I'll be at the so-called Million Man demonstration tonight [held across Israel this past Saturday night - Editor], if only because not attending would identify me (in my own mind) with the reactionary majority of the population. Whatever doubts I have about the motives, sincerity and staying power of the demonstrators, they have broken with the self-satisfied apathy that has characterized Israeli society for the past few decades and that in itself deserves to be supported.
There's an old, Marxist struggle raging inside me: whether to retain the purity of my ideology - and in so doing achieve absolutely nothing - or to compromise with the less ideologically rigorous and perhaps contribute in a very small way to positive change.
Having been a committed anti-Stalinist all my life I will, of course, abandon purity for the prospect of success. I will demonstrate with people whose sole objective appears to be to get increasing numbers of people to demonstrations; who haven't enunciated any goals for the demonstration (as far as I am aware,) and who seem to be avoiding like the plague anything that smacks of criticism of the military budget, the occupation and the mafia settlement enterprise.
Or, as T.S. Elliot might have put it, they are doing the right deed for the wrong reason (Murder in the Cathedral.) Sure, the economy is in a bit of a mess, cronyism and cartels abound, the social net is sagging and the cost of living is high. But are those really our existential problems? Are those the issues that, if solved, would make us a better society?
It's actually grotesque that Israel's pampered middle class marches when it feels that the government's hand is too deep in its pocket, but has sipped espresso and watched reality shows while a tiny minority has protested against the occupation over the past four decades or so.
The reality is that the global economy is in bad shape and Israelis are far from being the worst off. The cost of housing may be high, but it is no higher than in many other places. The capitalist reaction against the socialism of Israel's founders has gone too far for many people, but Israel still has a social welfare net that that puts the US, among others, to shame. True, the vulgarity (the word that comes to mind is the South Africanism grob) of the Israel tycoons makes one want to puke, but does that really justify a million people taking to the streets?