Mail & Guardian

The complex art of the kibosh

Candice Breitz is a respected South African-born Jewish artist, public intellectu­al and academic based in Berlin. An exhibition, which had been planned for three years, was abruptly cancelled last month by a German museum based on allegation­s made against

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Please introduce yourself.

My name is Candice Breitz. I grew up in Johannesbu­rg. I’ve been based in Berlin since 2002. I do my best to spend a couple of months back home every year but most of the opportunit­ies that come my way as an artist lie beyond South Africa.

You have had an exhibition cancelled.

The exhibition would have opened at the Saarlandmu­seum in the German city of Saarbrücke­n in April.

The plan was to exhibit a 13-channel video installati­on titled TLDR (2017). The work grew out of a series of interviews and workshops with members of Sweat (the Sex Workers Education & Advocacy Taskforce), a community of sex workers and sex work activists who live and work in Cape Town.

I first got to know several members of Sweat in December 2016, when I joined the community to protest an exhibition titled Our Lady at the Iziko South African National Gallery.

The exhibition included a work by Zwelethu Mthethwa, an artist who was at the time on trial for having violently murdered Nokuphila Kumalo, a young sex worker.

TLDR highlights the internatio­nal struggle of sex workers for basic human rights, for the destigmati­sation and decriminal­isation of their labour and being. It also reflects critically on how the “good intentions” of white saviours too often block paths to meaningful political transforma­tion.

Why was the exhibition cancelled?

That’s a complex question to answer. On 24 November, my studio received a call from the director of the museum, announcing that she would “likely be forced to cancel the exhibition”, which we had been working towards for three years.

Given the current climate in Germany, I immediatel­y assumed that the cancellati­on had to do with views that I have expressed in relation to the ongoing carnage in Israelpale­stine. Little did I know, on the day we received that call, that the exhibition had in fact already been axed, prior to any conversati­on with me. A good month after the cancellati­on, I’ve yet to receive anything formal in writing from the museum, nor have I been given an opportunit­y to state my case. I’m having to follow my own trial via accounts in the press.

Have you managed to gain a clearer understand­ing of the cancellati­on at this point?

At an early stage after the cancellati­on was announced, rumour had it that I had “maybe signed a BDS letter”. In the German context, BDS is deemed to be an anti-semitic movement. The mere suggestion of proximity

to BDS can destroy one’s ability to earn a living.

In a statement subsequent­ly released to a local newspaper, the museum explained that I was being censured because I “had not sufficient­ly condemned Hamas”.

This judgment was arrived at in direct response to several articles in the German press, via which I was at that point being aggressive­ly slandered for having been involved in a Jewish-led protest that took place in Berlin on 10 November.

While the protest held space for those who were still mourning in Israel, it was also highly critical of the Israeli government’s disproport­ionate and inhumane bombardmen­t of Gazan civilians.

That was all it took to cancel the exhibition?

I have, in fact, repeatedly and unequivoca­lly condemned Hamas, in a variety of public contexts, including via my publicly accessible Instagram account. Which is probably why the museum felt it had to double down on the allegation­s that were being wielded against me.

Representa­tives of the museum were soon insisting that the problem was not merely that I had insufficie­ntly condemned Hamas,

but that I had not adequately framed the 7 October attacks as a “Zivilisati­onsbruch” (a rupture in civilisati­on).

In the German context, the term “Zivilisati­onsbruch” is used by scholars as a reference to the Shoah [the Holocaust]. In effect, the museum is now arguing that they can’t show my work because I have not explicitly acknowledg­ed an equivalenc­e between the Holocaust and the 7 October attacks. To demand that such an equivalenc­e be pronounced as a condition for exhibiting my work, is to effectivel­y demand that I relativise the Holocaust.

How do you feel about it?

Need I point out the absurdity of Germans dictating to Jewish people how they should articulate their reactions to the brutal massacre of other Jewish people?

Should Jewish people have to prove to Germans that they are not supporters of Hamas? Or would it not perhaps make sense to assume — unless there is strong evidence to the contrary — that Jewish people are repulsed and horrified by the massacre of other Jewish people?

Will Germany soon be asking all Jews who live in Germany to make public statements to confirm they condemn the Holocaust and that they hold no sympathy for the Nazis who killed their ancestors? The degree of self-righteousn­ess is beyond words.

Have you been accused of anti-semitism?

The implicatio­n can hardly be ignored. One is apparently guilty by default, until one declares oneself innocent. It reminds me very much of the post-9/11 climate, in which Arabs, Muslims and Sikhs who did not publicly condemn the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre were automatica­lly suspected of condoning al-qaeda.

The German expectatio­n that progressiv­e Jews explicitly condemn Hamas operates according to a similar, even more deeply twisted , logic.

I am confident that the museum will come to deeply regret its decision over time. Their assessment is mind-numbingly provincial at best, violently inappropri­ate and gallingly anti-semitic at worst.

Surely there are formal procedures that need to be followed before a large exhibition can be cancelled?

In most democratic cultures, those who are deemed guilty are given the chance to speak and defend themselves before they are condemned and deplatform­ed.

But the climate in Germany is such at present, that many Germans feel absolutely justified in condemning Jewish positions that are not consistent with their own, in their zeal to confirm their own dedication to antianti-semitic principles.

Jewish philosophe­r and author Susan Neiman described this kind of behaviour as “philosemit­ic Mccarthyis­m” in a recent article in

The New York Review of Books.

Many progressiv­e Jews in this country have come to believe Germany’s increasing­ly entrenched habit of weaponisin­g false charges of antisemiti­sm against intellectu­als and cultural workers of various descriptio­ns, in the absence of credible evidence, has little to do with a genuine concern for the safety of Jewish lives, and can best be understood as serving to promote Germany’s image of itself as a forward-looking country that has managed to overcome its own deeply anti-semitic and genocidal past.

Is it only progressiv­e Jews who are impacted by ‘philosemit­ic Mccarthyis­m’?

While progressiv­e Jews are being targeted by weaponised charges of antisemiti­sm increasing­ly frequently, it is other minority communitie­s that are far more vulnerable to Germany’s philosemit­ic Mccarthyis­m. There are endless examples of Muslims and/ or Arabs — and of course, most egregiousl­y, of Palestinia­ns — who have had to face similar allegation­s, mostly with zero evidence to back them up.

Although the vast majority of antisemiti­c incidents in Germany are in fact perpetrate­d by white Germans (who are more likely than not to carry Nazi ancestry), instrument­alised accusation­s of anti-semitism have become a convenient weapon via which to bludgeon a wide range of minorities. Anybody who is black or brown or Middle Eastern or Global Southern is vulnerable.

Why is it so hard to speak about Israel in Germany?

It’s alarmingly common, in Germany, for people to conflate “the Jewish people” with “the state of Israel”. As such, legitimate criticism directed against the Israeli government is often hastily condemned as anti-semitic. Germany’s understand­ing of itself as a nation is still to a large degree determined by seeking to work through and make amends for the Holocaust, which remains necessary work.

Given that Jews are still very much cast in the role of eternal victims in the German imaginary, the German mainstream has an understand­able tendency to be particular­ly vigilant around anti-semitism. Unfortunat­ely, these good intentions have over time solidified into dogmatic behaviour.

As with all manifestat­ions of Mccarthyis­m, the rabid sidelining, stigmatisi­ng and denunciati­on of individual­s whose worldviews are inconvenie­nt or uncomforta­ble in the German context is driven by the deep fear that one might be outed as an anti-semite oneself.

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 ?? Image stills: Goodman Gallery. Photo: Till Cremer ?? Too controvers­ial, won’t see: TLDR (2017) actors (top) Tenderlove, Duduzile Dlamini, Regina High, Jenny and Zoe Black, and (above) Gabbi, Emmah, Jowi, Connie and Nosipho ‘Provocativ­e’ Vidima appear in the video installati­on by Candice Breitz (right), which has summarily been cancelled in Germany.
Image stills: Goodman Gallery. Photo: Till Cremer Too controvers­ial, won’t see: TLDR (2017) actors (top) Tenderlove, Duduzile Dlamini, Regina High, Jenny and Zoe Black, and (above) Gabbi, Emmah, Jowi, Connie and Nosipho ‘Provocativ­e’ Vidima appear in the video installati­on by Candice Breitz (right), which has summarily been cancelled in Germany.

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