Imran, there is actually a genetic argument to Jews being an actual nation. Among Coheni (etc.. the preistly tribe), who are supposedly the decendents of Aaron, there is an unusally high incidence of a particular set of genes, which is higher in general among Jews than among non-Jews. It's about 30% for Coheni, 6% for Jews, and less for everyone else.
It was using this odd fact that allowed scientists to prove the claim of a Southern African tribe to prove its claim that it was Jewish. Though they look like all the other Africans in the area (through intermarriage), they are decendend from Yemini Jews (discovered through tracing names and origin myths). (They also built Great Zimbabwe, at least according to them.)
So, Jews world-wide have a shared heritage of blood. That doesn't necessarily make them a nation, and nationalism is deeper than that. But, given a shared history, religion, language, and attachment to a particular piece of land, it's no strech of the imagination to call Jews a nation.
We find it difficult to accept because this happens to be an argument of anti-Semites for opressing Jews, that they are a foreign nation. In America, also, our Jews have largely been assimilated, and so we think of them as fellow Americans, as well we should, because they are. I don't think it's impossible for someone to be a member of more than one nation. Dual citizenship comes to mind. Contrary to Hitler's argument, it IS possible to be a German and a Jew, or Irish and American (as opposed to Irish-American), or Greek and American, and so on. Granted, being a member of the American nation is special, since our is a nation of ideals rather than "blood."
David, it is well established that ordinary Germans went along with the Nazi oppression of the Jews. I also included Poland because Poland, more than happily, partipated in the Holocaust. After the war, when the survivors tried to return to their homes, they were run out of Poland (if lucky, killed if not). Today, less than 9,000 Jews live in Poland out of an original population of 3,000,000 (and Poland still has anti-Semitism problems). I would have no qualms about turnig Posnan and Silesia and West Prussia to the Jews in compensation for the crimes done to them.
Eli, I used to be quite the Israeli sympathizer, even up to quoting Begin and Meir and saying that Palestinians don't exist and that there already is a Palestine, it's called Jordan.
Anyways, the reason I don't write about the notion of the Jews having an historical right to Israel because they lived there 2,000 years ago is because I consider that argument ridiculous. Whatever claim the Hebrews had to Palestine ended long ago, when the last generations who knew anyone that had lived in Judea and Samaria died out.
Furthermore, many of the Palestinian people could probably trace their ancestry back to the Cananites and earlier. The Hebrews never completely displaced the inhabitants of Canan, regardless of how many times they left (or were exiled) and came back. The Samaritans still live there (as I'm sure you know) and still practice their variant of Judaism. Just because the regions was eventually conquered by Arab tribesmen doen't mean that it was settled by them and everyone else was expelled. Some settled, some continued on elsewhere (Egypt, Syria, Anatolia, etc.).
Anyways, just as you are decended from people who lived in Judea and Samaria 2,000 years ago, you (specifically) are also decended from Slavic nomads from Central Asia. As a Slav, should you then be able to go and kick the Turkish people living there now from their homes?
It was using this odd fact that allowed scientists to prove the claim of a Southern African tribe to prove its claim that it was Jewish. Though they look like all the other Africans in the area (through intermarriage), they are decendend from Yemini Jews (discovered through tracing names and origin myths). (They also built Great Zimbabwe, at least according to them.)
So, Jews world-wide have a shared heritage of blood. That doesn't necessarily make them a nation, and nationalism is deeper than that. But, given a shared history, religion, language, and attachment to a particular piece of land, it's no strech of the imagination to call Jews a nation.
We find it difficult to accept because this happens to be an argument of anti-Semites for opressing Jews, that they are a foreign nation. In America, also, our Jews have largely been assimilated, and so we think of them as fellow Americans, as well we should, because they are. I don't think it's impossible for someone to be a member of more than one nation. Dual citizenship comes to mind. Contrary to Hitler's argument, it IS possible to be a German and a Jew, or Irish and American (as opposed to Irish-American), or Greek and American, and so on. Granted, being a member of the American nation is special, since our is a nation of ideals rather than "blood."
David, it is well established that ordinary Germans went along with the Nazi oppression of the Jews. I also included Poland because Poland, more than happily, partipated in the Holocaust. After the war, when the survivors tried to return to their homes, they were run out of Poland (if lucky, killed if not). Today, less than 9,000 Jews live in Poland out of an original population of 3,000,000 (and Poland still has anti-Semitism problems). I would have no qualms about turnig Posnan and Silesia and West Prussia to the Jews in compensation for the crimes done to them.
Eli, I used to be quite the Israeli sympathizer, even up to quoting Begin and Meir and saying that Palestinians don't exist and that there already is a Palestine, it's called Jordan.
Anyways, the reason I don't write about the notion of the Jews having an historical right to Israel because they lived there 2,000 years ago is because I consider that argument ridiculous. Whatever claim the Hebrews had to Palestine ended long ago, when the last generations who knew anyone that had lived in Judea and Samaria died out.
Furthermore, many of the Palestinian people could probably trace their ancestry back to the Cananites and earlier. The Hebrews never completely displaced the inhabitants of Canan, regardless of how many times they left (or were exiled) and came back. The Samaritans still live there (as I'm sure you know) and still practice their variant of Judaism. Just because the regions was eventually conquered by Arab tribesmen doen't mean that it was settled by them and everyone else was expelled. Some settled, some continued on elsewhere (Egypt, Syria, Anatolia, etc.).
Anyways, just as you are decended from people who lived in Judea and Samaria 2,000 years ago, you (specifically) are also decended from Slavic nomads from Central Asia. As a Slav, should you then be able to go and kick the Turkish people living there now from their homes?
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