This declaration is confused in all sorts of ways. The Israeli state may be a racist, colonial one but it’s not moving towards fascism. There’s a certain historical memory lapse involved in the bit which says the state’s founding principles were “equality, civil liberty and sincere aspiration for peace”. Nonetheless it show that their are many in the society who strongly oppose the oath to the idea of a religious based state.

"We will not be citizens of a fascist state purporting to be Israel" say hundreds of Israeli academics and public figures.

A protest rally against the government’s "Loyalty Oath Bill" was held outside the Tel Aviv house. There Ben-Gurion read the 1948 the Declaration of Independence. There, today, the "Declaration of Independence from Fascism" was signed.

"We are citizens of the Israel which was depicted in the Declaration of Independence, a peace-seeking country based on the principles of equality and civil liberties. We do not intend to be the citizens of a state purporting to be Israel which stops being democratic and embarks on becoming a fascist state," proclaimed intellectuals, public figures, and Israel Prize laureates who gathered this afternoon for a protest rally against the "Loyalty Oath Bill" approved by the government. A protest rally was held on Tel Aviv’s Rothschild Boulevard, in front of the museum building where David Ben Gurion had read the Declaration of Independence in 1948.

Beneath the statue of Meir Dizengoff, first mayor of Tel Aviv, actress Hanna Meron read out from that Declaration of Independence: "The State of Israel will be based on based on Liberty, Justice and Peace, as envisaged by the prophets of Israel; it will ensure complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants, irrespective of religion, race or gender; it will guarantee freedom of religion, conscience, language, education and culture; it will safeguard the Holy Places of all religions; and it will be faithful to the principles of the Charter of the United Nations". She noted that, sixty-two years later, the reality of Israel is very different than what the country’s Declaration of Independence envisaged. At the end of the rally, a "Declaration of Independence from Fascism" was signed (see full text below).

Among participants in the initiative were:

Shulamit Aloni, Uri Avnery, Alex Ansky, Shery Ansky, Menachem Brinker, Ran Cohen, Ruth Cohen, Yaron Ezrachi, Galia Golan, Haim Guri, Sna’it Gisis, Yoram Kaniuk, Dani Karavan, Yehoshua Knaz, Elia Leibowitz, Alex Libak, Hanna Meron, Sammy Michael, Merav Michaeli, Sefi Rachlevsky, Gabi Solomon, David Tartakower, Micha Ullman, and many others.

Following is the full text of the Declaration of Independence from Fascism:

A state which forcibly invades the hallowed realm of the individual citizen’s conscience, and which imposes punishment on those whose opinions and beliefs do not fit the authorities’ opinions and the prescribed "character" of the state, stops being a democracy and embarks on becoming a fascist state.

Behind these stairs where we stand, the state of Israel was proclaimed. The state which increasingly takes Israel’s place – a state which fills the country with a variety of racist legislation, promoted by the Knesset and the cabinet – is excluding itself from the family of democratic nations. Therefore we, citizens of the Israel envisaged in the Declaration of Independence, hereby declare that will not be citizens of a country purporting to be Israel and which violates its basic commitment to the principles of equality, civil liberty and sincere aspiration for peace – principles upon which the State of Israel was founded.

3 responses to “Israelis protest against loyalty oath”

  1. “The State of Israel will be based on based on Liberty, Justice and Peace…’

    And other people’s land. Israel could hardly be described as a democracy even before this. Millions of Palestinian’s from `Israel’ are living as refugees with no voice whatsoever in the affairs of their country whilst millions more are living in the West Bank and Gaza banthustans under Israeli rule with absolutely no maningful say in how they are ruled.

    This protest might be a start but it is nowhere near enough if it doesn’t lead on to the call for a united secular, democratic Palestine (Israel, West Bank, Gaza) covered by a single constituent assembly based on one single vote for every muslim, jew, christian or aethiest. How can anywhere call itself a democracy when most of its citizens are either in exile, under threat of ethnic cleansing or herded into a giant ghetto, subjected to economic blockade and periodic full scale military assaults.

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  2. I have always tended to regard the Israeli poltical spectrum as the same, save a few radicals. I agree with Ellis, we cannot allow the hard right in Israel to soften our opposition to the fundamentally racist Israeli state. I believe this post falls into that trap, therefore the hard right in Israel have served their purpose!

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  3. This post shows that although the opposition is limited within the confines of whether the Israeli state can be reformed, which it cant, it represents useful information on the state of the opposition within it.

    Whilst we may be critical of their stance, they are representing some who in everyday practice are challenging the Zionist State and in solidarity with the Palestinians in their struggle for self determination and freedom from occupation.

    Our debate with these cdes must be to point out that opposition to oppression cannot be successful within the constraints of a reformed Israel .

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