The Jewish establishment’s blindness to Palestinian slaughter also hurts U.S. Jews
Israel's racism against Palestinians has subsumed
official Jewish life. American Jews have abandoned their best traditions out of
deference to a militant state that exists in constant fear of those it
subjugates.
BY PHILIP WEISS DECEMBER 26, 2023
Jodi Rudoren of the Jewish Forward newspaper spent
days reporting in Israel recently, and on December 20, Brian Lehrer of WNYC
radio asked her what Israelis think of the death toll in Gaza,
which Lehrer said is “unprecedented anywhere on earth in this century in this
short a time.”
The Israelis don’t care, Rudoren said. “It’s really
not an active debate in Israel, among Jews anyway.” They are mourning and
fearful, she said– then went on to rationalize the 20,000 killed. The death
toll “is totally staggering and hard to grapple with… [but] we do need to keep
in mind, that the international laws of war are not based on what the total
death toll is, they’re based on the proportionality of the civilian casualties
and collateral damage of each attack, and it takes a long time to figure that
out in the fog of war.”
And therefore, “it’s on the international community to
pressure the Palestinians and the Arab world to provide some [diplomatic]
alternatives that might work for Israel right now.”
Rudoren’s mental gymnastics in favor of Israel are
hardly unique. All across the U.S., Jewish establishment groups and individuals
are lobbying for Israel, and if they mention the slaughter of Palestinian
civilians, they blame Hamas.
William Daroff, the head of the Conference of
Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, issued a statement calling
for Jewish unity in the face of international protests of Israel and never
mentioned Palestinians at all. There has been an “astonishing and alarming rise
in antisemitism… in response to Israeli governmental action–” Action? Israel
has killed more civilians in two months than have been killed in the Ukraine
war in almost two years. But Daroff saw a battle for Jewish survival.
“The entire Jewish nation is at war,” he says.
“Collective determination is also how I know we will overcome these challenges
and win… As a people, we are stronger when we are one.”
Liberal Zionists have heeded this call. For instance,
the New Israel Fund blames Hamas for “spawning the war that has claimed
thousands of lives and displaced hundreds of thousands of individuals.” Thus
leaving Israel’s crimes out of it.
That approach is little different from the approach of
the five big center-right Jewish organizations (the Jewish Federations, the
American Jewish Committee, the ADL, AIPAC, and the Conference of Presidents)
that lately launched a media campaign called the Ten-Seven project aimed at
keeping the American media and government’s focus on the Hamas atrocities of
October 7 and ignoring the slaughter of Palestinians and destruction of Gaza.
The Conference of Presidents ran a full page ad in the New York Times saying
this war is all about antisemitism. “Hatred of Israel is Endangering American
Jews.” The ad equates anti-Zionism and antisemitism. “Disagreement with
or contempt for Israel has become a pretext to attack Jews,” the ad says.
Lehrer echoed these fears when he interviewed Rudoren.
“Anywhere Jews have lived as a minority they have been oppressed. In the modern
era certainly.”
It is understandable why Jews have such feelings
historically, but they are surely inappropriate to a moment when more than
8,200 Palestinian children have been killed. I say that the relentless focus on
Jewish suffering poses a greater risk to Jewish life than antisemitism. Fresh
images of maimed Palestinian children are on the news every night, and famine
and disease are on the doorstep — and the Jewish establishment is fixed
entirely on the atrocities against Jews of 12 weeks ago.
The world clearly sees Hamas’s crimes, but it also
sees the horrifying scenes from Gaza, which never stop. Almost every nation has
called for a ceasefire except the United States, and BBC commentators regularly
describe conditions in Gaza as apocalyptic.
The polling indicates that the young and the
Democratic base are shocked and distressed by Israel’s actions—but their
feelings are unrepresented by our politicians. This awning at a bodega in
Brooklyn is a perfect expression of general attitudes in the progressive U.S.
community. And P.S., the awning doesn’t blame Jews.
The Jewish leaders want us to believe that only a
lunatic fringe cares and America is with us. The Ten Seven project insists on
this. But they are wrong. About half the American public is against the Israeli
genocide. A startling 46 percent of the U.S. public opposes U.S. military aid
to Israel, 45 percent support it, according to a Quinnipiac poll. Among the young the numbers are sharply tilted
against military aid — 72 percent of those under 35, 53 percent of those under
50. We can safely assume that the Democratic numbers are at least 60/40
against, based on earlier surveys.
The Israel lobby is fighting these attitudes with
wealth, and that is feeding the worst stereotypes about Jewish influence. It
is reported that AIPAC is planning to spend upward of $100 million to
try to defeat members of the Squad, the only people in Congress who have
challenged Israel’s actions.
Daroff brags that a “coterie of philanthropists” is
funding the Ten Seven project to influence media. That coterie surely has Joe
Biden’s ear. The ADL, the AJC, the Conference, and AIPAC have all met with the
White House, Daroff says. (Just as Obama’s top foreign policy aide had to
meet with officials of big Israel lobby organizations more than all other
interest groups put together and had to call a list of “leading Jewish donors”
in 2011 after Obama dared to suggest a two-state solution must be on the ‘67
lines and Netanyahu lectured him for seven minutes in the White House).
Israel’s crisis has only made the role of donors in
the American establishment more naked. Big Jewish donors have
been directing U.S. institutions on how to respond to Israel’s crisis.
Harvey Swieca at Columbia’s business school threatened to withdraw funds — and
the school suspended JVP and SJP for supposedly making Jews feel unsafe with
pro-Palestinian rhetoric. A major Penn donor, Marc Rowan, played a central role in the resignations of the university president
and the board chair over campus culture– and now faculty at the school is in an
uproar over why Rowan (a financial wizard mentored by Leon Black of Apollo
Global Management, of Jeffrey Epstein fame), is issuing mandates about the
correct “culture” in campus debates. And, just as shocking, the new chair of
Penn’s board is the leader of the Jewish Federations.
The top bosses at CNN and MSNBC, as I have stated many
times, are Jews who support Israel. It is hardly a coincidence that CNN anchors
insist on an October 7 frame – as opposed to an apartheid frame, or Israel’s
siege of Gaza frame – and that Virginia Moseley oversees editorial operations
and she’s married to Tom Nides, who has thrown himself into work for the Jewish Federations, which is part of the Ten Seven project.
Liberal institutions are also affected. When authors
at the National Book Awards ceremony last month issued calls for a ceasefire in
Gaza, it was too much for leading sponsors. A major Jewish donor, Zibby Owens, withdrew her sponsorship of the
presentation because she said there would be “antisemitic” speeches at the
event. Owens’s father, Steve Schwarzman, funds the institution where I wasted
my youth, the New York Public Library research building
I see this and am ashamed. The official Jewish
community is seeking to outlaw robust debate by declaring that only antisemites
would speak up for the millions of helpless Palestinians under a historic
onslaught.
That stance destroys Jewish traditions. Jews on the
left played a key political role in the liberation movements in the U.S. in the
last century and in the anti-Vietnam war movement, and in the last 30 years we
have gained unprecedented levels of privilege and influence in the U.S.
establishment.
And what role do we imagine for ourselves springing
from this power?
To demand that a Long Island Santa Claus be fired by the chamber of commerce for asking tough
questions of the American Jewish Committee proxies for Israel at a local
temple? Are you crazy? To knock out school board officials in suburban
Philadelphia because they denounce Israeli “genocide” or say it’s a terrorist state? Don’t they have
that right?
The commandment of supporting Israel has sent my
community into complete intellectual freefall. A community that prided itself
on Talmudic reasoning and for having three opinions for every two Jews is
enforcing one opinion on the U.S. discourse, then claiming that the resulting
conformity is actually U.S. public opinion.
How does this end well for Jews? This conduct fulfills
the very worst stereotypes of Jews wielding influence, and other Americans are
seeing it. The polling says that 67 percent of Americans under 25 believe that
Jews are an oppressor class, not a victimized class– and 44 percent of those
25-34 believe the same. Overall, Americans don’t accept these ideas, by three
to one. But I find those attitudes concerning. They should be a warning to the
entitled Jewish organizations to stop throwing their weight around and ignoring
Palestinian genocide. Even J Street is in that gang. (And so is Bernie Sanders,
a man I revered but who has failed the simple Ceasefire test – because of your
days on the kibbutz, Bernie?)
When Israel started bombing refugee camps, an old
friend who has always worked and socialized with Jews wrote to me in anger. Not
only was Israel exterminating people and possibly costing Biden Michigan and
inspiring more kids to become terrorists—it was “reigniting latent antisemitism
that mind virus that survives from Roman times…”
The official Jewish community’s indifference to
genocide is not only hurting Palestinians but will hurt Jews. “The entire
Jewish nation” is not at war. Israel is. A Zionist society that has totally
lost its bearings out of a psychosis bred by Holocaust thinking and political
impunity is at war with an impoverished people it has oppressed for
generations.
Let us celebrate all the young Jews who recognize
these truths and have bravely called for ceasefire. They are the only future
for the American Jewish community.
As it is, Israel’s racism against Palestinians has
subsumed official Jewish life. American Jews have abandoned their best
traditions out of deference to a militant state that exists in constant fear of
those it subjugates. Israel will only be curbed when American Jews recognize
that their own experience of a modern polity – an inclusive society based on
equal rights for all and the expansion of civil rights – is the true model.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario