You cannot understand the obsession with 'anti-Semitism' today without understanding how Jewish identity has changed
The idea for this
article, which was published in Electronic
Intifada came from someone who wrote to me.
They asked which of
the following applies to British Jews?
Black people experience
1 Deaths in custody
2 Worse health inequalities
3 Their children are disproportionately in
pupil referral units
4 They are disproportionately under employed
5 They are not given same opportunity to
access community asset development scheme when organisations given funding to
ensure this happen
6 Why are they disproportionately over
represented in prisons?
7 Why did the EU not investigate the EHRC on
all these counts as they are a national body for the member state equality
8 A disproportionate number who are subject
to stop and searched
9 Over medication in the treatment processes
for mental health
10 Disproportionate homelessness
When posed like this it is clear that British Jews are not oppressed. Antisemitism is confined to noxious comments on social media, at worst. There are very few anti-Semitic attacks. It is precisely because Jews don't suffer from state racism that the racist media - from the Daily Telegraph to the Guardian - have no hesitation in plugging 'antisemitism.
The above questions have crystallised in the article below.
Tony Greenstein
Britain’s
Labour Party lost support among Jewish voters before Jeremy Corbyn became its
leader. (Ben Cawthra/Sipa USA/Newscom)
Tony Greenstein The Electronic Intifada 26 June 2019
Cries of “anti-Semitism” are the charges every supporter of the
Palestinians has to face. I doubt that there is a single Palestine solidarity
activist who hasn’t been accused of anti-Semitism.
The rationale for these accusations include the suggestion that we are
operating “double standards” in singling out Israel for criticism. We are
alleged to criticize Israel because it is a “Jewish” state. Israel is the
“targeted collective Jew among the nations,” Irwin Cotler, a former government
minister in Canada, has written.
Today, a different, more subtle argument is developing: Israel and
Zionism are an integral part of Jewish identity. That is why opposition to
Zionism and Israel is automatically anti-Semitic.
This argument was tested earlier this decade in an employment tribunal
which assessed allegations that Britain’s University and College
Union was anti-Semitic because it supports BDS – the Palestinian call for
boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel. Ronnie Fraser, the pro-Israel
campaigner who had taken legal action against the union, argued that Zionism
was an integral part of Jewish identity.
That argument was rejected by the tribunal’s judges in 2013. The
tribunal concluded that “a belief in the Zionist project
or an attachment to Israel” was “not intrinsically a part of Jewishness.”
Another variant of this argument is to suggest that as Israel is the
only Jewish state in the world, opposition to it must be anti-Semitic. Since
there are Islamic and Christian states, opposition to Israel cannot be other
than anti-Semitic. However this is to obscure the fact that Israel is unique
because it is the only ethno-religious state in the world.
Inherently racist
Defining ethnicity and nationality in terms of religion means a state
will be inherently racist.
Being Jewish in Israel is not a religious but a racial identity. Jews
have privileges that are not accorded to non-Jews.
As a Jew in Israel, you have access to 93 percent of “national” land controlled or owned by the Jewish National Fund.
Imagine that in Britain, which is nominally a Christian state, I was unable to
rent a flat because it was Christian national land.
How would that not be anti-Semitic?
The Islamic states of the Middle East are certainly backward and
regressive political formations. However they do not systematically grant
Muslims special privileges.
On the contrary, the Islamic nature of the Iranian or Saudi states
operates to legitimize the oppression and persecution of Muslims. Arguably Jews
in Iran are better off than Muslims.
The French Revolution, which ushered in the emancipation of the Jews,
also introduced the separation of religion from the state. This is why Zionism
was based on a rejection of emancipation which it saw as leading to the
“assimilation” of Jews to non-Jews.
When France’s Constituent Assembly convened in September 1789 to discuss
the Jewish question, the civil liberties advocate Stanislas de
Clermont-Tonnerre declared that “Jews should be denied everything
as a nation, but granted everything as individuals.”
Anti-Semitism was widespread in the ethno-religious and nationalist
Christian states of Eastern Europe in the 1930s and 1940s. These states proved
receptive to the Nazis.
The savagery of the Holocaust in Romania was too much even for Hans
Frank, a leading Nazi lawyer and Governor of the Generalgouvernment (Poland). He contended
that some of the massacres committed in Romania were much worse than Nazi
violence in Germany, where “we use the art of surgery, not of butchery.”
In Romania, the fascist Iron Guard was also known
as the Legion of the Archangel Michael. Christianity was an essential part of Hungary’s fascist Iron Cross.
And Slovakia’s Hlinka Guard – which deported Jews to Auschwitz – was led by a Catholic priest, Jozef Tiso.
Moral panic
The British political establishment, including much of the leadership of
the Labour Party, has been in the grip of a form of mass hysteria, a moral
panic about anti-Semitism. The mere denial of the existence of anti-Semitism is
proof that you are an anti-Semite.
The situation resembles that other example of mass hysteria, the Salem
witch trials. The historian Elizabeth Reis writes about the dilemmas that faced the women in
these trials:
During
examinations, accused women were damned
if they did and damned if they did not: if they confessed to witchcraft
charges, their admissions would prove the cases against them; if they denied
the charges, their very intractability, construed as the refusal to admit to
sin more generally, might mark them as sinners and hence allies of the devil.
What is this “anti-Semitism” that is so all-pervasive? In many respects,
it resembles the allegations of being sympathetic toward communism
made in the West during the Cold War.
Among the theoreticians of this “new anti-communism” is Jonathan
Freedland, a columnist with The Guardian. In 2016, he argued that “93 percent [of British Jews] who
told a 2015 survey that Israel forms some part of their identity as Jews can
take criticism of Israeli governments and of Israeli policy” but not
anti-Zionism.
It should be noted that Freedland was concealing the full picture. The
same survey asked British Jews whether they identified
as Zionists – 59 percent said “yes” and 31 percent said “no.” The proportion
identifying themselves as Zionist dropped by 13 percent since a previous survey
was conducted in 2010.
Unsustainable
A similar claim was made earlier this year by Mike Katz, chair of the
Jewish Labour Movement – a pro-Israel lobby group. Katz was referring to a
comment by the Labour lawmaker Richard Burgon who described
Zionism as “the enemy of peace.”
The comment had been made at a 2014 meeting but a video of Burgon’s
speech was only published this April. When the video was
circulated online, Katz stated that Zionism is “a core part of their
[British Jews’] identity.”
In other words, criticism of Zionism, the ideology and the movement, as
opposed to the government of Israel, is intrinsically anti-Semitic because you
are attacking the identity of most Jews. This argument is unsustainable on a
number of levels.
First, the identity of Jews has changed repeatedly.
Before World War II, most Jews were anti-Zionist. To say that
anti-Zionism is a form of anti-Semitism is to say that Polish Jews, 90 percent
of whom died in the Holocaust, were anti-Semitic on the basis
that – in Warsaw and other major Polish cities – they voted overwhelmingly during 1938 elections for
the anti-Zionist Jewish Bund.
Secondly, the reasons for the change in Jewish attitudes to Zionism is
primarily a product of socio-economic changes which have driven them to the
right.
And thirdly, the argument that it is racist to criticize or oppose a
group’s identity is flawed and illogical. It has extremely reactionary
implications.
When I was a child I used to visit relatives in London’s East End. We
would go to eat in Bloom’s, the Jewish restaurant in Whitechapel. We would have
to queue to get a place at lunchtime.
In 1996 Bloom’s closed, the reason being that the Jews had moved
out of the East End to be replaced by Bengalis and other immigrant communities.
The Jews of the East End have migrated to the London suburb of Golders
Green and elsewhere.
During the first half of the 20th century, Britain’s Jews were
predominantly working class and prominent in the trade unions. When Phil
Piratin, England’s only Communist member of parliament, won the
constituency of Mile End in East London during the 1945 general election, it is estimated
that half of his vote came from Jews.
Jews formed an identifiable part of Britain’s working class and its most
politically conscious part. Jews led the anti-fascist movement. At one time
there were more than 30 Jewish trade unions.
Moving rightwards
Today, there is no Jewish working class. Jews have climbed the
socio-economic ladder and – in many cases – moved rightwards politically. When
it is argued that “anti-Semitism” under current Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has led to the loss of Jewish
support for the party, that is simply untrue.
According to a poll in April 2015, 69 percent of Jews were
planning to vote Conservative in the following month’s general election and
only 22 percent for Labour. That was despite the fact that Labour was then led
by Ed Miliband, its first Jewish leader.
William Rubinstein, a historian, wrote in the 1980s about “the rise of Western
Jewry to unparalleled affluence and high status.” That rise “has led to the
near-disappearance of a Jewish proletariat of any size; indeed, the Jews may
become the first ethnic group in history without a working class of any size.”
As the Jews changed, so too did anti-Semitism. State-sponsored
anti-Semitism disappeared in Britain to be replaced by racism against Black and
Asian people.
Rubinstein’s conclusion was that the change in Jews’
socio-economic position “has rendered obsolete (and rarely heard) the type of
anti-Semitism which has its basis in fears of the swamping of the native
population.” It has made “Marxism, and other radical doctrines, irrelevant to
the socio-economic bases of Western Jewry, and increasingly unattractive to
most Jews.”
Geoffrey Alderman, a Jewish Chronicle columnist and right-wing
Zionist, wrote in a 1983 book [Jewish Community in British Politics] that by 1961, “over 40 percent of Anglo-Jewry was
located in the upper two social classes, whereas these categories accounted for
less than 20 percent of the general population.”
Alderman shows that British Jews frequently became much more conservative than the rest of the
British population.
That is illustrated by the March 1978 by-election which took place in
the Ilford North area of Greater London. Labour had previously held this seat
by just 778 votes. By-elections are held in Britain when a parliamentary seat
becomes vacant, usually due to a death or resignation.
During the 1978 by-election Keith Joseph, Margaret Thatcher’s svengali,
came to the constituency to make a blatantly racist anti-immigration speech.
One might expect that Jewish voters of all people would react against
this. Not a bit of it. The Conservatives gained the seat on a swing of 6.9
percent but among Jewish voters there was a swing of 11.2 percent.
As Jews move to the right, they become more sympathetic to Zionism,
British foreign policy and US imperialism. That has nothing to do with
anti-Semitism.
Blackmail
The argument that opposition to a group’s identity is racist is part of
the poisonous legacy of identity politics which eliminates the distinction
between oppressed and oppressor. That legacy would have one believe that even
the powerful and privileged have an identity and their claims have equal
validity to those they exploit.
In the absence of class and race, identity politics become a
justification for the status quo.
Of course, it is true that racists will disguise an attack on a
particular ethnic or racial group by attacking its religion.
When right-wing firebrand Robert Spencer attacks Islam as “warfare against unbelievers” or
his colleague Pamela Geller writes that “the Quran is war propaganda,” then
that is racism, not a critique of religion. But when someone defends Salman
Rushdie because he published The Satanic Verses, that is a defense of
reason against religious bigotry.
The same applies to Zionism. If someone attacks Israel because it is a
Jewish state, then that is anti-Semitic. But nearly all criticism of
Israel has nothing to do with anti-Semitism.
On the contrary, it is anti-Semites – from Hungary’s Viktor Orban to
Steve Bannon in the US – who use support for Israel to disguise their
anti-Semitism.
Opposition to a particular identity is not racist.
In Afghanistan many, if not most, people consider the burka an integral
part of Islam. Is it seriously suggested that it is intrinsically racist and
anti-Muslim to oppose the burka, even when such opposition comes from Muslim
women?
In many countries in Africa female genital mutilation is part of the
identity of those living there. Is opposition to FGM racist?
There are many religious practices that are reactionary, medieval and
barbaric. Opposition to them is not racist.
The same is true with the Jewish community. Although there is no doubt
that most Jews in Britain are more liberal than the Jewish leaders and the
Board of Deputies, there is little doubt that the majority are supporters of Zionism. It is also arguable that a
majority of Jews do not realise the extent of Israeli racism and how Zionism
mandates a form of apartheid.
However it is a fact that a Jewish ethno-nationalist state in Israel
cannot be other than a racist apartheid state. The argument that it is
anti-Semitic to oppose an identity that is itself based on support for racism
is untenable.
If indeed the majority of Jews do support a Zionism that mandates the demolition of Palestinian villages such as Umm
al-Hiran in order to build Jewish towns in their place, then that is clearly a
racist identity. If the majority of British Jews support a state where the
chief rabbi of Safed issues an edict that non-Jews cannot rent property from
Jews, then how is that not racist?
The idea that opposition to religious identity is, in itself, a form of
racism is a form of blackmail.
Both apartheid in South Africa and slavery in the US
were justified by particular interpretations of the
Bible. Was opposition to the identity of white planters or West Indian slave
owners racist?
Tony Greenstein is a founding member of the Palestine Solidarity
Campaign and the author of The Fight Against Fascism in Brighton and the South Coast.
Black people experience
When posed like this it is clear that British Jews are not oppressed. Antisemitism is confined to noxious comments on social media, at worst. There are very few anti-Semitic attacks. It is precisely because Jews don't suffer from state racism that the racist media - from the Daily Telegraph to the Guardian - have no hesitation in plugging 'antisemitism.
During examinations, accused women were damned if they did and damned if they did not: if they confessed to witchcraft charges, their admissions would prove the cases against them; if they denied the charges, their very intractability, construed as the refusal to admit to sin more generally, might mark them as sinners and hence allies of the devil.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please submit your comments below