Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - The Echoes of Israel’s Founding Fathers - with Yossi Klein Halevi
Episode Date: May 2, 2025To help struggling Israeli combat veterans find their way back, please visit the American Friends of Israel Navy SEALs’ (AFINS): afins.us/warriorcareUpcoming Event Notice: Dan Senor will be deliveri...ng this year’s State of World Jewry Address at the 92nd Street Y (92NY) on Tuesday May 13 at 7:30 pm. To register: 92ny.org/event/the-state-of-world-jewry-addressWatch Call me Back on YouTube: youtube.com/@CallMeBackPodcastSubscribe to Ark Media’s new podcast ‘What’s Your Number?’: lnk.to/HJI2mXArk Media on Instagram: instagram.com/arkmediaorgTo contact us, sign up for updates, and access transcripts, visit: arkmedia.orgDan on X: x.com/dansenorDan on Instagram: instagram.com/dansenorToday’s episode:Flames that engulfed more than 5,000 acres around Jerusalem as Israel marked its 77th Independence Day. Dozens of Independence Day ceremonies were canceled, and according to many Israelis — the feelings of national solidarity that normally characterize this day were scarce. For the families of hostages in Gaza, this was their second Yom Haatzmaut without their loved ones. And yet, Israelis are nothing if not resilient. The country’s population has now surpassed 10 million people. Forty-five percent of all Jews on Earth today call Israel home. So, while there are reasons for concern, there are also reasons for hope. Reflecting on how far Israel has come, and where it may go from here, we are joined by bestselling author and senior fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute, Yossi Klein Halevi, to discuss the debt we have to Israel’s founders, and to the soldiers who have fallen in its defense. For Yossi Klein Halevi’s books: tinyurl.com/ycfcn72uCREDITS:ILAN BENATAR - Producer & EditorMARTIN HUERGO - Sound EditorGABE SILVERSTEIN - ResearchYUVAL SEMO - Music Composer
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And now on to today's episode.
You are listening to an art media podcast.
What we proved to ourselves on October 8th was that we haven't lost the instincts
of peoplehood, of national solidarity.
And when this war is over, Israeli society is going to be faced
with a very stark choice, October 6th or October 8th.
Do we go back to the profound schisms of October 6th
where Israelis were beginning to feel
that we have nothing in common with each other?
And that's the beginning of the end
when people start feeling that we don't really
belong to the same national project in any minimal way. Or, as our model October 8th,
every Israeli poll that I see points to the direction that there is a majority,
even a strong majority, that wants healing and not schism.
It's nine thirty a.m. on Thursday, May 1st here in New York City.
It's four thirty p.m.
on Thursday, May 1st in Israel
on Israel's Independence Day,
as one of the largest
fires in Israel's history blazes on the outskirts of Jerusalem.
Some 5000 acres were burned, forcing the evacuation of whole towns
and the closure of the road to Tel Aviv.
Channel 12, Israel's leading TV news channel announced mid-broadcast for
the first time in its history that it was
evacuating its studio in Neva Elan, which is just on the outskirts of Jerusalem.
The underlying cause of the fires was not immediately clear, but at least some of the
fires were suspected arson attacks.
IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir ordered the military to assist in battling the flames
and Israel's foreign
ministry has said that it has reached out to Greece, Cyprus, Croatia, Italy and Bulgaria
for assistance.
In response, Italy and Croatia have sent three firefighting planes.
Romania, Spain, France and Cyprus will also dispatch firefighting planes and additional
support.
As a result of the fires dozens
of Independence Day ceremonies were cancelled including the official torch
lighting ceremony in Jerusalem. Now Israelis need something to watch there
is a national communal event typically during these ceremonies so what the
government did is it just aired the rehearsal footage of the ceremony that
had been recorded I, the day before.
It is hard on this Israeli Independence Day to avoid reflecting on the internal rifts
in the country that have been widening and that we have been discussing on this podcast
in recent weeks, including with Ari Shavit.
It's hard to avoid reflecting on the sense of solidarity
that typically characterizes this day and how that sense of solidarity seems scarce.
At the same time, this year Israel's population has grown past 10 million people.
And if you dive into the data of Israel's Central Bureau of Statistics, you'll know that 45% of all the world's Jews have made Israel
their home. And while there are reasons for concern, there are also many reasons for hope.
With me today is Yossi Klein-Halevi of the Shalom Harman Institute and the author of a number of
books, which we will post in the show notes.
Yossi is gonna join me to discuss the debt we have
to Israel's founders and to the soldiers
who have fallen in its defense.
Yossi, welcome back.
Great to be with you then, as always.
Yossi, before we get into the focus of today's conversation,
I wanna ask you about these fires
that I spoke about in the introduction
that are affecting people in large parts of Israel,
including in Jerusalem, where you live
and where my sister and her family and my mother live.
How are the fires affecting people in Jerusalem
during these memorial and independence days?
There's this sense that there's something biblical about this moment.
And these are not just ordinary fires.
The country is on fire on Independence Day, on Memorial Day.
These are the two, in some ways, the two most sacred days of our national secular calendar. And these days really reflect the ambiguity between
the sacred and the secular that's at the heart of Israeliness. We really go in and out of
the sacred and the secular, and they tend to blur on these days. People I speak to say,
you know, this is biblical, this is mythic. It's not even a metaphor anymore. You know,
for the last few years we've been saying the country's on fire. And on these of all days, to see our main road
burning, to have the, to be even more almost surrealistically symbolic, to have our torchlight
ceremony that marks the beginning of Independence Day canceled. Whether you relate to this in a
poetic sensibility or a literal religious sensibility,
God is not happy with us.
However one wants to interpret this,
there really is a feeling among many people
that this tells us in the most stark way
that something's wrong in the country.
If it is in fact arson, in a coordinated way,
organized and catalyzed by people who live in Israel or live near Israel,
you're just, unless you've been there, you don't realize how these threats around Israel, internally, externally, surrounding Israel, multiple fronts, are just always present.
And there's this very deep sense of the fragileness of our ecosystem. Every tree in Israel has been consciously planted
and these trees, you know, you look at an Israeli forest and the trees in comparison to forests
in America and Europe, the trees look like twigs and we cherish our fragile trees.
and we cherish our fragile trees. We have a holiday of trees, Tu B'shvat,
and the trees in some ways, again,
I come back to a metaphor.
The trees, for me, represent the Jewish people
clinging to the land and the love with which we've
nurtured the land.
So this is a wound on multiple levels.
And yes, you're right, of course,
it points out to the fragileness of our security.
But you know, this is actually a very old
and deep Israeli fear.
The Israeli novelist, Alif Bait-Yoshua,
wrote a short story in the 1960s
about an Arab forest keeper
who decides to get his revenge on the state
by burning down the forest that he's entrusted to protect. And so this fear is so deep in us. And what we've seen the last year and
a half is the fulfillment of our nightmares. And in some ways, this is one of the deepest.
And Yossi, if in fact it is what there's speculation about, which was either some kind of rogue
arson or some kind of coordinated effort.
I mean, again, we don't know,
we're gonna learn a lot in the days ahead.
The only comparison I could think of is,
do you remember what they called the stabbing,
the knife into fada, which was what,
no, but it reminded me of that.
I remember, I remember.
First, can you describe what that was,
and then I'll bring in the comparison.
Well, it starts with one guy yelling,
allow Akbar and randomly stabbing Jews in Israel.
And then you've got the copycat syndrome,
and it becomes a movement.
And that's how pathological crime very often works,
whether political or apolitical.
And so this could have been a copycat syndrome.
It could have, for all we know,
the first fire might have begun through carelessness.
And then someone picked up on it as a deliberate act,
and then so to speak, it spread like wildfire.
And yeah, that's very often how,
in fact, that's how previous acts of mass arson
have played out.
The reason I mentioned the stabbing intifada
is because like many of Israel's wars mention the stabbing intifada is because,
like many of Israel's wars, even the second intifada,
you could build a strategy around a national security
strategy around how to defeat it, prevent it, deter it,
whatever the approach is.
And what was so unnerving, I think,
about the stabbing intifada is how do you develop
a strategy about some random person deciding just to walk in the streets of Tel Aviv
and Jerusalem and go stab someone?
Yeah, you can't fully insulate yourself
from this kind of terror.
You can drastically minimize it.
And the fact that the Shabak, the Shin Bet,
moved so quickly and within one day or less,
had arrested 18 suspects, I think,
really tells us that while there's no absolute
security, we're still on top of the game.
Okay.
I want to turn to Israel's 77th year of independence.
And before we talk about some of the characters
I want to talk about, I want to ask you first
to just describe this transition in the Israeli calendar
between Yom HaZikaron and Yom HaZmud,
between Israel's Memorial Day and Israel's Independence Day.
It is a unique feature, I don't know any other country
that does this, I've long felt that the U.S.
should do something like this.
Can you explain what happens within those two days?
Well first you have to understand the trajectory
of this last week.
We call this week the secular or modern high holidays of the
Jewish experience. It begins on Holocaust Memorial Day, which was last week. It segues a few days
later to Memorial Day for the fallen in Israel's war. And then it culminates in what is supposed
to be the unequivocal joy of Independence Day.
And the sequence of these three holidays tells a story.
It tells the trajectory of the modern Jewish experience.
So on Holocaust Memorial Day,
we mourn the consequences of Jewish powerlessness.
On Memorial Day for the fallen soldiers,
we mourn the consequences of Jewish power,
our reclamation of power.
And then we're supposed to instantly leave
all of that enormous weight behind
and embrace the joy, the uncomplicated joy
of our national sovereignty.
Now, under the best of circumstances,
that's a very demanding emotional
transition to move literally from the most difficult day of the year, which is in Israel
is actually not Holocaust Day. The most difficult day is the Memorial Day for the Fallen Soldiers,
because the Holocaust is transitioning into history. Memorial Day for the soldiers is happening every day. Just
this week we've added more families to the circle of bereavement. So the
Memorial Day for the fallen soldiers, it's not like it is in the West where
there's something abstract about it. There's no more open wound in Israel
than this day. And the only thing that separates the hardest day
of the year from the most joyful day of the year is a siren.
There's a siren that's the demarcation
between the end of Memorial Day for the soldiers
and the beginning of Independence Day.
And so we go from this extraordinary solemnity
where all you hear on the radio are these heartbreaking Hebrew songs for 24 hours and the stories on TV.
The entire media is taken up by collective mourning, and I don't know of any other society that quite does this.
And then you immediately segue into fireworks and celebration. And there's something almost cruel about it,
but there's also wisdom in it because it forces us
to make that transition from mourning to celebration.
And that's a very Jewish move.
We see that, and I think that this model is really taken
from traditional Judaism.
For example, we move from the fast day of Esther, which commemorates
the threat to the Jews in ancient Persia, to literally that evening celebrate the redemption
of the Jews, which is the festival of Purim. And so this is where this dichotomy that's
built into the Jewish experience. 1945, the end of the Holocaust, the lowest point in Jewish history.
Three years later, we're celebrating the return of Jewish sovereignty after 2000 years. So there's
this extreme dichotomy in the Jewish experience, which is condensed into this transition from
Memorial Day to Independence Day. But this year, Dan, I have to tell you,
I think that Israeli society as a whole
has not been able to make that transition.
The fires are only in some way the most visible expression
of what most of us are feeling inside.
And that is, how do you make this unequivocal celebration,
this transition from Memorial Day to Independence Day,
when soldiers are falling every day,
and when our hostages are dying in the Hamas tunnels?
For the hostages and their families,
it's still October 7th.
They're still stuck in October 7th,
and the rest of us, to some extent, are too.
I feel this especially strongly this year.
You say soldiers are still falling literally this week
and yet you have spoken about,
and I too have spoken about just how we shouldn't take
for granted how inspiring and how moving these soldiers are
and what it has told us about young Israelis
and the next generation, God willing,
of leadership of Israel. We've learned a lot about Israelis over this past year and a half, young Israelis and the next generation, God willing, of leadership of Israel.
We've learned a lot about Israelis over this past year and a half, young Israelis.
We've learned that we underestimated the intensity of their commitment and their deep identity
and their sense of belonging to the Jewish and Israeli stories.
You know, and every generation in Israel has the anxiety,
and maybe this is true for Jewish
history generally.
Maybe every generation of Jews has the anxiety of are we really going to be able to pass
on the intensity of this story and the commitment?
And in Israel, we've certainly felt that.
You see it from the founding generation, which really in some ways saw itself as the peak
of our national commitment.
And yet each generation in Israel
has stepped up to the challenge.
And there was a special anxiety on the part of my generation
toward what we disparagingly called
the Israeli TikTok generation.
And yet what this TikTok generation has proven
is that they are no less heroic than the generation
of 67 and 73.
And in some ways, then, I have even greater respect for them because this is Israel's
most thankless war.
This is the longest war we have fought since 1948.
No war that we have fought has been more disparaged
around the world. In no other war have our soldiers been so cavalierly compared to Nazis.
There's no glory in this war. This isn't 1967. In some ways, this is the anti-six-day war.
This is a war without end. And the horrific casualties, the civilian casualties,
the devastation, I don't think we have a choice but to fight the war in the way that we have.
Nevertheless, the consequences are so devastating that whatever glory there is attached to war
has really been denied this generation. And yet they keep showing up. They're fighting with
extraordinary heroism under conditions that no other army has ever had to fight, including previous
generations of Israeli soldiers. They're fighting in hundreds of kilometers of tunnels. Thousands
of homes in Gaza are booby-trapped. There's never been warfare quite like this.
And yet there they are and doing the job.
And I was just listening to a song by Yidan Raifel,
the great Israeli musician.
It's a letter from a soldier to his parents.
And he's saying, our work is black.
And we're not heroes. Don't call us heroes. our work is black and we're not heroes.
Don't call us heroes.
Our work is black.
Our work is grim, is dirty in some ways,
which of course is true.
That's the nature of any military.
And I was listening to that yesterday and thinking,
that's it, you know, we all have these soundtracks
on Spotify of the sad songs that we listen to
on Memorial Day.
And I was listening to that song and thinking,
that's exactly right in describing the nature of this war,
but exactly wrong in denying the heroism.
It's precisely because this war is so awful
that the heroism of those who are fighting it
is all the more extraordinary.
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can help someone find their way back. Now back to today's conversation.
You'll see, I want to go back and do a little bit
of history, given that it's Independence Day and we're celebrating Israel's founding, however
difficult the circumstances in which we are honoring Israel's founding are. And I want to
talk about David Ben-Gurion, Israel's first prime minister and Zev Jabotinsky, who were bitter rivals,
but they also obviously played a significant founding role
in their own way in what is today modern Israel.
And I also want to think about what their vision
and would have been today,
given the twists and turns Israel has taken.
First of all, how would you define each of their visions,
Jabotinsky and Ben-Gurion?
The two of them, you know,
Jabotinsky represents the Zionist right, Ben-Gurion represents the
mainstream Zionist left.
And the two of them were divided on multiple issues from what the economic structure of
a future Jewish state would be.
Jabotinsky was a deeply committed capitalist, which came out of his traditional liberalism, his
strong belief in honoring the integrity and freedom of the individual.
And Ben Gurion was a passionate socialist.
He began in his early years as being, I'd say, something quite close to Bolshevism,
and then quickly became disillusioned with Bolshevism and moved to what we would call
today social
democracy, but very strongly socialist.
There was nothing socialist-lite.
Ben-Gurion was himself a kibbutznik.
He lived communally and he believed that Israel would be a laboratory for a new way of communal
living for humanity.
So they disagreed profoundly on economics. They
disagreed even more bitterly on the borders of the state. Jabotinsky was a maximalist.
He believed that Zionism had already made its historic compromise when it lost what
today is the Kingdom of Jordan, which had traditionally been part of the British mandate
under the League of Nations and had been lobbed off to award that territory to Britain's World War I allies.
And so Jabotinsky fought every partition plan beginning in 1937, the Peel Commission.
Well, he was no longer alive by 1947, but his ideological descendants, Menachem Begin
especially, continued his tradition of opposing
partition. And Ben-Gurion was, I would say, more pragmatic. When you're in a weak position,
you take what you can get. And so he supported every partition plan that was on the table.
And this was a source of deep bitterness between the two movements. They also fought strongly over how to free the land of Israel from British rule.
Ben-Gurion was more of a gradualist, believed in cooperating with Britain where possible,
resisting where necessary, and Jabotinsky and especially his descendants became more
and more committed to an
armed struggle against the British colonialists. But I would say, Dan, that the deepest divide
between these two men was over their vision of what Zionism needed to do to change the Jewish character that had developed or been deformed
by 2000 years of exile and helplessness.
So Ben-Gurion had a whole long list of aspects
of the Jewish character that he believed Zionism
needed to change.
The new Jew, according to Ben-Gurion,
that Zionism was forming,
would be either a worker or a farmer. So Ben Goyon wanted to change
the economic character of the ghetto Jew. The new Jew would be secular, quote enlightened,
quote open-minded, as opposed to religious. And of course, the new Jew would be a socialist.
And so Ben Goyon had a very ambitious program of social engineering,
of remaking the Jewish character. Jabotinsky's idea of remaking the Jewish character was very
limited. And I should add, by the way, that what all the Zionists had in common was that they all
agreed that the Jewish character that had been formed in 2000 years of exile needed
to be changed. The question was what? And Jabotinsky's idea of changing the Jewish
character was limited to one idea, basically, which was teaching the Jew how to defend themselves.
And if you arm the Jews and the Jews know how to protect themselves and the Jews are
imbued with a military culture of dignity.
Dignity was crucial.
And it's funny, as soon as I said this,
I found myself sitting up straight,
because I grew up in the Javatinski movement.
And what we were taught was pasture.
We were taught how to, I was 13 years old,
going to Camp Baitar, founded by the Javatinski movement.
The youth movement.
Yes, and we used to line up, military style.
And I developed my posture as a 13 year old in Camp Baitar.
And Javatinsky's insight was that the ghetto Jews stoops.
And when you look at Khari Adim,
look at all Jew-Orthodox Jews,
and you see the ghetto stoop.
Javatinsky hated the ghetto posture. And he spoke about
the dignity of the Jew. He said, a Jew, you are the progeny of Hebrew princes, of ancient
biblical princes. It was a very powerful message for ghetto Jews in Eastern Europe, for Jews
who are doomed, actually, who are on their way, whether they intuit it or not,
were on their way to destruction.
And Jabotinsky sensed that the Jews were sitting
on a volcano more than any other Zionist leader.
And so his whole emphasis was arm yourselves and rescue,
move the Jews en masse out of Eastern Europe
to the land of Israel.
Ben-Gurion, in this sense, I believe, failed.
Ben-Gurion was much more gradual as we have to build up the land of Israel slowly, carefully.
Jabotinsky said, we don't have time.
And bear in mind, this argument is happening between them in the 1920s and 1930s.
And we know who turned out to be right.
Right. And can you spend a out to be right. Right.
And can you spend a moment on that
in terms of which vision and which of the leaders
was validated and just flesh that out?
I think that each of them was validated in a different way.
Jabotinsky wrote a famous essay in, I think, 1923
called The Iron Wall, in which he said,
the only way that we're going to establish a Jewish state
is by surrounding
ourselves with a metaphorical iron wall.
And by that he meant teaching the Jews to defend themselves and deterring any Arab attempt
to undo the Jewish return home.
And it was a very powerful essay.
One of the most interesting aspects of the essay is how deeply Jabotinsky respected Arab nationalism. He said let's not deceive ourselves. Arabs
are proud people and they don't welcome what the Zionists left was saying you
know we're bringing progress to the Middle East and Jabotinsky said nonsense
we're bringing a counternational movement to the Middle East.
And they will not welcome us with open arms. So Jabotinsky got that right.
And that they would be implacable.
Yes. And that we would have to resort to arms.
Right.
Now, one of the ironies of Zionist history is that the leader who ended up implementing
Jabotinsky's iron wall was none other than Ben-Gurion.
Ben-Gurion built the IDF.
Ben-Gurion really built Israel's military capacity.
Ben-Gurion built the atomic reactor, our nuclear force, which is the ultimate iron wall envisioned
by Jabotinsky.
And so Jabotinsky won the argument over the iron wall, over the preeminent need, the overwhelming need,
to arm the Jews. And if you look at the Israeli character today, who won? Yes, we have farmers,
we have workers, but I think that the deepest change that the state of Israel has made in
the Jewish character is in our ability to defend ourselves. And here Jabotinsky won the argument. Where
Ben-Gurion won the argument was over partition. If we hadn't accepted partition all the way along,
I don't think we would have had a state. And it was Ben-Gurion's pragmatism that made it possible
for us to win UN support and to declare a state in 1948.
I would fast forward to the Camp David, Clinton,
Ehud Barak, Yasser Arafat negotiations.
And when President Clinton put his proposal on the table
for a two state solution and Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Barak said yes and Arafat said no.
That bought us 20 years of reprieve from world pressure,
at least among our friends,
because we had once again said yes.
And it's so interesting to me how when we defend Israel
against all of the accusations,
the crucial points that we'll say is, look at the history of
peace offers. And the Zionist movement and then the state of Israel always said yes, and the
Palestinian National Movement always said no. But what that argument is really affirming is that
Ben-Gurion was right. And you can't have it both ways. You can't use that argument to prove that Israel is right
and then oppose partition, which of course
is the sleight of hand that we see
on parts of the Jewish right, which is,
oh, look, we've always been for every peace agreement,
but we're not really.
Right.
Earlier this week, we had Yonatan Adiri and Mikhail Levram on this podcast, who
are launching their own podcast right now called What's Your Number.
I spoke with them about the present moment as Israel's third founding moment.
And that the first founding moment, the first founding fathers was 1947.
The second was their children in 1985 when Israel was going through a major,
you know, experiencing a major inflection point, inflection moment, unity government between Shamir and
Peres, economic crisis, Israel really on the brink.
And that they argued that we're now in this third founding moment, which
was in the making, I guess, for some time, but obviously accelerated by October 7th.
You talked earlier about why you've been so impressed and remain
hopeful in part because of these young Israelis that are on the front lines of
this war and what they've demonstrated.
Israel's deeply divided today.
We don't need to rehash that.
You and I have discussed this many times, including on this podcast and offline.
And our number of our recent guests have talked about it.
I guess my question is the way out.
Do you see these young Israelis, the ones as I mentioned on the front lines, those serving in Miloim who are leaving jobs
and families and fighting three, four, 500 days and still staying in it? Are these the next leaders
of Israel? I mean, because listening to Yonatan, he sees, you know, he's spending time with these
people. It's something I've been talking a lot with Saul recently about these different groups
that are being formed. They're sort of quasi-political these different groups that are being formed, there's sort of quasi political groups in
Israel that are being formed, I guess, leading up to the next elections, which
will be sometime between fall of 2026, that there's stuff happening.
And in a sense, it's being populated and led a third way, if you will, in
Israeli politics by these young people who have been turned on and found inspiration from such
a, to come back to the song you referenced earlier, an otherwise very black period.
So there's an insight that I heard recently from our friend Michael Orrin, which is that
the generation that emerged from the 1973 Yom Kippur War, defying the Israeli schism.
Peace Now and the settlement movement,
Gush HaMonim, were both born after the Yom Kippur War,
and in large part in response to the deep disillusionment
that Israeli society felt.
What was the hard left and the hard right?
Yeah, but the Zionist left.
But I just wanted to,
Gush HaMonim, I don't know if I can, I just wanted to establish what it is.
Right, the Kishumunim settlement movement.
Right, right.
And Peace Now, both emerged after 1973 when there was this deep disillusionment in Israeli society that the army had failed to protect us in the early days, we'd been caught unawares, the government had failed us.
Very interesting echoes to this moment.
And in some ways, I think that 1973
was this moment of shattering, very similar to this time,
except I would argue this time is far more intense
because October 7th was a much more devastating blow.
But what Michael says is that just as the generation
after 1973 shaped the Israeli schism, which
culminated in the year leading up to October 7th, the bitter debate over the judicial assault,
this new generation of young people coming back from the front will be the generation of healing.
What gives me hope, Dan, about Israel,
you didn't ask, but I'm going to offer some hope anyway.
Hey, when I can get hope out of you, Yossi,
there needs to be no throat clearing, just come right in.
So the extraordinary transition that we made as a society
from the lowest point of our schism in Israel's history,
which is the year leading up to October 7th,
to literally pivoting overnight from October 6th
to October 8th to one of the peak moments of Israeli unity
is I think the single most impressive expression
of Israeli solidarity in our history.
And the reason that I say that is because
we have had other moments, tremendous moments
of national unity, the weeks before and after
the Six Day War in 1967, the celebration
over the Entebbe rescue in 1976,
but never were we coming from such a low point of schism
and instantly moving to unity.
And so what we proved to ourselves on October 8th
was that we haven't lost the instincts of peoplehood,
of national solidarity.
And when this war is over,
Israeli society is going to be faced
with a very stark choice, October 6th or October 8th.
Do we go back to the profound schisms of October 6th
where Israelis were beginning to feel
that we have nothing in common with each other?
And that's the beginning of the end
when people start feeling that we don't really belong
to the same national project in any minimal way.
Or is our model October 8th.
Every Israeli poll that I see points to the direction that there is a majority, even a strong majority that wants healing and not schism.
So Yossi, I guess on that note, I'll just wrap by asking you, what do you say
during this week of holidays and remembrance?
What do you say we owe Israel's founding fathers,
both Ben Gurion and Jabotinsky?
What do we owe these men and to the soldiers
that have fallen in defense of Israel
since the founding of the state?
Besides the obvious gratitude that we owe both of these men,
these formative figures, and I should add, by the way,
that Jabotinsky's tragedy
and more broadly, the Jewish people's tragedy,
was that he died in 1940.
And that the man who really saw the Holocaust approaching
more clearly than any Jewish leader, any Zionist leader,
didn't live to try to help us through
and didn't live to see the state
that he devoted his life to emerge.
But what we owe both of these men in some way is to make peace between them and to celebrate
both of them, celebrate the vision, acknowledge the failures.
In some ways the failures of each of them were monumental, but I think that the insights
and the achievements were far greater.
And we live in the combined imagination
of these two rivals.
In some way, the state of Israel,
the reality that we're living in,
is a result of what each of these men envisioned.
And the insights of each has really helped shape our reality. And where that brings us to in the
post-October 7th reality is I think in some way to remember that rivalries that appear at the time
to be irreconcilable. An abyss seemed to separate Ben-Gurion and Jabotinsky, in retrospect seem really serious arguments, profound
arguments, well within the same consensus. And what's been so painful over these
last couple of years is a feeling that something profound, that the trust,
something in the trust has been broken. And I don't expect this government, this
generation of leaders who gave
us the schism to heal the schism. It's not going to come from them. It will come from the generation
that has really paid the price of the schism and that rose to the occasion and from their ranks,
I believe, will emerge new leaders and new visions for beginning the process of healing Israel
All right, you'll see we will leave it there and I look forward to being with you seeing you soon in better days ahead
Great to be with you
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