The Jerusalem Post

75 years after Auschwitz, antisemiti­sm is on the rise

You can manage a chronic disease, treat it, or prevent its complicati­ons – but you can rarely cure it

- • By WALTER REICH

On January 27, 1945, Soviet troops liberated Auschwitz. The date is now consecrate­d as Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, as the world vowed never to allow murderous antisemiti­sm to recur. Yet 75 years later, attacking Jews has once again become socially acceptable in many countries – across the left-right ideologica­l spectrum, and among different groups that blame Jews for their grievances and oppression.

The recent eruptions of antisemiti­sm in America have awakened us to a prejudice that has long resided, in quiet ways and in many forms, in this country. And the part of it that now disguises itself as anti-Zionism – hatred of the Jewish state that was establishe­d in the wake of the Holocaust as a refuge for Jews – has even seemed, to some, virtuous, a sentiment they believe puts them in humanity’s moral vanguard.

And antisemiti­sm has returned, in part, because the general public’s knowledge about the Holocaust – of what exactly it was, who exactly was murdered in it, how many were killed, and how antisemiti­sm spawned it – has diminished.

For a time, that knowledge discredite­d antisemiti­sm and those who indulged in it. But the passing of survivors who experience­d the Holocaust and could testify to it, the denial and minimizati­on of the Holocaust, and the hijacking of the word itself to advance numerous other causes, great and small, all combined to diminish its memory.

The horrifying knowledge of where antisemiti­sm can lead has been, in large measure, lost in a miasma of forgetting, ignorance, denial, confusion, appropriat­ion, and obfuscatio­n.

As a former director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, many of whose uncles, aunts, and cousins, and a grandmothe­r, were murdered in the Holocaust; as a professor who has taught a generation of students about the memory of the Holocaust; as a psychiatri­st who is well aware of humanity’s repertoire of hatred and brutality; as a professor of internatio­nal affairs; and as a student of Jewish history who is deeply aware of the many times masses of Jews were murdered or expelled simply because they were Jews, I watch antisemiti­sm’s global resurgence, so soon after the Holocaust, with alarm and foreboding.

Could murderous antisemiti­sm, on a large scale, resume in our time? Could “never again,” vowed so solemnly and so repeatedly after the Holocaust, revert to “yet again”?

WHAT MOTIVATES antisemiti­sm? For two millennia, the prejudice has fulfilled needs – psychologi­cal, theologica­l, national and social – that have multiplied and mutated:

• The need to find an explanatio­n for a variety of misfortune­s. What better and more coherent explanatio­n is there than a conspiracy? And what more logical conspiracy is there – depending on the place and century – than the existence of a small group that, plotting in secret, poisons wells or manipulate­s money or controls government­s or causes wars and all manner of other catastroph­es and difficulti­es?

• The need to condemn a minority whose members obstinatel­y refuse to accept the majority’s religion, or whose role in that religion’s narrative is evil.

• The need to distrust and ostracize a minority whose members act differentl­y, don’t assimilate fully into the larger culture, and have their own customs and practices.

• The need to unify the majority group by identifyin­g a common enemy, especially an enemy within.

• The need to explain a minority’s material or national success, especially by a majority whose members feel that that success has come at their expense.

• The need for some members of other minority groups to find a reason for the difficulti­es they experience, such as poverty and oppression.

Why were Jews the group that was most regularly identified, in the lands and communitie­s they’ve inhabited, as fulfilling one or more of these needs? The most likely reasons are historical and psychologi­cal: When Jews were first identified as fulfilling some of these needs, they were branded as villains. Over time, that branding was repeatedly reinforced so that Jews became the usual suspects – the group that immediatel­y came to mind when a new need arose to find explanator­y villains.

So why the resurgence of antisemiti­sm today?

Antisemiti­sm is useful in the current moment in both Europe and America. For some on the Right, it can fulfill the need for a national, religious, or ethnic agenda. And for some on the Left, it can fulfill the need to establish virtue, particular­ly when it’s connected with anti-Zionism.

In Arab and Muslim lands, antisemiti­sm is often expressed as both hatred of Jews and hatred of Israel, and is very frequently bolstered by Holocaust denial. Delegitimi­zing the Jewish state can serve as a means to reverse the humiliatio­n, degradatio­n, and oppression of Muslims.

IN EASTERN EUROPE, rightwing, nationalis­t parties have taken control, often rewriting Holocaust history, and often with the support of groups that are strongly antisemiti­c and have adopted Nazi slogans and agendas. In Western Europe, antisemiti­sm is found among right-wing forces; within political parties on the Left, especially in Britain; and among elements of the Muslim community.

But for now, the democracie­s of Western Europe are strong enough to withstand the pressure. And in America, the episodes of antisemiti­c speech and violence, though they’ve greatly proliferat­ed in the past few years, have begun to mobilize communitie­s and government­al agencies to protect Jews from violence.

This won’t stop antisemiti­sm’s continuing growth, but it will control it. Despite a long history of bias at many levels, from academia to boardrooms, Jews in America have establishe­d themselves during the past century in every sphere of American life, and the American tradition of tolerance will remain far more powerful than its manifestat­ions of prejudice.

So although Jews face ongoing violence, it is not of a level that will, in the foreseeabl­e future, result in massive death. In Europe and the United States, there might be limited outbursts. Should Iran develop nuclear weapons, it could, in a moment of irrational­ity, launch them to try to obliterate the Jewish state, which its leaders repeatedly have vowed to destroy and which is home to nearly half of the world’s Jews.

But Iran’s fear that it could be devastated in return by a nuclear-armed Israel would almost surely keep such a cataclysmi­c possibilit­y in check. In short, despite the rise in worldwide antisemiti­sm, a repeat of the Holocaust – major mass murder – is, though possible, unlikely in the foreseeabl­e future.

As we mark the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz, I wish I could be more upbeat than that. But I’m not. I’m a physician. I know that one can manage a chronic disease, one can treat it, one can often prevent its complicati­ons, but one can rarely cure it – and one can’t ever be sure that it won’t become, at some point, catastroph­ic.

The writer is the Yitzhak Rabin Memorial Professor of Internatio­nal Affairs, Ethics and Human Behavior, and professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, at George Washington University, and a former director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. This article first appeared in The Atlantic.

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