More than a decade ago, a diverse focus group of Americans was asked to describe a typical Italian house. Words like “lush, food, cooking, maternal, welcoming” quickly rolled of the tongue. The same group was asked about an Israeli home and a very different vibe is described: “concrete, strict, ultra-religious, middle-aged ultra-Orthodox men.”
Not exactly a country they were keen on visiting — or supporting.
The loose consortium of volunteer marketing and advertising executives who commissioned the study now falls under the Brand Israel Group (BIG) rubric. While each member of this heterogeneous Mad Men coalition had his own reasons for wishing to change Americans’ innate view of Israel, for Fern Oppenheim, co-founder of Brand Israel Group, her tipping point came after the September 11, 2001, World Trade Center attacks.
The child of Holocaust survivors, Oppenheim said she awoke from her sense of Jewish security that day. “I never thought I’d smell smoke living in New York,” she said in Jerusalem this week.
Her safety bubble popped, Oppenheim decided to throw her support — and skills — behind Israel. With her extensive marketing and management background at such companies as Kraft/General Foods, Oppenheim began to use her professional prowess to help the Jewish state, which she calls “the canary in the coal mine.”
The team had a revolutionary approach: Instead of the Jewish community’s typical “shooting from the hip,” said Oppenheim, the high-level marketing execs “rolled up their sleeves to get a research-based understanding” of mainstream Americans’ perceptions of Israel, and only then to create a strategy based on their research.
Since its initial coalescence in 2002, Brand Israel has commissioned a large-scale segmentation study in 2010 and a followup in 2016. For anyone with the slightest Zionist impulse, the downward slope of Israel support is disturbing.
While in Israel to present the recent 2016 BIG segmentation study, “Sounding the Alarm: The American-Israeli Relationship,” Oppenheim repeatedly used the word “devastating” — each time without hyperbole.
In sum, the gap between Israel-supporters and detractors is widening. The current Israel advocacy programs are not working, and Jewish college students are the leading defectors from Israel support.
‘The future of America no longer believe that Israel shares their values’
Mainstream Americans are not starting from a neutral perspective on Israel; rather, they begin with misperceptions and negative assumptions. This creates “fertile ground” for delegitimization, said Oppenheim, who also spoke this week at the prestigious annual Herzliya Conference.
The 2016 segmentation study’s data shows that the current campaign of depicting the Israel beyond the conflict — specifically, highlighting high-tech achievements — is not effective. In fact, the more the study participants knew about Israel, the less favorably they felt about the country.
According to the report’s executive summary, since 2010, claimed knowledge of Israel has increased 14 percentage points nationally (from 23% to 37%) and is up among every demographic group (except for college students, which is down 16 percentage points, from 50% to 34%). These increases, however, have not translated into increased favorability, which is down 14 percentage points (from 76% to 62%) nationally and by large margins across the board.
“The paradigm of Israel beyond the conflict is not the right paradigm for capturing hearts and souls,” she said.
The key is to emphasize common values. To change an attitude about Israel, the camera needs to be pulled back to show the full face of the country and its people, she said. When Israel is an issue, and not a country filled with an incredibly diverse population, the field is open for boycott campaigns and other delegitimizing efforts.
“Shared values have been the bedrock of the American-Israeli relationship. Without this connection, the future of the alliance is in jeopardy,” claims the BIG group. And the biggest value gap is between core Israel supporters — basically older, wealthier, more conservative, whiter Americans — and those who are labeled as “at-risk” — younger, minorities, liberals.
The picture is even more dire when looking at the next generation of potential Jewish leadership. Between the 2010 and the 2016 surveys, Jewish college students dropped 27 percentage points on the question of whether they lean towards the Israeli side.
This is explained, said Oppenheim, because of a perceived lack of shared values between the ultra-liberal Jewish college student and Israel.
On December 15, 2015, more than 300 Jewish activists in Boston marched for the Black Lives Matter movement, including members of Jewish Voice for Peace (photo credit: Ignacio Laguarda/Wicked Local)
“The future of America no longer believe that Israel shares their values. This is huge! Devastating,” she said.
According to the survey, 31% of Jewish students reported experiencing anti-Semitism; of that bunch, 59% say it was related to anti-Israel attitudes. But these experiences generally do not sway their opinions of Israel.
“The Jewish college student is the only group more favorable to Palestinians” now, rising 18 percentage points between 2010 and 2016, she said.
Much of this change she blamed on the rise of “intersectionality” on campuses. There is no longer nuance in campus conversations about Israel, she said. Instead, the “atmosphere is oppressor versus victim. Israel is just another symbol of this.”
Despite the plethora of organizations, campus advocacy does not appear to reach these students’ hearts. Using a morbid example, she said, “No one didn’t think that [Nazi “Angel of Death” Josef] Mengele wasn’t a brilliant scientist. But he was a monster. We need to drill down that Israelis are people” — not just high-tech geniuses.
“We are allowing Israel to be defined by its detractors,” she emphasized.
Israeli military medics assist wounded Syrians on April 6, 2017. Seven wounded Syrians who crossed into Israel on Thursday night received immediate treatment and were hospitalized. They are the latest group of Syrians receiving free medical care through an Israeli military program operating since 2013. (AP Photo/Dusan Vranic)
Instead of stating dry facts, professionals must highlight Israel’s decency, morality and the diversity of the Israeli society in general — and in the context of the conflict — to be heard.
For example, former head of Hamas Ismail Haniyeh sent his granddaughter to Israel “because Israel is too decent to turn her away. People need to know this,” said Oppenheim.
In terms of practical solutions, Oppenheim suggested increasing the number of people who visit Israel at a younger age, and even starting prophylactic Birthright-Taglit trips before university.
“The sands under our feet are shifting,” said Oppenheim. “It is clear that the divide in our community is here for the next generation.”
@ vivarto:
Hello, Vivarto
I don’t believe anything is as it has “always been”. Israel was not even an independent state when I was born.
Here are some things to be concerned about:
1. The prospect of diaspora Jews “assimilating” (actually simply apostatizing — very few become Christians) is not good. Today, roughly half the world’s Jews live outside of Israel. If they would support their homeland instead of fighting it, Israel would not have the “Palestinian” problem it has today.
2. The Jewish people are not their own: They belong to the God of Israel. The last time they considered falling away in large numbers, God delivered a third of them to the Holocaust. That shocked the remainder to their senses, and the State of Israel was born. Do the Jews want a second shock?
“More than a decade ago, a diverse focus group of Americans was asked to describe a typical Italian house. Words like “lush, food, cooking, maternal, welcoming” quickly rolled of the tongue. The same group was asked about an Israeli home and a very different vibe is described: “concrete, strict, ultra-religious, middle-aged ultra-Orthodox men.””
Really, folks — they’re not that bad
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/c1/ca/f2/c1caf27dde6f2d954a8a2ce7d4da6a1b.jpg
once you get to know them.
For the next twenty-five years or so, the level of support for Israel, among young people who identify as being Jewish, is going to be bouncing along in a bear market; maybe hitting an all-time low in 2030.
But by the mid-2040s, such support will have firmed up to steady about where it is today.
By around 2070, the bull market in young, Jewish support will have become obvious, with poll numbers pushing historical highs ever higher.
By the turn-of-the-century, the poll numbers will be >= 90% . Yep.
This phenomenon will correlate with Jewish population statistics studied and boldly predicted — so far accurately — by Karlin (?) in the 1970s.
The explanation is simply the well known fact that the birth-rate of Orthodox Jews — who are reliable supporters of Israel — far surpasses that of left-wing Jews.
The Orthodox parents of today are now producing the numerous, young, Orthodox Jewish supporters of Israel fifty years from now.
It’s too bad that most of us — including Oppenheim — probably won’t be around to see it.
Nothing to worry about.
Some will assimilate and stop being Jewish,
others will eventually get tired of antisemitism and will come to Israel.
It is like it has always has been.
While emphasizing shared values is a good idea, even more important is to respond vigorously to all the specific allegations made against Israel (expulsion of Palestinians, theft or their land, brutal “occupation” of them,”apartheid,” racism, etc. etc.) is even more important. After all, if a doctor is accused of murder, what good does it do to point to all the thousands of patients he has healed, his great contributions to medical research and science, how nice he is to his wife and kids, his activity in all sorts of charities and community organizations, etc. The good of pointing out all this is limited, unless you can also disprove the allegations against him and obtain an aquittal. Israel’s friends seem to have a lot of trouble answering the allegations head on.