wounded.
Pained, you put down your civilized drink. Uneasy, you go out to your civilized dinner. Bombs are exploding everywhere. Dynamite has just been thrown in London; the difference is that when a bomb goes off in a West End restaurant the fundamental right of England to exist is not in dispute.
Yet here you sit at dinner with charming people in a dining room like any other. You know that your hostess has lost a son; that her sister lost children in the 1973 war; that in this Jerusalem street, coolly sweet with night flowers and dark under the lamps, many other families have lost children. And on the Jaffa Road, because of another bomb, six adolescents-two on a break from night school-stopping at a coffee shop to eat buns, have just died.
But in the domestic ceremony of passed dishes and filled glasses thoughts of a destructive enemy are hard to grasp. What you do know is that there is one fact of Jewish life unchanged by the creation of a Jewish state: you cannot take your right to live for granted. Others can; you cannot.
This is not to say that everyone else is living pleasantly and well under a decent regime. No, it means only that the Jews, because they are Jews, have never been able to take the right to live as a natural right.
To be sure, many Israelis refuse to admit that this historic uneasiness has not been eliminated. They seem to think of themselves as a fixed power, immovable. Their point has been made. They are a nation among nations and will always remain so. You must tear your mind away from this conviction, as you must tear it from "civilized" appearances, in order to reach reality.
The search for relief from the uneasiness is what is real in Israel. Nationalism has no comparable reality. To say, as George Steiner says, that Zionism was created by Jewish nationalists who drew their inspiration from Bismarck and followed a Prussian model can't be right. The Jews did not become nationalistic because they drew strength from their worship of anything resembling Germanic Blut und Eisen but because they alone, amongst the peoples of the earth, had not established a natural right to exist unquestioned in the lands of their birth. This right is still clearly not granted them, not even in the liberal West.
At the same time Jews are called upon by Mr. Steiner and call upon themselves to be more just and more moral than others."
There is nothing I could add to the words of a master except GET THE BOOK!
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