Edmonton Journal

‘Enablers’ on left and right

Jewish scholar surveys the rise of anti-Semitism

- ann Levin

Anti-Semitism: Here and Now Deborah E. Lipstadt Schocken Books

Deborah E. Lipstadt was surprised at how hard it was to write her latest book.

A leading authority on the Holocaust, she was used to “skulking in the sewers of anti-Semitism and genocide.” But that was history.

What made her latest work so challengin­g — documentin­g the recent resurgence of anti-Semitism in Europe and the U.S. on the right and left of the political spectrum — was it was happening now.

The end result was well worth it. Anti-Semitism: Here and Now is an indispensa­ble guide to contextual­izing activities as diverse as the neo-Nazi march in Charlottes­ville, Va., and the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions campaign, also known as BDS. And it’s about as even-handed as it could be, given the disturbing subject matter and the fact that Lipstadt’s strong self-identifica­tion as a Jew made the topic intensely personal for her.

The book is structured as a series of letters between a Jewish student of hers named Abigail and a colleague named Joe at the law school at Emory University, where Lipstadt is on the faculty.

They are fictional characters who are composites of many people she has had discussion­s with over the few years.

The letter format gives the book an urgency that might otherwise be lacking in a scholarly work, although at times it can seem a little contrived.

Lipstadt is best known for being sued for libel by David Irving after calling him a Holocaust denier. She won the case, which was later made into the 2016 film Denial, starring Rachel Weisz.

At the outset, Lipstadt expresses her hope that both sides of the political divide will be discomfite­d by her analysis and conclusion­s — and they probably will.

For instance, she classifies both U.S. President Donald Trump and Jeremy Corbyn, the head of Britain’s Labour Party, as “anti-Semitic enablers.”

Lipstadt wrapped up the manuscript in August 2018 after noting the pace of anti-Jewish incidents and rhetoric had made it almost impossible to finish.

Sadly, she was right. Just weeks after penning her note to readers, a man gunned down 11 people in a Pittsburgh synagogue in the deadliest attack on Jews in U.S. history. The suspect had a history of posting anti-Semitic vitriol online.

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