See the latest opinion pieces on our page
In his words and deeds, Rivlin thus signals to his opponents that even on the political Right, and even among those who believe, as he does, in Greater Israel, the legacy of Ze’ev Jabotinsky – the Revisionist Zionist leader who envisioned a state in which “the son of the Arab, the son of Nazareth, and my son” would live in peace and prosperity – lives on.Last week, at the inaugural Dov Lautman Conference on Educational Policy, established in partnership with the Israel Democracy Institute and the Open University, President Rivlin presented certificates of recognition to schools that have shown an outstanding commitment to pursuing cooperation and dialogue between different segments of Israeli society. One of the important findings of research conducted in preparation for this conference, which was discussed at the conference itself, was that Israeli teachers have difficulty educating for democratic values (beyond basics such as the rule of the majority) and addressing hatred and racism in their classrooms because democratic values are perceived as “leftist values” and are seen as political. The hate campaign against Rivlin reflects this type of equation of democratic and leftist values. On the Right, and especially within the Likud, a battle is raging between contradictory trends. The extremists in this camp are denouncing any liberal statement that respects human rights as “left wing.”This was seen recently when condemnations of the decision to segregate buses in Samaria, issued by members of the Right, not just the Left, were attacked.These denunciations are intended to exclude anyone who preserves Jabotinsky’s revisionist spark from the ranks of the Right and to pull the Israeli Right toward nationalism and away from the values of democracy. A similar move in 2012 ousted Dan Meridor, Benny Begin and Michael Eitan – moderates who embraced liberal values – from the Likud’s list of candidates for the 19th Knesset. We must salute President Rivlin for his activities, both because of their direct contribution to mending the rifts in Israeli society and because he is an exemplary model of the fact that democratic values are not the purview of the Left; rather, they are the values of the State of Israel, which are anchored in the Declaration of Independence. Recognizing that democracy and human rights belong to us all is vital for preserving the character of the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state.The author heads the Defense of Democratic Values Program at the Israel Democracy Institute.