The ideal of a “Jewish and democratic” state is nothing new. The phrase first appeared in the State Education Law of 1953, designed to reflect a hopeful, but basically flawed and conflicting resolution of values. The tensions inherent to “Jewish and democratic” are both theoretical and practical. Can a state that explicitly defines itself as Jewish also respect the fundamental democratic value of equality of rights for all? How does this apply, for example, to the Arab minority that is 20 percent of Israel’s citizenry? How does this apply to the other 80 percent of the population, among whom the meaning of Judaism, Zionism, and even who is a Jew is highly controversial?

Nevertheless, the Jewish nature of the state was fundamentally established in the section of the Declaration of Independence declaring Israel to be a state of Jewish immigration (aliyah) and of “The ingathering of the exiles.” 

This was legislated into the Law of Return, passed in 1950. The 1948 Declaration of Independence includes Israel’s explicit commitments to democratic values: 

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