"Our opponents maintain that we are confronted with insurmountable political obstacles, but that may be
said of the smallest obstacle if one has no desire to surmount it." - Theodor Herzl

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Why is Adam voting Labor? Keeping public services public


              When I made aliyah in the fall of 2011 I knew I was coming to a country that had undergone serious changes in the past forty years. Even for Jews outside of Israel, it has been clear for some time that the country is not what it once was. The conversation has changed. For my mother, growing up at a Zionist summer camp in Canada, Israel was a modest society comprised of pioneering kibbutzniks who worked the fields by day and danced the hora into the night. For myself, raised in the same community forty years later, Israel was sleek, sophisticated, and high-tech savvy. A ‘Start-Up Nation’ that could compete on the international market and lead the world in medical and defense research. A nation whose children, just like me, wore Levis, ate McDonalds and listened to the newest MTV star. Celebrated in synagogues, at community events and on Israel advocacy displays in Hillel Houses throughout North America, this transition has been hailed as a great success and source of pride throughout the Jewish world. The fact that Israel developed ICQ, ‘a marvel display of Israeli ingenuity’ my dad told me, was something to brag about to my friends. And it is.

Nevertheless, the transition in Israeli society that has taken place over the last forty years has not been entirely positive. The changes in Israel have produced a much more negative – and widely unknown in the diaspora – trend of privatization. The current government, led by Benjamin Netanyahu, continues to cut social services, health care, and welfare while refusing to interfere with corrupt tycoons who exploit their workers and the public at large. Unlike what those in the Likud would tell you, this trend is not simply economic. It is not just a ‘changing of the times’ or a necessary step that every country in transition must take. The trend towards privatization is a dangerous turn that, if left unchecked, could have disastrous long term effects on the future of the country.

As an oleh, nothing makes the nature of this trend clearer than the continual attempt of the government over the last ten years to privatize ulpanim. As educational institutions dedicated to absorbing immigrants and teaching them the Hebrew language, ulpanim have functioned as essential institutions since the founding of the country. They, perhaps more than any other institution in Israel, are the practical manifestation of the Zionist dream of the “ingathering of the exiles” laid out in the Declaration of Independence. They are essential to the future of the country as a home for olim and as center of the Jewish People. 

However, beginning in 2007 when a study about deficiencies within the ulpanim was released, the ulpanim have been under attack. Successive governments have complained of failures within the ulpan system – mainly poor teaching and results – and have called for the breaking apart of the system into a private service that is not run by, or accountable to, the state.  As Leora S. Fridman explains in her article in Haaretz, this shift in government attitude shows a deeply unsettling trend. 

Placing the ulpan on the budgetary chopping-block raises serious questions, not only about Israel's relationship with Hebrew, but also about how the state relates to its immigrants and their role here. If even the minimal common denominator of a single language is no longer a top priority, the country's population will become increasingly segmented.”

        For myself, for all the future olim chadashim, and for the country as a whole, it is essential that our government be one that will push back against the all-encompassing trend of privatization. A push which, left unchecked, threatens services as basic, crucial and essential to the Zionist definition of the country as the ulpanim. Netanyahu and the Likud, sitting at the forefront of privatization for the last forty years, have continually chosen to place funding cuts and privatization above all else.

We need a change in priorities. We need Avodah.

·       Adam, an Oleh from Canada

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