Wikipedia Describes Zionism As âColonizationâ
Since Oct. 7, the âEncyclopedia of the Internetâsâ entry for Zionism has been the focus of a contentious editorial battle.
- By Aaron Bandler
- Published September 26, 2024
[additional-authors]
September 26, 2024
Wikipediaâs main article on Zionism describes it as a movement based on âcolonization,â garnering controversy both on and off Wikipedia.
The Wikipedia Flood blog that the Zionism Wikipedia article became slanted following âa spasm of edits by pro-Hamas editors subsequent to Oct. 7, when the article was reasonably stable and was not heavily edited. At the time of the âAl Aqsa Floodâ slaughter in the Gaza Envelope, itÂprovided a balanced and neutral depiction of Zionism, noting criticism by anti-Zionists but not giving undue emphasis to it.â
The opening sentence of the Wikipedia article states: âZionismÂis an ethno-culturalÂÂmovement that emerged inÂÂin the late 19th century and aimed for the establishment of aÂÂthrough theÂÂof a land outside of Europe.â In 2023, the opening sentence âa nationalist movement that emerged in the 19th century to espouse support for the establishment of a homeland for the ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» people in Palestine, a region roughly corresponding to the Land of Israel in ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» tradition. Following the establishment of Israel, Zionism became an ideology that supports âthe development and protection of the State of Israel.â
The Wikipedia page for Zionism;
2023 vs 2024.History is being rewritten.
— Liv Lovisa ð¸ðª (@eljest_)
Middle East historian Asaf Romirowsky, who heads Scholars for Peace in the Middle East and the Association for Study in the Middle East and North Africa, told me that the sentence implies that âJews are Europeans and theyâve colonized the landâ and that âscholars who recognize the connection between the land and the ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» people and the evolution that Zionism is ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» nationalism based on ancestral ties to the land itself from Biblical times all the way to modern times, that would be the honest way to look at it.â Those who promulgate the narrative that Zionism is settler-colonialism try to âweaken the claim that the people and Israel are connectedâ and that Israel stole the land from the Palestinians is âahistorical.â Tel Aviv University Vice Rector Eyal Zisser told me that âitâs not a matter of colonization, itâs a matter of feeling if any nation has its own right for self-determination and a state, Jews should also have this right and they should fulfill it in their historical homeland.â Zisser also said regarding the Wikipedia articleâs use of the term âethno-cultural nationalistâ that âitâs the national movement of the Jewsâ and that âPolish nationalism or Italian nationalismâ would not be discussed âin the same manner.â
âItâs not a matter of colonization, itâs a matter of feeling if any nation has its own right for self-determination and a state, Jews should also have this right and they should fulfill it in their historical homeland.â- Eyal Zisser
A Wikipedia editor told me that while itâs true that âZionism ended up with colonizationâ¦as written now [the article] implies colonialism. It should probably mention the Ottoman [Empire] and British for context.â An editor who grew disillusioned with Wikipedia after making thousands of edits believes the âcolonizationâ term should be removed altogether âbecause it’s being used anachronistically. When the early Zionists were talking about âcolonization,â a new city anywhere could be called a âcolony.â Now they’re trying to shoehorn that into the modern interpretation of colonialism where a power sends its people to gain control over a territory that at least to begin with remains loyal to that power.â
Shortly after the âcolonizationâ sentence, the Wikipedia article says that âZionists wanted to create a ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» state in Palestine with as much land, as many Jews, and as few Palestinian Arabs as possible.â Romirowsky called this sentence âfalse.â âThere are [an] abundance of diplomatic correspondents of looking to find ways for coexistence and the fact of the matter is that all those Arabs who stayed in the land and became the Arab Israelis ⦠they became naturalized citizens because of that earlier desire for coexistence between the population of the land,â he said, adding that there were Jews who âbought the areas of the land fair and square from lease owners and land owners who were not even on the land itself. The politicization of the land itself only became politicized post-1948, and the reason for that was, this is all part of the Arab propaganda of the day, and theologically speaking I would argue that ⦠there is a Sharia law perception that any land that was once Muslim is Muslim in perpetuity.â Romirowsky also pointed to the fact that âthe ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» community was willing to accept whatever proposal was offered to them, even the desolate land itself, just the idea of having a homeland.â
The Wikipedia Flood blog noted that the behind the âas few Palestinian Arabs as possibleâ line includes âanti-Israel extremists such as Columbia University professor Rashid Khalidi.â In addition to Khalidi, anti-Israel historians Avi Shlaim, Ilan Pappe and Nur Masalha are among the academics also cited.
âShlaim, Pappe are all New Historians, theyâre basically anti-Zionist Jews. Masalha and Khalidi are, of course, Palestinian ⦠why not read Ken Steinâs book about what the ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» community did in the 1930s, how about reading Anita Shapiraâs book on Israel and Israelâs formation,â Romirowsky said. âThere is a plethora of Zionist historiography looking at these facts, and they have selectively chosen basically all Arab Palestinian ones.â Shapira is cited elsewhere in the Wikipedia article.
Israeli historian Benny Morrisâs 2004 book, âThe Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited,â is also among the citations for the âas few Palestinians Arabs as possibleâ line, based on a passage that stated in part that âthe displacement of Arabs from Palestine or from the areas of Palestine that would become the ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» State was inherent in Zionist ideology.â Romirowsky claimed that Wikipedia editors are âselectively choosing quotesâ from Morris here. Interestingly, an editor that the line in question is âa bit too vague to be considered a broadly-supported mainstream viewâ and that the citation from Morrisâ book is âtaken out of context,â pointing to how Morris in the following paragraph of the book that âthere was no pre-war Zionist plan to expel âthe Arabsâ from Palestine or the areas of the emergent ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» State; and the Yishuv did not enter the war with a plan or policy of expulsion.â ÂThe editorâs concerns were roundly rejected, as others argued that the sourcing still supported the line in question.
An editor told me that the line âas few Palestinian Arabs as possibleâ line is not precise. ââAs much land as possibleâ is obviously false. They only cared about the land of Israel, and while some certainly wanted as few Arabs (or non-Jews more precisely) others didnât, so putting all this in the encyclopedia’s neutral voice is an obvious NPOV violation.âÂAnother editor told me that the line is âPOVâ and poorly written, explaining that the âlead is supposed to be concise, a summary of the article, including all minority POVs. Itâs ridiculous that thereâs an article about Zionism that scarcely says what Zionist historians actually say.â
The end of the lead of the Wikipedia article concludes with the sentence: âProponents of Zionism do not necessarily reject the characterization of Zionism as settler-colonial or exceptionalist.â Romirowsky said that this too was âincorrect,â calling the Zionism is settler-colonial narrative âpropaganda. That is the Arab Palestinian viewpoint in order to argue and amplify that there is no connection between the people and the land itself.â Zisser said that âthe United States is also a settler-state, and the Americans have no problem with that ⦠maybe this is what they mean, I donât understand it⦠maybe technically itâs right, [but] what you understand from such a sentence is wrong.â
An editor told me that the sentence âis awkward, clumsy, and itâs arguing in the lead,â reiterating that the âlead is supposed to be a simple summary.â Another editor told me, âHow is this lead material unless you’re trying to push a POV? Most proponents of Zionism reject the characterization obviously. The âdo not necessarilyâ is so weasel-worded it’s ridiculous. Some donât, most do.â
As I have previously written, Wikipedia operates by a process known as consensus, which is a combination of the number of editors who weigh in on a discussion and the strength of their arguments as it pertains to site policy. There have been and of debates dating back to the beginning of the summer on whether or not the notion that Zionism is based on âcolonizationâ is the mainstream academic view.
âIt is not the mainstream academic view,â Romirowsky argued, though he acknowledged that âit is the one that has become dominant as a result of how the conflict has been sold as a white colonial settler movement.â
At the heart of the arguments on the talk page is the aspect of Wikipediaâs reliable sources guideline known as , which states: âWhen writing about a topic, basing content on the best respected and most authoritative reliable sources helps to prevent bias, undue weight, and other NPOV [Neutral Point of View] disagreements. Try the library for reputable books and journal articles, and look online for the most reliable resources.â Those in favor of the âcolonizationâ descriptor that academic books specifically about Zionism, rather than about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or Judaism more generally, are the best sources to decide this debate, especially when such books have âZionismâ in their titles. Those books describe Zionism as âcolonialismâ or âcolonization,â editors in favor of the use of âcolonizationâ argued. Those opposed to the use of âcolonizationâ in a neutral voice (wikivoice) in the article argued that there are enough academics who dispute that Zionism is colonialism and that âcolonizationâ should be put in its proper context. And so the two sides have gone back-and-forth on what the corpus of academic literature says on the matters and what exactly constitutes as the BESTSOURCES. Talk page discussions on the matter for a possible rewrite.
âI disagree that sources explicitly about Zionism are necessarily best sources … that seems to be likely to skew the results,â an editor told me. Another editor similarly told me that âthat many more critical works on Zionism use Zionism in the titleâ and that the Wikipedia article needs to reflect that âmost sources describe Zionism first and foremost as the ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» movement for self-determination and a national homeland but not necessarily or always ethnocentric, or demanding anything in particular about the Arabs. To paint all of Zionism with said brush in my opinion is POV.â A new ongoing list of books on the matter on the talk page that was seems to include a handful of books that donât explicitly mention Zionism in the title.
Some editors on the Zionism talk page contended that the early Zionist founders saw their efforts as a colonial venture; one of the to the âcolonizationâ sentence in the lead of the Wikipedia article is to Zeâev Jabotinskyâs that âcolonization can have only one aim, and Palestine Arabs cannot accept this aim. It lies in the very nature of things, and in this particular regard nature cannot be changed ⦠Zionist colonization must either stop, or else proceed regardless of the native population.â But Romirowsky told me that the early Zionist thinkers âall saw themselves as reclaiming and reinvigorating the ancestral promise of a ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» homeland, not as colonizers.â Romirowsky explained that Zionist founding fathers specifically used a Hebrew phrase âthat talks about resettling those landsâ and âthe opposition has taken that verbiage to connote that Jews are colonizers and they are stealing land that was not theirs. Thatâs the game that plays out here where they weaponize the meaning of what words actually mean.â Zisser agreed that the Zionist founders were talking about the resettlement of the Jews. âAt that time, colony had a different meaning, and if you translate some of the statements made in the 20s or 30s or in the 19thÂcentury, when they speak about cultivating the land, and use it to show something that has a different meaning nowadays, itâs not serious,â he said.
Another aspect of the Wikipedia Zionism article that has garnered controversy is discussing how âearly Zionists were the primary ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» supporters of the idea that Jews are a race.â The opening sentence of the second paragraph in the subsection states that âit was particularly important in early nation building in Israel, because Jews in Israel are ethnically diverse and the origins ofÂÂwere not known.â Romirowsky called this line âidiotic,â noting that the term âAshkenaziâ is traced to âareas of modern-day Germany. We know exactly where they came from.â
One of the to the Ashkenazi Jews line is to a 2012 book by Columbia University and Barnard College anthropologist Nadia Abu El-Haj; the citation highlights a passage from the book that says: âThere is a âproblemâ regarding the origins of the Ashkenazim, which needs resolution: Ashkenazi Jews, who seem European â phenotypically, that is â are the normative center of world Jewry. No less, they are the political and cultural elite of the newly founded ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» state. Given their central symbolic and political capital in the ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» state and given simultaneously the scientific and social persistence of racial logics as ways of categorizing and understanding human groups, it was essential to find other evidence that Israel’s European Jews were not in truth Europeans. The normative Jew had to have his/her origins in ancient Palestine or else the fundamental tenet of Zionism, the entire edifice of ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» history and nationalist ideology, would come tumbling down. In short, the Ashkenazi Jew is the Jew â the Jew in relation to whose values and cultural practices the oriental Jew in Israel must assimilate. Simultaneously, however, the Ashkenazi Jew is the most dubious Jew, the Jew whose historical and genealogical roots in ancient Palestine are most difficult to see and perhaps thus to believeâin practice, although clearly not by definition.â
This is one of the citations.
I cannot believe what I am reading: one would be forgiven for thinking it was an excerpt from Mein Kampf.
âThere is a âproblemâ regarding the origins of Ashkenazimâ.
âThe Ashkenazi Jew is the most dubious Jewâ.
This was actually published?
— Rachel Moiselle (@RachelMoiselle)
Romirowsky noted that Abu El-Haj had previously written a book in 2001 in which she attempted to âsay that there is no connection whatsoever archaeologically between the land and the people of Israel.â Zisser said that the El-Haj citation in the Wikipedia article is âpolemic not scientific.â
An editor told me that âan anthropologist should not be considered an authoritative source on such a matter but in Wikipedia âacademic pressâ and âsome kind of professorâ means âwe can useâ and the complete politicization combined with admins getting rid of dissenting views means this sort of s— can and does find its way into high visibility articles.â
There appears to other issues with the âEthnic unityâ subsection. The beginning of the subsection states that âearly Zionists were the primary ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» supporters of the idea that Jews are a race, as it âoffered scientific ‘proof’ of theÂÂmyth of common descent.âÂZionist nationalism drew fromÂÂthat people of common descent should seek separation and pursue the formation of their own state⦠According toÂ, as early as the 1870s, contrary to largely cultural perspectives among integrated and assimilated ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» communities in theÂÌý²¹²Ô»åÌý, âthe Zionists-to-be stressed that Jews were not merely members of a cultural or a religious entity, but were an integral biological entity.ââ
âThe whole narrative here is to dilute as much as possible the connection between the land and the people of Israel, to argue ultimately that Judaism is purely a religion,â Romirowsky said, âand has no nationalistic aspirations which are rooted in the Zionist narrative, which is ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» nationalismâ¦That ignores thousands of years of ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» history of connecting to the land and the people and everything else.â Zisser agreed that the entire subsection reads like itâs trying to downplay the ÖÐÎÄ×ÖÄ» connection to Israel and is thus ânot serious.â
In the end, Wikipedia talk page discussions are a âkabuki dance,â the longtime editor behind The Wikipedia Flood blog told me. âThe sources and other substantive issues are actually weapons, sort of like sabers and rifles, deployed by one warrior or set of warriors against the other,â The Wikipedia Flood editor told me, adding that ultimately the numbers are what prevails as consensus on Wikipedia. âAnyone who says otherwise is either ignorant or lying.â One Wikipedia Flood blog post that a recent discussion on the Zionism talk page consisted of at least 4700 words in the course of a single day. âThat is typical of discussions when the Wikipedia Flood of pro-Hamas editors are involved,â the blog post stated. âThey just go on and on and won’t let up ⦠Wikipedia talk pages under the control of anti-Israel editors use such methods to wear down their opponents, using the sheer numbers that they can bring to bear.â The blog post further noted that under the âextended confirmedâ protection rule, someone has to have been an editor for at least 30 days and made more than 500 edits to even participate in talk page discussions on matters related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict rule, thus keeping the anti-Israel editors in control.
Which then begs the questionÂÂby the news aggregator Visegrad 24 on X, âWhy did they feel the need to drastically rewrite the Wikipedia page for âZionismâ in the past few months?â An editor told me that âthere was a run on the article in the past 6-9 monthsâ after âa bunch of editors were banned, and others were exhausted and stopped fighting as hard.â Consequently, the anti-Israel editors ârealized that a lot of the opposition was weakened so they swooped in.â Another editor acknowledged that this explanation is âquite possible,â noting that at least a couple editors were banned âand other people just stopped editing or editing less, or got topic banned⦠I’ve seen other editors say they are just holding their powder and are gun-shy, editing in other topic areasâ¦The area has been considered a war and toxic, and a failure of ArbCom, for years.â ArbCom is a reference to the Arbitration Committee, Wikipediaâs 15-member body that acts as a Supreme Court of sorts on the site.
It may be easy to simply dismiss Wikipedia as being an unreliable site that nobody takes seriously, but consider that, as I have previously written, studies show that students begin their research process by looking at Wikipedia. Imagine the kind of effect Wikipediaâs Zionism article would have on a student working on a research paper about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
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