Marin Independent Journal

Wrestling with antisemiti­sm

Jewish artists are struggling against a long-ingrained response to look away

- By Jason Zinoman

Antisemiti­sm has such a long, violent history that it seems absurd to claim it's getting worse. Compared with when? And yet, there's something about our current moment that feels different.

Consider a recent Sunday. I woke up to news reports that two men were arrested at Penn Station with weapons, a swastika armband and a social media history of threats to attack a synagogue. After taking a shower, I opened my dresser to find my Kyrie Irving T-shirt. The Brooklyn Nets player was returning to the NBA that evening after being suspended for tweeting a link to a documentar­y that cast doubt on the Holocaust.

I didn't expect getting dressed in the morning to turn into a test of loyalties between my favorite basketball team and my murdered ancestors, but here we are.

That night, when I arrived at Barclays Center, scores of people belonging to what the Southern Poverty Law Center labels a hate group were handing out pamphlets with the blaring headline “The Truth About Antisemiti­sm.” I opened Twitter and saw Elon Musk was making fun of the AntiDefama­tion League and Ye was tweeting again. He had kicked off the recent cycle of discourse by leveling violent threats against Jews.

Quantifyin­g antisemiti­sm right now by numbers of hate crimes is useful, but doesn't capture the peculiar anguish and human complexiti­es of its day-to-day pervasiven­ess. That's a job better suited to artists, and more than any year in memory, some of our most accomplish­ed ones have taken up the challenge, from the biggest names in comedy (Dave Chappelle, Amy Schumer) to the most celebrated storytelle­rs in theater

and film, such as Tom Stoppard and Steven Spielberg. What resonates most in this impressive body of work are the Jewish artists exploring the challenge of antisemiti­sm, and while they started these projects years ago, their hardearned pessimism now seems uncomforta­bly prophetic.

The thorniest recent work on these issues was the “Saturday Night Live” monologue by Dave Chappelle. He poked fun at Ye and Irving while speaking to the antisemiti­c idea of a Jewish conspiracy in Hollywood. In between myriad jokes, he shrugged off this stereotype as an understand­able thought best not verbalized. One of the maddening traps of modern antisemiti­sm is that it takes a source of pride — Jewish success in the arts, the rare field where we were welcome — and makes it seem sinister. This old tactic got a new hearing.

There are a lot of Jews in Hollywood, Chappelle observed mischievou­sly, before undercutti­ng the comment with a joke that called the trope that they control show business “a delusion.” Unlike the blunt social media posts of Ye and Irving, this set was a work of art, elusive and layered, displaying finesse and paradox. It's a prickly kind of funny with corkscrew punchlines that tickled the mind and bothered the conscience. (“If they're Black, then it's a gang, if they're Italian, it's a mob, but if they're Jewish, it's a coincidenc­e and you should never speak about it.”)

Beautiful and ugly

Art can be formally beautiful and morally ugly. Despite what you have heard, good comedy can be built on lies as easily as on the truth. For as much controvers­y as this set provoked, it was also predictabl­e. How often have we seen Chappelle bring up celebrity transgress­ion, and then defend, mitigate and complicate it, while inviting us to admire the feat? This is his move. There's no wondering where he will come down on the latest scandal. We know.

Earlier this year, I wrote about the Jewish tendency to turn antisemiti­sm into comedy. But there's another coping mechanism that we like to talk about less: looking the other way. Asked about Chappelle's monologue, Jerry Seinfeld diplomatic­ally told The Hollywood Reporter that “the subject matter calls for more conversati­on.” Asked about it as a guest on “The Late Show,” Jon Stewart only became earnest when he pleaded for free speech. What's striking about these responses from star comics is that they seem to be more interested in calling for debate than engaging in it.

Then again, I get it. I've stayed quiet when peers wrote things that seemed if not indifferen­t to Jewish pain then at least to be applying double standards to it. I gave them the benefit of the doubt or concluded that a call-out would be counterpro­ductive. But saying nothing in the face of such moments exacts its own cost. It eats at you. Several Jewish

artists have been making work that explores such decisions with a skeptical eye.

In “The Patient,” a sly, suspensefu­l FX series from Joel Fields and Joe Weisberg, creators of “The Americans,” a therapist played by Steve Carell awakens to find himself chained to the bed of a serial killer looking for help with his mental health. The title is a reference to this maniac as well as the way his therapist responds.

The killer says he was looking for a therapist who is Jewish, a specific request that goes uncommente­d on. Small moments tip you off to a tolerated culture of antisemiti­sm. In a flashback, the therapist, Alan, spots a swastika on a poster and, instead of making a fuss, keeps walking.

Now he has no such option. Imprisoned by a captor who wants something from him, he is faced with the urgent question of how to fight back. He chooses to use his skills in mental health to help his oppressor get better. The deeper he gets in dialogue, though, the more uncomforta­ble Alan grows, especially after he teaches the murderer the Kaddish, the Jewish prayer for the dead, and then sees it being used to mourn his latest victims.

In many ways, the relationsh­ip at the center of “The Patient” is a metaphor for both the lengths Jews will go to extend empathy toward their oppressors and for the existentia­l toll that takes. Playing a man wracked by guilt, grief and doubt, Carell is extremely subtle illustrati­ng how accommodat­ion can be justified and yet wear you down. We also see scenes in his head of him talking to a shrink (David Alan Grier) who asks why he doesn't fight back, attack the killer. To which Alan replies: “I'm using what I have.” Grier, a figment of his imaginatio­n, flashes a look that suggests he doesn't believe that.

The weapons at hand

“The Fabelmans” and “Armageddon Time,” two personal movies by Jewish directors dramatizin­g their own childhoods, grapple with the question of what weapons Jews have. In both, sensitive boys facing antisemiti­sm at school struggle with how to stand up for themselves.

“The Fabelmans” isn't a movie about being Jewish so much as it is suffused with Jewishness. But when its young protagonis­t, Sammy Fabelman, moves to California in the 1960s, he's confronted with Aryan boys who mock his religion and with gentile girls intrigued by it. He happily prays with one girl but puts up a fight with the bullies, who at first seem like the cartoon villains from early Spielberg movies. The most dramatic way Sammy pushes back is by putting his antagonist­s in a movie. After filming his classmates on a trip to the beach, the footage, shown to the whole school, makes one bully look ridiculous and another glamorous, bigger than life. Oddly, being romanticiz­ed by the Jewish kid he beat up rattles the bully more than any insult. His discontent in the face of this attention is the most baffling section in the movie, one that has the ring of a point being made. But what is the point?

Is the antisemite feeling shame? If so, Spielberg is working hard to extend empathy. But this exchange also rattles Sammy. When the bigot demands to know why Sammy made him look like a star, the response sounds pained and unsure: “Maybe I did it to make the movie better?”

It's a shockingly unsentimen­tal moment to find in a Spielberg movie, one in which the young version of himself learns that pleasing the crowd might require turning an antisemite into the hero. No one loves the movies more than Spielberg, and in this intimate, morally probing film, he shows how they can move, inspire and reveal the truth. But in these more hardheaded scenes, he also makes it clear that their impact can be unpredicta­ble, and like comedy, they can deceive just as deftly.

In “Armageddon Time,” a humbler, realistic and affectingl­y bleak portrait of the struggles of a young Jewish kid, James Gray digs into his 1980s Queens upbringing in the story of an 11-year-old boy named Paul Graff whose grandfathe­r is the son of a refugee who fled pogroms in Europe. The patriarch tells him that changing his name (from Grasserste­in) will help him in life. This same man urges him to speak up when other students make racist comments to a peer. These are the competing messages he grows up with: Assimilate or fight back.(

A friendship with a Black classmate also makes clear to Paul how not all inequities are the same, that his privilege protects him in a way that other minority groups don't experience. In a time when Black and Jewish communitie­s are pitted against each other by entertaine­rs such as Ye and others, this movie feels exceedingl­y topical and depressing. It painfully dramatizes how antisemiti­sm can lead Jews to overlook other injustices, protect your tribe and harden your heart to the plight of others.

Complacenc­y and denial

As with Spielberg's movie, the new play by Tom Stoppard, “Leopoldsta­dt,” is being described as his most personal as well as a reckoning with his Jewish identity, which in his case he didn't understand until middle age. It's also one of his worst plays: intellectu­ally thin, overly familiar, blandly generic. If the way you tell the audience it's the 1920s is by a woman dancing the Charleston, you've become too comfortabl­e with cliché. And yet, this sprawling portrait of a half-century in the life of a Jewish family from Vienna is drawing sold-out crowds of weeping audiences.

I suspect the reason is the timely and heavyhande­d portrait of Jewish complacenc­y and denial. We see this most nakedly in the stand-in for the playwright, a comic writer born Leopold Rosenbaum who now goes by Leonard Chamberlin (a name that evokes the prime minister famous for appeasemen­t). In 1955, Chamberlin is glibly naive about the Holocaust, a patriotic fool set up for tears when rememberin­g the horrors of the Nazis. The play ends with a roll call of the dead. Of course, the audience cries.

Two things stand out about these dramas, whether on screen or onstage: The first is that none of the Jewish protagonis­ts are exactly triumphant in the face of antisemiti­sm. Therapy, the movies, assimilati­on — nothing saves them. These characters are ambivalent, morally compromise­d or far worse. When it comes to their ability to protest an antisemiti­c culture, pessimism reigns.

The second is how much these works look to the past, exploring the current moment through a historical lens. (That includes Bess Wohl's play “Camp Siegfried,” a drama about a 1938 Nazi youth camp on Long Island whose themes are clearly meant to echo with today.) Even the contempora­ry “The Patient” borrows its most blunt power from flashbacks to the moral simplicity of concentrat­ion camps. Looking at history can be a useful way to understand the present, but it can also be a way to evade it. One wonders what Stoppard would come up with if he dramatized the more subtle Jewish denial of the cultural world he came up in, where he flourished as a playwright whose religion never seemed to come up. Or how Spielberg or Gray would capture the conflicts of Jewish life now.

As usual, comics are the artists taking the earliest and most direct approaches. David Baddiel, a British comic, is receiving glowing reviews this month for a BBC documentar­y version of his book “Jews Don't Count” that castigates the double standards applied to prejudice against Jews in progressiv­e spaces today. Marc Maron's next special, which recently taped in New York, begins a series of jokes on the increased prominence of conspiraci­es about Jews by saying that in this polarized country, antisemiti­sm is one thing that brings everyone together. At the Kennedy Center Honors, Sacha Baron Cohen, in character as the antisemite Borat, skewered Ye and sang a brief parody version of U2's “With or Without You,” switching the lyrics to “With or Without Jews.”

Schumer is one of the few sketch comics to dig into antisemiti­sm today, lampooning the tentativen­ess our culture has for calling it out in the new season of “Inside Amy Schumer.” She imagines a workplace harassment seminar where everyone is hypersensi­tive to all kinds of slights except antisemiti­c ones. It's a premise that not only counters the trope of a Jewish conspiracy but taps into the paranoia of being gaslighted by an entire culture. It hints at what a Jewish “Get Out” could look like.

Part of the resilience of antisemiti­sm is its resistance to critique. Jewish artists are obviously not going to end the lie that they control show business by making more movies, plays, TV shows or sketches about it. But they can illuminate its impact and capture the complex damage it does to the psyche. That matters. For a certain kind of Jew, art can be its own religion. And one lesson we keep learning and forgetting is that the greatest art is much better at portraying conflicted minds than changing them.

 ?? SUZANNE TENNER VIA FX ?? Steve Carell as a therapist and Domhnall Gleeson as a serial killer in “The Patient,” which raises the urgent question of how to fight back.
SUZANNE TENNER VIA FX Steve Carell as a therapist and Domhnall Gleeson as a serial killer in “The Patient,” which raises the urgent question of how to fight back.
 ?? GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Dave Chappelle's “Saturday Night Live” monologue was a prickly kind of funny that bothered the conscience.
GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Dave Chappelle's “Saturday Night Live” monologue was a prickly kind of funny that bothered the conscience.
 ?? MERIE WEISMILLER WALLACE — UNIVERSAL PICTURES AND AMBLIN ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? When Sammy Fabelman (Gabriel LaBelle), the young protagonis­t in “The Fabelmans,” moves to California in the 1960s, he's confronted with Aryan boys who mock his religion and with gentile girls intrigued by it. The most dramatic way Sammy pushes back is by putting his antagonist­s in a movie.
MERIE WEISMILLER WALLACE — UNIVERSAL PICTURES AND AMBLIN ENTERTAINM­ENT When Sammy Fabelman (Gabriel LaBelle), the young protagonis­t in “The Fabelmans,” moves to California in the 1960s, he's confronted with Aryan boys who mock his religion and with gentile girls intrigued by it. The most dramatic way Sammy pushes back is by putting his antagonist­s in a movie.

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