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Israel at 75: Can a divided nation reconcile its differences?

The oft-repeated theme of Israel’s 75th anniversary celebrations was unity, but at commemorative events and protests last week, society’s divisions were on full display. Bereaved families scuffled with each other at military cemeteries on Memorial Day. Opposition leader Yair Lapid boycotted the state Independence Day ceremony.

In Jerusalem, right-wing demonstrators congregated under banners declaring that an unnamed “they” would “not steal my election” and calling for an end to the “Supreme Court dictatorship.” In Tel Aviv, government opponents listened to Israel’s Declaration of Independence, including the provision that the state “will ensure complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants.”

Why We Wrote This

For months, Israelis have protested proposed judicial reforms. But as events around Israel’s 75th anniversary made clear, the divisions roiling its society are even more fundamental, threatening consensus on democracy, Judaism, and Zionism.

The dueling demonstrations indicated just how alienated and polarized Israelis have become: one people residing in a single country but split by vastly different conceptions of democracy, Zionism, and Judaism. Yet, despite warnings that society was unraveling, older analysts recall previous mass demonstrations and internal divisions.

“You’ve had deep political crises here before, and none of them threatened the existence of the state,” says political commentator Nahum Barnea. When Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared a “time out” on his judicial agenda it was a positive signal for democracy, says Mr. Barnea.

“I’m a happy pessimist,” he says. “I still believe that they built something here very positive for the Jewish people.”

Israel’s marking of its 75th Independence Day was supposed to be a celebratory event, a day of national unity.

Instead, the milestone last week and the solemn, annual Memorial Day that immediately preceded it were marred by deep social divisions over urgent matters like the government’s plan to overhaul the judiciary as well as existential debates surrounding liberal democratic values and Jewish identity.

Bereaved families scuffled with each other among the graves of fallen loved ones at military cemeteries. Protests forced government officials to cancel their participation at memorial ceremonies. Opposition leader Yair Lapid boycotted the state Independence Day ceremony.

Why We Wrote This

For months, Israelis have protested proposed judicial reforms. But as events around Israel’s 75th anniversary made clear, the divisions roiling its society are even more fundamental, threatening consensus on democracy, Judaism, and Zionism.

Tellingly, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu repeatedly stressed “unity” in multiple speeches – even invoking the 40 years Jews spent wandering in the desert in the Book of Exodus as a lesson to be heeded on the need to resolve disputes – and the Israel Air Force’s country-wide flyover was held under the theme of “Together all the way.”

Yet if the disruptions to the ceremonies were not as widespread as had been feared, the pall of division was emphasized by the continuation of anti-government protests into a fifth month. A large rally was held in Tel Aviv on the festive eve of Independence Day, followed by the weekly nationwide demonstrations Saturday night.

Maya Alleruzzo/AP

A scuffle among mourners at an Israeli military cemetery during a Memorial Day ceremony in Beersheba, Israel, April 25, 2023. The tense exchange came ahead of a visit by National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir. The families of people being remembered there had asked him not to attend.

Sandwiched in between was a government-organized mass demonstration in Jerusalem last Thursday that drew more than 200,000 people, a major show of force for right-wing Israelis who support plans to circumscribe the power of the judiciary.

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