The Jerusalem Post

Why the blind spot to antisemiti­sm?

TERRA INCOGNITA

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN (Reuters)

Washington, DC, Councilman Trayon White is done apologizin­g. In a Facebook Live post he claimed that he is the victim now of the media. “It’s gone too far, I apologized, it’s over, I’m trying to move on.” He will be allowed to move on because there is a blind spot when it comes to antisemiti­sm in the US. Instead of a zero tolerance policy for antisemiti­sm, as there is for other forms of racism, antisemiti­sm is treated as a special category and when antisemiti­c comments emerge there is no real expectatio­n that offensive voices will be held to account.

The DC councilman is symbolic because he sits on a council in the US capital and his views are about much more than just one person. He first gained attention for a video blaming the Rothschild­s for controllin­g the weather. It emerged that at a February 27 meeting of city officials he went further. “There’s this whole concept with the Rothschild­s, control the World Bank, as we all know, infusing dollars into major cities,” The Washington Post quoted him as saying. “They really pretty much control the federal government.”

And how did the city officials gathered around him react? They said nothing. Local Jewish leaders embraced White after his comments, inviting him to attend a Passover Seder and meetings, breakfasts and other events. An op-ed at The Forward defended the councilman’s comments. “White mistakenly believed that one family of Jews controlled the weather. And while the Rothschild­s are frequently used as a stand-in for Jews more generally, it’s entirely possible to believe the Rothschild­s are evil manipulati­ve mastermind­s while also not believing this of all or even most Jews,” the author claimed in a March 20 piece. He went on to claim that “many use it [Rothschild­s references] independen­tly of its Jewish connection, referencin­g ‘Rothschild’ as a stand-in for ‘capitalist’ rather than ‘Jew.’”

This is the blind spot when it comes to antisemiti­sm. Instead of confrontin­g the comments, and being outraged that a member of the city council of the US capital believes in such offensive things, the reaction was to want to “educate” him a bit and also excuse his views. Host him for a Passover Seder. Whitewash his comments by legitimizi­ng him.

Then the councilman was invited for a visit to the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. According to reports he was shown a picture of a woman wearing a sign reading “I am a German girl and allowed myself to be defiled by a Jew” and White asked if the crowd was “protecting her.” No, the guide said, the crowd was humiliatin­g her. According to reports, when shown a picture of the Warsaw ghetto, one of White’s staff claimed it was “a gated community.” Instead of standing up to this comment, the rabbi present said “I wouldn’t call it a gated community, more like a prison.”

Unsurprisi­ngly the city councilman has now been linked to a “Saviour’s Day” event in February where Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan claimed “powerful Jews are my enemy,” the Washington Post reported. This reminds us that Women’s March co-president Tamika Mallory was criticized in March for standing by Farrakhan as well.

At The Root Terrell Jermaine Starr says that “many black people have had either direct or indirect interactio­ns with the Nation of Islam.” He points out that a group of black women signed a letter denouncing efforts to “smear Ms. Mallory” for her associatio­n. He claims that the NOI is controvers­ial due to “it’s homophobia and, most notoriousl­y, its unmitigate­d hatred of whites and, under Farrakhan’s leadership, Jews,” but writes that the NOI has “another side that’s more familiar to many black people: facilitato­rs of black dignity and prison rehabilita­tion.”

Starr’s piece makes an important point. Intersecti­onality has provided a bridge to antisemiti­sm by connecting far-right voices like Farrakhan with ostensibly left-wing and civil rights causes. The blind spot on antisemiti­sm once again makes its appearance, because any attempt to confront antisemiti­sm is said to somehow harm people like Mallory who are powerful voices for African-Americans and the women’s movement. So instead of zero tolerance for antisemiti­sm, it is allowed to have a seat at the table.

To understand the larger problem let’s recall the case of Oberlin College assistant professor of rhetoric and compositio­n, Joy Karega. She also shared antisemiti­c content on Facebook. One showed a photo of Jacob Rothshild with the text “we own your news, the media, your oil and your government.” In January 2015 she also shared the following post: “considerin­g the Rothschild­s’ propensity for whacking scientists who dare interfere with their repopulati­on agenda, of which AIDS is a key component.” This was shared by an up-and-coming academic at a prestigiou­s college and no one noticed it for a year or so until an investigat­ion by The Tower revealed the posts.

Karega, White, Mallory and Farrakhan are connected by the same blind spot. The familiar reactions consist of claims the statements are “controvers­ial” and then there is some pushback about how “we need to understand that they are voices in their community,” and then they become “victims of the media.” Lost is any question about why so many people hold antisemiti­c views and why these views are welcomed at the heart of Washington, on college campuses, and in major social justice events in the US. These aren’t marginaliz­ed views. People at the very heart of US culture, many of them young and rising influencer­s, hold and spread them. White, Mallory and Karega are all in their thirties.

They aren’t loners who came to these theories on their own. They are products of a milieu that encourages stories about “Rothschild­s.” In fact this kind of terminolog­y hasn’t been used so often in the US since the time of Henry Ford’s antisemiti­c publicatio­ns in the 1920s. One hundred years have gone by and the US has produced a large number of people in intellectu­al circles who talk about “the Rothschild­s” among friends, colleagues and eventually on social media, where they think the comments are normal, until there is some pushback.

Karega, Mallory and White happen to be African-American and some see the attacks on them as attacks on black Americans or a double standard for social activists from their community. Coddling of antisemiti­sm is a recent phenomenon among some African-American activists. Ralph Bunche, a US diplomat who won the 1950 Nobel Prize, was once asked about antisemiti­sm.

“I know the flavor of racial prejudice and racial persecutio­n,” he said. Because of that, he said, he could never be an antisemite. So hatred of Jews has only emerged recently in some circles in America, primarily because no one confronts these views and demands zero tolerance.

Mallory, Karega and White are depicted as simply ignorant or in need of a bit of outreach to “educate” them on the issues. But what about Valerie Plame, the former CIA operative who shared an article titled “America’s Jews are driving America’s wars.” She initially defended sharing the article, which she claimed was “provocativ­e and thoughtful.” The blind spot on antisemiti­sm reared its head again.

The blind spot misses the forest for the trees. According to those suffering from this blind spot, all these examples are just individual­s, and most of them just made a mistake, a bad choice of words, and an invitation to a Passover dinner will sort it all out. People don’t suddenly wake up in the morning and think the Rothschild­s run the World Bank or that Jews “drive” America’s wars. No one wakes up in the morning and suddenly thinks that one wealthy Jewish family is responsibl­e for depopulati­ng the world with AIDs.

No. People are led to think such things through years of conditioni­ng and being in circles where everyone talks this way. No one becomes a racist overnight. They become a racist by being exposed to racism, learning it through relatives, friends, family, at religious events and social events.

Those confrontin­g antisemiti­sm have not done a good job of exploring how it festers. How about a survey to see how many people believe that “the Rothschild­s” are responsibl­e for all the ills in society? How about a survey asking whether people think “the Jews” are responsibl­e for America’s wars? Maybe some voices don’t want to ask direct questions about antisemiti­sm because it might reveal a troubling fact, namely that it is growing and is already worse than it was 10 years ago, worse than it was 50 years ago and that it is bubbling up in influentia­l, educated circles, to the extent that professors, politician­s, civil servants, religious leaders and major leaders of social movements openly hold antisemiti­c views.

 ??  ?? LAST YEAR’S ‘Saviours Day’ rally.
LAST YEAR’S ‘Saviours Day’ rally.
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