The Left Berlin News & Comment

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Stop political expulsion at Berlin universities

Urgent Call to Action: Students, Academic Freedom and Democracy under Attack


20/03/2024

Copy the linked template, edit it to your liking and send it to the representatives of your district. You can find their contact sorted by district here. If you disagree with something in the letter, feel free to change it, or simply write an email in your own words.

At the end of this text, we added  a template in English and German, that students can send to their professors, lecturers, academics, and research assistants asking them to also speak out.

Background  

On March 26, Berlin is debating a change to the Higher Education Act where “politically motivated expulsion” can be used as a disciplinary measure in universities. This not only threatens people’s right to stay in Germany, as visas can be tied to student status, but sets a frightening precedent of shutting down student political organizing and restricting academic freedom. They are quickly pushing this in during semester break, and leaving little possibility of organized opposition. We need a wide alliance of students and non-students to oppose the right-wing turn in Germany: WE CANNOT LET THIS PASS!

Why It’s Important for You to Send Out

By using this template to express your concerns, you contribute to the collective effort to protect the rights and freedoms of students and faculty members at Berlin universities. Together, we can make our voices heard and work towards a more just and equitable higher education system in Berlin.

Sign our petition

Petition · Hände weg vom Hochschulgesetz: Politisch motivierte Exmatrikulationen in Berlin stoppen! · Change.org

The actual law proposal

Siebzehntes Gesetz zur Änderung des Berliner Hochschulgesetzes (17. BerlHG-ÄnderungsG)

You can find the suggested mail to politicians and to professors, lecturers, academics, and research assistants here. Please take the time to send a message to protect academic freedom in Berlin.

News from Berlin and Germany, 20th March 2024

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Police investigate fire at Tegel refugee accommodation

A fire broke out last Tuesday at the refugee accommodation on the site of Berlin’s former Tegel airport. Luckily, no one was injured, but most of the refugees living in the destroyed accommodation have lost all their belongings. Alternative accommodation for the affected refugees, most of whom are from Ukraine, has been organised. While police investigate the possibility of arson, some officials believe the cause of the fire could simply be down to the camp being overcrowded and unsuitable for long-term accommodation. “We have always warned that Tegel is not suitable for accommodating so many people.” said Jian Omar (the Greens), migration expert. Source: exberliner

Techno clubs as cultural heritage: Club commission hopes for more support

Following the decision to declare Berlin’s techno culture an intangible cultural heritage, club operators in the capital hope now for financial support from the state. The chairman of the Berlin Club Commission, Marcel Weber, complained on the rbb24 evening programme on Saturday that the existing club culture in the city is under increasing threat. “Due to the coronavirus pandemic, we now have a completely different situation once again. There is hardly any space left in this city. There is a huge distribution battle for the few spaces that are still available,” said Weber. He is also hoping for the support of the state on the search for suitable properties. Source: rbb

 

NEWS FROM GERMANY

Welfare state reform: more penalties, less money

On Monday, the CDU decided what the return to the dark days of Hartz IV should look like. The party’s board unanimously approved a concept for the reorganisation of the benefit system. The proposed reforms mean a removal of state support completely in extreme cases if recipients refuse “reasonable work”. The CDU would also like to see a change in the name: instead of the SPD’s new branding “citizen’s income”, they would rename the ‘streamlined’ welfare state benefit “new basic security”. “The term ‘citizen’s income’ is misleading,” said CDU Secretary General Carsten Linnemann. “It suggests that every citizen is entitled to it.” Source: nd-aktuell

SPD rejects welfare state reform

SPD leader Lars Klingbeil has rejected CDU demands for extensive changes to the welfare state and the so-called “citizens’ income”. Speaking in Berlin, Klingbeil said: “The amount of citizens’ income is determined by a constitutional court ruling. This has now been implemented, incidentally with the support of the CDU/CSU.” The citizen’s income replaced the Hartz IV system (unemployment benefit II) at the beginning of 2023 following a reform by the current coalition government. It is intended to secure the livelihood of people who can work but whose income is not enough to live on. Source: tagesschau

Cracks in the AfD ‘firewall’

A study by the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation titled “Will the firewall hold?” shows that political cooperation with suspected or proven right-wing extremist parties in Germany is common. Between 2019 and 2023, political scientist Anika Taschke and her colleague Steven Hummel recorded 121 cases in eastern German municipalities where such cooperation took place. For example, in October 2019, the CDU in the Berlin district of Reinickendorf applied for a “headscarf ban for schoolgirls up to and including 6th grade”. After discussions that dragged on for months, the motion was passed with the votes of the CDU and AfD in 2020. Source: dw

German government appeals against climate judgement

The German government violated the requirements of current law in the transport and buildings sectors in 2021 and 2022. The Federal Government also never adopted a programme proposed by Construction Minister Klara Geywitz (SPD) for the sector. She argued a new climate protection law is in the works, planned to give the sectors more room for manoeuvre, but it has not yet been passed by the Bundestag. Environmental Action Germany condemned the revision as “irresponsible and scandalous behaviour”, with which the coalition government is breaking its election promises. Source: handelsblatt

Fight against right-wing extremism

The Democracy Promotion Act is a law aimed at ‘promoting democracy’ and tackling far-right extremism which is causing divisions in the current coalition government. But the FDP has been blocking the law, calling for an additional controversial extremism clause to be reintroduced and warning that the law could promote initiatives that “combat” legitimate criticism of feminism. Federal Minister for Family Affairs Lisa Paus (Greens) emphasised in Berlin at a conference of the “Live Democracy!” programme, that the promotion of democracy is based on Basic Law and that it is more important than ever. Recent times have shown “that our basic values are being attacked by enemies of democracy”, said Paus. She notes that hate is not an opinion. She mentioned too that the initiatives to be supported by the law are “often the last bulwark on the ground” – even more reason for them to be able to rely on the state. The Green Party therefore demanded: “The Democracy Promotion Act must now be passed quickly in the Bundestag.” Source: taz

Berlin’s mayor loves antisemites

Kai Wegner denounces the “antisemitism” of left-wing Jews — while he embraces the most high-profile antisemitic conspiracy theorist in the world.

On Saturday, the Austrian Nazi Martin Sellner was detained by Swiss police and expelled from the country. Sellner is known internationally for his calls to deport millions of non-white people from Germany (which he calls “remigration”). When reports were published about a meeting he had with leading members of the far-right AfD last November, millions of people took to the streets of Germany to protest against racism. Sellner also had connections to the fascist mass murderer in Christchurch.

When he posted a video on Twitter about being expelled from Switzerland (his own “remigration”), he got a reply from the platform’s owner. Elon Musk asked: “Is this legal?”

Sellner, leader of the fascist Identitarian Movement, had been banned from Twitter in 2020. He was welcomed back to the platform just last week, and he thanked Musk personally.

Musk has been increasingly open about his fascist and antisemitic views. He has endorsed the conspiracy theory that Jews control migration and promote “hatred against whites” — this is, in Musk’s words, “the actual truth.” He has attacked the Jewish billionaire George Soros (who “hates humanity,” according to Musk) and supported the AfD. He has used his billions to make Twitter a safe space for Nazis.

Yet none of this stopped Berlin mayor Kai Wegner (CDU) from embracing Musk last week, as did Brandenburg’s prime minister, Dietmar Woidke (SPD). Responding to criticism about posing with such a well-known antisemite, Wegner only said that “Tesla is an important employer for the whole region.” He explicitly refused to condemn Musk’s far-right and antisemitic views. 

When Israeli and Palestinian filmmakers at the Berlinale film festival called for equality, Wegner said such views should be banned. “There is no space for antisemitism in Berlin,” he declared.

What Wegner meant to say: There is space for antisemitism as long as you’re a billionaire. Musk is not the only antisemite Wegner’s admires.

  • The biggest donors to the CDU are the Quandt siblings, who inherited billions from Nazi war criminals.
  • Horst Seehofer, the former German interior minister and a CDU/CSU leader, supported a historical association that relativized the crimes of the Nazi army and denied the facts of the Holocaust.
  • The hotel where Sellner met with AfD leaders to discuss mass deportations was provided by Wilhelm Wilderink, a CDU member.
  • Peter Kurth, a former Berlin economics senator and another CDU member, has been revealed to be one of the main sponsors of Sellner’s Identitarians.
  • Hans-Georg Maaßen, the former head of the internal secret service and yet another CDU member, has been spouting antisemitic conspiracy theories. 
  • An early leader of the CDU, Hans Globke, was the author of the Nazis’ Nuremberg Race Laws against Jews. 

A few of these people, such as Kurth and Maaßen, recently resigned from the CDU voluntarily. Others, like Seehofer, have faced no consequences for their far-right views. The CDU is still trying to protect the memory of the fascist mass murderer Globke.

In other words, Wegner is absolutely surrounded by antisemites. He was himself in far-right Facebook groups. He only talks about “antisemitism” to voice support for Israel’s right-wing government and its genocidal assault against Gaza. All genuine antisemites get a “Persilschein,” a bill of clean health, from Wegner.

As I’ve written before, it’s not that the German state is overzealous in its fight against antisemitism, and is thus accidentally including left-wing Jews. All these “Antisemitism Bureaucrats” are about protecting actual antisemites, who tend to be right-wing Germans. The accusations of antisemitism against leftists, immigrants, and Jews are a smokescreen to distract from the state’s deep hostility to Jews.

Charlotte Church – Voice of an Activist

The Welsh singer’s strong words for Palestine are part of a radicalisation which she has been showing for years


18/03/2024

Charlotte Church learned not to trust the media at a very young age. She was originally feted for singing ”Pie Jesu” from Andrew Lloyd Webber’s requiem in 1997, at the age of 11. The next year, she released ”Voice of an Angel”, becoming the youngest artist in the British classical albums chart. Reviews of the album called Church “talented, young, and adorable”. Her fans apparently included Prince Charles and Pope John Paul II.

At first, Church was an ”unpolitical” member of the Arts establishment. She performed for Bill Clinton and George Bush and sang at Rupert Murdoch’s Wedding to Wendy Deng. She claims that Murdoch offered her £100,000 to sing, but she waived the fee in return for good publicity – a deal which Murdoch later reneged on.

As she got older, coverage of Church became more ominous. An article in the Guardian refers obliquely to “fascination with her private life – from the online countdown to her 16th birthday, to tabloid coverage of her teenage smoking and drinking, not to mention the swearing, the weight gain, and the unsuitable boyfriends who kissed and told.”

What was meant by “countdown to her 16th birthday”? When Church was still 15, an Internet site was set up headed “Charlotte Church Countdown”, giving the number of days until “Charlotte Church is legal”. Although it was wrongly assumed that this site was set up by the Sun, the occurence was still gleefully reported by the tabloid press. Church later responded: “it was bizarre, all these grown men looking on a website: ‘How many hours to go?’ Disgusting!”

That was not all. On Radio 1, DJ Chris Moyles, then 28, said on air that he wanted to “lead her through the forest of sexuality now she had reached 16”. A few months later, she was awarded the Rear of the Year award. She later admitted that accepting the award was “a ridiculous choice, a stupid thing to do but, you know, there was a whole host of people that I was working with who should have said, ‘Woah. woah. woah. You shouldn’t do this. This is bad, you’re 16.’”

As Church grew older, the press became obsessed with her drinking habits, her swearing, and her celebrity engagement to rugby player Gavin Henson. She became “the girl portrayed as a chav, a binge drinker, a fallen angel, a symbol of everything wrong with modern Britain”. Her initial response was to request privacy and hide away from media attention.

At the time, Church played along with the media; in later interviews she was more reflective, saying: “here was a way in which young women were presented, and particularly young working-class women. And because I didn’t have any life experience, and because I hadn’t stepped into my female power in any way, shape or form, I allowed that narrative to be told. I even played along with it, because it’s what people wanted.”

Charlotte becomes an activist

When the Leveson inquiry exposed intrusive behaviour from the British press, especially Murdoch’s News of the World, Church was revealed to be one of the victims of phone hacking. After listening in on her calls, the tabloids published stories about her mother’s attempted suicide and her father’s affair.

At the enquiry, “she described how photographers had installed secret cameras outside her home to track her movements, followed her car, and tried to take upskirt shots. Her first pregnancy was revealed in the Sun before she had even told her parents; her mother’s mental health crisis and suicide attempt were exposed by the News of the World.”

After Leveson, Church became political, saying “I started to understand how corrupt shit was. I suppose the more you see this kind of stuff, the less you can undo seeing it. Eighty per cent of the papers are owned by five billionaires and it’s happening all over the world. That concentration of power and money in too few hands has never been very good historically … After seeing that, I started getting more and more annoyed at the Tory government and when they got in again I was totally devastated.”

In a later interview she explains her turn to activism post-Leveson: “I hadn’t been interested in politics before because I thought it was all bullshit and they were all full of bullshit. And then when I started to understand how corrupt things were in the press, in government … There was so much injustice that I was like, ‘No, I’m going to get involved and try and understand.’” She voted for the first time in 2015.

After the Tories won that election, Church started attending demonstrations. In 2015, Wales Online reported that she was “last seen wielding a placard which read ‘I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore’ as she marched through the streets of of her home city of Cardiff on the weekend to protest austerity measures following the Conservatives’ recent win at the General election.”

Following that demonstration, she started to get active. As she recounted: “I got involved with the People’s Assembly and I met amazing people, just out on the streets, telling me stories about what had happened when their benefits were cut or they got chucked out of their house. And then you’re in, you know what I mean? You’re absolutely in.”

In the same year, Church appeared on stage at Glastonbury with Pussy Riot, and joined a Greenpeace protest against drilling in the Arctic, singing outside Shell’s London offices. When detractors (not for the last time), accused her of being a “silly girl”, she replied: “What I think perplexes me the most when people get wrathful at celebrities campaigning is that they don’t react that way when a celebrity is being paid to endorse a product.”

She went on: “the only relevant fact here is that not just Shell, but Vladimir Putin, Barack Obama, Norway’s Statoil and, I don’t know, let’s just call them all Psychopaths Anonymous, have so little respect for scientific research that they are going to bore into the Earth’s achilles heel to steal and burn the very stuff that will weaken this extraordinary wilderness further … And we can stop it, before it’s too late.”

When Jeremy Corbyn became Labour leader, Church was a great supporter. In 2016, the Guardian reported that she was “spotted urging the audience at a Jeremy Corbyn rally to “get these fucking Tories out.” In the same year, she played a fundraiser for Corbyn’s campaign to become prime minister on a radical reformist platform.

She spoke up for Corbyn on Radio 4’s Today programme, saying: “You look at the way that Jeremy Corbyn has just been completely slated, so unfairly, a lot of the time, then I think there is definitely an unbalance there. The majority of stuff I see about Jeremy Corbyn I don’t think reflects the popular idea of who he is and what the people think. It comes across as a little biased.”

Speaking Up for Palestine

All this is just a prelude to Church’s latest “scandal”. On March 9th this year. she attended a demonstration for Palestine, singling “There are no leaders who dare to say ‘Every life is precious’, so it will have to be us.” She concluded her speech with a quote by Carl Jung: “The spirit of evil is a negation of the life force by fear. Only boldness can deliver us from fear. And if the risk isn’t taken, the meaning of life is violated. This is how much this means. Free, free Palestine!”

Church also had the temerity to take part in a Sing for Palestine event organised by the Middle East Childrens’ Alliance to raise money for a new ambulance for the Al Awda hospital. At the event, she led a 100 strong choir singing “From the River to the Sea”.

The usual Greek chorus of self-appointed experts had a predictable reaction. The right-wing Campaign Against Antisemitism accused Church of “using the voice for which she is so well known to fan the flames of hatred.” The Daily Mail reported Andrew Percy MP calling her to “hang her head in shame”. Police were called to check on Church’s family after they were threatened by “some pretty scary people”.

On the BBC, reporter Nick Robinson asked notorious racist Nigel Farage whether Church should be arrested for singing “From the river to the sea…” Farage’s response was to call her a “naive idiot”, who should be “given a severe warning”, and “made to see the error of her ways”. All this on Britain’s public broadcaster presented as unbiased news.

Church wrote a powerful reply on her blog, entitled From a mother on Mother’s Day. In it, she said: “I have to take the opportunity to speak out because since the start of the genocide very little of the campaign that calls for an end to Israeli aggression in Palestine has been covered by the press, except when it is being denounced as ‘hateful’ or ‘islamist’ by some of the most notorious racists in the western world.”

After addressing the legitimacy of the chant “From the river to the sea” and the apartheid system in modern Israel, Church eloquently denounced Robinson, Farage and “self-proclaimed ‘public intellectual’” David Baddiel for their “’shush, silly girl’ strategy”, used to silence any opposition. In passing, she pointed out Baddiel’s “checkered hisory with racism”, which hardly gives him a safe place on the moral high ground.

She concluded by calling on “all mothers, all grandmothers, in fact all those who have mothers, to hold in our hearts all those who had mothers in Gaza and now do not, all those mothers whose children have been murdered, and the families whose every member has been brutalised and wiped out. Let us listen to our bones, our great-great-grandmothers’ instincts that live within us, and reject the fallacy of western patriarchal moral authority.”

Why is any of this important?

A main part of Church’s story is about class and gender. Although she earned a lot of money very young, she remains shaped by the working class values she gained growing up in the Welsh city of Cardiff. She has also learned how to healthily respond to a lifetime of patronising men talking down to her (she doesn’t need me to explain how well she has reacted).

When asked why more public figures aren’t speaking out on Palestine, she answered: “clearly there is risk in it, the risk of being labelled an antisemite. People think they have too much to lose.” She went on: “I can do nothing but be a part of this movement … this is not just for the people of Palestine who are currently experiencing the worst thing I’ve ever lived through on planet Earth … But it is striking at the very heart of all of our freedoms and our ability to call for something better.”

And yet, at a time when so few artists and MPs are putting their heads above the parapet to speak out about Palestine, Church’s steadfast intervention is exemplary. Her erudition busts the myths that working class people should ”just shut up and listen” to our betters. She speaks for all of us.

Israel, India, and the Spectre of Nationalism

On the European ethno-nationalist legacy, and how it still shapes our reality


17/03/2024

Very few institutions have been legitimised as extensively today as that of the nation-state.  The hyphenated term in itself alludes to a troubled history: the unification of a nation — i.e. a people, with some “collective consciousness” — with a state — a formal bureaucracy with complete hegemony and sovereignty over a geographic location.

Nation-states are a very recent phenomenon. This is uncontroversial amongst both Marxist and liberal historiography. A key point of disagreement surrounds why they emerged. Liberals tend to associate the phenomenon with industrialisation and urbanisation, Gellner, for instance. He saw nation-states as essential to industrial society, with creation of a dominant standardised language and a state bureaucracy. Marxists on the other hand, tend to see nation-states arising as a consequence of the emergence of capitalist economic relations. Anderson famously focuses on the spread of print capitalism, and replacing sacred languages by local vernaculars as a key factor developing a national consciousness. Davidson discusses the utility of nationalism as a form of “psychic compensation” under capitalist alienation, easing class domination by mobilising working classes for “their” capitalists.

Today, given the dominance of the capitalist mode of production, the nation-state (i.e., the state) is universal. The entire world is divided into nation-states. Even if some are not seen as legitimate, the notion is universally seen as an appropriately “modern” way to organise the world. What is not universal, however, is the form of the nation-state. Japan, the United States of America, and Pakistan are all very different internal descriptions of nation. Yet each is as legitimate in the “international community” as the others. All have very similar outward-facing institutions — a bevy of diplomats, a government, a seat at the UN, etc.

Briefly, the nation-states in Europe emerged as follows. The origins lay in the birth of capitalism in modern England. The slow creation of the identity of an Englishman occurred over centuries, through the rise of the robust internal trade networks and the state capacity enabled by primitive accumulation. English, the language of the nascent bourgeoisie, began to dominate as Latin began to disappear. The ruling class became more attentive to the interests of burgeoning mercantile hubs. Land enclosures followed and with the growth of industry, spurred on mass migration to the cities.

Increasingly, the village community faded and the eternal feudal order that governed it began to give way to modernity. Peasants now found themselves doubly free (to sell their labour, free of their means of reproduction), but needed to be assimilated into being good Englishmen and women. Thus, early capitalist modernity led to the emergence of a very specific form of nation-state. It was characterised by constructing a mass culture, built on a unitary language and a unitary notion of “the people”.  People had a shared history, and shared myths and collective imaginings.

France, driven by competition with Britain, set about rapidly restructuring the French state. The strongly centralised, homogeneous, indivisible republic that followed became a template for the rest of the world. The  world became organised into linguistic nation-states. Many ethnic groups with their petty bourgeoisie began to demand their own formal language and state. Often, these deliberately-constructed nations came into existence after their respective states did. The Sardinian premier Massimo d’Azeglio  said “L’Italia è fatta; restano da fare gli italiani” (We have created Italy; now we must create Italians). This gained impetus outside Western Europe after the First World War. Both Lenin and Woodrow Wilson championed the “right of people to self-determination”, specifically, their right to self-determination within the parameters of a state. Western European notions of culturally and linguistically homogenous nation-states became hegemonic, and seen as an essential transformation for a people to become a truly modern people.

Unfortunately, latecomers to capitalist modernity were forced down a different path. The gradual homogenisation that had occurred in the north-west of Europe simply could not exist everywhere. The late Ottoman Empire, particularly Istanbul, was extremely heterogenous. As was Austria-Hungary where a 1911 census revealed that only 24% of the empire used German in their everyday lives. Emergent nationalism in most of Europe followed a very different trajectory to Britain or France. Attempts to resolve these contradictions, and to emulate their predecessors resulted in nationalist violence, reshaping the entire continent. Emergent nations, faced with a wide variety of ethnicities within their borders, found themselves facing the “minority problem”. Ethnic minorities found themselves facing mass deportations and ethnic cleansings all over the continent, in the wake of collapsing empires.

This was by no means a “natural” reordering of society, nor was it chance mob violence that spiralled out of control. All over Europe and the European periphery, these projects were legitimised and put into place top-down. They were expressions of state power. Ultimately, the Armenian genocide was not the doing of unruly mobs, but of the the nascent Turkish state. New nationalist thinking legitimised these movements. For example the Ottoman sociologist Ziya Gökalp’s views on Turkish nationhood as an “involuntary” linguistic and social solidarity. The universal hegemony of these proto-fascist tendencies, was encouraged by American “pragmatic” Wilsonianism. It wound up leading to varities of militant nationalism all over the region. Ethnic cleansings and pogroms grew to be seen as regrettable, yet absolutely inevitable.

Unfortunately, today, while the heart of ethnonationalism is once more at tenuous peace, the idea itself is far from dead, it has simply taken on different forms. Ethnonationalism has been transformed into the more politically correct “common sense” idea that all “functional” nations must be an ethnoculturally cohesive unit. If it weren’t for the pesky metropolitan elites, the idea goes, England would remain English, and Germany would remain German. Most importantly, England and Germany would be much less prone to crisis. In Europe, blame for modern crisis is laid squarely at the door of refugees and migrants. In the United States, white nationalism is resurgent, as memories of the post-war boom are increasingly associated with a simpler, whiter, and less “woke” America. This is often framed as a critique of capitalism; yet it is a primitive critique that promises something even worse — ethno-capitalism.

Numerous nations have undertaken the process of shaping themselves in Europe’s image with renewed enthusiasm. Yet two particularly stark examples of this drive stand out today. These are those of Israel and India. The former’s attempt to create a Jewish ethnostate on historical Palestineis powered by European beliefs that Jews are entitled to self-determination, along European lines. Equally in India the rapid spread of Hindu hegemony. In reality Hindus are an extremely diverse group with little in common by way of practice or identity. But they are cultivated to become a ‘people’, whom the Indian state ought to represent. Effectively relegating Christians and Muslims to being second-class citizens. It becomes increasingly critical for us to learn from European history, lest we be doomed to repeat and reproduce it.

Israel

The legitimacy of contemporary Zionism, stems from three principles. The first is that the Jewish people constitute a nation. Historically, this was far from deterministic. Hobsbawm wrote on the self-perception of German Jews as German, and the drive to assimilate into European society that existed as one of many political tendencies in western Judaism. That  resulted in a schism between western and eastern Judaism. Herzl’s Zionism came not from the antisemitism of Poland, nor even from Germany. It was an aftermath of the Dreyfus affair in France, despite the Third Republic being a liberal nation, and an explicitly civic form of nationalism. The ethnogenesis of the Jewish people was forced upon them by “white” Europeans.

The second principle is that being a nation, the Jewish people were entitled to a Jewish state. Europe’s bloody history is once again rendered relevant. It was precisely this marriage of the nation and the state that inspired and legitimised the countless ethnic cleansings and genocides in a new Europe, reorganising itself into ethnostates. Mark Levene describes the genesis of nation-states in Europe as a harbinger of Jewish and Palestinian disasters: “What is the common denominator”, he writes “in this wretched litany of genocidal expulsions and deportations?” He replies “nationalism”, and the attempt to apply it in regions where it went against the grain of actual, lived human reality. Something which could only be done by extreme violence._ The European associations of nations with states resulted in the most absurd violence being inflicted upon those communities that lacked a land that they could be deported to: diasporic European Jews, and the nomadic Roma people. Ironically, the Zionist entitlement to statehood appears to have helped elevate contemporary Israelis to being, in the eyes of the West, a “civilised” people: an acceptance that still eludes the Roma.

The final principle behind contemporary Zionism is that the Jewish people were entitled to a state in historical Palestine. Consequently, the Nakba became a reproduction of the same patterns of nationalist violence that tore Europe apart in the 20th century. One with a clear expansionist undercurrent, to accommodate the growing settler population. Thus, the carving out of a Jewish state in Palestine by the British Empire, then seen as an admirable solution for Zionists, and ethnonationalist European nations happy to be rid of their Jewish populations. This contextualises (not excuses) David Ben-Gurion 1941 description of the replication of the patterns of mass expulsion in Europe as “a practical and […] secure means of solving the dangerous and painful problem of national minorities”.

Today, critique of Israel as a settler-colonial state hinges on this third principle. The Arab world has rightfully never accepted the British partition of Palestine, and the ethnic cleansing that was the Nakba. Yet Zionism’s capacity for violence stems from Israel’s birth as a Jewish nation in the first place. Today, rejecting the one-state solution in Israel stems from the desire to maintain the fundamentally Jewish ethnocentric character of the Israeli state. The never-ending land grabs in the West Bank by Jewish settlers, as well as the genocide in Gaza, are enabled precisely by the firm attachment of Israel to the notion of “a state for a people”, and the hubris to believe that a people without a land are necessarily entitled to one.

India

The steady march of Hindu nationalism in India has many parallels with Zionism. The causes for the rise of Hindu nationalism are myriad and complex. What is important to highlight, however, is the discursive role that ethnicity and nationalism play in India. A direct comparison of Hindu nationalism to early European ethnonationalist projects is, at first blush, irrelevant. After all, India is an extremely diverse country. Indeed, true European-style linguistic nationalism was never hegemonic in most of India — the average Indian city is, for instance, more ethno-linguistically diverse than its European counterpart. This is not accidental; the conditions in which modernity emerged in India were vastly different to those in Europe. Moreover the Indian bourgeoisie and the Indian state were shaped by the British Empire. English thus became the language of administration in modern India, and opened up a vast market for the emergent bourgeoisie. The Indian superstructure has therefore simply never required widespread ethnolinguistic self-differentiation.

Yet, the relative lack of ethno-linguistic violence does not imply an immunity to ethnic violence. This is best exemplified today with the startling success and dominance of the ideology of Hindu nationalism. This is an an ideology that, contrary to Hindu narratives, is definitionally an extremely contemporary one, because the notion of nationhood itself is extremely contemporary. Hindu nationalism does not attempt to create a theocracy. Actually one of the movement’s key idealogues, VD Savarkar, was an atheist who took a very dim view of many mainstays of upper-caste Hinduism, such as beef taboos.

The Hindu nationalist project attempts to bring about the *ethnogenesis* of the Hindu people. It is largely predicated on the belief that Hindus should constitute a people, or a nation. This is therefore a modernising project. To harmonise the ‘Hindu people’ across ethnolinguistic group and (nominally) caste. It involves the spread of Hindi as a dominant language all over the subcontinent. There is no genuine commitment to abolishing caste, but rather the integration of caste into a modern capitalist machinery, driven by dispossession and expropriation. India, as imagined by Hindu nationalists, should transform into a “state for the Hindu people”.  A people who, hitherto, have had no state of their own. Unsurprising since both Hindu people and nation-states are a recent creation. The land that this state is entitled to is, at best, the present Indian state, at worst, it includes modern Pakistan and Bangladesh as ‘historically Hindu lands’.

Thankfully, India lacks the third principle driving contemporary Zionism. Contemporary Indians are (with caveats) not yet settlers. Yet this is cold comfort to the millions of Indian Muslims who face persistent racialisation, segregation, and state violence from the formidable Indian state machinery. “We gave them Pakistan” the Hindu nationalist talking point goes. “Why can’t they just go there?”  This is not very different to an Israeli settler wondering why the Palestinian booted out of their home doesn’t simply go to Jordan or Egypt.

It is impossible to imagine the sheer scale of violence that efforts to (re)build ethnostates would enable, all over the world. Yet we are encouraged to ignore both real and potential violence, and accept it as somehow “necessary” to stabilise modern nation-states. It is this idea that allows liberal Zionists to defend Israel’s history of ethnic cleansings — “Everyone did it, so why can’t we?” It is this that allows Hindu nationalists to claim that mass deportations of Muslims are essential to maintain India’s fundamentally “Hindu” character.

All nation-states are bad, but some are worse than others. It is time, for the left to assert that the European model of nationalism, far from being the “most natural unit”, has been responsible for unprecedented scales of violence. Nobody — not Germans, nor Jews, nor Hindus — should be entitled to a land for their people, and we must have the honesty to acknowledge that no long-awaited socialist revolution can ever emerge from the immensely artificial, parochial and myopic cultures that these tendencies enable.