Anti-Israel demonstrations are in danger of morphing into anti-Semitism, writes Simon Schama
Much
of the student left has “some kind of problem with Jews”, said the
bravely decent Alex Chalmers last week in his resignation statement as
co-chair of the Oxford University Labour Club following a vote in favour
of Israeli Apartheid Week.
Labour’s national student organisation is
launching an inquiry but the “the problem with Jews” on the left is not
going away. In January a meeting of the Kings College London Israel
Society, gathered to hear from Ami Ayalon, a former head of Shin Bet,
the Israeli domestic intelligence service, who now champions a two-state solution, was violently interrupted by a chair-hurling, window-smashing crowd.
Last summer the Guardian columnist Owen Jones made
a courageous plea for
the left to confront this demon head on. Since then, however, criticism
of Israeli government policies has mutated into a rejection of Israel’s
right to exist; the Fatah position replaced by Hamas and Hizbollah
eliminationism. More darkly, support in the diaspora for Israel’s right
to survive is seen by the likes of Labour’s Gerald Kaufman, who accused
the government of being influenced in its Middle Eastern policy by “Jewish money”, as some sort of Jewish conspiracy.
The charge that anti-Zionism is morphing into
anti-Semitism is met with the retort that the former is being
disingenuously conflated with the latter. But when George Galloway (in
August 2014 during the last Gaza war) declared Bradford “an Israel-free
zone”; when French Jews
are unable to wear a yarmulke in public lest that invite assault, when
Holocaust Memorial day posters are defaced, it is evident that what we
are dealing with is, in Professor Alan Johnson’s accurate coinage, “anti-semitic anti-Zionism”.
When the international Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement singles
out Israel as the perpetrator of the world’s worst iniquities,
notwithstanding its right of self defence, it is legitimate to ask why
the left’s wrath does not extend, for example, to Russia which rains
down destruction on civilian populations in Syria?
With the retreat of Marxist socialism, militant energies have needed somewhere to go
Why
is it somehow proper to boycott Israeli academics and cultural
institutions, many of which are critical of government policy, but to
remain passive in the face of Saudi Arabia’s brutal punishment of anyone
whose exercise of freedom of conscience can be judged sacrilegious? Why
is the rage so conspicuously selective? Or, to put it another way, why
is it so much easier to hate the Jews?
Growing up in London in the shadow of world war two my pals and I talked about who might be the bad guys, should evil come our way. We agreed the Jew-haters would not wear brown shirts and jackboots but would probably be like people on the bus. It is not the golf club nose-holders we have to worry about now; it is those who, in their indignation at the sufferings visited on the Palestinians, and their indifference to almost-daily stabbings in the streets of Israel, have discovered the excitement of saying the unspeakable, making hay with history, so Israel is the new reich, and a military attack on Gaza indistinguishable from the industrially processed incineration of millions.
Enter the historian. And history says this: anti-Semitism has not been caused by Zionism; it is precisely the other way round. Israel was caused by the centuries-long dehumanisation of the Jews. The blood libel which accused Jews of murdering Christian children in order to drain their blood for the baking of Passover matzo began in medieval England but never went away, reviving in 16th century Italy, 18th century Poland, 19th century Syria and Bohemia, and 20th century Russia.
In 1980s Syria, Mustafa Tlass, Hafez al-Assad’s minister of defence, made his contribution with The Matzo of Zion, and last year the Israeli-Palestinian Islamist Raed Salah,
once invited to parliament by Jeremy Corbyn as an “honoured citizen”,
declared that Jews used blood for the dough of their “bread”.
For the Jews, the modern world turned out to be a lose-lose proposition. Once reviled for obstinate traditionalism; their insistence on keeping walled off from the rest (notwithstanding that it had been Christians who had done the walling) they were now attacked for integrating too well, speaking, dressing and working no differently but always with the aim of global domination.
What was a Jew to do? The communist Moses Hess, who had been Marx’s editor and friend, became persuaded, all too presciently, that the socialist revolution would do nothing to normalise Jewish existence, not least because so many socialists declared that emancipating the Jews had been a terrible mistake. Hess concluded that only self-determination could protect the Jews from the phobias of right and left alike. He became the first socialist Zionist.
But that was to inflict an entirely colonial and alien enterprise upon a Palestinian population, so the hostile narrative goes, who were penalised for the sins of Europe. That the Palestinians did become tragic casualties of a Judeo-Arab civil war over the country is indisputable, just as the 700,000 Jews who were violently uprooted from their homes in the Islamic world is equally undeniable. But to characterise the country in which the language, the religion and the cultural identity of the Jews was formed as purely a colonial anomaly is the product of the kind of historical innocence which is oblivious of, say, Jewish kabbalistic communities in Galilee in the 16th century or the substantial native Jewish majority in Jerusalem in the late 19th century.
None of this unbroken history of Jews and Judaism in Palestine is likely to do much to cool the heat of the anti-colonial narrative of the alien intruder, especially on the left. With the collapse of the Soviet Union and the retreat of Marxist socialism around the world, militant energies have needed somewhere to go.
The battle against inequalities under liberal capitalism has mobilised some of that passion, but postcolonial guilt has fired up the war against its prize whipping boy, Zionism, like no other cause. Every such crusade needs a villain along with its banners and I wonder who that could possibly be?
The writer is an FT contributing editor. He will be taking part in a debate on February 27 during Jewish Book Week.
http://nathanrabinowich.com/nathan-rabinowich-publication/newest-publication-from-rabbi-dr-nosson-dovid-rabinowich/
ReplyDeleteWhile this may not pose a threat to children, the poskim say that someone like him should be removed from all positions related to chinuch & rabbonus. (Sorry Nosson Dovid, we read your little pshettl where you twisted the Zkan Aharon's teshuva out of context. It just doesn't fit your situation).
Rabinowich launched his new sefer in a public shiur type setting.
Note his website posting date: FEBRUARY 18, 2016
http://theunorthodoxjew.blogspot.com/2009/08/battles-that-brought-down-yeshivah.html?showComment=1251613164662#c7331190750050026862
ReplyDeleteA mentally ill bochur Tzvi Yechezkel Ference who was thrown out of Ner Yisroel in 10th grade came on to UOJ in 2009 to rant against Rabbi Yosef Tendler for not talking to him anymore after throwing him out.
http://www.local10.com/news/local/safety-advisory-issued-at-um
ABC News later ran a story that Ference was banned from University of Miami for harassing staff & students and will be arrested if steps foot there again.
http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/letters-to-the-editor/article3857695.html
In 2014 he wrote would would eventually prove to be a very bizarre letter to the editor of the Miami Herald blasting dangerous drivers.
Bizarre because he started fantasizing on Facebook that he wanted to die by ramming his car head on into other drivers.
http://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/tzvi-ference-commits-suicide-in-wrong-way-turnpike-crash-leaves-facebook-note-behind-8268922
Last night the lowlife did it, killing the innocent in the process.
(He tried, unsuccessfully, to kill innocents)
ReplyDeleteAvi Shafran just calling me finif minit tzerik altz vindication, az zet men fin Ference vhat kind of lowlives hanging out mit UOJ!
ReplyDeleteHa!
How much do you want to bet that had Ference managed to murder other drivers & then survive himself, the Agudah would have gone on another binge to intervene on his behalf, like they did for cop killer Grossman, despite that the gedolei Eretz Yisroel said the Agudah has no recht al pi halacha to do so?
ReplyDeleteSome brainless Agudah followers (maybe from Philly yeshiva?) were calling prosecutors during the Grossman fiasco to scream at them that 'goyim are not allowed to execute Yidden'. And they were making pathetic threats to vote out of office various politicians who demanded Grossman be executed.
ReplyDeleteOne or two of them got so carried away that they called relatives of the murdered police officer to threaten them.
These are the "wonderful" products of the Agudah keeping a tight grip over the flow of information. They have produced a bunch of imbeciles who don't even have a concept we are in golus and who manage to cause the worst degree of misgareh b'umos.
It was for the same reason that the gedolei EY were against the Rubashkin shnorfest assifos for convicted criminal Sholom Mordechai. And the more something defies logic, the more Agudah operatives spring into action. For Rubashkin there were thugs sent around to threaten rabbonim who sided with the gedolei EY against the Agudah. Some of the players in that gangsterei like Pinny Lipschutz & the little pipsqueak Larry Gordon were mostly driven by profit considerations as opposed to ideology.
http://www.buildabear.com/shopping/home.jsp
ReplyDeletePinny Lipschutz who has been living in the vochens in Lakewood for years now, was going around the last while applying tremendous pressure on all American roshei yeshiva to not sign against the Kaminetzkys making mamzerim.