The Jerusalem Post

The phrase ‘Jewish supremacy’ is brazen antisemiti­sm

- • By BRUCE S. TICKER

american jews are caught in a paradox. We thought we have struggled “against all forms of racism, colonialis­m and injustice,” yet we are accused of standing for… “jewish supremacy.”

at Franklin & marshall College in lancaster, pa., 24 faculty members recently accused us of “jewish supremacy” as the linchpin for Israeli oppression of the palestinia­ns, yet the vast majority of american jews vote for democrats who strive to end racism, etc. and improve the lives of our most vulnerable citizens.

We cannot stand for social justice and “jewish supremacy” simultaneo­usly. just like “white supremacy,” of course.

It must be the truth. Four of the signatorie­s teach history. the others teach religious studies, sociology, government, english, economics, geoscience­s and classics. the collective voice of authority.

the phrase “jewish supremacy” can be traced back to nazi Germany and has been retreaded for use in today’s conflict between Israel and the palestinia­ns, writes Gil troy in Newsweek. he is a professor at mcGill university in montreal. I confess I never heard the term until last week after the faculty statement was published in F&m’s College Reporter.

If they blame Israel’s alleged brutality on “jewish supremacy,” then all jews must be responsibl­e. What else can “jewish” mean? not only jews in Israel, but the same for jews in america, Canada and all over. We are all, well, jewish, so who else can represent jewish supremacy?

their june 23 “statement in solidarity with palestine” reads: “the brutal system that controls Israel and the occupied palestinia­n territorie­s is ideologica­lly founded upon jewish supremacy, rules over the lives of arab and jewish citizens of Israel alike, and is practicall­y committed to territoria­l theft from palestinia­ns who continued to resist physical removal and existentia­l erasure.”

I am usually reluctant to accuse harsh critics of Israel of antisemiti­sm. By invoking the phrase “jewish supremacy,” what more evidence do we need that these teachers are antisemiti­c? they should know what it means, and if they do not they are too dense to teach on a college level.

the college should re-evaluate the qualificat­ions of each signatory. this extends beyond questions of free speech. they smeared an entire ethnic/religious group and in so doing created a hostile environmen­t.

these two dozen faculty members – these dirty dozen doubled, as the sergeant in The Dirty Dozen would bellow – give themselves away in two ways: a phrase like… no, the very phrase… ”jewish supremacy” is brazen antisemiti­sm.

they are not saying “Israeli supremacy” or “Zionist supremacy” to reflect their insistence that they are only criticizin­g Israel. of course, most Israelis are jews, but these faculty members emphasize that their problem is with how the Israeli government – not jews in and of themselves – oppresses the palestinia­ns.

americans who decry “white supremacy” can readily identify with a term like “jewish supremacy.” From their vantage point, both Israel and america base their power on “supremacy.” jewish life in american society, less so Israeli-american life, is immersed in american society.

their final paragraph locks it all in: “We stand in solidarity with palestinia­ns and their Israeli allies, understand­ing that their struggle is fundamenta­lly entwined with many other movements for equality, justice, and liberation both within the united states and around the world.

“We join together in rededicati­ng ourselves to working against all forms of racism, colonialis­m, and injustice at Franklin and marshall, in the classroom, on campus, and beyond.”

dissidents like Black lives matter members can easily connect “jewish supremacy” with both “white supremacy” and Israeli policy. these, um, teachers, could limit their reference to Israelis who live in america, numbering more than a half-million. this being kind of an obtuse connection, it is much easier to relate to “jewish supremacy.”

the jeWIsh community’s response was forceful, but not always forceful enough. according to the news site the algemeiner, 11 faculty members urged “greater efforts to build bridges between arabs, jews and other affected parties that are based on respect and dignity and not on highly politicize­d and/or inaccurate historical narratives.”

likewise, 98 former students wrote, “It mimics antisemiti­c tropes that jews are conniving, manipulati­ve, and power-hungry.” the anti-defamation league of philadelph­ia added that the anti-Israel letter was “filled with deeply concerning anti-Israel rhetoric, some rooted in antisemiti­sm.”

these are not only “inaccurate historical narratives.” they do not just “mimic antisemiti­c tropes.” they are not merely “rooted in antisemiti­sm.”

It is antisemiti­sm. all of it. period.

In a follow-up statement published in the same newspaper, the 24 teachers wrote that they “would like to clarify several points that have been criticized by some readers.” never did they mean it in any vile, antisemiti­c form. so they claimed:

“some have expressed concern about the phrase in our statement ‘jewish supremacy’ to characteri­ze Israel’s founding and governance. the phrase is taken from an Israeli human rights organizati­on, B’tselem run by Israelis.

“If one wonders about the meaning of this claim, adalah, the legal Center for arab minority rights in Israel, has published detailed substantia­tion via a database “comprising a list of over 65 Israeli laws that discrimina­te directly or indirectly against palestinia­n citizens in Israel and/or palestinia­n residents of the occupied palestinia­n territory (opt) on the basis of their national belonging. the discrimina­tion in these laws is either explicit – ‘discrimina­tion on its face’ – or, more often, the laws are worded in a seemingly neutral manner, but have or will likely have a disparate impact on palestinia­ns in their implementa­tion.

“We are aware that antisemiti­c views have sometimes used the expression ‘jewish supremacy.’ We explicitly and vehemently deny any connection with or support for these dangerous views. the mention of ‘jewish supremacy’ in our letter in no way is intended to endorse or invoke traditiona­l tropes of antisemiti­sm. however, we also reject the claim that any criticism of Israeli government policy automatica­lly equates with antisemiti­sm.”

they think that we must be stupid. they expect us to believe that use of the phrase “jewish supremacy” to explain Israeli actions is not antisemiti­sm.

I concede that they do not intend “to endorse or invoke traditiona­l tropes of antisemiti­sm.” they are invoking antisemiti­sm. period.

as to their rejection that criticism of Israeli policies “automatica­lly equates with antisemiti­sm:” not in their case.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel