This week, the New Israel Fund of Canada, JSpaceCanada and Canadian Friends of Peace Now released a survey of 588 Jewish Canadians that aimed to figure out the community’s relationship to Israel. In short: it’s complicated.
The survey, managed by Leger, found that 94 percent of respondents agreed Israel “has the right to exist as a Jewish state”—yet only 51 percent self-identified as “Zionist”. This startling contradiction could reveal how tarnished the brand of Zionism has become, regardless of Jewish Canadians’ opinions on Israel itself, and dispels the myth of the Jewish community being monolithic about its opinions towards the Holy Land, its voting patterns and its values. Can Zionism be saved? Or should we all just ditch labels and talk about the issues?
To learn more about the key takeaways, we invited Ben Murane and Maytal Kowalski, the executive directors of the New Israel Fund of Canada and JSpaceCanada, respectively, to come on Bonjour Chai and explain their motivations for commissioning the survey and how we can digest the data. Listen to that interview above.
After that, Avi and Phoebe dig into the anthology book On Being Jewish Now, which Phoebe had previously not read—then was called out for—and has since read every page of. Avi read it, too, and they dig into the politics of not paying Jewish writers for their work while purporting to support Jewish artists.
Credits
- Hosts: Avi Finegold and Phoebe Maltz Bovy (@BovyMaltz)
- Production team: Michael Fraiman (producer), Zachary Kauffman (editor)
- Music: Socalled
Support The CJN
- Subscribe to the Bonjour Chai Substack
- Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
- Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
- Subscribe to Bonjour Chai (Not sure how? Click here)