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Indybay Feature

It never ends with just Jews and gays

by Sadqa il Fillistine / NYC Indy
those who care for freedom, democracy and human rights must realize that anti-Semitism or mythic anti-Zionism will not liberate the supposed victims of Jews but the opposite: It will perpetuate their self-definition as victims and thus perpetuate their victimhood. More than hate destroys the hated, hate destroys the hater.


It is coming simultaneously from three different directions: first, a radicalized Islamic youth inflamed by extremist rhetoric; second, a left-wing anti-American cognitive elite with strong representation in the European media; third, a resurgent far right, as anti-Muslim as it is anti-Jewish. It is being fed by the instability of globalization, the insecurity of the post-Cold War international arena, and the still-undischarged trauma of September 11. It has been allowed to grow unchecked because of a general unwillingness among Europe's political leadership to confront the problem head on ("For evil to triumph," said Burke, "it is necessary only for the good man to do nothing"). It has been aggravated by the breakdown of a morality of right and wrong acts in favor of a therapeutic ethic which "feels the pain" of the perpetrators of violence. Taken in combination, these are powerful forces, to which the countervailing influences of reason, responsibility and restraint are as unequal now as they have been at any other time of populist ferment and generalized fear.

Anti-Semitism exists and is dangerous whenever two contradictory factors appear in combination - the belief that Jews are so powerful that they are responsible for the evils of the world, and the knowledge that they are so powerless that they can be attacked with impunity. Those two factors are in abundant evidence today in many parts of the world. That this has happened with such speed and so little protest, less than 60 years after the Holocaust, is profoundly shocking. No one - not Jews, not Muslims, not Christians, no one - should suffer this kind of hate, and the moral credibility of more than one civilization is at stake. On February 28, I thought it was sufficient to sound a warning. Now I think more is needed: a call to all those with a sense of history and humanity to say: Stop. No problem was ever solved by hate, falsehood, racism, religiously inspired terror, and the willingness to deflect attention from real abuses of power, human rights and moral responsibility. Now is the time for good men and women to do something: to say "never again," and mean just that: Never again....

Let me state the point as simply as I can: anti-Semitism is alive, active and virulent in the year 2002, after more than half a century of Holocaust education, interfaith dialogue, United Nations declarations, dozens of museums and memorials, hundreds of films, thousands of courses, and tens of thousands of books dedicated to exposing its evils; after the Stockholm Conference, January 27, 2000, after the creation of a National Holocaust Memorial Day, after 2,000 religious leaders came together in the United Nations in August 2000 to commit themselves to fight hatred and engender mutual respect. After all this.

What more could have been done? What more could and can we do to fight anti-Semitism? Yet it exists today in many parts of the world: in the Middle East, Africa, Southeast Asia and yes, in Europe, in more virulent forms than at any time since the Holocaust. There can be little doubt that it has been the most successful ideology of modern times. Fascism came and went. Soviet communism came and went. Anti-Semitism came and stayed.

Like a virus

How does anti-Semitism survive? Sadly, the answer is this: Anti-Semitism is not a belief system, a coherent set of ideas. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Jews were hated because they were rich and because they were poor; because they were capitalists and because they were communists; because they kept to themselves and because they got everywhere; because they were superstitious believers and because they were rootless cosmopolitans who believed nothing.

Anti-Semitism is not a belief. It is a virus - and like a virus, it mutates. The human body has the most sophisticated of mechanisms - the immune system - to defend itself against viruses. It develops antibodies. Viruses defeat the immune system because they mutate. They are then able to get past the body's defenses, in effect by persuading them that they are friends, not foes. The immune system, alert to last year's virus, fails to recognize this year's.

The classic case of mutation happened in Europe in the 19th century. There was a belief that in an age of enlightenment - emancipation, the French Revolution, the secular nation state - prejudice would die, not least the age-old Christian prejudice against Judaism and Jews. What happened instead was that religious anti-Judaism mutated into racial anti-Semitism.

The word `anti-Semitism' itself was coined in 1879. What made racial anti-Semitism so much worse than its religious precursors was that now Jews were hated not because of what they believed, not because of how they lived, but because of who they were. You can eliminate a religion by forcibly converting all its followers. You can eliminate a race only by genocide. As Raul Hilberg put it: "There is a straight line from `You have no right to live among us as Jews,' to `You have no right to live among us' to `You have no right to live.'"

What we are witnessing today is the second great mutation of anti-Semitism in modern times, from racial anti-Semitism to religious anti-Zionism (with the added premise that all Jews are Zionists). It uses all the medieval myths - the blood libel, poisoning of wells, killers of the Lord's anointed, incarnation of evil - transposed into a new key and context. This could not have succeeded, however, without one mutation - a mutation so ingenious, demonic and evil that it paralyzes the immune systems the West built up over the past half-century.

The mutation is this: that the worst crimes of anti-Semites in the past - racism, ethnic cleansing, attempted genocide, crimes against humanity - are now attributed to Jews and the State of Israel, so that if you are against Nazism, you must ipso facto be utterly opposed to Jews. I regard this as one of the most blasphemous inversions in the history of the world's oldest hate. I am shocked that so few non-Jews in Europe have recognized it and denounced it.

What then shall we do? I have three messages - one to Jews; a second to antiSemites; the third to us, to humanity as a whole.

My first message is to the Jewish community in this country and throughout the world. We must not internalize this hate. The great mistake Jews made in the 19th century - and it was a mistake made by good and serious people - was that to believe that since Jews are the object of anti-Semitism, they must therefore be the cause of anti-Semitism.

That is untrue. We now have copious evidence that there can be fierce anti-Semitism in countries where there are no Jews at all. The moment we internalize anti-Semitism, the result is that tortured psychology - from ambivalence to self-hatred - against which my last book, "Radical Then, Radical Now" [in America, "A Letter in the Scroll"] was directed. Ambivalence and self-hatred have injured Jewish life for a century, and we still suffer its after-effects today.

Some years ago, in the early years of Russian Glasnost, the following episode occurred (I heard it from one of my rabbinical colleagues). Glasnost allowed Jews in the Soviet Union to live freely and openly as Jews for the first time in 70 years. Unfortunately, it also brought to the surface a degree of anti-Semitism that had been suppressed before.

A British rabbi went out to Russia in the late 1980s to help reconstruct Jewish life. One day he had a visit from a young woman. She said, "Rabbi, all my life I have hidden the fact that I was a Jew. No one ever commented on it. Now, though, when I walk in the street, people shout out, Zhid, Zhid [Jew, Jew]. What shall I do?"

The rabbi said, "You don't look Jewish. If you hadn't told me, I would never have known that you were a Jew. Look at me. With my black hat and my black yarmulka and my beard, people probably know that I'm a Jew. Yet in all these months that I have been here, no one has ever shouted out to me Zhid. Why do you think that is?"

The girl was silent for a minute, and then replied, "Because they know that if they shout `Jew' at you, you will take it as a compliment. If they shout `Jew' at me, they know I will take it as an insult." The best way for Jews to combat anti- Semitism, beyond eternal vigilance, is to wear our identity with pride.

Hate destroys

I turn now to the anti-Semite. I say to him or her: Forgive me, but I cannot return hate with hate. I fight my hatreds. You must fight yours. You cannot fight my battles and I cannot fight yours. But this I can tell you: When bad things happen to any of us, there are two different questions we can ask - and which we ask defines what kind of person we are. We can ask, "How can I put it right?" Or we can ask, "Who did this to me?"

The first question - "How can I put it right?" - defines me as a subject, a moral agent, a person with free will. The second question - "Who did this to me?" - defines me as an object, a victim who, being a victim, can only experience resentment and rage. If there is anything that paralyzes human freedom and destroys human responsibility, it is resentment and rage.

Throughout history, anti-Semitism has been the weapon of choice of tyrants, dictators and rulers of totalitarian states because, more effectively than anything else, it deflects all justified complaints - of the hungry, the poor, the uneducated, the sick, the repressed, those denied the most basic human freedoms - away from those responsible, and projects them on a mythical enemy elsewhere.

That is why those who care for freedom, democracy and human rights must realize that anti-Semitism or mythic anti-Zionism will not liberate the supposed victims of Jews but the opposite: It will perpetuate their self-definition as victims and thus perpetuate their victimhood. It will gain them sympathy but deprive them of all responsibility. It will allow them to embark on policies that, in more than one sense, are suicidal. The link between self-defined victims and their sympathizers (whose intentions are nothing if not noble) is what in therapeutic terms is called co-dependency, and its effect is profoundly self-destructive. More than hate destroys the hated, hate destroys the hater.

Finally I turn to us, all of us in our shared humanity. There is something I must say in its full depth and gravity. Since the destruction of the First Temple, nearly 2,600 years ago, Jews have known the bread of affliction. Think of the words that Jewish history has added to our vocabulary - expulsion, inquisition, ghetto, pogrom, Holocaust. I do not want to dwell on that history. It is too painful, and besides, I do not think it defines who and what we are. Judaism is about sanctifying life, not remembering death.

However, during those 26 centuries Jews adopted three strategies in order to survive. The first was initiated by the prophet Jeremiah at the beginning of Israel's history of exile. He sent a letter to the Jews who had been forcibly taken from Israel, or who had fled. He told them (Jeremiah 29): "Seek the peace and prosperity of the city to which you were exiled, and pray to God for it, for in its peace, you will find peace." That is an idea that was ancient even in Jeremiah's day. It goes back to the opening words of Jewish history (Genesis 12) and to God's first call to Abraham, in which He tells him to act so that "through you, all the families of earth will be blessed." That was, and remains, the Jewish vocation: to be true to our faith while being a blessing to others.

That is what Jews sought to do for some 25 centuries: to contribute to the countries in which they lived by developing businesses, enlarging trade, adding to the arts and sciences, to poetry and philosophy, and above all, to the spiritual heritage of mankind.

That was the first strategy. It failed. It failed because, until the 19th century, Jews had no civil rights. They lacked the protection of the law. They were dependent on the favor of the ruler, and when it was no longer in his interest to keep Jews, they were expelled: from England in 1290, and then, in the course of the next two centuries, from virtually every country in Europe, culminating in 101 years of anti-Jewish persecution in Spain and finally the expulsion, in 1492. Thus, the first solution failed.

What was the second? It arose in 19th century Europe, and came about as a result of enlightenment, emancipation and the birth of the secular nation-state. For the first time in history, Jews were offered equal rights as citizens. The promise was that the rule of reason would dispel the ancient mists of prejudice.

The failure of that dream is one of the most devastating chapters in European history. The depth of its failure is measured by this: that virtually all the great philosophers of modernity - Voltaire, Fichte, Kant, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Frege - made sharply anti- Semitic statements in the course of their work (these are documented in my book "The Politics of Hope"). The greatest German philosopher of the 20th century, Martin Heidegger, was an enthusiastic member of the Nazi Party who never, in the postwar years, recanted, atoned or apologized for his acts. Thus the Europe of reason, enlightenment and philosophy became the Europe of the Holocaust. (I speak, of course, not of Britain, one of the honorable exceptions). The second solution failed.

No safety in Europe

Zionism was born in the consciousness of that failure. It began in 1862 with Moses Hess, friend of Karl Marx, and the first person to diagnose the emerging German anti-Semitism. It was followed in 1882 by the assimilated Russian Jewish doctor, Leon Pinsker, after the great Russian pogroms of 1881. Then, in 1895, Theodor Herzl, a Viennese journalist covering the Dreyfus trial in Paris, heard the crowds cry "A mort les Juifs" ("Death to the Jews"). France at that time was widely regarded as the most civilized nation in Europe, the home of the revolution, the birthplace of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen. When he heard that cry on the Parisian streets, Herzl knew that Europe was no longer safe for Jews. This is what he wrote a year later. It sums up the experience of a century of Jewish life in Western Europe:

"We have sincerely tried everywhere to merge with the national communities in which we live, seeking only to preserve the faith of our fathers. It is not permitted to us. In vain are we loyal patriots, sometimes super-loyal. In vain do we make the same sacrifices of life and property as our fellow citizens. In vain do we strive to enhance the fame of our native lands in the arts and sciences, or her wealth by trade and commerce. In our native lands, where we have lived for centuries, we are still decried as aliens, often by men whose ancestors had not yet come, at a time when Jewish sighs had long been heard in the country."

He added: "I think we shall not be left in peace."

The idea of Hess, Pinsker and Herzl was simple. If the nation-states of Europe had no place for Jews, then Jews must have a nation-state of their own. Sadly, it took the murder of two-thirds of Europe's Jews before the state was born.

That solution must not fail. For the only fourth solution is the one the Nazis called "the final solution." That is why Jews must have a safe collective home, in the sense defined by the poet Robert Frost, who wrote "home is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to let you in."

From here on, we must stand and fight our ground. There is no other. We must fight it with courage, integrity, honesty, cogency, with neither animus nor hate nor desire for revenge, but we must fight it - and Jews must not be left, yet again, to fight it alone.

Why have Jews been persecuted and hated throughout the ages? Not because they were better than anyone else, not because they were worse than anyone else, but because they were different and because there is a natural human tendency to dislike the unlike, to fear the stranger and hate what we fear.

But surely, every nation, each faith, every culture is different. That is so. What made Jews singular is that, with more tenacity than anyone else, they insisted on the right to be different, the duty to be different, the dignity of difference. In the days of the Alexandrian Empire they refused to be Hellenized, so they were persecuted. In the days of Rome, they fought for the right to practice their faith, and they were persecuted. In Christian Europe they resisted conversion, and they were persecuted. Today, in an Islamic Middle East, they are not Muslims; and so they are persecuted. Had the majority of Jews capitulated under any of these dispensations, they would have spared themselves and their children much suffering and grief, and today there would be no Judaism and no Jews.

Our ancestors believed - I dare still to believe - that no one should be forced to abandon his faith, traditions, history and loyalties to have the right to be free, to walk down a street without fear of being attacked, to build a place of worship without fear of it being burned down. I was a student at Cambridge. The synagogue in Cambridge, built in the 1930s, has no windows in the walls that face the street, because of the fear then that if there were, they would be broken. That fear has now returned, if not in Cambridge, then in Paris, Marseilles, Brussels, Berlin.

Anti-Semitism is a crime against humanity - not because Jews are human beings (I hope that much will be conceded) but because human beings are Jews, by which I mean difference is the essence of our humanity. There is a fine rabbinic saying, 2,000 years old, that "When a human being makes many coins in the same mint, they are all the same. God makes every person in the same image - His image - and they are each different." The miracle of creation is that unity in heaven creates diversity on earth. Or, as I have put it elsewhere, the fundamental challenge is to see God's image in one who is not in our image. A world that has no room for Jews, has no space for difference; and a world that lacks space for difference has no room for humanity. That is why anti-Semitism is not a, but the, paradigm of a crime against humanity.

The unfolding tragedy in Israel will not be solved by demonization, myth, blood libels, reiterations of medieval fantasies, modern forgeries like the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, attacks on Jews and synagogues throughout the world, evasions, lies, and conspiracy theories. Political problems have political solutions, and they require nothing less than truth, fact, relentless honesty, self-criticism, the capacity to compromise, and a willingness to prefer an imperfect peace to the perfect purity of holy war, sacred suicide, and murderous martyrdom. Anti-Semitism begins with Jews but never ends with Jews. Now is the time for those who care about humanity to join in the defense of humanity, by protesting this newest mutation of the world's oldest hate.

by .........
"That is why anti-Semitism is not a, but the, paradigm of a crime against humanity."

The number of American natives killed in the New World Holocaust, which is ongoing, is more than twentyfold the number who died in the Nazi Holocaust.

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