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America revives anti-semitism
- Subject: America revives anti-semitism
- From: Other News - Roberto Savio / IPS <soros at topica.email-publisher.com>
- Date: Tue, 10 Feb 2004 17:27:33 +0100
//Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, article sent for information purposes.// The Anti-Semitism Spectre Analysis - By Jim Lobe WASHINGTON, Feb (IPS) - Some 30 years ago when the U.S. military was bogged down in Vietnam, a number of prominent Jewish intellectuals worried that the visibility of U.S. Jews as leaders in the anti-war movement would spark a resurgence of anti-Semitism once the conflict ended. ''I think anyone who looks to the future in America'', wrote Nathan Glazer in the neo-conservative 'Commentary' magazine in 1971, ''must consider this possibility -- almost a probability -- of the rise of a stab-in-the-back myth, in which it will not only be students and professors and intellectuals who are attacked, and not only Jews in their role as members of this general community, but conceivably Jews AS JEWS''. (emphasis in original) Glazer, a Harvard sociologist who warned that people should not lightly dismiss the parallels with Weimar Germany after World War I, was not alone in his concerns. Walter Laqueur, a prominent Holocaust historian at the time and now a terrorism analyst at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) here, wrote in the same issue: ''The fact that Jews have been prominently associated with declarations and actions abhorred by the majority of Americans provides fuel for a reaction which will be not just anti-Left or anti-intellectual, but potentially anti-Semitic as well". "No great demagogic skill would be needed to single out the Jews as the main culprits for the evils which have befallen America in recent times,'' he added. Glazer's and Laqueur's fears proved unfounded, confirming to many U.S. Jews that the United States was an ''exceptional'' nation where anti-Semitism, a deep-rooted phenomenon in most of Christendom, has never found particularly fertile ground. But now, 30 years later, that exceptionalism might again be tested because of the convergence of two separate events -- the war in Iraq and the release later this month of Hollywood superstar Mel Gibson's 'The Passion' -- both of which could feed anti-Semitism in this country, according to some observers. Just as Jewish leftists played a prominent role in the anti-war movement then, so 33 years later Jewish neo-conservatives both inside and outside the administration of President George W. Bush played a major role in rallying the country to war against Iraq. They included Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz; Undersecretary of Defence for Policy Douglas Feith, and much of his staff, who are charged by war critics with systematically exaggerating the threat posed by former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein; Eric Edelman, Vice President Dick Cheney's senior foreign policy adviser; and the White House's senior Middle East adviser, Elliott Abrams. Several members of the Pentagon's Defence Policy Board (DPB), including its former chairman, Richard Perle; Kenneth Adelman, and Eliot Cohen, could also be added to the list. Those outside the administration included key journalists and think tank analysts like nationally syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer; William Kristol, the editor of 'The Weekly Standard'; Max Boot of the Council on Foreign Relations; and several fellows at Perle's American Enterprise Institute (AEI), including Michael Ledeen and Danielle Pletka. Their prominence and ubiquity in the mass media in the run-up to the war, and later in defending the decision to attack and to expand the action to Syria and Iran, have given the impression that U.S. Jews overwhelmingly favoured the war, presumably on behalf of Israel. In fact, that impression is incorrect. According to surveys conducted by a number of polling organisations, U.S. Jews were as deeply split on going to war as was the general public. Moreover, Jews have played a leading role in the new anti-war movement, just as they did more than 30 years ago during the Vietnam War. And, as neo-conservatives themselves never tire of pointing out, the actual policy-makers, like Vice President Dick Cheney, Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, not to mention Bush himself, are all non-Jews. Still, these facts might be of little concern to those searching for a scapegoat if the situation in Iraq continues to worsen. ''Since no weapons of mass destruction have been found, there's a lot more attention to who was eager to go to war, and who can be blamed'', Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder and director of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre in Los Angeles, told IPS. ''It's an election year, Iraq will be the dominant issue and (there are) no weapons of mass destruction'', he went on. ''Some people will say, 'Aha, why did we do this'? and some will say 'Israel', and then you get typical stereotyping that has crept up all too often in history''. Ken Jacobson of the New York-based Anti-Defamation League (ADL) echoed that fear. ''People all around the world and even in this country seem to be raising questions about why we went to war, which creates the perfect environment for anti-Semitic conspiracy thinking'', he told IPS. ''Anti-Semitism at its core is about blaming the Jews for problems that don't seem to make sense.'' The release of Gibson's 'Passion' later this month is adding to that concern. By all accounts, a masterly produced movie, it dramatises the last hours of the life of Jesus Christ and particularly his excruciating physical suffering at the hands of his persecutors during his crucifixion. Fundamentalist Christian clergy have praised the film as an opportunity to evangelise millions of people both in the United States and abroad. The movie has also received very strong reviews from neo-conservatives, including Jewish film critic Michael Medved and Catholic theologian Michael Novak, both of whom praised Gibson in Kristol's 'Weekly Standard'. But according to most of the relatively few Jews, Catholics and Protestants involved in Christian-Jewish reconciliation efforts who have seen it, the movie depicts Jews as unrelentingly vicious and cruel, much worse than Jesus' Roman captors. ''It is the good guys and the bad guys, and the Jews are the bad guys'', said Hier, who has seen two screenings. Paula Fredriksen, a Bible scholar at Boston University who reviewed a script as part of an inter-religious group of scholars convened by the U.S. Catholic Bishops, found the movie ''stands in the echo chamber of traditional Christian anti-Judaism''. ''Even before the Gibson movie, we found (in a survey to be released later this month) that 25 percent of Americans believe that Jews are responsible for the death of Christ'', Jacobson said. ''It's not that we're suggesting there will be pogroms or violence against Jews as a result of the movie, but we are very concerned that the tremendous progress that has been made in Jewish-Christian relations could be set back by this'', he said, adding his group is particularly concerned about the impact of Gibson's movie on audiences abroad, where he said anti-Semitism has surged to its highest levels since World War II. Hier agreed, insisting the movie could be ''incendiary'' in many parts of the world. He said he was also worried it could have a major, if delayed, impact on impressionable teenagers and youngsters in the United States itself. Rabbi Michael Lerner, publisher of the liberal 'Tikkun' monthly, also expressed concern about the impact of the ''Passion'' -- less in relation to the Iraq invasion than concerning the depiction of Israel's occupation of the Palestinian territories. ''I don't think there will be a backlash against Jews because of the Iraq War'', he told IPS from his California office. ''The real problem is the convergence of the 'Passion' with the Israelis acting in a morally insensitive way in the Palestinian conflict". "It too neatly corresponds to the negative image of Jews one gets from Gibson's movie'', added Lerner, who blamed the media in part for screening out Jewish voices, like his, which oppose Israel's policies. Still, Lerner, like Jacobson and Hier, agreed the convergence of the 'Passion' with the questioning of U.S. policy would have a greater impact abroad than at home. ''We strongly believe that America is different'', said ADL's Jacobson, ''but at the same time America is not immune, so one can't be complacent about it''. (END/IPS/ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Other News" is a personal initiative seeking to provide information that should be in the media but is not, because of commercial criteria. It welcomes contributions from everybody. Work areas include information on global issues, north-sutrh relations, gobernability of globalization. The "Other News" motto is a phrase which appeared on the wall of Barcelona’s old Customs Office, at the beginning of 2003:”What walls utter, media keeps silent”. 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