Anti-Semitism in Europe Is Getting Worse. By Cathy Young.
Anti-Semitism in Europe Is Getting Worse. By Cathy Young. Real Clear Politics, November 16, 2013.
Young:
Is
hostility toward Israel linked to hostility toward Jews? A report on
anti-Semitism in Europe, released on November 8—the day before the anniversary
of the Kristallnacht pogrom that marked the start of the Nazi war on Jews 75
years ago—addresses this contentious question. While Israel’s supporters have
long warned of a new strain of anti-Semitism camouflaged in pro-Palestinian
advocacy and opposition to Israeli policies, Israel’s critics complain that
charges of anti-Jewish bigotry are used to silence dissent. Yet the latest study, “Discrimination and Hate Crime Against Jews in EU Member States,”
strongly suggests that “the new anti-Semitism” is not a propagandist myth but a
depressing reality.
The
evidence is especially compelling since it comes from a neutral source: the
European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA). The agency surveyed nearly
6,000 self-identified Jews in eight European Union countries (Belgium, France,
Germany, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Sweden and the United Kingdom). While the
online survey, publicized through Jewish community organizations and media
outlets, did not have a random sample of respondents, it was designed with
expert input to be as representative as possible.
A few
findings:
*
Two-thirds of respondents said that anti-Semitism was a serious problem in
their country; three out of four felt it had worsened in the past five years.
* One
in four said they had personally experienced anti-Jewish harassment in the past
twelve months; while this included verbal attacks on the Internet, almost one
in five had been harassed in person.
*
During the same period, three percent said they had been targets of
anti-Semitic vandalism; four percent reported hate-motivated physical assaults
or threats.
*
Nearly half worried about anti-Jewish harassment or violence; two-thirds of
those with school-age children or grandchildren were concerned that the
children might experience such harassment at school or on the way to school.
* Close
to a quarter said they sometimes refrained from visiting Jewish events or sites
out of safety concerns. Nearly two out of five usually avoided public displays
of Jewish identity such as wearing a Star of David.
*
Almost one in three had considered emigrating because they did not feel safe as
Jews.
Even if
the self-selected the pool of respondents was skewed toward those affected by
or strongly concerned about anti-Semitism, these are still disturbing results.
The
survey also reveals some interesting—and not entirely surprising—facts about
the face of anti-Jewish bigotry in 21st Century Europe. Most of those who
reported anti-Semitic harassment identified the culprit or culprits as having
either “Muslim extremist views” (27 percent) or left-wing political views (22
percent); only 19 percent said it came from someone with right-wing beliefs.
This
tendency is even stronger for anti-Semitic hate speech, from Holocaust denial
to claims that the Jews “exploit Holocaust victimhood” or have too much power.
(The exceptions are Latvia and Hungary, where anti-Semitism is more likely to
be of the traditional far-right variety.) Among Western European Jews who
reported encountering such slurs in the past year, 57 percent had seen or heard
them from left-wingers; 54 percent, from Muslim extremists; 37 percent, from
right-wingers; 18 percent, from Christian extremists. Moreover, the most common
anti-Jewish comment reported in the survey was that Israelis act “like Nazis”
toward the Palestinians—rhetoric European institutions have repeatedly
condemned as anti-Semitic.
Of
course criticism of Israeli policies does not equal anti-Semitism: All states
are fallible, and the state of Israel is locked in an excruciatingly complex
conflict with the Palestinians in which there is very real suffering on both
sides. Yet the Israelis-as-Nazis metaphor is a stark illustration of how far
such criticism has gone beyond the pale. Such analogies do not get thrown at
states with far worse human rights records, such as China or Russia; even South
Africa’s racist apartheid regime, however reviled, was not routinely attacked
as Nazi-like. The Israelis are singled out for this comparison precisely as
Jews—the primary targets of Nazi genocide—who have supposedly traded places
with their murderers. If this is not anti-Semitism, what is?
Yet
such parallels are creeping into mainstream left-wing discourse, even in the
United States. The new book, Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel by Max Blumenthal, heavily promoted by The Nation—the leading magazine of the
American left—features such chapter titles as “The Concentration Camp” and “The
Night of Broken Glass.” (Even Nation columnist Eric Alterman, himself a vocal
critic of Israel, has slammed Goliath
for, among other things, the “implicit equation of Israel with Nazis.”)
There
are even more striking examples of the fusion between Israel-bashing and
Jew-bashing. A 2011 tract called The
Wandering Who? by Israeli-born British musician and self-styled “self-hating
Jew” Gilad Atzmon not only asserts that Israel is “far worse than Nazi Germany”
but suggests that historical anti-Semitism in Europe must have been the Jews’
fault. Atzmon brags about getting suspended from school as a child for asking
the teacher how she knew that Jews didn’t really murder Christian babies for
ritual use of their blood. He also blames American Jews in the 1930s for
provoking Hitler by calling for a boycott of German goods.
While
some anti-Zionist leftists and pro-Palestinian activists denounced Atzmon’s book, it received a disturbing amount of praise—including a blurb from
University of Chicago professor John Mearsheimer, co-author of the
controversial book The Israel Lobby and
U.S. Foreign Policy. A major British newspaper, The Guardian, carried The
Wandering Who? in its online bookshop before pulling it in response to
criticism.
In this
toxic climate, the lines between “new” and “old” anti-Semitism keep getting
more and more blurred. Last year, veteran Norwegian academic Johan Galtung, the
founder of “peace studies” and a distinguished professor at the University of
Hawaii, came under fire for some eyebrow-raising statements. Among other
things, Galtung had described the Protocols
of the Elders of Zion, a 1903 hoax “documenting” a Jewish world domination
plot, as a useful tool for understanding the modern world; he had also made
outlandish claims about Jewish control of the American media, apparently drawn
from neo-Nazi guru William Luther Pierce.
Sympathy
for the Palestinians, who are seen as Third World victims of pro-Western
colonialists, has led many on the left to condone anti-Jewish attitudes
presumably driven by anger at Israeli oppression. Take Alterman, the anti-Goliath polemicist, who in a recent
blogpost writes that he himself has often been attacked and tarred with the
anti-Semitism brush by Israel sympathizers. I am one of those polemicists, and
I regretfully admit that in a 2005 column I made some inappropriate comments about
Jewish self-hatred. Yet there remains the fact that Alterman has written off
anti-Jewish violence by young Arab immigrants in France as a backlash against
the Israeli occupation of the West Bank (rather than real anti-Semitism) and
defended a British Muslim group’s decision to boycott a Holocaust remembrance
event. Whatever the motive, such excuses effectively amount to enabling
anti-Semitism. And as long as such enabling continues, the problem will keep
getting worse.