Jewish state
The Jewish state is the State of Israel, a sovereign nation in the Levant established on May 14, 1948, as the realization of Jewish national self-determination in their historic homeland following the United Nations General Assembly's adoption of Resolution 181 partitioning Mandatory Palestine into Jewish and Arab states.[1][2] Proclaimed amid the immediate invasion by neighboring Arab armies rejecting the partition, Israel declared itself the nation-state of the Jewish people, drawing on millennia of continuous Jewish ties to the land despite repeated exiles and foreign conquests.[1][3] Israel's Jewish character is enshrined in foundational documents, including the 2018 Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People, which affirms the state's role in exercising Jewish self-determination, promoting Jewish settlement, Hebrew as the official language, and national symbols rooted in Jewish history and scripture, such as the flag and anthem referencing biblical motifs.[4][3] This framework facilitates policies like the Law of Return, granting Jews worldwide automatic citizenship to counter historical vulnerability as a dispersed minority, particularly after the Holocaust that claimed six million Jewish lives.[3] Demographically, Jews comprise about three-quarters of Israel's population of over nine million, fostering a society where Jewish culture, holidays, and education predominate while maintaining democratic institutions with universal suffrage, including for the Arab minority comprising roughly one-fifth of citizens who enjoy legal equality and parliamentary representation.[3] Notable achievements include Israel's transformation from a resource-scarce immigrant society into a global leader in innovation, with advancements in desalination, cybersecurity, and medical technology driven by compulsory military service emphasizing technological edge and high R&D investment as percentages of GDP exceeding most nations.[3] Militarily, it has prevailed in multiple defensive wars against coalitions seeking its destruction, securing peace treaties with Egypt, Jordan, and through the Abraham Accords with several Arab states, while confronting persistent terrorism from groups like Hamas explicitly dedicated to eradicating the Jewish state.[1] Controversies arise principally from the unresolved Israeli-Palestinian conflict, where rejection of Jewish statehood by Palestinian leadership and allies frames Israel's existence as illegitimate, leading to debates over the 2018 Nation-State Law's codification of Jewish priority amid claims—often amplified by institutionally left-leaning international media and NGOs—of democratic erosion, though empirically Israel's Arab citizens vote, serve in judiciary and security forces (e.g., Druze), and benefit from state welfare without the ethnic privileges denied to Jews in surrounding Muslim-majority states.[4][3] This tension underscores the causal reality that sustaining a Jewish-majority state in a hostile region necessitates vigilant border security and settlement policies, prioritizing collective Jewish survival over universalist ideals that have historically imperiled minorities.