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Why Israel is the World's Happiest Country
By Spengler
Envy surrounds no country on Earth like the state of Israel, and with good
reason: by objective measures, Israel is the happiest nation on Earth at the
60th anniversary of its founding. It is one of the wealthiest, freest and
best-educated; and it enjoys a higher life expectancy than Germany or the
Netherlands. But most remarkable is that Israelis appear to love life and hate
death more than any other nation. If history is made not by rational design but
by the demands of the human heart, as I argued last
week , the light heart of the Israelis in face of continuous danger is a
singularity worthy of a closer look.
Can it be a coincidence that this most ancient of nations [1], and the only
nation persuaded that it was summoned into history for God's service, consists
of individuals who appear to love life more than any other people? As a simple
index of life-preference, I plot the fertility rate versus the suicide rate of
35 industrial countries, that is, the proportion of people who choose to create
new life against the proportion who choose to destroy their own. Israel stands
alone, positioned in the upper-left-hand-quadrant, or life-loving, portion of
the chart [2]. Those who believe in Israel's divine election might see a
special grace reflected in its love of life.
In a world given over to morbidity, the state of Israel still teaches the world
love of life, not in the trivial sense of joie de vivre, but rather as a
solemn celebration of life. In
another location, I argued, "It's easy for the Jews to talk about
delighting in life. They are quite sure that they are eternal, while other
peoples tremble at the prospect impending extinction. It is not their
individual lives that the Jews find so pleasant, but rather the notion of a
covenantal life that proceeds uninterrupted through the generations."
Still, it is remarkable to observe by what wide a margin the Israelis win the
global happiness sweepstakes.
Nations go extinct, I have argued in the past,
because the individuals who comprise these nations choose collectively to die
out. Once freedom replaces the fixed habits of traditional society, people who
do not like their own lives do not trouble to have children. Not the sword of
conquerors, but the indigestible sourdough of everyday life threatens the life
of the nations, now dying out at a rate without precedent in recorded history.
Israel is surrounded by neighbors willing to kill themselves in order to
destroy it. "As much as you love life, we love death," Muslim clerics
teach; the same formula is found in a Palestinian textbook for second graders. Apart from the fact that the
Arabs are among the least free, least educated, and (apart from the oil states)
poorest peoples in the world, they also are the unhappiest, even in their
wealthiest kingdoms.
The contrast of Israeli happiness and Arab despondency is what makes peace an
elusive goal in the region. It cannot be attributed to material conditions of
life. Oil-rich Saudi Arabia ranks 171st on an international quality of
life index, below Rwanda. Israel is tied with Singapore on this index,
although it should be observed that Israel ranks a runaway first on my
life-preference index, whereas Singapore comes in dead last.
Even less can we blame unhappiness on experience, for no nation has suffered
more than the Jews in living memory, nor has a better excuse to be miserable.
Arabs did not invent suicide attacks, but they have produced a population pool
willing to die in order to inflict damage greater than any in history. One
cannot help but conclude that Muslim clerics do not exaggerate when they
express contempt for life.
Israel's love of life, moreover, is more than an ethnic characteristic. Those
who know Jewish life through the eccentric lens of Jewish-American novelists
such as Saul Bellow and Philip Roth, or the films of Woody Allen, imagine the
Jews to be an angst-ridden race of neurotics. Secular Jews in America are no
more fertile than their Gentile peers, and by all indications quite as
miserable.
For one thing, Israelis are far more religious than American Jews. Two-thirds
of Israelis believe in God, although only a quarter observe their religion
strictly. Even Israelis averse to religion evince a different kind of
secularism than we find in the secular West. They speak the language of the
Bible and undergo 12 years of Bible studies in state elementary and secondary
schools.
Faith in God's enduring love for a people that believes it was summoned for his
purposes out of a slave rabble must be part of the explanation. The most religious
Israelis make the most babies. Ultra-Orthodox families produce nine children on
average. That should be no surprise, for people of faith are more fertile than
secular people, as I showed in a statistical comparison
across countries.
Traditional and modern societies have radically different population profiles,
for traditional women have little choice but to spend their lives pregnant in
traditional society. In the modern world, where fertility reflects choice
rather than compulsion, the choice to raise children expresses love of life.
The high birthrate in Arab countries still bound by tradition does not stand
comparison to Israeli fertility, by far the highest in the modern world.
The faith of Israelis is unique. Jews sailed to Palestine as an act of faith,
to build a state against enormous odds and in the face of hostile encirclement,
joking, "You don't have to be crazy to be a Zionist, but it helps."
In 1903 Theodor Herzl, the Zionist movement's secular founder, secured British
support for a Jewish state in Uganda, but his movement shouted him down, for
nothing short of the return to Zion of Biblical prophecy would requite it. In
place of a modern language the Jewish settlers revived Hebrew, a liturgical
language only since the 4th century BC, in a feat of linguistic volition
without precedent. It may be that faith burns brighter in Israel because Israel
was founded by a leap of faith.
Two old Jewish jokes illustrate the Israeli frame of mind.
Two elderly Jewish ladies are sitting on a park bench in St Petersburg,
Florida. "Mrs Levy," asks the first, "what do you hear from your
son Isaac in Detroit?" "It's just awful," Mrs Levy replies.
"His wife died a year ago and left him with two little girls. Now he's
lost his job as an accountant with an auto-parts company, and his health
insurance will lapse in a few weeks. With the real estate market the way it is,
he can't even sell his house. And the baby has come down with leukemia and
needs expensive treatment. He's beside himself, and doesn't know what to do.
But does he write a beautiful Hebrew letter - it's a pleasure to read."
There are layers to this joke, but the relevant one here is that bad news is
softened if written in the language of the Bible, which to Jews always conveys
hope.
The second joke involves the American businessman who emigrated to Israel
shortly after its founding. On his arrival, he orders a telephone, and waits
for weeks without a response. At length he applies in person to the telephone
company, and is shown into the office of an official who explains that there is
a two-year waiting list, and no way to jump the queue. "Do you mean there
is no hope?," the American asks. "It is forbidden for a Jew to say
there is no hope!," thunders the official. "No chance, maybe."
Hope transcends probability.
If faith makes the Israelis happy, then why are the Arabs, whose observance of
Islam seems so much stricter, so miserable? Islam offers its adherents not love
- for Allah does not reveal Himself in love after the fashion of YHWH - but
rather success. "The Islamic world cannot endure without confidence in
victory, that to 'come to prayer' is the same thing as to 'come to success'.
Humiliation - the perception that the ummah cannot reward those who
submit to it - is beyond its capacity to endure," I argued in another location.
Islam, or "submission", does not understand faith - trust in a loving
God even when His actions appear incomprehensible - in the manner of Jews and
Christians. Because the whim of Allah controls every event from the orbit of
each electron to the outcome of battles, Muslims know only success or failure
at each moment in time.
The military, economic and cultural failures of Islamic societies are
intolerable in Muslim eyes; Jewish success is an abomination, for in the view
of Muslims it is the due of the faithful, to be coveted and seized from the
usurpers at the first opportunity. It is not to much of a stretch to assert
that Israel's love of live, its happiness in faith, is precisely the
characteristic that makes a regional peace impossible to achieve. The
usurpation of the happiness that Muslims believe is due to them is sufficient
cause to kill one's self in order to take happiness away from the Jewish enemy.
If Israel's opponents fail to ruin Israel's happiness, there is at least a spark
of hope that they may decide to choose happiness for themselves.
Why are none of the Christian nations as happy as Israel? Few of the European
nations can be termed "Christian" at all. Poland, the last European
country with a high rate of attendance at Mass (at about 45%), nonetheless
shows a fertility rate of only 1.27, one of Europe's lowest, and a suicide rate
of 16 per 100,000. Europe's faith always wavered between adherence to
Christianity as a universal religion and ethnic idolatry under a Christian
veneer. European nationalism nudged Christianity to the margin during the 19th
century, and the disastrous world wars of the past century left Europeans with
confidence neither in Christianity nor in their own nationhood.
Only in pockets of the American population does one find birth rates comparable
to Israel's, for example among evangelical Christians. There is no direct way
to compare the happiness of American Christians and Israelis, but the
tumultuous and Protean character of American religion is not as congenial to
personal satisfaction. My suspicion is that Israel's happiness is entirely
unique.
It is fashionable these days to speculate about the end of Israel, and Israel's
strategic position presents scant cause for optimism, as I contended recently.
Israel's future depends on the Israelis. During 2,000 years of exile, Jews
remained Jews despite forceful and often violent efforts to make them into
Christians or Muslims. One has to suppose that they did not abandon Judaism
because they liked being Jewish. With utmost sincerity, the Jews prayed thrice
daily, "It is our duty to praise the Master of all, to acclaim the
greatness of the One who forms all creation, for God did not make us like the
nations of other lands, and did not make us the same as other families of the
Earth. God did not place us in the same situations as others, and our destiny
is not the same as anyone else's."
If the Israelis are the happiest country on Earth, as the numbers indicate, it
seems possible that they will do what is required to keep their country,
despite the odds against them. I do not know whether they will succeed. If
Israel fails, however, the rest of the world will lose a unique gauge of the
human capacity for happiness as well as faith. I cannot conceive of a sadder
event.
Notes
[1] There are many ancient nations, eg, the Basques, but no other that speaks
the same language as it did more than 3,000 years ago, occupies more or less
the same territory, and, most important, maintains a continuous literary record
of its history, which is to say an interrupted national consciousness.
[2] The countries shown in the chart are:
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Suicide
Rate
(per 100,000)
|
Fertility
Rate
|
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Israel
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6.2
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2.77
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United
States
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11
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2.1
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France
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18
|
1.98
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Iceland
|
12
|
1.91
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Ireland
|
9.7
|
1.85
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Denmark
|
13.6
|
1.74
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Finland
|
20.3
|
1.73
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Serbia
|
19.3
|
1.69
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Sweden
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13.2
|
1.67
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Netherlands
|
9.3
|
1.66
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United
Kingdom
|
7
|
1.66
|
|
Canada
|
11.6
|
1.57
|
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Portugal
|
11
|
1.49
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Switzerland
|
17.4
|
1.44
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Estonia
|
20.3
|
1.42
|
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Croatia
|
19.6
|
1.41
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Germany
|
13
|
1.41
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Bulgaria
|
13
|
1.4
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Russia
|
34.3
|
1.4
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Austria
|
16.9
|
1.38
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Greece
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3.2
|
1.36
|
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Hungary
|
27.7
|
1.34
|
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Slovakia
|
13.3
|
1.34
|
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Italy
|
7.1
|
1.3
|
|
Spain
|
8.2
|
1.3
|
|
Poland
|
15.9
|
1.27
|
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Slovenia
|
25.6
|
1.27
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Ukraine
|
23.8
|
1.25
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Bosnia
|
11.8
|
1.24
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Belarus
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35.1
|
1.23
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Czech
Republic
|
15.5
|
1.23
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Japan
|
24
|
1.22
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Lithuania
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40.2
|
1.22
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Singapore
|
10.1
|
1.08
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Hong
Kong
|
18.6
|
1
|
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