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What's
behind the 'new anti-Semitism'?
So, who is an anti-Semite today? It is very difficult to answer
that question, since virtually no one in the West is prepared to
acknowledge that they dislike Jewish people or Jewishness. Yet some
commentators insist that we are confronted with a new phenomenon
– ‘The New Anti-Semitism’ – which is apparently
thriving and becoming increasingly menacing.
For evidence of a new form of the oldest prejudice, they point
to a rise in the number of physical and verbal attacks on Jewish
people in Europe; to the expansion of anti-Jewish hatred and prejudice
to the Muslim world; and to what they consider to be prejudice dressed
up as political criticism, where hatred and invective against the
Jews is expressed through anti-Zionism and the criticism of Israel.
In recent months, the debate about the new anti-Semitism has shifted
to the US. There, a number of individuals critical of Israel and
Israeli policies have been accused of being anti-Semitic. In turn,
the critics of Israel argue that the charge of anti-Semitism is
a mendacious attempt to deflect legitimate criticism of Israeli
policy, particularly in relation to the Palestinians.
Unfortunately it is quite easy to become disoriented in the debate
about the new anti-Semitism, since its focus is often on what people
‘really mean’ rather than on what they actually say.
Bret Stephens of the Wall Street Journal is one of those who argues
that many critics of Israel are motivated by an anti-Semitic impulse.
However, he acknowledges that it is difficult to demonstrate, convincingly,
that someone is anti-Semitic. ‘[There] aren’t many anti-Semites
today who will actually come out with it and say “I hate Jews”’,
he notes. Therefore, ‘spotting an anti-Semite requires forensic
skills, interpretive wits, and moral judgement’ (1).
However, combining forensic skills, interpretive wits and moral
judgements is not necessarily conducive to searching for the truth.
Rather, such methods of ‘investigation’ might lead individuals
to see something that isn’t there. Making a moral judgment
call about what an individual really means is a highly subjective
act, which can be influenced by the judger’s own prejudices
and by other cultural and political assumptions. If such a method
for ‘spotting an anti-Semite’ were to become institutionalised,
we would surely end up with a definition of anti-Semitism so entirely
subjective and detached from intent that it would become all but
meaningless. Just as we already have ‘unwitting racism’
in the UK, perhaps we would end up with accusations of ‘unwitting
anti-Semitism’ against those judged by other people’s
interpretive wits to be anti-Semitic.
Stephens’ call for moral judgements on what people really
mean can only encourage an inquisitorial climate. Yet he does highlight
a genuine problem with public debate today. We live in a world where
speech is heavily policed, and where people are actually discouraged
from saying what they genuinely believe. People habitually censor
themselves in anticipation of the charge that they are defying some
contemporary speech code, whether formal or informal. Increasingly,
fear of being told ‘You can’t say that!’ is giving
rise to a culture of self-censorship. At a time when calling someone
‘old’ instead of ‘elderly’ is likely to
lead to charges of insensitivity, or using the word blind or handicapped
can cause a storm of controversy, people have become careful indeed
about what they say and how they say it.
Matters are even more complicated when it comes to anti-Semitism.
Since the Holocaust, and especially in recent decades, very few
in the West have openly expressed anti-Jewish sentiments. Indeed,
in some European countries it is illegal to make anti-Semitic comments,
and even where it is not illegal, there are powerful cultural barriers
against holding or giving voice to such views. The marginalisation
and even criminalisation of public expressions of anti-Semitism
are in part understandable responses to the tragic events of the
Second World War. They are also a consequence of what we might call
the sanctification of the Holocaust.
In recent years, the Holocaust has been elevated to the status
of a secular truth and a moral compass. At a time of great moral
uncertainty in the West, the Holocaust increasingly serves as a
unique symbol of evil, and thus atoning for it is seen as an act
of virtue. There are Holocaust Memorial Days, through which governments
communicate their key values, including multiculturalism, anti-bullying
and the protection and promotion of self-esteem. There are more
and more Holocaust museums and memorials that seek to remind us
what can happen when we lose our humanity. The Holocaust is now
taught as part of citizenship or religious studies classes in numerous
schools, and is discussed in a growing number of ethical and moral
schoolbooks aimed at children.
It is not an exaggeration to say that this transformation of the
Holocaust into a secular sacred symbol underpins the West’s
entire moral universe today. That is another reason why, even by
the standards of the prevailing climate of self-censorship, explicit
anti-Semitic pronouncements are relatively so rare. This symbolisation
of the Holocaust also helps to explain some of what lies behind
today’s ‘new anti-Semitism’.
Is the genie out of the bottle?
Those who believe that there is a new anti-Semitism also fear that
the moral authority of the Holocaust is being breached. One critic
of the ‘new anti-Semitism’, Alvin Rosenfeld, writes
that ‘despite the huge scandal of the Holocaust, which most
Jews probably thought would prevent public manifestation of anti-Semitism
from ever appearing again, the genie is once more out of the bottle’
(2). According to Rosenfeld, author of a pamphlet on the new anti-Semitism
published by the American Jewish Committee, Jew-hatred has become
globalised and has become particularly virulent in the Muslim world.
He is especially concerned about what he considers to be the emergence
of a strident anti-Zionist sentiment in the West, one that increasingly
calls into question the right of Israel to exist.
In essence, Rosenfeld’s pamphlet is a response to the growing
influence of anti-Israeli criticism among American public figures
and intellectuals – including some Jewish thinkers. In recent
years, and over the past year in particular, Israeli policy has
come under fire from a variety of public figures in the US. Stephen
Walt and John Mearsheimer’s controversial criticism of the
‘Israel lobby’ in the London Review of Books and former
president Jimmy Carter’s attack on various Israeli policies
are symptomatic of a new mood of estrangement from Zionism within
Washington. At the same time, numerous intellectuals – Tony
Judt, Tony Kushner, Adrienne Rich – have also laid into Israel,
attacking its policies and its global role.
Rosenfeld, like many of his co-thinkers, takes the view that ‘anti-Zionism,
in fact, is the form that much of today’s anti-Semitism takes,
so much so that some now see earlier attempts to rid the world of
Jews finding a parallel in present-day desires to get rid of the
Jewish state’ (3). In a world where it is still not permissible
to be openly anti-Semitic, it is of course possible that some hide
their real thoughts about the Jews behind attacks on Israel. But
is that what motivates the new band of anti-Israeli critics? Or
is it the case that, as John Judis, senior editor of the American
magazine The New Republic argues, ‘what these charges are
meant to do is to raise the warning flag of anti-Semitism over certain
opinions, placing them beyond argument’? (4)
Before answering that question, it is important to note that the
genie may indeed have escaped from the bottle. The sanctification
of the Holocaust, the institutionalisation of this horrific event
as a new moral absolute to guide our societies, has had the predictable
effect of breeding cynicism, and in some cases giving rise to contestation
over the meaning of the Holocaust. Consider Iranian president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad’s recent sponsorship of a conference questioning
the Holocaust: that is only the most striking illustration of an
attempt to hit out at the West by undermining the moral meaning
of the Holocaust, an historic episode that is now tied so closely
to Western governments’ sense of moral purpose and vision.
Even more significantly, some have sought to divest Israel from
any association with the moral authority of the Holocaust. Critics
of Israel, some unconsciously, others consciously, try to turn the
symbolic authority of the Holocaust against Israel. So opponents
of Israel frequently accuse the Israeli government of acting like
the Nazis. Respectable media outlets in the West now regularly claim
that Israel is engaged in ethnic cleansing, genocide, crimes against
humanity, all of which invite comparisons between Israel and the
Nazis. Some critics liken Theodor Herzl, the founding father of
Zionism, to Adolf Hitler. Israeli or Jewish complicity in Israel’s
war crimes is said by some to be even more comprehensive than the
complicity of the German people with the crimes of the Nazis. Some
talk of the ‘Nazification’ of Israeli society, suggesting
a role reversal, whereby Jews become the twenty-first century equivalent
of their former oppressors.
In any intense debate, it is easy to get carried away and exaggerate
the sins of your opponents, to go over the top and slander your
enemy – especially in our morally illiterate times, where
it has become common to denounce your enemy for being ‘like
the Nazis!’ Viewed in this context, it seems that calling
Israelis ‘Nazis’ does not make you a closet anti-Semite.
Rather it represents a sordid rhetorical strategy for laying claim
to the moral authority of the Holocaust. At the same time, the association
of Zionism with Nazism looks like an attempt to dispossess Israel
of the moral authority it derives from its association with the
Holocaust. Effectively, ‘ownership’ of the Holocaust,
which today confers authority on those who uphold its memory, is
now being contested by the opponents of Israel. In this sense, at
least, the genie is indeed out of the bottle, though not in the
way that many of the critics of the new anti-Semitism understand
it.
Demonising Israel
In a confused and confusing debate, where much of the focus is
on what people apparently ‘secretly mean’ and where
there is an emerging competition over the Holocaust, it can be difficult
to get to the truth. However, as a rule of thumb, it is worth judging
people by what they say and do rather than what we think they mean.
The criticism of Israel should be interpreted as just that. To criticise
Israel, even to call into question the legitimacy of the Jewish
state, is not, in itself, an act of anti-Semitism. Even the harshest
denunciation of Israel can be inspired by motives that have nothing
to do with anti-Semitism. It is certainly difficult to characterise
the arguments put forward by someone like American commentator Tony
Judt as anti-Semitic. Therefore, it is possible to draw the conclusion
that some wield the charge of anti-Semitism against their opponents
in order to defend Israel from legitimate criticism.
However, something very peculiar is emerging in the debate about
Israel today, on both sides of the Atlantic. Increasingly, Israel
is depicted as the biggest threat to world peace and stability.
The Walt and Mearsheimer article not only suggested that the pro-Israel
lobby had more or less hijacked Washington’s foreign policy;
it also implicitly called into question the loyalty of American
Jews to America and its interests. These days, you do not have to
look very far before finding someone who is convinced of the omnipotence
of the American Jewish lobby. In recent weeks colleagues of mine
on both the left and right of the political spectrum have tried
to convince me that were it not for the Jewish lobby there would
be no war in Iraq.
This view of the American Jewish lobby as an omnipotent global
conspiracy springs from a growing tendency to demonise – not
just criticise – Israel. Israel is represented as a malevolent
society sui generis. It alone faces regular demands for academic
and commercial boycotts. It is frequently described as the greatest
threat to global stability, and portrayed as an intensely racist
and barbaric society. Once upon a time, leftists viewed Israel as
a guard-dog of imperialism; these days they are more likely to discuss
it as the very seat of the Empire. Whatever the motivations behind
this demonisation of Israel, it does seem that Israel is judged
by a double standard by a rising number of influential thinkers
and activists.
For a variety of reasons, Israel has come to bear the cross of
the West’s sins. In Europe in particular, there is a powerful
sense of weariness towards Israel. ‘If only it would go away,
then we would have a chance for peace in the Middle East’,
is the fantasy view of some European officials and writers. Others
simply resent Israel’s claims to special status on the basis
of its links with the Holocaust – which is why there is a
growing trend to turn the moral power of the Holocaust against Israel.
The West’s estrangement from Israel today does not mean it
is ready to rethink its transformation of the Holocaust into a new
moral symbol. All that it means is that the West increasingly embraces
the ‘good Jews’ who were the victims of the Nazis, while
distancing itself from the ‘bad Jews’ who are alive
and kicking in Israel.
In today’s climate of self-censorship, moral uncertainty
and competition over the Holocaust, it does not look as if the genie
of the ‘new anti-Semitism’ will return to the bottle
anytime soon.
(1) Bret Stephens, ‘Anti-anti-Semitism defended’ ,
Wall Street Journal
(2) Alvin H Rosenfeld, ‘“Progressive" Jewish Thought
and the New Anti-Semitism’, American Jewish Committee, New
York, December 2006, p7
(3) Ibid. p8
(4) John B Judis, ‘The New Anti-Semites’, The New Republic
First
published on spiked, 6 March 2007
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