Ask Haviv Anything - Episode 53: Telling the Jewish story to the Arab world, with Elhanan Miller
Episode Date: October 21, 2025Rabbi Elhanan Miller has half a million online followers, and almost all of them are Arabs. They tune in to his "People of the Book" project on YouTube and other platforms to learn in Arabic... about Jewish ideas, customs and holidays, and to hear the testimonies of Jews from the Arab and Muslim worlds who now live in Israel or the West.Elhanan has appeared hundreds of times on Arabic-language television networks throughout the Gaza war, where is asked to convey the views and experiences of Israelis.He joins the podcast to talk about the unique and remarkable bridge that he's built between Jewish Israel and its Muslim Arab neighbors.We also tackle difficult questions of Islamic radicalism, alternatives to Hamas rule in Gaza, and whether peace is really possible in this deeply religious part of the world -- when religion itself often plays such a radicalizing force in politics and society.This episode was sponsored by Tali Rice as a tribute to her sister who's currently serving in the IDF, and to everyone doing their part to keep Israel safe. This episode is also cosponsored by an anonymous donor who is dedicating it to the lone soldiers from Newton, Massachusetts for their bravery and for their safety. As hard as the situation is for their families here in the US, their service is also a source of deep pride.If you like what we do here, please join us on Patreon to support our work: https://www.patreon.com/AskHavivAnything.If you would like to sponsor an episode, please email us at haviv@askhavivanything.com.Musical intro by Adam Ben Amitai.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everybody. Welcome to Ask Habib Anything. I'm really glad for the episode we're about to record.
My friend El Khanan is here. He is a rabbi with hundreds of thousands of subscribers throughout the Arab world.
I'll just dangle that. As I tell you that this episode was sponsored by Tali Rice as a tribute to her sister,
who's currently serving in the IDF, and to everyone who's doing their part to keep Israel safe.
And the episode is also co-sponsored by an anonymous sponsor who dedicated it to the lone,
soldiers in the IDF from Newton, Massachusetts, for their bravery and for their safety.
As hard as the situation is for their families here in the U.S., it is also a source of deep pride.
Thank you to our sponsors.
Also, I would like to invite everyone listening to this to join our Patreon.
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Join the Patreon.
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I hope to see you there.
Rabbi El Khanan Miller is the founding director of People's,
of the book. An educational
non-profit that teaches
Jewish faith, Jewish culture,
teaches about it to
Muslim audiences throughout the Arab world.
He's been surprisingly viral in
disseminating this on social media. You find it
on Facebook. You'll find it on YouTube.
The initiative has
roughly half a million subscribers,
millions of monthly hits
across the different platforms.
Mostly, all the ones I've seen when I go
through the videos and I look at the comments in the
Arab Middle East.
the YouTube channel alone is like 200,000 subscribers.
El-chanan is a research fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem.
He served as the Arab Affairs correspondent for the Times of Israel.
That's where I met him years ago, back when we were both young and handsome and had no white hair.
And he was the rabbi of the Jewish community in Canberra, Australia.
He was born and raised in Jerusalem.
He started studying Arabic at 13.
I assume at school, I'm about to ask him.
and so he is now fluent, and as you'll hear, very fluent in English, in Hebrew, in Arabic, in French, and in Yiddish.
I know.
I have that feeling when I meet people who can speak five languages as well.
El-chanan, how are you?
I'm great.
Thanks so much, Kavi, for having me on.
It's really nice.
I really enjoy your podcast, and I'm glad to be part of it.
All right, so let's get started with a joke in Yiddish.
Tell us something funny.
No, no, I'm just kidding.
So first of all, I just, you know,
You have such a unique, a downright, strange position as a Jewish rabbi.
And I've watched your videos, and I've been watching your videos for years,
because the Arab world comments on your videos are such a more interesting window into the Arab street
than a lot of other ways that I personally have from Israel to interact with the Arab world.
And what's fascinating is, first of all, your videos are a very, very traditional Judaism.
You cite the Talmud, you're giving your video for Holshana, for example.
Here are the five ways that the Talmud says that we can change our faith between Losha Shana and Yom Kippul
as we confess our sins and try and repair ourselves for the new year.
And you literally just give the verses cited by that.
Now that video has every response under the sun.
the vast majority deeply appreciative
from people saying, hey, you know, watching you from Morocco,
thank you so much for this.
This is deep stuff. Judaism is so great.
Every once in a while you get, there's only Islam, nothing but Islam.
But mostly you don't, at least that's on YouTube.
I don't know if, you know, it's different on different platforms.
How did you get into this now extraordinarily successful
Jewish rabbi speaking Arabic,
accented Arabic, even I can hear the accent, you're very clearly an Israeli Jew teaching just
Judaism. You're not talking about the war, you're not, you know, you're not trying to
explain why the Emirates are good for doing business with us and the Qataris are bad for not
for funding Al Jazeera against it. None of that, just literally, hello Muslim world, hello Arab world,
which is not all Muslim, here's what Judaism is, because you don't actually have Jews
anymore. Here's what Judaism is. How did you get into that?
Well, I don't know how far back you want me to go.
Like, should I start at age 13 when I started learning Arabic in my religious primary school
in a neighborhood of Jerusalem called Ramoth?
Yes, absolutely.
Absolutely.
This is something you've been doing for a long, even your Times of Israel, reporting as an Arab affairs reporter,
was very much about getting into the kishkis, as we would say in Yiddish, the guts,
but meaning the meat and potatoes of the Arab world and how the Arab world thinks about us.
Okay, so yeah, great. So let's start at 13. And the irony is that from seventh grade to the end of my master's degree at Hebrew, all of my teachers, except for one, both in Arabic and in Islamic studies, were all Jews, all Israeli Jews. And my first Arabic teacher was an ultra-Orthodox woman, like many of the primary school teachers that I had. And that's interesting. It's also a, you know, a testament to how siloed our lives are, where Arabs aren't usually.
teaching Jews about their own faith, but we can go into that later. But I made a series of choices
that led to me graduating high school with majoring in Arabic. You can major in a subject in Israel.
Very few Israeli Jews decide to major in Arabic as their subject, because simply put, Arabic is
not seen as necessary to get along in Israel. You can get along very well in Hebrew.
Arabs mostly Palestinian Israelis need Arabic, sorry, need Hebrew to get along in Israeli life, but the opposite, the reverse isn't true.
But for me, Arabic was kind of love at first sight in some ways.
It was the first foreign language I'd studied because I grew up pretty much bilingual with English at home.
My parents immigrated from Canada in the 70s, Hebrew in school on the street with my friends.
And Arabic at 13 was the first foreign language.
and I immediately noticed that I have a knack for languages,
but also that I love learning Arabic specifically.
Maybe it's the fact that I grew up in a city that has almost 40% Arabs,
that they're all around.
And there was some this immediate sense of, I don't know, affinity, I guess, between the languages.
So I took it in high school.
I went to a high school that's now become famous Himmelfarb,
in tragic circumstances, unfortunately.
I think it had the highest rate of,
fallen soldiers in this war. But I had a fantastic Arabic teacher and a great Arabic class.
And when you do that in Israeli schools, typically you get recruited to the intelligence or
you get vetted for the intelligence to be an Arabic linguist. And I went through the most
advanced training course in Arabic at the time that I could have done and became an Arabic
linguist in unit 8200, Shmonema Taim in military intelligence. And that was probably my real
famous signals intelligence unit of the idea of that outstrips all signals intelligence units on earth
that that we've heard about at least and yes that's very prestigious yes and that was my that was my
real school i guess in arabic that was my immersion it's hard to be really immersed in arabic
growing up you know in jewish israel but when you you know deal with arabic at the intensity
that i did during the three plus years that i served in the army then you become pretty pretty
pretty fluent and I loved it. I had a fantastic military service very fulfilling.
It corresponded completely to the second Intifada so there was a lot of interesting things happening,
a lot of tragic things but also a lot of interesting work. And then I came out of the army thinking,
what should I study? Should I go for the practical route, which for me would probably be law
because I'm not in sciences at all
or would I go for my passion
and continue studying Middle East history
and Islamic studies
and I took a year off to think about it in yeshiva
and then after that
I went to Hebrew U and did two degrees
and then I had to think about my career
and did I want to go to the main employers
of my skill set
which is the Mossad, the Shabak,
foreign ministry
of police, the army
I felt like I wanted to be
a little bit more independent
and not behold into a big government bureaucracy.
I did do some vetting for some of these agencies,
but nothing really took.
And I became a journalist,
and that's where I met you eventually in 2012.
I became one of the founding staff of Times of Israel
and the Arab Affairs reporter,
which was also a fantastic opportunity
to be exposed more to the Arab world,
to report on both the Arab Spring,
which was unfolding at the time,
but also Palestinian.
Palestinian politics. There was a stabbing intifada happening in and around Jerusalem and
Chavron and places like that. And just meet excellent colleagues and be in a great work
atmosphere. But around 2016, I was kind of getting burnt out a little bit from the daily grind
of journalism. I had done some freelance work. And then I heard about this new program opening up in
Jerusalem called Beit Midrash Haral, a modern Orthodox rabbinic seminary that also trains women.
so it's very unique in the landscape of Orthodox seminaries or, you know, ordination programs.
And in 2019, I was ordained as a rabbi along with eight other people.
And then I went to Australia and became a rabbi there during the first year of COVID,
came back and started working mostly in education at the Pardes Institute,
which is a higher education institute for Torah learning in Jerusalem,
and at the Hartman Institute, also in Jerusalem.
But during my studies, and this goes back to the question, I started this project called People of the Book as sort of a hobby.
I was teaching some Palestinians in a field outside of Jerusalem.
Some people know about roots, Shohashim.
It's a sort of very unique interfaith Palestinians and settlers meeting in the Etzion block south of Jerusalem.
I was commissioned to teach some, like basically Judaism 101 to Palestinians.
And the theology and philosophy that I brought to the table was of no interest of the three and a half
four Palestinians who showed up to the classes.
But the questions that they did ask me, like, what is this, for example?
What is kosher food?
Just for people listening in audio, you raised your Kippa.
Yeah, I just showed my head gear here.
what is kosher food
how do Jews pray
like what's the choreography of the prayer
because we pray so how do you pray
what does fast mean to you
and I said okay we need to start with the basics
and if these are the questions that
our neighbors the Palestinians many of whom speak Hebrew
and work with Israelis and no Jews have
then there's probably a potential of
half a million Arabic speakers out there
and if we expand that to
the Muslim world and we have two billion
plus Muslims internationally from Indonesia to
Senegal and I saw huge potential.
There was nothing online exposing Arabs and Muslims to Judaism
in their own language or in Arabic principally.
And I said, okay, there's a potential here.
That's actually why I joined the rabbinic program to begin with.
I wanted to do interfaith on a high level
and have the qualifications to do that.
and social media
was the platform that I identified
as the most promising for that
and here we are eight years later
as you said with a following of half a million
and a lot of interaction
and going to places
to paraphrase Star Trek
where no Jewish Israeli
has gone before. It's not the low-hanging
fruit or the ones
who are convinced. We're talking about Syria,
Yemen, Iraq, Egypt,
very mainstream
classic Sunni countries
that are quite hostile to us, generally speaking.
So to see those figures, to see the statistics of where these videos are being shown,
is very heartening and encouraging.
It is. Egypt has a grand sort of national museum where the display on Judaism
includes the protocols of the elders of Zion, or did a couple years back when I read about that
and discovered it and was shocked by it.
The framing of Jews, the framing of Israel,
I have a book on my bookshelf called Israelism, which is an Arab scholar analyzing Israel studies in academia in the Arab world.
And his basic argument is there is no actual Israel studies.
It's the studies of the Arab ideological framing of Israel that everybody has to adhere to and no.
And not actually studying Israel.
So any fact about Israeli society, any complexity, any layer that doesn't fit, the Arab political narrative doesn't exist in
Arab academia. And so there is, it's missing. I mean, that's an incredible point that you just made
that. I just, I want to dig more into that. There's nothing online like what you do. And I just,
parenthetically, in my totally different world, which I guess would count as teaching Jewish history
to Jews, I don't know what I do exactly, but what I do, I've discovered that identical point,
that when I come in with the most basic outline of the Jewish 20th century, of the millions of, of, of, the millions of
Jews who fled before a Holocaust of the of the you know the refugee
of most Israeli Jews the sheer number the percentage if it's 80% or 90% of
Jews at the founding of Israel who are refugees and if you don't understand
that none of the rest makes sense not their military prowess willingness to
sacrifice not how the 48 war actually went down not now you can criticize anything
you want to criticize but just to have the social sense of the social history of
that moment and nobody knows it and nobody says it nobody talks about
nobody teaches it.
The only version in Western academia of the Israeli or Jewish story that you get is also framed in these larger ideological constructs.
And so to just talk about the basics is missing out there.
And my question to you, it's all coming together, I promise.
My question to you is, we live in an age where all the things are there to just reach out and take.
It has never been easier to be deeply knowledgeable.
and it feels like it's never been harder.
You know, I bring a very simple, straightforward,
you fact-checked me, it'll work, into the discourse,
and nobody had it.
Why is it?
And that's true in the Arab world.
Nobody in the Arab world just reaches out and grab,
now first I'm accusing Jews so that you understand that when I'm accusing Arabs of this,
I think it's structural in our times.
I don't think it's specific to Arabs.
Nobody reaches out and just grabs this knowledge.
Why is there nobody?
nobody. Why did you step into it? So Jews not telling what and who they are to the Arab world
anywhere in any way is weird, right? Definitely. I mean, I think we reacted to the shunning and,
you know, the shutting off of Israel from the Middle East in kind. I mean, the fact that there was
a boycott, essentially, not just a financial, economic boycott of Israel, but also a cultural
boycott, a complete shutting down, which was possible during the time of controlled media, right?
When Syria can control what their people listened to or were exposed to or Egypt could control,
then you could shut off Israel. By the way, one of the people who complained most about that is
Mahmoud Abbas. He actually writes a lot about how devastating that was to the Palestinian cause
or to the Arab cause. But that's not possible anymore in the age of social media. And you see that the
countries that were most closed down to Israel. I'm talking about Saudi Arabia, which for years
was the number one country of viewership for me. Twenty-five percent of my viewers for years on
YouTube were from Saudi Arabia. It's still, I think, the number one country. Syria, Yemen, Iraq,
countries where, in some of them, Jews had existed. So I should mention also that the project,
my project has evolved from just being about Jewish faith, which is what you saw in the last
video to also dealing with Jewish peoplehood. And for the last probably five or six years,
I've been interviewing consistently Jews from the Middle East and North Africa.
Those are beautiful interviews. People have to go see them. Yeah. And those are going viral,
probably much more at this point than the religious videos. The religious videos,
some of them get more, some get less, but interviewing a Syrian Jew or a Lebanese Jew or
a Iraqi Jew, and what's fascinating is that the algorithms on social media send these videos
or get them watched in those countries.
I can actually see province by province on YouTube.
If I'm interviewing a Syrian,
it gets watched in Damascus, Holmes, Aleppo,
Baden-Wurtenburg,
like, I don't know, Istanbul.
It's like a map of where Syrians are living now
in the diaspora and in Syria.
It's fascinating.
And what do they respond?
What do they respond when they,
it's an old man who tells about his life.
There's a lot of good there.
There's, you know,
centuries and millennia of history and a tremendously deep memory and also it all fell apart
and also they all fled and also they're all Israeli and they don't want Israel to disappear
because it's their great refuge from an Arab world that that as empires fell and as nationalism
took over and a lot of the nationalisms in World War II turn to the Nazis if only to be
anti-British sometimes out of literal ideology but it's all this very Iraq was not Syria, Syria was
not Yemen it's all complex but nevertheless they're Israelis and they have no
nowhere else to go. How did the Arab world respond to these kinds of interviews?
Right. They're almost all Israelis. I've also filmed people in the U.S. and in Australia and in
Europe, but most of them are Israelis. It's to create cognitive dissonance. That's, I'd say,
the overarching kind of goal of my project. It started as trying to confuse what Arabs typically
think about Jews and Israelis specifically. And as you pointed out, not in a political way,
because I felt like if it's perceived immediately as propaganda or as some form of Hasbara,
then people shut down and it's categorized.
There's also enough of that.
Even in Arabic, there's Hasbara being done.
I felt like a more promising way of getting, reaching to people's hearts and minds would be through the culture and the history and the religion.
We live in a very religious area.
But again, it evolved from just religion into peoplehood.
And here again, the cognitive dissonance, meaning the confusion and the psychological,
impact that it has in creating this sense of uncertainty or angst is extremely important, I think,
for the development.
Because what happens is that in the Arab world, there's sort of a predominant paradigm or thought
that is Israel is essentially a Western European colonialist project.
And insofar as people from the Middle East came to Israel, they were enticed or duped by
the empires or by Ashkenazi Jews to come here.
They were tricked and then they were kind of, you know, oppressed.
And here you have consistently an audience seeing Jews from Libya to Morocco to Egypt to Iraq,
telling very similar stories, which is we got along pretty well with our neighbors.
We had always Muslims or Arabs who protected us.
But at some point the government turned against us.
it was no longer possible for us to live here.
Usually Israel was the instigator of that, the creation of Israel.
But across the board, you have this sense that Jews could no longer live in the Middle East.
And we're living in a turning point now in history where the Middle East and North Africa are completely emptying of their final Jews.
And it breaks something in the misperception in the perception of, I guess they are a world of Jews,
which is that everything was idyllic.
Jews were suffered terribly in Europe,
but their experience in the Middle East and North Africa
was predominantly positive.
So it breaks that down.
On the other hand, it also fosters this great nostalgia
because these Jews often talk with fondness
about their communities, their neighborhoods,
their neighbors.
So there's this mix of difficulty and nostalgia,
bitter and sweet, which is, I think,
fascinating to hear.
It's important also for us,
for Jews to preserve these memories and stories,
just like the Spielberg project preserves Holocaust stories.
It's not comparable,
but the end of the Jewish communities,
the end of their languages,
their children, their grandchildren don't speak Arabic anymore.
So it's preservation for us as Jews,
but it's also very important for the outside world to see it.
I, you know, sometimes it's all true all at once, right?
in Europe too
there was not a little bit
there was vast there was a millennium
of good
of extraordinary wonderful
culture creation and not
a little bit of integration
there was a lot of good and then there was a collapse
and there were many many small collapses
and then in the 20th century there was
a very big collapse so those are all
you know those are the same what strikes me
and
when I talk to
Arabs when they blame the founding of Israel you think but
like if all of New York City turns anti-Zionist, which is imaginable in a way it wouldn't have been 10 years ago, right?
Would every last Jew have to flee? Would the Green Party Jew have to flee?
Would the socialist, Democratic Socialist of America Jew have to flee?
Would the Hasidic anti-Zionist Jew have to flee? Would every single kind of Jew have to flee?
You then discover that it isn't really about Israel.
Something was happening in, you know, in our analogy, New York City.
If every Jew flees, if the Iraqi nationalist Jew has to flee,
flee Iraq, then something's wrong with
Iraq, and it's got nothing to do with Zionism.
Zionism is the...
And there's no...
There's no grappling with that.
There's no serious anywhere
in the Arab world. It's all very self-serving.
It's all very... You know, and
Mahmoud Abbas, Abu Mazen, one of the things he wrote
also is, if you hadn't mistreated
your Jews to the point where they flee to the last man,
woman, and child,
Zionism probably wouldn't have been viable.
Yeah, he writes that.
Yeah, he writes that. So,
there is no grappling with even the problem they created now
is their own abuse of their own minorities.
And after the Arab world has done that to so many other minorities,
Christians and Yazidis and Kurds and you name it,
where is that grappling?
As someone who talks about Judaism to the Arab world,
do you ever encounter,
we need to do a serious reckoning with our own history in the 20th century
because we collapsed on all of our minorities everywhere
and the Jews all fled because they had somewhere to flee,
but even those who didn't flee just stuck around and died?
Yeah, I think there is that.
Few go as far as to say what you just said,
meaning that we did this to other minorities.
But I think the experience of Arabs today,
especially in countries like Syria and Iraq,
where the refugee experience has now become that of the mainstream,
the Muslims, right, not just the minorities.
And especially in Syria, I see comments sometimes on my pages
of, you know, it's not just the Jews who suffered, but now, you know, but everyone suffered,
or today we're suffering what you suffered back then.
And I think that's a way that they understand how dynamics of dictatorships work.
In other words, it starts with the minorities.
It never ends there.
At the end, there's a dynamic that expands it to the mainstream.
You know, this is an educational process.
It'll take a very long time.
It'll take decades.
I don't see this as Hasbara, I see this as education.
But the education isn't just for the sake of educating people academically about Judaism or about Jews.
It's about there is a political end there, right?
The political end is to understand Israel in a much more nuanced and complex way than that Arabs understood it up until now.
And to identify with us in some way, right?
To humanize Jews to Arabs.
and I think one of the ways, one of the vehicles of humanizing us to the Arabs is number one by religion, religious discourse, which was really absent in the peace discourse up until very recently.
And secondly, by speaking the language.
So the language element is very important.
In all the dialogue groups that I've ever participated in in college and later on, I was usually the odd man out in two senses.
I was usually the only religious person in the room.
Most of the people on the Jewish side are secular.
And I was the only Arabic speaker in the room.
And those experiences and the immediate sort of connection that I had with the Arab participants,
not that we always reached understandings,
but there was this kind of immediate, I don't know, communication
that didn't have these barriers that other people had.
And so there's also modeling from my own side here.
And I've been doing more and more.
of that. I've been translating more and more of my videos into Hebrew to kind of like reflect this
back to my own Jewish society, my own Israeli society to show, look at the connections that can
be made and look at the potential of pursuing this rather than just the classic,
I don't know, elites or secular elite peace initiatives that haven't really led us to any of that.
It's just an experiment. It's kind of a work in progress, I guess.
Okay, so on October 7, the Great Massacre, the war begins.
The next two years are the disaster that we all know about
and have been talking about endlessly.
And you have gone on every Arabic language channel I know about,
at least Western Arabic language channel, so France 24, BBC, Sky News in Arabic.
I haven't seen you in English.
I haven't seen you in Hebrew.
but you've been hundreds of times in the major broadcast into the Arab world in Arabic.
I don't know that your politics and my politics are the same.
I don't hear a lot of your politics in what you talk about,
but you try to not culture, not history,
but convey what it is that Israelis think and feel and are going through right now
on those channels.
Tell us about that, about sort of updating that story in these two years.
So on October 7th, my phone starts ringing.
I don't answer it.
I was trying to observe the holiday as best I could that day with all the craziness and the sirens.
But I saw on my screen, on my phone, mobile phone screen, that the calls were coming in from the Emirates and from Berlin and from Paris.
And they were all channels that I had known from my journalism days.
And I kind of got dragged in almost against my will back to being sort of a journalist.
I wasn't doing journalism, but sort of doing this punditry.
They had my number in their Excel sheets, I guess, from my journalism days, and they just wanted to know what was going on.
And here we are two years later, and the phone hasn't stopped ringing.
In other words, this is a story, right?
It's a developing story, and it's not one war.
It's multiple wars that were fought in parallel, right?
But I don't know of any other story.
Russia, Ukraine hasn't been in the headlines like this at all.
No other war even comes close.
And I've done, I think,
over a thousand. I've lost count, but in the first few months of the war, it was four to five
interviews a day sometimes on these channels, because there's a very small pool of Israeli
Arabic speakers, meaning standard Arabic, modern standard Arabic, who can give an interview in Arabic.
So there's me and a bunch of, you know, Olim immigrants from Israel who worked in Israel's
broadcaster in the 70s and 80s and are now also in their 70s and 80s. So there's a very
small pool of people speaking, you know, about Israel. And basically, this was my Miloim in some way,
right? I haven't been drafted, but I saw this very much as my own national service. And one of it was
informing the Arab world about the, you know, the anxieties, the fears. And I'd say by and large,
a large Israeli perspective. And in the earlier days of the war, that was easier because I think
most Israeli Jews were exactly on the same page, at least in the first few months.
I certainly supported the war and, you know, justified the war in every interview I gave.
The one channel that had not called me since the beginning of the war was Al Jazeera,
which was a channel that I had given, that I was a regular commentator on Al Jazeera Arabic.
They had a program called Mirate Sahafah, a mirror to Israeli newspapers.
I was there almost every week sort of deciphering Israeli headlines, Israeli newspaper.
headlines. And Al Jazeera flipped even before this war, I think. So Al Jazeera stopped calling me and
stopped calling, I think, most Israeli Jewish commentators. But other than that, BBC and Sky News and
France 24, a lot of European channels, a few in the Gulf. And you're right. I mean, I don't know
if my politics and yours are the same. I think I have listened to what you said about this war and,
you know, your last episode about analyzing the deal. I think we're,
basically on the same page. I have very few disagreements about analyzing the moment. But one of the
things that is very important for me is to allow myself to criticize the government and its policies,
the way you do, actually, in front of an Arab audience, which is generally and basically hostile.
I know that I am the enemy, right? I'm representing the enemy side. So why do I do this?
Number one, because I believe in honesty. And if I'm actually going to be a credible pundit,
I should say what I think, if asked directly about a certain policy that the government is pursuing.
But secondly, I think it's actually much wiser and more sophisticated way of explaining Israel
and it actually justifying Israel in some way because in doing so in Arabic with this Kipa again on my head,
usually in a visible way on TV, as much as it's possible on TV.
I'm doing something.
I'm modeling something that for Arabic,
viewers is impossible if they're in the Middle East, which is to sit in their capitals or in their
cities and criticize their government without consequence. So you know how in writing they say show,
don't tell, right? So you can shout till tomorrow, Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East.
Okay, either they believe it or they don't. Most won't believe that. But if you demonstrate to them that
here I am sitting in Jerusalem and I'm saying things about my government that are very critical,
I'm wishing further to be elections.
I'm wishing further for there to be a change of policy.
I'm expressing empathy to the Palestinian side when empathy, in my opinion, is due.
I'm admitting certain mistakes.
You know, maybe some people will cap, you know, we'll pocket that and sort of use it against us.
That's possible.
But I'm hoping that the more intelligent viewers and the more sensitive viewers among them,
and if I'm, you know, speaking over time to hundreds and thousands or millions of viewers,
will be sensitive to the fact that I'm doing something that they can't do.
And what does that mean about Israel?
I think that's a much better way of presenting Israel to the Arab world
than just defending it blanketly or defending everything it does.
And doing this in Arabic is specifically important.
So that's kind of where my mind is when I'm doing these interviews.
That's why I'm still doing them, even in channels that are very hostile.
Yeah, it's gratifying, but it's also masochism at the same time.
It's sometimes very frustrating.
At the beginning of the war, I would sometimes go to bed reeling.
I wouldn't be able to fall asleep.
I was so sort of worked up by these interviews, but with time, you kind of get used to them, I guess.
Yeah, I feel very free to criticize and constantly criticize.
And in fact, at some points, what the world needs to know is why Israelis are united.
And at some points, what I think is the only important thing to talk about is the screw-up of the Israeli government or Israeli policy that sometimes have terrible costs for Palestinians and also for Israelis.
I also feel we are free from even imagining we should try to win a propaganda war by the simple fact that there's not a lot of us in the world.
And so we're going to lose the propaganda war.
And so ignore the propaganda war.
There's only your own truth.
And I agree with you.
People respond to it.
You know, I find that it's in the Israeli government, after I've criticized the Israeli government,
There's some people, once in a while, maybe it makes it all the way to the top,
but there's some people who are in the policymaking room
who then carry that critique into the policymaking room.
And if they thought that it was want in criticism because it was partisan, that would not happen.
And if they also thought that I can't criticize because I'm a gung-ho supporter,
because I don't know what, Israel can do no wrong or some other obviously idiotic statement
that people pretend to feel or pretend that their opponent thinks that.
So nobody I've ever met thinks that.
then also I would be useless to them.
A supporter is useless and an opponent is useless,
but an analyst is actually quite useful.
And so that's the only thing we have to offer.
Okay, so let me take this in a different direction.
I have a sense that the big question that I have been asking,
and I don't have the tools you have to answer this question,
is which way is the Arab world going?
Which way is the Muslim world going?
and specifically because you have interactions, one way or another, hundreds of thousands of them,
with Arabs, with Muslims, on issues of Israel, on issues of their understanding of Jews and of Israelis,
is the Arab world turning Muslim brotherhood?
Is it radicalizing?
Is it actually, despite the defeat of Hamas, despite the defeat of the resistance axis,
most of which is Shia at the end of the day,
is it actually joining because of the Gaza war was radicalizing or maybe pre-Gaza war
and it actually just brought it down to the open but didn't actually create it,
joining the Hamas narrative of us and we're in for another 30 years of war,
or is what the Saudis and Emirates are doing,
trying to create a Middle East that doesn't have these insanityes,
isn't fallen into these never-ending constant religious wars that end up destroying Arab societies,
is that having an effect.
In your sense of the Arab world,
and here you're a guy who talks to them,
but you're also just literally an analyst,
an Arabic-speaking analyst, an intelligence guy,
and an analysis guy who knows the Arab world.
Which way are they going?
What does our future look like in this region?
Wow, that's a huge question, Kaviv,
and I don't think that there's an easy answer.
I think the Arab world, the one short thing I can say
is that it's completely broken.
And the Arab world has come out of the Arab Spring,
what was called the Arab Spring, in many cases in a worse state than it was going into it.
Before it had authoritarian or dictatorial regimes, especially in the republics, right,
the countries that called themselves republics.
And those countries are today in chaos, from Libya to Yemen to Syria.
Well, Syria now maybe finally is starting to turn around, but we don't know yet.
And that's why the promise of the,
democracy that these revolutions brought with them and even the successful
countries like Tunisia it's catastrophic the situation politically so the
promise of democracy and liberalization that a lot of the people were on the
streets fighting for did not materialize and in many cases what replaced the
dictatorships is anarchy violence Yemen is still divided between the
Houthis and a legitimate government that is dysfunctional in Egypt we have
of CC, who in many ways is more authoritarian, I think in every significant way, is more authoritarian
and clamps down even more than Mubarak.
So the promise of liberalization and of taking to the streets has not delivered the, I think,
the result that they had hoped for.
And the countries that survived and where the Arab Spring sort of virus almost didn't infect
were the monarchies and the Emirates, right, for whatever reason.
some of it has to do with the fact that they manage to that they're rich that they manage to buy off
the loyalty of groups with money with public spending but even in countries that are not
resource wealthy like jordan or morocco there was this idea of i think loyalty and there's a different
social contract there's no pretense of democracy or of representation for the public they're you're
a you're a you're a subject you're not a citizen and i think when you come
come into, when you're in the mindset of a subject, then all you need is the king to take care of
you, you don't expect ever to be represented. I think that's part of, I think that's part of it.
It's not that Jordan didn't have upheavals in Morocco and they did make adjustments.
I don't think that the Muslim Brotherhood model has succeeded to convince people that that's
the right way. I think with Hamas, it's maybe still open. It's still an open question.
I think Hamas acted on October 7th based on
a set of incentives that Israel helped set up, which helped incentivize violence, kidnappings,
targeted roadside bombings, rocket launches, in order to get gains that were important for the Palestinians.
And as long as there's no credible convincing alternative to that,
the Muslim Brotherhood may be still the most convincing alternative for Palestinians.
And that's what's more interesting to me, whether it takes root in Syria or Yemen,
or Iraq is of less consequence to me
than whether it's convincing to Palestinians.
And I think the jury's still out on that one.
I take your point.
What Palestinians think will deeply affect
the future of our children
and what Moroccans think less so.
Jordan nevertheless faces a serious Muslim brotherhood threat.
Iran has, because it's angry at Jordan
for not helping it fight Israel over the last two years,
begun to massively fund the Muslim brothers.
Qatar funds, the Muslim brothers
or whatever offshoots and pieces
as there are, Turkey, is a party, is ruled by the AKP party, which is not, you know, card-carrying
members of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, but the ideological foundations at the start of the
party and the way the party talks now about Muslim piety and its importance in creating a stronger
Islam.
And Turkey's, I think, geopolitical aspirations in the region to lead Sunni Islam to take that
leadership away from the Saudis, this neo-Ottomanism, as some people call it.
all these things are a religious framing of Muslim return to power that always, always,
always looks at Israel, looks at the Jews in the Middle East and says they are the thing that is
most out of sync with Islamic strength and confidence and return to the world stage.
And so the Jews have to be put back in their place, and that means overcoming Israel and
defeating Israel.
And so everywhere the Muslim Brotherhood goes, you end up with this deep anti-Israel, even Egypt
now flexing its muscles and occasionally some officials saying, hey, war with Israel is a possibility.
Egypt, Egypt itself is a soft to deep-seated, the spread of Muslim Brotherhood version of Islam in Egyptian society.
And so we're going into Gaza in 10 seconds.
Is it reasonable to think that the Arab world is, you know, with all due respect to the Emirates and the Saudis and the people who see this as the constant Arab self-destruction of their own societies?
This Islam that will only ever bleed us and make us poor and make us ridiculous and dysfunctional.
Nevertheless, it feels on the march all over.
Yeah, so I've started actually committing.
I've started like looking into some of these ideas and writing them down for a book that if I ever managed to find a publisher, I hope to write to publish.
Especially Hamas's thinking about Jews in Israel.
You know, I've read Sinwar's novel.
I've read Makadme, who was a senior Hamas person.
The M70 rocket is named after him.
Husam Badran, who I interviewed myself in 2018.
He was one of the Hamas leaders who was in that room or safe house in Qatar that we bombed.
I interviewed him for tablet in 2018.
All of these people wrote down their thoughts.
And having read all of that, I think it's impossible to minimize the impact of Islam and Islamic thinking on the conflict.
So maybe like, unlike many people on the left, which I think I,
largely belong to, I don't minimize or marginalize the impact that the Koran and Islamic
thinking on Jews has on the conflict. I think it's a serious, serious barrier impediment.
And the form of Muslim Brotherhood thinking, as long as it exists, is probably an insurmountable
obstacle to peace. That's why Hamas needs to be... You're talking about Hamas, but Hamas itself is
air to these ideas coming in from Egypt in the 1930s all the way to the 1980s.
So, you know what?
You'll do it better than I ever have.
What are those ideas?
Can you do the reverse of what you usually do, which is tell us, now this is not Islam.
This is a particular strain that had profound influence on how the Arab nations around
us, look at us, see us, understand us, and decide whether or not we deserve to live or die.
What are these ideas?
Well, largely speaking, political Islam says that previous models of Arab governance
or subordinates to empires didn't work, and that Islam itself contains all of the features
and tools to govern societies, and that as the motto of the Muslim Brotherhood is, Islam
is the solution.
So unlike Judaism, which didn't really have in the last two months,
millennia very many opportunities to show governance or to prove how it creates a theology of
governance, Islam did govern as a caliphate and then as, you know, the Turkish, the Ottoman Empire
for hundreds of years. It has a model of how Islam, at least nominally, you know, can govern
societies. And the fact that they lost World War I and that the caliphate collapsed is a,
is a wound that's still open, right? It's just the thing.
sort of final stage of deterioration of the prestige of Arab governance,
the Abbasid Caliphate and later on the other dynasties that ruled the Middle East.
But the idea is that Islam, that the Quran gives you a toolbox to govern societies,
that any ruler that doesn't adhere to Sharia law is kind of betraying his purpose.
and what it means for minorities
like Jews used to be in the Middle East
is that they're protected by a system called
Vimma or they're under the protection
of the Muslim benevolent rulers
Christians and Jews and other minorities
and that's the model that Hamas envisions
I think or that other Muslim
Islamist rulers envisioned
they don't see themselves as particularly oppressive.
They actually see themselves as benevolent, kind,
you know, and merciful,
given the Jews' subversive character,
their nefarious character,
as presented in the Quran
and in the stories of the prophet, the hadith.
But as long as the foundation stone,
the cornerstone of it all is Islam is on top,
and then everybody gets to have Islamic mercy
beneath Islam.
That's, I mean, that is,
that's the hierarchy
ordained by the God in the cosmos
and that's the precondition.
So where does Israel fit into that?
It doesn't, really.
I mean, I get this so much in the comments
also on my pages.
I get, you know, the sense of betrayal,
it's an authentic sense,
the sense that the Jews
betrayed their Muslim patrons,
right? We protected you.
We brought you in
after you were expelled from Al-Andalus,
from Spanish, Catholic Spain, right?
We brought you into the Ottoman Empire,
and there you went and backstabbed us,
even though you had it great,
and formed your own country.
Why did you need to do that?
It just caused all the problems in the world.
Everything was fantastic before them.
400 years later, right?
400 years later, we backstab them.
Yeah.
Right.
Something happened suddenly,
and because of the European sins,
we decided to turn against our...
Now, I think this is the strand.
There is a pragmatic Palestinian
camp. There is a pragmatic Arab world out there. Maybe the most, the best example is the
Emirati and, you know, Bahraini and Moroccan regents, right, the leaders who are like, yes,
Israel is there to stay. We have just what to benefit from relations with Israel and then by
extension with the U.S. And, but this wasn't just the thinking of those regions, like, you know,
the Hashemite family that became the kings of Iraq and Jordan, right, Faisal and Abdallah, they
cooperated with Zionism on a pragmatic
basis for a hundred years. There was a correspondence
between Faisal and our
first president, Chaim Weizmann, right?
So there was always a strand
of pragmatists,
but I would say that in the large scheme of thing,
they always lost out to the ideologues and
to the maximalists and to the
Islamists, essentially. Basically,
in the struggle, in Palestine,
it was the Hussein's
and Hajamin Hussein, especially,
who won out over
the more pragmatic Nashashibi's and
other families who are more amenable to cooperating with Zionism.
And now that's basically that's the battle that is being fought between, I think,
Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas.
Now, I know we have a lot of things to say about Abbas, people.
I'm one of the, at least up until a few years ago, one of the pro-Abasses.
I think Abbas is different than Yasser Arafat.
I think he did went a very long way to suppressing.
the second intifada.
I think he continues to collaborate with Israel.
And that's why he's seen as a sellout
by many Palestinians.
And he helped with Israel to end the second intifada.
But there's no...
I often tell Palestinians,
you need your Altelena moment.
What is the Altelena moment that we had?
It's the moment where the militias,
the pre-state militias,
had to give up their arms
and basically submits to the one decision,
to the sovereign decision.
There's no contiguity, territorial continuity between Gaza and the West Bank, so even physically, it's very difficult for them to settle this debate, I think, between pragmatism and maximalism or radicalism.
But they need this discussion to be settled because it's destroying them.
It's destroying their national project.
And I don't know how we and Israel can enable that to be decided, but I just know that up until now, we supported a divide and conquer policy.
policy that blew up in our faces on October 7th.
Now, I know it's not just our fault.
They don't need our help necessarily to hate each other and to prefer the sectarian or
factional considerations over their national cause.
But I think we need to help reverse that trend and help the moderates win.
And I think we need to put a lot of thinking into how we're doing that if there's going
to be a peaceful solution.
Israel's trying for two years to defeat Hamas.
the skeptics among Israelis, never mind the international discourse,
which really matters far less than Israeli and Palestinian discourse.
But the skeptics say Netanyahu has not really been trying enough
or doesn't, wants the war to continue because of political considerations.
But let's imagine that that's not true of the chief of staff of the IDF
and of the Shabakh and of the vast majority of Israeli soldiers
and of the vast majority of the Israeli hierarchy.
And I happen to also think Netanyahu really does actually
want to defeat Hamas. And my criticism of him is the failures in that regard trying to achieve
that goal, not that he's not trying. Is it doable? How does Israel defeat Hamas? Is Hamas undefeatable?
Is Hamas so deeply integrated into Palestinian society, the Palestinian sense of self,
the narrative of ordinary Palestinians about their historical experience, that there is no
removing Hamas, you know, even if Hamas, because it,
I don't know what. The last Hamasnik is killed in Gaza
changes its name to a new organization with exactly the same
ideology, which is a very widespread ideology in the Middle East,
including about Israel, the Muslim Brotherhood, et cetera, that whole world of discourse,
that we're never ridding Palestinian society of Hamas.
You're saying now Palestinians have to make a choice to turn away from that.
Can they? Can Israel do something that will make them do that?
I definitely think Israel can help, yes.
Just as Israel help the divide, Israel can help the healing.
I think that in order for there to be a future
Hamas has to be eliminated and be removed
now how that happens is very complicated
I'm not sure we have easy answers
but it has to be something along the lines of the Marshall Plan
you mentioned Nazi Germany I think in your last episode
of course Nazism hasn't been completely eradicated
from Germany but it's not the governing power
because an alternative was brought forward
right there was a new
there was denazification then there was a new
constitution and there was a huge amount of funds meant to rebuild. Okay, I see the funds coming in
in Gaza, right, in the Trump plan. I see perhaps the de-thamasization, but where is the alternative
ideology and how do we help that alternative ideology come up? I think we can because it is there.
It is there in the West Bank. And I think that's why I really believe, I know it's so unpopular, people
pooh-poo it. But I think the model that
Oslo gave,
maybe not with Arafat as the leader,
but where Gaza and the West Bank
need to be one territory that's
controlled by the same government
and connected physically.
And then rehabilitated with
conditions that
Hamas' ideology can't reemerge.
Now we need to discuss the details of how
to implement that. But that's a way forward.
There were other experiments
that didn't work. There were very noble
ideas of right curtailing
communism. That's what led the U.S.
to Vietnam. Okay.
And then so many years later and so many
tens of thousands of American soldiers later
Vietnam today is still communist,
right? Same thing
with the Taliban in Afghanistan
with the Ba'ath and Iraq.
It's not enough to do debathification.
You need to find an alternative
and safeguards also to make sure that
Iran doesn't intervene. But I think that
the international constellation
relations right now are such that
with Iran depleted,
with some Arab Sunni countries
on the ascendancy like the Emirates,
like Saudi Arabia, we have
the ability to introduce a form
of government that
would be more amenable to living with Israel.
I don't think that this would cause
Palestinians or Arabs to accept Zionism.
I've given up on that dream.
I don't think, I wish
them to understand Zionism better
where we're coming from, but I don't think they'll
ever accept Zionism. They'll always
be a tension and animosity between the Arab world and Israel. But I think we can find an alternative
scheme to replace Hamas. But for that, we need to drop the mindset of divide and conquer.
So yes, I believe like you that Netanyahu wants to defeat Hamas. I just don't think that
the alternative that he wants is not divide and conquer. I think he's looking for another
pawn to fight the PA and continue the same policies, whether this be, you know, gangs like
Abu Shab or other families or clans in Gaza, I think he's not convinced that part of the
problem was weakening the Palestinian body and not strengthening it. So I think in this, I'm 180
degrees opposed to Netanyahu. I think Netanyahu's speech two weeks before October 7th at the
UN, exactly two years ago, where he said, the Palestinians are only 2% of the Arab world.
They're going to have to jump on the bandwagon of normalization or just be irrelevant. And therefore,
they're going to capitulate, that was immensely, incredibly short-sighted, naive and dumb, honestly.
Like, that was not possible.
That was not what Palestinians were going to do, given the normalization.
I'm not saying that the attack on October 7th as it took place was the inevitable way,
but there was going to be some sort of backlash.
So we need a reversal of policy.
We need to find a partner who is capable of working with us and allowing him to control
the entire Palestinian population.
Even if there's a transitional period now in Gaza
of a few years or five years,
that has to be the strategy.
We have to have a strategy.
That has to be it.
I want to end.
I'm always optimistic.
I've been optimistic for two years,
if only because I've had an argument
about Israeli strength
and about how Israeli strength is
sustainable over the long term.
And I wish the region would understand it,
and I wish our enemies would understand it,
and our allies would, and I wish Israelis would understand it, because it would reconfigure a lot of the
attempts to destroy us, a lot of theories about our fragility. But that makes me very deeply
optimistic over the long term. We're an incredibly strong people, and it doesn't come from
the clever strategizing of one prime minister or another. Olmer had this strength available to
him, and Rabin did, and Barak did, and Sharon did, and Biby does. But I'm ending this pessimistic,
because I deeply believe that people live in stories.
And the Muslim Brotherhood story of Israel
is the only story out there.
What's the religious story that I have met, I have talked to,
sometimes online, Palestinians,
Agazans, who are horrified by Hamas,
sick and tired of Hamas's brand of Islamic,
you know, indoctrination, they ran the schools for a generation of Gazans.
And Gazans were already primed to think the way they think, but Gazans have learned nothing else
for the 17 years Hamas ruled Gaza. And they're horrified by where that has taken Gaza and where
that took Hamas. They know Hamas wanted this war, still wants this war. And a lot of Palestinians
are enraged and hate Hamas for that. And my question is,
is so when you reach out, what other Muslim story of Israel is there for you to hold on to?
I mean, the Muslim Brotherhood, among other things, is a revolutionary rebellion against
the staid and standing sort of Muslim authorities of the 19th century that just kind of
to the British when they showed up, count out to the French when they showed up.
And so it's this, it's this, you know, Islam is a religion of order.
Islam, just like we described with where the Jews belong in, the Islamic sense of where,
you know, of how society should be organized.
Islam's on top, Jews, Christians, beneath them,
or monotheaists beneath them, and then non-monotheas beneath them, right?
And this sense of social, absolute, it's true of gender,
it's true of many things in Islam.
Islam is a religion, they often talk about it as a religion of peace.
It's actually a religion of order.
And that very, very clear social order brings, you know, Islamic thinkers say,
brings peace, brings safety, brings prosperity,
brings all the good things.
The Muslim Brotherhood in that sense is,
a statement that all the order that had been brought about in the decaying Ottoman Empire and in
the imperialists who showed up, all of that left us weak and shattered and broken. And we have to now
revolutionarily demolish all of it, destroy all of it, overthrow all of it, and reestablish the
first generations of Islamic order, the first generations closest to Muhammad, the holy
generations who first built out this great sacred order, but they did it as a conquering
revolution. And so we restore that conquering revolution. Now, that's powerful. And it recast the
Palestinian story of weakness as a story of the vanguard of a resurgent, confident Islam out
to redeem the world again, rather than just decaying in the face of Western strength.
Now, what other possible narrative as evocative and powerful and dignifying does a Palestinian
who hates Hamas have to have to latch onto? And I don't, I've never heard of the
one. And I, I, I, what are the Emirati
saying? They're too powerful. So we're going to
make peace with them. The West backs them. I don't know what. They have
a high tech. So, you know, we're not going to
destroy everything. By the way, eventually
they'll all convert to Islam anyway. We have to have faith
in God that everything's going to be okay.
Let's end the word. Is there an alternative?
Well,
it's certainly not for me to create.
I can't create an alternative Islam.
And I'm not convinced that they're a convincing alternative
Islam in this point.
But I'm going to now undermine what I've told
you this whole last hour and say that it's not
all about religion also. We also, as Jews,
Kaviv, have a religious narrative, right? And the
representatives of our religion today are pulling Israel in a very,
very specific direction, right? So if I were to rely only on
religious narratives on the Jewish side, and I'm trying to fight
the battle also on my side, right? But I'm not sure I would win that
battle, okay? I'm not sure that my narrative would be more
convincing to my fellow Jews than the narrative of
Smotrich, Ben-Gvier, Orit Strouk, and others. I'm kind
pessimistic on my side as well if
I need to be pessimistic about something
and I think Hamas
will probably at the end of the day not be
undermined by an alternative
Islamic narrative if I'm honest
but with a narrative more
like the Emirati pragmatic
narrative that you just put forward
imagine Chaviv if we gave
1,027
captives or whatever
prisoners Palestinian prisoners
to Mahmoud Abbas or to a pragmatic leader that's
better than Mahmoud Abbas.
And given the 78, I think we gave to Abu Mazen,
I was covering this as a journalist during the 2013-2014 negotiations as an incentive, right?
So for good behavior that Abbas, right, went back to negotiations,
he got 78, he never got the last trunch of prisoners,
because Netanyahu basically shut down those negotiations.
Or if we gave the entire territory, let's say area C or area B,
or Area A, to the pragmatic leader who actually helps our security forces crush radicalism
and not to the Islamic Jihad and Hamas like we did in 2005,
when we withdrew to the international recognized borders in direct response to violence.
That could help create a different narrative.
Yes, it's not a religious narrative.
It's a pragmatic narrative.
But let's start with that and see where that takes us.
I know it means taking risks.
We'll have to take risks as Israel.
I believe we're strong enough to take those military risks.
Because the alternative really is catastrophic for Israel, I think.
I don't think we can say sustain the direction we're going.
I don't think we can manage anyone who thought we could still manage the conflict.
I don't think we can manage the conflict anymore.
If the last two years taught us anything.
So I don't think we really have much of a choice.
in the matter. We can't just wait for another narrative to emerge if it does. We have to start
being Zionists again and acting and putting forward a plan, which is something that Zionists
used to do in the past and have stopped doing. So let's start thinking of a plan and maybe not
letting other people impose plans on us, whether they take place or not, but actually thinking
of what we want Israel to be like in 20 years. Elhanan, thank you for joining me. The people of the
book. People should look it up on social media, on YouTube. It's absolutely astonishing and
beautiful. And, you know, well done, being in a space that nobody else is in. Thanks so much.
Thanks, Khadiv. Thank you.
