The Jewish Chronicle

Sadly it’s all too familiar

- Ben Judah Kristallna­cht Goldene Medina, Goldene Medina, yiddishkei­t Der Jude Süss. Goldene Medina Ben Judah is the author of This is London

IDIDN’T EXPECT to say goodbye to my America so quickly. The America that I had heard about for so, so long but somehow only reached when I visited for the first time last year. The as they called it in the shtetl, the country that glittered, that was best for the Jews. Growing up in Europe, I never really understood American Jews. But as I got to know them, I became jealous of their apparently seamless identity. Jewish, American, it seemed so easy. I was jealous of the way that AmericanJe­wish identity seemed fused with the American story itself, woven into the fabric of the nation.

American Jews in turn looked at me full of pity and shock as I talked about everyday antisemiti­sm in Britain and France. The dog-whistles, the Twitter trolls, the synagogue guards, the Facebook warriors, the nervous jokes about willwe-ever-end-up having to make Aliyah.

Impossible, they told me. Unimaginab­le. It can never happen here. Over and over, I was told America was structural­ly philosemit­ic. That, as Leon Wieseltier, put it, the last Jew leaving Europe for Zion or the should turn around, and — “spit.”

The more I visited of Washington, Manhattan and Brooklyn, the more I fell in love with the American exceptiona­lism, which allowed Jewish exceptiona­lism, the comfortabl­e diaspora of Sandy Koufax, Saul Bellow and Jon Stewart. They didn’t have trade off their to fit in as Americans, as most British Jews feel they have to.

I was so enthralled, obviously, I phoned my mother to tell her. But she was very sceptical of all this Medina talk. “They have synagogues the size of cathedrals here,” I gushed. “They should be smaller,” she puffed. “They should stop attracting so much attention!”

Now it seems my mother was right to be sceptical when I said — “No, don’t be silly… it’s not like Europe.”

The dog whistles came with Donald Trump. He spoke of Hillary and cabals of bankers. He warned of behind the scenes forces and implored voters to smash “The global special interest”, as the faces of George Soros, Lloyd Blankfein and Janet Yellen, three famous, financial Jews, flashed in his final ad.

Online, the dogs were barking in America. My friends — mostly Jewish, mostly journalist­s — the ones who had told me they had never experience­d antisemiti­sm before, came under a machine gun attack of hate tweets. The ADL recorded 2.6m antisemiti­c tweets in a year. Journalist­s’ faces were cropped onto Auschwitz and

The same Jewish friends who had never experience­d antisemiti­sm, who looked me as if I was a refugee from

as I talked about George Galloway and my family in Paris, suddenly started to sound, well, just, like British Jews. Tense. Nervous. Embattled. Aghast at what was running amok in the Grand Old Party of American politics. I was in New York when the lost its shine. The results came in. Trump triumphed in white America. Black America and Hispanic America rejected him. So had the Jews. So, much so, that as a proportion more Jews (76 per cent) had voted against Trump than Hispanics (71 per cent). It was underscore­d and underlined: Jewish America and Trumplandi­a were two different states of mind.

I was walking through the neon glinting, Manhattan Midtown, the streets of Scorsese, flashing through feeds on my phone, when the results hit. Trump’s face, and Electoral College count, was shimmering, illuminate­d onto the face of the Empire State building.

America had become a European country again in front of my eyes. A country where antisemiti­sm is a background melody in political life, and whilst perfectly safe, Jews are not entirely comfortabl­e either. I used to feel better here than I do in Britain, now I feel exactly the same.

They should stop attracting so much attention

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom