Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘GO BACK TO POLAND’ THE LATEST GROTESQUER­IE

- Seth Greenland is a Los Angeles-based author of six novels and a memoir.

When it was reported that a demonstrat­or near Columbia University had loudly suggested that Jews should go back to Poland, I was already there. My wife, son and daughter and I were visiting Holocaust sites in Eastern Europe. My father’s family is from Poland and Ukraine, and many of our relatives perished in the Holocaust.

I don’t know if any of my ancestors were Zionists, although I suspect some of them must have been. The definition of “Zionist” that I’ve always used is a person who believes the Jews deserve a state where they can be safe. That is something I believe. I also believe the Palestinia­ns deserve a state where they can be safe, the Israeli occupation has been a disaster and Benjamin Netanyahu needs to be replaced.

As for the suggestion that Jews, or more precisely Ashkenazi Jewish Israelis — those of European heritage — should book a one-way ticket to Warsaw, I realize it’s not a point of view representa­tive of the whole of the protesters on U.S. campuses.

And what about Poland? Almost 3 million Jews lived in Poland before World War II. Now the population that self-identifies as Jewish is less than 5,000. It’s instructiv­e to remember that most of the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto, perhaps 300,000, were taken to Treblinka where they were murdered alongside another 500,000 or so Jews.

Treblinka is now a vast field covered with a massive memorial consisting of hundreds of stones laid side by side, pointing heavenward. I wandered among them and thought about the catastroph­e that led to this place and what was now unfolding at universiti­es across America — the anti-Israel chants, Jewish students’ fear of being on campus, the protests and counterpro­tests creating a climate of menace.

The same day my family visited Treblinka, another Columbia student, described as a leader of the protests there, was quoted in the New York Times as saying, “Zionists don’t deserve to live.” He apologized, and I don’t want to compare him to Nazis. He and his compatriot­s are young, and with youth comes the right to let your heart dominate your brain. His words, however, wore a swastika.

Of course, what has happened to the Palestinia­n people since 1948 has been its own catastroph­e, of which the war in Gaza is the latest iteration. The number of civilian deaths is appalling, the suffering of the families profound and seemingly endless. It is not hard to understand the anger and heartbreak animating proPalesti­nian encampment­s.

“Go back to Poland” taunts are grotesque and willfully misinforme­d. To read about them while in Poland, where a ghost country of murder victims exists alongside the current population, is deeply disorienti­ng. So many Jews died in Poland that you could say that the entire country is a Jewish cemetery. In Poland, Jews are like the Native Americans in America. They are celebrated, sometimes sincerely, but mostly they are erased.

I am by inclinatio­n sympatheti­c to the protesters. I am even inclined to forgive their ahistorica­l point of view, although it is ironic given that so many of them are being educated at elite institutio­ns. But they must know: Jewish collective trauma, like that of the Palestinia­ns, is undeniable. One shouldn’t have to go to places like Treblinka to be reminded of this. Have we learned nothing?

That the protesters are not all antisemiti­c is a given. And yet, from their encampment­s in privileged Los Angeles and Manhattan, they envision a progressiv­e paradise where everyone’s wounds are salved and racism a dim memory, but there is no place for Zionists, which for many (once again: not all!) is simply a dog whistle meaning Jews.

Go back to Poland? It is impossible. And the maximalist daydreams of American protesters will not help Palestinia­ns.

 ?? ?? Seth Greenland
Seth Greenland

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