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Reviewed by:
  • Israel, Diaspora, and the Routes of National Belonging
  • Theodore Sasson
Jasmin Habib, Israel, Diaspora, and the Routes of National Belonging, University of Toronto Press, 2004, 317 pp

The titles of recent books on the politics of Israel among North American Jews—Irreconcilable Differences? by Steven Rosenthal, Divided We Stand by Ofira Seliktar, Jew versus Jew by Samuel Freedman—suggest a common storyline: Over the past two decades, in response to conflicts over the peace process, the Pollard spy case, conversion, marriage, and the legal status of non-Orthodox movements, Israel has shifted from a source of consensus among North American Jews to an increasingly sharp point of contention. Nevertheless, American Jews continue to express strong political support for Israel, and many continue to invest a great deal of emotional energy in their connection to the Jewish state. This state of affairs might reasonably prompt one to ask: Why, in spite of the conflicts and disagreements, do so many North American Jews continue to express strong attachment to Israel?

Anthropologist Jasmin Habib's Israel, Diaspora, and the Routes of National Belonging seeks to answer this question. Theresearch for the book, spanning several years in the late 1990s, entailed participant observation on three Israel Experience tours, participation in roughly 200 Israel-related events (lectures, films, celebrations, etc.) in two Canadian cities, and interviews with the Israel Experience trip participants and other members of the Canadian Jewish community. Habib's analytical goal was to learn how tour guides, lecturers, and community leaders represented Israel to North American Jews, both in Israel and in their diaspora communities, and how North American Jews responded to these representations. The book reads very much like a doctoral dissertation—it is overly long and detailed for any but the most motivated readers. It also suffers from rather serious methodological and interpretive errors. Still, the importance of the topic and the paucity of alternative treatments justify a careful assessment. [End Page 162]

In the opening chapter, Habib establishes the theoretical framework for her inquiry. She finds the anthropological literature on diasporas to be less helpful than the literature on nationalism in describing the active construction of a sense of belonging among "deterritorialized" subjects. In framing her approach, she therefore draws on Benedict Anderson's notion of the nation as an "imagined community," and on the works of Roland Barthes, Ana Maria Alonso, and Michel de Certeau. Among national subjects and members of diaspora communities alike, nationalism works discursively by inviting people to view themselves as part of an idealized, mythologized whole, and by making mythological narratives of the past seem transparent and natural. "In passing from history to nature," writes Roland Barthes, "myth . . . abolishes the complexity of human acts, it gives them the simplicity of essences, it does away with all dialectics, with any going back beyond what is immediately visible, it organizes a world which is without contradictions." (p. 20) According to Alonso, nationalist narratives engage in a process of "idealization" through which "the past is cleaned up, rendered palatable and made the embodiment of nationalist values. . . . Pasts which cannot be incorporated are excluded by national history." (p. 21) Ordinary people draw upon such narratives and thus situate themselves as part of the nation or its diaspora. Following de Certau, however, Habib stresses that diaspora subjects potentially subvert the institutionalized narratives by setting them alongside other culturally available perspectives.

The first substantial section of the book describes the guides' narratives on the Israel Experience tours. Although the author participated in a variety of tours, including one sponsored by a civil rights organization, she views the differences as apparently trivial, in large measure because the tour guides were all Israeli trained and certified professionals. She therefore describes core narratives common to all three tours. The first collection of narratives, which she dubs One nation, One land, emphasizes the Jews' unique relationship to the land of Israel, either as its divinely chosen or longest surviving inhabitants. In Jerusalem, on top of Masada, and elsewhere, the tour guides emphasized evidence of continuous Jewish settlement in the region, and encouraged tour participants to contemplate the miraculous return of the Jewish people. They also forged direct links between Jewish textual culture...

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