Simon_Jester wrote:To be fair, this happened largely because the Germans then decided to redefine "Germany" as "everything we can grab, plus a million square kilometers of room to expand into later." The Israeli Jews are at least slightly less ambitious.
For certain Orthodox Israelis, that's only because "Greater Israel" isn't plus a million square kilometers. They still do consider the land granted to them by Yahoo to be much larger than the land granted to them by the British/UN. These people certainly have power within the Israeli government.
You'll note, for example, that no part of Jerusalem was part of Israel when Israel was created.
True, although the two can be closely associated: remember the history textbooks passed out to schools in French colonies that began "Our ancestors, the Gauls..."
The Gauls certainly were a big part of French history. However, you don't need to be descended from Gauls to be French, even historically. The Normans weren't Gauls, after all, they were Norsemen who settled the area, but certainly became French. Nowadays, you don't even need to be European to be French. One of our graduate students here in my department is just as much a French citizen with all the rights, et al of a Frenchman descended from a Merovingean king, and he's ethnically African.
MasrhalPurnell wrote:Japan was too obvious of an example where the völkisch definition of the nation prevails. France and Germany both rely more upon a cultural definition of the nation than not. However in the end of the day both are nation-states where the background assumptions of governance, education, and culture are defined by those people who are part of the nation. It would be silly to my mind to deny that Germany is a German state, or to say that France is not a French state whose existence serves the French nation. Both were chosen to contrast with the much blunter and cruder Israeli declaration of itself as a Jewish state - the degree to which nationality is stressed is different, the degree to which people can assimilate is different, but the underlying essence is still that of the nation-state.
I still think Japan is a better comparison to use than France or Germany. With Germany, they have severe hangups with Germany existing for Germans. They very famously tried that a few times and the result is history, including the history of Israel, but it was a failure. I doubt you'd get alot of Germans nowadays to go on record and state that Germany exists for their benefit and is their state as opposed to German citizens who aren't ethnically German. Its simply not in their character anymore.
With France, well, like I said above, being French doesn't mean you are descended from Gauls. Perhaps being a snob is in French character, but that extends across all ethnicities.
Japan, on the other hand, fits what you are talking about exactly. Being ethnically Japanese IS a big deal and the Japanese government pretty openly exists for the benefit of the Japanese (as opposed to say, Koreans, who have severe problems living in Japan). However, in Japan, like in Israel, it boils down to simple prejudice and that is not a good thing. In fact, given their own history, it's something they should know better. That's why people find it objectionable that Israel defines itself as a Jewish state. They certainly didn't like it when THEY were defined as the outsides and were ground under the boot.
Also, being a nation-state as you describe is KILLING Japan. Because Japan is so set on serving ethnic Japanese and doing that nation-state thing, they are suffering the worst from an aging population because they aren't making enough babies and their own policies discourage fresh blood from elsewhere to pollute their sacred gene pool. Way to go, nation-state.
I will say there's a difference between "Israel is a Jewish state" and "Israel is a state only for Jews." The very fact that the Israelis did not comprehensively expel all non-Jews is what drives their concern with the demographic stability of their nation-state. If the Israeli Arabs were not 20% of the population and growing fast they could be much more sanguine about the future of Israel as a Jewish state. The actions they are taking to insure the Arabs remain a minority are largely preferential treatment of Jews as immigrants and restrictions on other immigration, which does not entail violence (other than metaphorical) against the existing minority population. One can compare it to White Australia and Apartheid (though it is not comparable to South Africa in extent and brutality) but also to Malaysian Bumiputera policies or Japanese immigration policies.
They certainly made an effort early on. When Israel was first formed and there was alot of fighting, what was the Palestinean middle class decided to get out of dodge for a few weeks for things to settle down and when they attempted to come back, they found they weren't allowed to return because their homes had been stolen by Jewish settlers or bulldozed. The Palestinean right to return is a maor concern and the EXACT STATED REASON is that "Israel is for the Jews and if they grant Right to Return to the people they drove out, then they are afraid it won't be a Jewish state much longer.
Further, I'm not sure how you can say that it didn't entail violence; the Israelies helped INVENT modern terrorism to drive out Arabs. They sent heavily armed settlements into land that wasn't part of Israel because they believe that it's the Holy Land granted to them by Yahoo and thus they have the right to send armed settlements anywhere they please (supported by the government until relatively recently). Oh, yeah, and the first thing on the Israeli agenda was the conquer Jerusalem by force and make it a Jewish city, even though it wasn't part of the original state.
Even with all that, they STILL have demographics problems because immigration policy isn't making up for the fact that they just aren't making enough Hebrew babies with the exception of their fundamentalists and immigration isn't making up the difference. This makes the "Israel is a Jewish State" thing something that is going to bite them in the ass, because with current trends, the only option that will make their survival the most likely is to give up being a Jewish state and instead being a secular Israeli one which treats Arabs/et al equally. One of the more damning arguments I heard for Israel just giving up on Gaza and the West Bank entirely was from a conservative Israeli who stated that holding on the Occupied Territories only speeds up the process to where they have to chose between giving up on Israel being Jewish or become Apartheid South Africa and thus become a pariah state.
The underlying result, though, is still the same as more benign or less interventionist policies elsewhere, in so far as the nation-state remains the preserve of the dominant nation. Is the problem an issue of the methods Israel chooses, or is it an underlying problem with the idea of the nation-state?
I would say both.