20
(pt. 1)
JEWISH INFLUENCE IN
POPULAR CULTURE
"If anything distinguishes American Jews today within the
context of American
society it is the special deference that society accords
them."
-- Charles Liebman/Stephen Cohen,
p. 7
"I have found that being
Catholic means having less status than
being Jewish. I see it in the
media, in the newspapers, in the
intonations; I do not see how
one can avoid that feeling or
sensibility."
-- Michael Novak, [in
Stallsworth, p. 71]
"I'm half Jewish and half nothing."
(four-year-old boy in an elevator, to his friend),
[COWAN, P., 1987, p. 245]
"Too many Jews have turned away
from the modern project, from
the Enlightenment and the idea
of progress, to barricade
themselves in an angry
tribalism."
-- Norman Birnbaum, Tikkun,
p. 111
"The Jews in America ... have
become very powerful as a lobby and
can afford the luxury of being
hypersensitive. Any little thing that
you say in criticism is seen as
a criticism against the people. They
seem to want to be seen as
infallible."
-- South African Bishop Desmond Tutu,
Nobel Peace Prize
Winner
"When Jews see themselves as
superior to all other human beings
... they are claiming license
to do what is forbidden to others."
-- Yehoshafat Harkabi,
former chief of
Israeli military
intelligence, p. 180
"I didn't hear that polio was
cured today. I heard that a Jewish
doctor cured polio today." -- Godfrey Cambridge,
Black comedian,
SIMONS, p.
135-136
"[Black Americans have] an envy
of the Jewish position and an
exaggerated notion of their
power, which is standard in the
anti-Semitic imagination." --
Henry Feingold, Jewish scholar, p. 77
"American Jews have exerted an
extraordinary impact upon the
character of the United
States."
-- Stephen Whitfield, Jewish
scholar, [AMERICAN
SPACE,
p.20]
"It is all very puzzling. Who
are these people, Christians wonder,
who have moved so rapidly from
obscurity to positions of
prominence, even influence, in
American society ... [and] why
do Jews seek to stick together
so much?"
--
Charles Silberman, Jewish scholar, p. 26
"The period after World War II, especially, was a time of advance.
Before then Jews had moved into the entertainment field, dominating
Hollywood, and had begun to move into medicine, the sciences,
academia, journalism, and cultural life in general. By the 1960s,
they were disproportionately represented in most professions having
to do
with the creation or dissemination of culture."
-- Stanley Rothman and S. Robert Lichter,
Jewish authors,
1982, p. 96
"Jews in America are a power
group; is it unreasonable for some
people to ask whether Jews
have too much power?"
--
Jerome Chanes, Jewish scholar, [in Weiss, p. 32]
"We Jews still prepare
ourselves to fight the things the world
plans on doing to us. It ain't
true ... Jews are not victims. We are
the players." -- J. J. Goldberg
[in Silverstein, B., p. 5]
Transcending religion, race, or any
other traditional Judaic reference, modern American Jewry is often
described these days as a voluntary (from the perspective of the
individual, not the community, which claims Jews by birth to the
"community of fate") polity, a secular organizational
network with emphasis upon social, educational, economic and political
activism. It is an organization that unifies atheists and the
religious, rich and the less affluent, Sephardim, Ashkenazi, and any
other self-defined "Jew" within a communal solidarity to Jewish
"peoplehood" and its four unifying pillars of Jewish identity: 1) belief
in a communal identity of historic persecution and victimhood and the
uniqueness of Jewish suffering in the Holocaust, 2) belief in the
omnipresent threat of an irrational anti-Semitism, 3) allegiance to the
modern state of Israel, and 4) a dedication to helping others Jews.
The secular Jewish polity is a very
adjusted model of the old obsolete "kehillah" self-governing
organization that the Jewish community in Europe used to mediate with --
and distance itself from -- the surrounding non-Jewish people and
cultures. While today's Jewish polity is world's apart in method and
structure from the old institution, its purpose for existence today has
moved towards what is was in ancient times: Jewish people distinct from,
and often at the expense of, others. (Since the late 1960s, there has
been a major shift in fundamental American Jewish attitudes: from
helping fellow Jews assimilate fully into American mainstream society,
to its polar opposite: massive amounts of money raised to support all
aspects of "being Jewish.”) [SINGER, p. 220] The largest and best known
expression of this polity is the United Jewish Appeal, an entity that
has some 225 "federation'" sub-branches throughout the country. (In
1999, the UJA merged with other groups to form the "United Jewish
Communities.") Such organizations claim a supportive base of 95% of all
Jews in America. [WOOCHER] (One UJA fundraising brochure summed up its
sense of itself by stating that "the programs of [our] agencies ... are
not merely organizational endeavors, even 'good works' ... they are
expressions of the essential meaning of Jewishness." [LIEBMAN/COHEN, p.
19]) By 1980, 4,600 "key leaders" traveled to Israel that year alone on
UJA "missions." [SILBERMAN, p. 198]]
Still other Jewish polity expressions
(what Daniel Elazar describes as "government-like institutions" [ELAZAR,
p. 217] include B'nai Brith (and its Anti-Defamation League), Haddassah,
the American Jewish Committee, the American Jewish Congress, the
National Council for Jewish Women, and a variety of overtly Zionist
organizations, most linked to the American Zion Federation. The central
Jewish lobbying organ for Israel is the American Israel Political Action
Committee -- AIPAC. By 1982 Jewish Americans had "no less than 340
national organizations." [KREFETZ, p. 71] More than eighty were
expressly Zionist or other pro-Israeli groups. [WAXMAN, p. 134]
This modern American Jewish polity is
often noted as a quintessential "civil religion," a secular belief
system that elicits deeply-felt allegiance of religious depth and
proportion. "It has become a commonplace in recent years," notes Peter
Novick, "that Israel and the Holocaust are the twin pillars of American
Jewish 'civil religion' -- the symbols that bind together Jews in the
United States whether they are believers or nonbelievers, on the
political right, left, or center." [NOVICK, P., 1999, p. 147] (The
modern Jewish attachment to Judaism as a formal religion in most of the
twentieth century has been weak. A 1971 study revealed that only 17% of
American Jews attended religious services more than once a month; this
was in comparison to 65% of non-Jews who did so). [FORSTER, p. 128] As
in any religion, the secular Jewish polity beliefs are articles of
faith. They need not make logical sense to an outside observer; even
some of its adherents may recognize -- and struggle to resolve --
various incongruencies, paradoxes, and hypocrisies in its central
tenets. As the Random House dust jacket blurb noted for James Yaffe's
1968 volume The American Jews: Portrait of a Split Personality,
"no people on earth are more riddled by contradictions than the American
Jews." [YAFFE, 1968]
These inconsistencies largely stem
from Jewish attempts to rationalize their traditional (and current)
notions of their exalted selves as the Chosen People in the context of a
modern western society that socializes against such chauvinism, a
pan-human perspective that most Jews themselves give public lip service.
Jewish reluctance to surrender, however, (whatever form of) their
self-perceived hereditary specialness as central to Jewish identity has
created for some a lingering moral and psychological dilemma, one that
the Jewish polity resolves by dissimulation and/or equivocation, by
enforcing the preposterous and paradoxical Jewish myth that it is Jewish
chauvinistic exceptionality itself that created the notion of pan-human
universality. "[The Jewish polity believes that] America is, after all,
created in their [Jewish] image," says Jonathan Woocher, "and in
pursuing the civil Jewish version of Jewish destiny, they are merely
reinforcing the terms of America's own understanding." [WOOCHER, p. 102]
"Whether Jews define themselves as
'just Jewish,' 'ethnic Jews,' 'nonreligious Jews,' or some other phrase
that classified them as more assimilated," noted Gary Tobin in 1988,
"most know that they are different from other Americans.... [TOBIN, p.
70] ... For most Jews, there continues to be a 'them' and an 'us,' even
though the 'us' is in some ways part of the 'them' ... [TOBIN, p. 73]
... The majority of American Jews continue to struggle to maintain their
separate identity." [TOBIN, p. 74] "Despite their strong desire for
integration into American society," wrote Nathan Glazer in 1972, "Jews
do not, on the whole intermarry and do maintain themselves apart. How to
resolve this contradiction is one of the major dilemmas of Judaism in
America." [GLAZER, p. 10]
This "contradiction" is clearly
manifest in the very principles of Jewish identity that are
diametrically opposed to the founding principles of Americanism. As Adam
Garfinkle observes:
"The principle of
individualist equality that flows from American
sacred texts and the American
experience cannot be reconciled with
the hierarchical, communal
principle that flows from halakhah,
Jewish religious law. Many try
and some claim success, but
'success' is mere illusion.
Most American Jews have two religions
the way some men have one wife
and one mistress, or some women
one husband and one lover. It
is a condition that can be managed,
learned from, even enjoyed,
some times for long periods. But it can
never be brought to true
reconciliation." [GARFINKLE, p. 4]
After a 1950s survey of American
Jews, researcher Joseph Adelson noted the "confusion" some Jews had in
grappling with stereotypes about Jews that seemed to them to be true,
all centering on the contradictions of Jewish identity and "self-hatred"
(i.e., self-criticism):
"It should be emphasized that the nonauthoritarian [a 1950s-era
term for the
non-prejudiced] are not free from conflicts and confusions about
being Jewish;
indeed, they frequently seem more disturbed than do the
authoritarian [i.e.,
"prejudiced" Jews who put stock in some stereotypes], in part
because of a
lesser rigidity of defense and in part because their political
beliefs are often at
variance with underlying feelings concerning Jewishness [the
human universalist/Jewish
chauvinist tension]. It is doubtful
whether many individuals, Jewish or Gentile, can
completely avoid
incorporating our society's stereotype of the Jew. The point is
that the authoritarian Jew accepts the stereotype and recasts it
to meet the
circumstance of his Jewishness; the nonauthoritarian Jew rejects
its validity,
fights its existence within himself, and is sometimes ridden by
guilt when he
unable to do so completely." [ADLESON, J., 1960, p. 479]
Zalman Posner, in championing the Orthodox Chabad Lubavitcher
religious world view and bemoaning the fact that there are too many
secular Jews who have been misguided by concepts of human universalism,
addresses the religious root in the conflict between "Christian"
identity and Jewry's traditionally separatist, and intolerant, core:
"I suggest that the American Jew conceives of religion and
discusses it in
Christian terms. He grapples with religious difficulties, because
a Jew must examine Judaism, but he does so with Christian
categories. His conflict
is not necessarily a Jewish one, but one of reconciling divergent
viewpoints,
the Jewish and the Christian, that were never intended to be
reconciled, for
they represent thoroughly different values." [POSNER, Z., p. 31]
Stephen Steinlight, a former American Jewish Committee official,
observes that
"Jews regularly identify with 'belief in social justice' as the
second most important
factor in their Jewish identity; it is trumped only by a 'sense of
peoplehood.' It also
explains the long Jewish involvement in and flirtation with
Marxism. But it is
fair to say that Jewish universalistic tendencies and tribalism
have always existed
in an uneasy dialectic. We are at once the most open of peoples and
one second
to none in intensity of national feeling. Having made this
important distinction, it
must be admitted that the essence of the process of my [Jewish]
nationalist training
was to inculcate the belief that the primary division in the world
was between 'us'
and 'them.' Of course we also saluted the American and Canadian
flags and sang
those anthems, usually with real feeling, but it was clear where
our primary loyalty was
meant to reside." [STEINLIGHT, S., OCTOBER
2001]
"The American Jew,"says Charles Liebman, "is torn between two sets
of values -- those of integration and acceptance into American society
and those of Jewish group survival. Those values appear to me to be
incompatible." [LIEBMAN, C., THE AMBIVALENT ..., p. vii; QUOTED IN
O'BRIEN, 2000] As Paul Cowan once underscored about his renewed Jewish
identity, and the distinctness between that and being American:
"Until 1976, when I was thirty-six, I had always identified as an
American Jew. Now I am an American and a Jew. I live at once in the
years 1982 and 5743, the Jewish year in which I am publishing this
book." [COWAN, P., 1982, p. 3]
"Every prayer and ritual observance
in Judaism,” says Arthur Koestler, "proclaims membership to an ancient
race, which automatically separates the Jew from the racial and historic
past of the people whose midst he lives." [KOESTLER, p. 287] "Above
all," says rabbi Jonathan Sacks, "the otherness of Jewish law as
something given by God and interpreted by authoritative rabbis runs
counter to the fundamental thought of modernity." [SACKS, J. p. 157]
"Traditional views of the Gentile and the fear of anti-Semitism
persist," wrote Charles Liebman and Steven Cohen in 1990, ".... This
sense of estrangement from the non-Jew and fear of the non-Jew remain
not only for Israelis and not only for those most deeply committed to
the Jewish tradition." [LIEBMAN/COHEN, p. 40]
Edward Bernard Glick notes his people's tradtional identity like
this:
"The Jewish people (as the American dictionary calls them),
dos yiddische folk
(as Yiddish speakers refer to themselves), and am yisrael or
ha'am ha'yehudi
(as Hebrew speakers refer to the concept) denote a transnational,
multilingual,
historical, and religious group which professes a oneness, a unity,
a whole, a
solidarity, and a partnership that predates by millenia the modern
Jewish state.
The concept applies to all Jews in the world, whether they realize
it or not,
whether they want it or not, and whether they they like it or not.
For Jewish
peoplehood is Judaism, which is a religion in the gentile
sense. And the proof
of this is that no other religious group in the world so steadily
and so steadfastly
calls itself a people. Do the multifarous denominations of American
Protestantism,
concerned as they may be with the fate of foreign Protestants, call
themselves the
Methodist people, the Baptist people, the
Episcopalian people, or the Presbyterian
people? Do American Catholics ... call themselves the Catholic
people, even though
catholic is a synonym for universal? Do
American Muslims, American Hindus, and
American Buddhists use the
word in reference to their creeds? No." [GLICK, E., 1982, p. 125]
As large numbers of Jews left the
hearts of big cities over the years, in 1959 Rabbi Albert Gordon's study
called Jews in Suburbia noted that "Jews seldom come to know
non-Jews any better in suburbia than they did in the big city ... To
what extent is this condition the result of Jewish self-segregation?
Scrutinizing each of the communities in this study with this question in
mind, I discovered first of all that ... their closest friendships are
reserved for other Jews who have the same community, class, synagogual
and organizational interests. This primary friendship is natural -- and
characteristic of every kind of suburb." [GORDON, A., p. 170] Arthur
Hertzberg notes that in post-World War II America, "even those Jews who
affirmed neither religious nor ethnic identity admitted that they were
most comfortable with other Jews. Even the most 'anti-Jewish' Jews
reported that at least four out of five of their friends were Jews. This
was true even of people of Jewish origin who had converted to one of the
branches of Christianity. Jewish businessmen and professionals ... did
business much of the time with Americans of all origins and persuasions.
They lunched often with their customers or clients, but they went home
to have dinner and play cards, or to play golf on weekends, or to go to
the theater or symphony, with other Jews." [HERTZBERG, A., 1989, p. 325]
"In one study," noted Susan Schneider
in the 1980s, "78% of the Jews (as compared to 14% of Protestants) say
that they have 'regular interactions' with at least five households of
[their] relatives. What may be a uniquely Jewish way of keeping the
kinship ties is the 'cousins' club,' meeting regularly to create family
networks that reinforce every member's sense of belonging, of having a
reference group or 'home room' even in adulthood." [SCHNEIDER, p. 265]
"Jews appear to be, by origin and authentic nature, a tribe," says
Jewish author Eric Kahler, "a primordial social structure and hence, in
spite of their dispersion the closest related of historical communities,
closer related among each other than the locally associated members of a
modern nation." [KAHLER, E., 1967, p. 10-11]
By scholarly -- or any other --
accounts, the Jewish tradition of a clannish collectivism and communal
self-promotive unity -- religiously or otherwise -- endures for most
Jews today. "The American Jewish community is cohesive," wrote Alan
Zuckerman in 1991, "... Because most American Jews occupy distinctive
niches in the general social, economic, and political structure of the
United States, each Jew makes decisions about friends, husband or wife,
neighbors, workmates, and political associates from a set of persons,
most of whom are Jews... [ZUCKERMAN, p. 15] ... The ties of residential
concentration and social class place the American Jewish community into
a distinctive niche in the general society." [ZUCKERMAN, p. 22] "The
community of class and status among Jews," says Calvin Goldscheider,
[and] occupational concentration and educational achievement at high
levels [results] in [Jewish] social bonds, economic networks, and common
lifestyles and interests ... [GOLDSCHEIDER, p. 135].. . The common
assumption that increased levels of education and occupation would lead
to assimilation of the American Jewish community [into mainstream
society] ... seems to be unfounded. An examination of the empirical
evidence has pointed to the very opposite conclusion. The uniqueness of
the stratification profile and the distinctive social mobility patterns
of American Jews mark Jews off from others and binds Jews to each
other." [GOLDSCHEIDER, p. 136] "The commonality of class and status
among Jews," agrees Esther Wilder, "is distinctive and results in social
bonds, economic networks, common lifestyles and interests." [WILDER,
6-96]
"In America as elsewhere," noted
Benjamin Ginsberg in 1994, "... Jews are outsiders who are often more
successful than their hosts ... And, to make matters worse, Jews often,
secretly or not so secretly, conceive themselves to be morally and
intellectually superior to their neighbors." [GINZBURG, p. 8] "To be a
Jew," wrote Eugene Borowitz in the 1970s," means to have a bond with
every other Jew -- and somehow know how to find him." [SILBERMAN, p. 76]
"In social intercourse with other Jews," says Theodore Reik,
"informality and familiarity form a kind of inner security, a
'we-feeling.' They know each other and there are not many things which
need to be explained. Meeting and speaking with other Jews is
accompanied by the feeling that they are 'my kind of people.' It is what
[Sigmund] Freud calls 'the clear awareness of an inner identity, the
secret of the same inner construction.'" [REIK, T., 1962, p. 228-229]
Early in his acting career, Marlon
Brando recalls walking with a Jewish friend in New York City:
"There was a woman in front of us
with blond hair wearing a mink
coat and we were talking about her,
when Caroline said, 'She's
Jewish.' I asked, 'How do you know?'
She answered, 'Well, it's
because ... I don't know, she's just
Jewish.' I said, 'You mean to
say, just because she has blond hair
and a mink --" She interrupted,
'Look, I'm a Jew, and I know what
Jews are like from the front,
back, side or top.' 'Well, how can
you tell a Jew from a non-Jew?'
She replied, 'Well, you have to be
Jewish to know that.' I was
stunned, and I thought Caroline had
remarkable powers of
perception." [BRANDO/LINDSEY, 1994,
p. 75]
Erich Kahler recalls and incident
involving a fellow Jew (poet Richard Beer-Hofmann) in Berlin:
"His face was wrapped in a woolen
scarf [against the cold] so that
only his eyes could be seen. An old
orthodox Jew in his caftan came
down the stairs and stopped him. 'The
gentleman is one of us (Der
Herr ist einer von uns),' he said to
Beer-Hofmann, 'he will tell me
how I can get to the
Nollendorfplatz.' The eyes alone were enough
to reveal a Jew to a Jew." [KAHLER,
E., 1967, p. 6]
Former New York Times Executive Editor Max Frankel notes the
following in his autobiography:
"The best reporters and editors normally have no race, sex, or
religion. They
may charm or muscle their way into strange places, but they try
not to THINK
male or female, black or Jewish. Still, there always comes a time
for exceptions.
I remember reliving the shudders of refugee life at the sight of
Hungarians trudging
across a frozen frontier swamp. I never
totally banished that twinge of smug American
security when
interviewing high-ranking Germans. And there's no denying the
conspiratorial bond that suddenly appeared when an old man on a
park bench in Kiev
whispered, BIST AH YID? Are you a Jew? was a
question often put to me, and
with decidedly different inflections. In Communist countries, it
came from Jews
who meant thereby to ask whether they could trust me with
seditious conversation.
In Israel, it was asked to discover whether I would ever put my
feelings for the Jewish
state ahead of my journalistic mission.
Now that I had charge of editorials at the
Times, the question was
usually hurled with contempt; I was obviously a Jew, but
in the eyes of many Jews, an unworthy one for daring to criticize
the Israeli
government. So whenever I turned to the subject of
Israel, there was no escaping
my skin." [FRANKEL, M., 1999, p. 397]
"Jewish civilization should have
vanished a long time ago," says Henry Feingold, "that it did not and
does not may also be part of Jewish exceptionalism. It may well be that
Judaism is governed by different rules ... Jews are a subgroup in this
dynamic society; but they are also more Jewish, as measured by the
concern for Jewish people throughout the world." [FEINGOLD, p. 52] "90%
[of American Jews] claim to feel 'very close' or 'fairly close' to other
Jews," noted Alan Zuckerman in 1991, " ... Even when they select
non-Jews [as spouses and friends], most Jews have strong ties which pull
them back to the Jewish community." [ZUCKERMAN, p. 27] "The Jews," noted
Jonathan Rieder in his study of Jews and Italians in a section of
Brooklyn, "had a pronounced feeling of ethnic honor, another sign of
their willingness to invest in loyalties beyond the nuclear family. The
articulateness of Jewish identity, and the capacity for immersion in the
collective experience of Jewish suffering, ran contrary to the muteness
of Canarasie Italians about their ethnicity." [REIDER, J., 1985, p. 46]
In 1993 Joel Kotkin noted that "an
estimated 50 per cent or more of American Jews send their children to an
ethnic school, and over three-quarters of young men undergo the
traditional bar mitzvah ceremony. In contrast, counterpart systems
promoting specifically Italian or German language, culture, and history
largely have disappeared in most major countries of immigration. Even
among inter-married couples ... a large majority claim that most of
their friends were Jews." [KOTKIN, p. 35] In 1988 eight of ten American
Jews still participated in some sort of yearly Passover ritual.
[WHITFIELD, AMERICAN, p. 6] One study showed that as late as the 1970s,
"96% of American Jews only had Jewish relatives, 77% had all their
closest friends as Jews, 60% belonged to Jewish community organizations,
virtually all of them gave to Jewish charities, and 90% felt a strong
attachment to Israel." [FORSTER, p. 129]
In a 1982 study of the American
Jewish community, "61% of the respondents reported that 'all,' 'almost
all,' or 'most' of their friends were Jewish. "About two-thirds of
American Jews still form their closest friendships with other Jews,"
noted Stephen Whitfield in 1988, "The process of acculturation may have
blurred distinctions between Jews and their gentile neighbors, but a
sense of peoplehood has not been entirely suppressed." [WHITFIELD, AM,
p. 6] In 1988 Gary Tobin could still write that "a study of the Jewish
population of New York City found 70% of respondents saying that all of
their three close friends are Jewish." [TOBIN, p. 69] In a 1990 survey
of American Jews, 60% selected the statement "I see the Jewish people as
an extension of my family"; only 23% disagreed. 74% agreed that "As a
Jew I have a special responsibility to help other Jews"; only 14%
disagreed. [LIEBMAN/COHEN, p. 18] (Jews in Russia? Jewish scholar Zvi
Gitelman in 1994 "found that Jews overwhelmingly reported that their
closest friends were Jewish." [SACKS, M., 1998, p. 264]
"No matter where I was," says Ze'ev
Chafets, about his travels across America in 1986, "-- in a Jewish farm
town in New England or a black synagogue in Queens, in a gay temple in
San Francisco or among the Jews of the Louisiana bayou -- I always felt
at home. I came to the United States feeling like an Israeli; I left
reminded that I am also, as a friend in Detroit put it, an MOT -- a
Member of the Tribe." [CHAFETS, MEMBERS, p. 8-9]
Stephen Bloom notes his enduring Jewish identity this way:
"Despite the lack of Jewish worship and observance, and my family's
total
assimilation into everything American and secular, we were
thoroughly Jewish
as was our very essence. The world was split into two distinct
halves: Jews
and gentiles. Jews were always sought in business or social
dealings over
gentiles. A common expresion used by Jews to describe a slow, dense
person was -- and still is -- 'He's got a goyisher kop,'
which literally means
'He's got a gentile head' but figuratively means 'slow-witted.'
First question
when I came home and boasted of making a new friend was 'Is he
Jewish?'
'God forbid!' (my father's expression) if I should ever go out with
a gentile
girl, and 'Oy vey!' (which literally means 'Oh, pain!') if I ever
got serious
with her. All my parents' friends were Jews." [BLOOM, S., 2001, p.
63]
"This clannishness, as it appears to
others," says Charles Silberman, "is rooted in the sense of destiny that
Jews the world over share with one another -- a destiny that has some
transcendent (and transcendental) significance." [SILBERMAN, p. 76]
("The destiny of the Jewish people," writes Jean Francois Steiner, " ...
no earthly power has ever been able to defeat." [HOWE, p. 445]) This
clustering, in the largest sense, has a very geographical flavor; over
95% of American Jews congregate in cities and nearby suburbs; in fact,
80% of them live in only ten population centers -- New York City and Los
Angeles are the two largest. [WHITFIELD, AMERICAN, p. 6] A third of all
American Jews live in the New York-New Jersey area. [SILBIGER, S., 2000,
p. 5] (City-wise, by 1999, the greater Miami Jewish population, about
653,000 people, ranked second only behind New York City). [BELKIN, D.,
5-6-99] Linking modern Jewish American geography to their roots in a
separatist ghetto past, in 1978 Nachum Goldmann added that "even today
Jews have a tendency to live in a neighborhood of their own, in an
environment that facilitates the life of their community." [GOLDMANN,
N., 1978, p. 66] [Click
here for world geography of the Jews] (American Jews are
overwhelmingly of Eastern European background. By the late 1950s, more
than four-fifths were estimated to be of Eastern European descent).
[GRINSTEIN, H., 1959, p. 73]
In London, England, the Jewish Chronicle noted in 2002 the
results of a local survey:
"London Jews also like to be near other Jews. More than 97 per cent in
North and North West London say they know of another Jewish resident in
the same street, while more than half (two-thirds in the North West)
have a next-door Jewish neighbor. More than 80 per cent in the North
East, and more than 90 per cent in the North West, have a Jewish
neighbour within three doors away." [JEWISH CHRONICLE, 12-6-02, p. 31] [Note: South London percentages are much, much smaller -- poorer
part of town?]
Decades earlier, the descendants of
other peoples who had immigrated to America with the last major Jewish
wave had already assimilated into American culture. In 1964, Arthur
Hertzberg was noting that "the grandchildren of the Italians, the Slavs
and the rest have become completely assimilated culturally ... The ...
European immigrants of the last century have failed to provide Jews with
a parallel for their devotion to some continuity for their own
subculture." [HERTZBERG, p. 287]
James Yaffe notes that
"In 1962 AJC [the American Jewish
Committee] studied the Jewish
community in Baltimore and came to
these conclusions: Jewish
employees are much more likely to
work for Jewish employers;
although most Jews claim they don't
care what religion their doctor
or lawyer professes, they
nevertheless use Jewish doctors 95 percent
of the time and Jewish lawyers 87
percent of the time; the great majority
of them say that it doesn't matter
to them if their children go to a school
that has only Jewish pupils in it --
yet 90 percent send their children to
schools which are predominantly
Jewish." [YAFFE, J., 1968, p. 65]
In 1973, Harry Golden noted that:
"Affluence and the census explain two
of the obvious characteristics
of Jewish mobility: when Jews move,
they all move at once and they
all want to move to the same place.
For Jews want the enclave. They
cluster." [GOLDEN, H., 1973, p. 43]
This clustering has a transnational
flavor. As Harold Troper noted about the Jews of Canada in 1999:
"Even today, no other ethnic group in
Canada is as institutionally
complete, nor does any other group
have a comparable degree of
communal self-awareness, as measured
by knowledge of organizations
and leaders, voluntarism and reading
of the ethnic press, community
fund raising, and individual
self-identification. Compared to most other
groups, and certainly compared to
other ethno-European groups, Jews
are a highly identified,
unassimilated group ... Many Jews in Canada
demonstrate a deeply held feeling of
mutual interdependence and
transnational identification with
Jews everywhere that defies any
explanation." [TROPER, H., 1999, p.
228, 232]
This is what the Jewish Chronicle noted about London
Jews, as reported by the Institute for Jewish Policy Research, in 2002:
"80 per cent had watched a programme of Jewish interest [in the past
year], 53 per cent had read a book on a Jewish topic, while just 10 per
cent had not participated in any kind Jewish cultural activity or bought
a piece of Judaica of any kind. A third had attended a Jewish lecture,
and one in five a synagogue adult-education programme; 24 per cent had
been to a Jewish film, theatre or music event; and 24 per cent had
visited a Jewish museum outside the UK. Around 60 per cent had been to
at least one Jewish educational or cultural event ... More than half of
those surveyed had done some type of voluntary work for their synagogue
or another Jewish organisation in the past year ... As many as 13 per
cent had served as a trustee on a Jewish charit ... Forty-six per cent
attached highest priority to Jewish causes in the UK; 20 per cent to
general British charities; 14 per cent to Israel; and 11 per cent
equally to Jewish and Israeli charities [i.e., noted that 71% of Jews
placed higher priority on Judeo-centric welfare over pan-British
welfare, which received only a 20% priority figure] ... 'What is
absolutely apparent,' the report comments, 'is that London Jews have
long sinced ceased to comprise a religious group. They are truly an
ethnie (ethnic group) within British society, with shared historical
memories, a myth of common ancestry ... and an overall sense of
solidarity ... More than 90 per cent think it important for their
children to mix with in Jewish social groups, and 89 per cent are
willing to send their children on an Israel trip -- an "amazingly high"
figure, the report notes, given the conflict in the Middle East."
[JEWISH CHRONICLE, 12-6-02, p. 31]
Jonathan Woocher, in his volume about
the Jewish American polity, notes that: "The civil religion knows that
the goals of Jewish group survival and social integration [with
mainstream American society] are indeed in tension. Civic Judaism's
world view and ethos in fact incorporates a host of assertions which are
potentially contradictory." These include the Jewish insistence that
they are "under siege" while they enjoy unprecedented freedom,
prosperity, and opportunity in America, the notion that all Jews are
"one people" when in fact they are -- in modern times -- as diverse as
any other group in every possible manner (except perhaps, throughout
most of the world, for their usual similarities in relatively high
income and social status), the idea that the modern state of Israel is
their "home" when they have perfectly fine homes here (indeed, homes
that are even "safer" than the Jewish ones overseas), the common secular
Jewish belief that Judaism's distinctive ideals are social justice,
equality, et al when mainstream American society's ideals are (and have
always been since the founding of the nation) no different, and the
expending of so much time, energy, and money on themselves as Jews (much
of it internationally) when the American social contract expects a
foremost Jewish responsibility to their fellow Americans (or simply
fellow humans) as equal members of the American polity. "Civic
Judaism," notes Woocher, "is ... a religion of thorough-going
ambivalence, of paradox, and inconsistency." [WOOCHER, p. 98] We might
also add the fact that Jews portray themselves always as victims, when
they are in fact the wealthiest and most influential ethnic group in
America.
While, David Davis, a Jewish
professor at Yale can, like most American Jews, completely mythologize
Jewish history as "a testing ground for American ideals, especially the
ideal of apportioning rewards according to individual merit as opposed
to hereditary privilege or ethnic identity," [DAVIS, D., p. 27] another
Jewish professor, Adam Garfinkel, states more honestly, and bluntly,
that "the underlying harmony between Jewish and American values vanishes
upon close inspection." [GARFINKLE, p 5]
Concerned about his peoples' modern
schizophrenic identity, Jewish scholar Jacob Neusner wrote:
"Why American Jews sustain the
contradictory position of deeming
the state of Israel to be
critical to their own existence as a distinctive,
self-sustaining group in
American society, and also insisting that
they and their future find
permanent place within American society,
has to be worked out. Here is
a strange civil religion ... What is
puzzling is not that political
events -- the destruction of a group, the
formation of a national state
-- should generate dislocation in society
and so in people's
imagination. It is that the state of dislocation
should be made into a
permanent and, if truth be told, normative
condition of a group."
[NEUSNER, STRANGER, p. 3]
Among the most disturbing paradoxes,
however (one not lost to many Jews, but rarely addressed publicly) is
the one that James Madison foresaw in the very establishing of the
American constitution. In a free society of competing ideas and
interests, there is always the inevitable danger that a powerful
"faction" (or factions) could successfully coagulate to disbalance the
fullest expression of pluralistic opinion and subvert the idealized
democratic process. The obvious example of this is the innocent "one
person, one vote" democratic principle which is a trivial cosmetic to
hide the powerful economic interests that function offstage where
real political power, influence, and decision-making lies.
Ironically, in the honing of the modern liberal American state of
multicultural and pluralistic tolerance (which Jews were influential in
demanding, to the letter of the law, in recent decades) the conditions
were established whereby American Jewry could launch itself as a
minority "superpower," to the inevitable detriment of others in the
American social experiment, Arabs, and those in other parts of the Third
World, and at the expense of the very pluralistic ideals which Jews have
exploited to chauvinist ends. In the American cultural tradition of
"rugged individualism," the relentless Jewish collectivist entity --
economic, political, and social -- could, and is, vanquishing all foes
in its aim of Jewish exclusionist allegiances, an aim that ironically
seeks to bend the full American polity to the Jewish exclusionist will.
This aim has thus far been successful, especially per American popular
views toward the modern state of Israel. Part of the strategy
(intentionally or de facto) is to weaken all competing unification
efforts by potentially larger non-Jewish polities; numerically weaker
ones (i.e., "minorities") have served as Jewish allies in so far as the
Jewish polity may lead them to expressly Jewish goals and benefits. In
recent history other American ethnic groups -- particularly Blacks --
have rebelled against Jewish hegemony in the modern contesting tribal
battles called multiculturalism, which Jews were instrumental in
creating to protect their own "particularism."
Indeed, the modern American milieu of
"cultural pluralism" (laid bare, the celebration of ethnic ethnocentrism
as a foundation of the American cultural milieu) affords the American
Jewish community the safest framework for its own expression of global
Jewish nationalism. Zionism, the modern secular ideology of
transnational Jewish allegiance (a hard-core political
creed and not merely a champion of Jewish "culture"), owes much of its
success to its careful nurturing amidst America's Jewry and American
society at-large. An Israeli professor of history, Allon Gal, notes that
"A major characteristic of American
Zionist ideology is its acceptance
of the concept that has become
known as 'cultural pluralism' ... This
philosophy ... has typified
American Zionist thought since the early
twentieth century ... True, the
focus of Zionist interest has been on
building an autonomous Jewish
community in Palestine. But the
successful development of the
Jewish community in America and its
constructive relationship with the
pluralistic society at large have always
loomed large in American Zionist
thought and deed. Living in
democratic and pluralistic America,
Zionists
looked for a general
American
rationale for creating the Jewish state against many heavy
odds." [GAL, p. 20]
"Pluralism," remarks Kevin MacDonald,
"serves internal Jewish [American] interests because it legitimizes the
internal Jewish interests in rationalizing and openly advocating an
interest in Jewish group commitments and non-assimilation." [MCDONALD,
INVOLVEMENT, p. 296] The Jew in America, warned Israel's first prime
minister David Ben Gurion, "faces death by a kiss -- a slow and
imperceptible decline into the abyss of assimilation." [WEYL, N., 1968,
p 293-294] "Solomon Schechter," noted Allon Gal, "the chief architect of
Conservative Judaism [one of the major branches of the faith today],
supported Zionism in 1906 mainly 'as the great bulwark against
assimilation.'" [GAL, A., 1986, p. 376]
Jews have been the foremost activists in molding public
institutions and opinon towards what is today called "political
correctness," intergroup "tolerance," the celebration of ethnic
differences, and and multiculturalism. "While the intergroup relations
field included representatives of various racial, religious, and ethnic
communities," notes Stuart Svonkin,
"Jewish organizations played the leading role indefining the
movements tactics and
objectives. Among the Jewish agencies that became involved in
intergroup
relations, the American Jewish Committee (AJC), the Anti-Defamation
League
of B'nai B'rith (ADL), and the American Jewish Congress (AJC) were
the most
active and influiential. These three national secular agencies
aspired to function
as the Jewish community's department of state formulating and
implementing
policies to shape American Jewry's relations with other American
communities
... The AJCongress explicitly favored cultural pluralism and
strongly supported
Jewish nationalism. These two commitments were closely connected;
Horace
Kallen, who deveoped the theory of cultural pluralism, was himself
an
ardent champion of both the AJCongress and American Zionism."
[SVONKIN, S., 1997, p. 1, 23]
This man, Kallen, most credited with
the conception and development of cultural pluralism (the ethnocentric
vehicle by which Zionism could unobjectionably thrive in the United
States) was an American Jewish professor, most active in the teens and
1920s. He argued a sharp distinction between "nationality" (being
Jewish) and "citizenship" (being American). [SCHMIDT, p. 38] One author
calls Kallen "the grandfather of multiculturalism;" his important
collection of essays was entitled Culture and Democracy in the United
States. "Although the ideas contained within it had little impact at
the time," says John Miller, "they became enormously influential later
in the century. Horace Kallen was the first multiculturalist." [MILLER,
p. 80]
Kallen was also so great a Zionist
that he was the "leader and guiding spirit" of "an elite secret society
called the Parushim, the Hebrew word for 'Pharisee' and 'separatist.'"
[GROSE, p. 54, 53] "You will be subject," stated the inductor in the
Parushim swearing-in ceremony, "to an absolute duty whose call you will
be impelled to heed at any time, in any place, and at any cost."
[SCHMIDT, p. 77] Kallen wrote to the prominent German Zionist, Max
Nordeau, in 1914, saying, "[I] t happened to be my turn to lead the
secret organization here in America which is aiming to turn the Zionist
movement in a political direction, from within. Our order is called
Parushim ... Our present purpose is one of quiet propaganda and
education in 'the political idea' ... It is our desire and plan to
organize brotherhoods all over the world." [SCHMIDT, p. 79] "[A]n
organization which has the aims we have," Kallen wrote to a fellow
American Zionist leader, "must work silently, and through education and
infection rather than through force and noise." [SCHMIDT, p. 83] Under
great influence of Kallen's thinking was a Jewish United States Supreme
Court Justice, Louis Brandeis (who was also the eventual director of the
Federation of American Zionists). "Certainly Kallen wished to 'instruct'
Brandeis," notes Sarah Schmidt, "and perhaps, covertly, even to
manipulate him. But Kallen's preference was for the role of anonymous,
self-effacing string puller." [SCHMIDT, p. 85]
"Against those powerful Jews who
argued that a Jewish nationalism was unpatriotic and seditious," notes
Kevin Avruch, "Brandeis put forth the contrary notion: 'Zionism is the
Pilgrim inspiration and impulse over again.'" [AVRUCH, K., 1981, p. 30]
Using the idea of cultural pluralism
to buttress his Zionist arguments, Horace Kallen, notes David Levering
Lewis, "rejected assimilation and proposed instead that Jews retain
their 'racial' uniqueness, the better to enrich American society."
[HERTZBERG, p. 283, LEWIS p. 553] Henry Feingold notes that:
"Writing in the definitive
Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic
Groups, Philip Gleason
finds a 'racialist' dimension in Kallen's
approach to the pluralism idea
and suggests that the number of Jewish
thinkers attracted to the notion
-- Franz Boas, Mordecai Kaplan, and
others -- has the earmarks of a
Jewish intellectual conspiracy to create
space for a Jewish culture. There
may be some truth in that idea ... The
legitimacy of Zionism would not
have been established without the
ideological rationale put forward
by the cultural pluralists."
[FEINGOLD, p. 54]
Kallen wrote that "[human
associations] have constituted communities tending to preserve and to
sustain the continuity of the physical stock. Empirically, race is
nothing more than this continuity confirmed and enchanneled in basic
social inheritances. It is hardly distinguishable from nationality." [in
MILLER, J., p. 84] He also asserted that "men may change their clothes,
their politics, their wives, their religions, their philosophies, to a
greater or less extent; they cannot change their grandfathers." [BIALE,
D., 1998, p. 25] Elsewhere, Kallen addressed the idea of anti-Semitism
as the veritable foundation of Jewish identity: "Anti-Semitism imposes a
unity upon Jews whether they like it or not ... Only by working together
may each be better defended than if he worked alone. This fact should
guide Jewish education ... It has to recognize that Jews are members of
one another; that each Jew carries a responsibility, not only as an
individual but as a member of a group called Jews." [KALLEN, 1954, p.
188-189]
Working for decades for acceptance in
American society at-large, many Jews have even deceptively championed --
for popular consumption -- Judeo-centric Zionism, however
incongruously, as a universalistic creed. As Allon Gal observes
"American Zionist thinkers emphasized
the non-nationalist or
'higher' social and ethical goals as
the fulfillment of Zionism;
the rationale of Zionism was
perceived as it service to the
betterment of mankind. In pure form
this ideology held that
serving the human race was the only,
or the chief test of
Zionism." [GAL, 1986, p. 363]
The notion of a "mission" to serve
humanity (although there is absolutely no evidence that Zionism has ever
benefited anyone on earth but Jews) blended well with American
democratic ideals and self-conceptions. With the acceptance of cultural
pluralism and its institution into the American social fabric, notes
Peter Grose, "the way lay open ... to link Jewish group identity,
through Zionism, to the American Dream." [GROSE, p. 55] "Once Kallen
became convinced that the American Zionist movement was developing in
accord with his ideas," notes Sarah Schmidt, "he began to use his
contacts with the non-Jewish media as 'propagandists' for the Zionist
cause." [SCHMIDT, p. 93]
(By World War II, Zionist
propagandistic activities had enormously grown and accelerated. As
Zionist historian Melvin Urofsky notes: "The Zionists, throughout the
war period, carefully cultivated Christian America. From a standpoint of
practical politics alone, the Zionists recognized that only if the
larger community supported their aims would they be able to influence
government policy. A minority, no matter how effacious its propaganda or
skillful public relations, no matter how many important contacts it has
made, cannot affect American foreign policy unless it either neutralizes
the majority or wins it over to active support of its cause." [UROFSKY,
1978, p. 35] )
Yet even an American environment of
mutually tolerant ethnicities is not what traditional Jewish identity
really seeks. Zionism is not only interested in "foreign policy." As
Arthur Hertzberg wrote in a B'nai B'rith publication in 1964:
"[Cultural pluralism] has not ...
succeeded in achieving its very patent
'Jewish' purpose, to reorganize
America in such a fashion that all of its
various communities would so live
their lives that the Jews could, in the
very act of being themselves, be
just like everybody else. There are two
keys to this failure: politics and
culture. In both dimensions the Jews
have acted uniquely and not like
any of the other minorities."
[HERTZBERG, p. 284]
In other words, even in a revised
American socio-cultural system that been entirely reformed to
accommodate "patent Jewish purpose," cultural pluralism is still not
enough for those Jews who refuse to completely assimilate, it is merely
a means to discretely reach strata even more foreign to the founding
principles of America: Jews implicitly demand a special dimension of
"uniqueness" -- their own caste -- outside the realm of all others in
the American experiment, by which they can connect to their Jewish
brethren throughout the world. Even Israel Zangwill, the Jewish writer
who is generally credited with popularizing the term "The Melting Pot"
(the long-dead concept of America as a kind of homogenized 'soup' of
immigrant cultures) to describe American society (via his successful
1908 play of the same name), was eventually a Zionist. "He gave more and
more of his energy to this cause as time passed, and retreated from his
earlier position of racial and religious mixture." [GLAZER/MOYNIHAN, p.
289-290] (This is what Zangwill wrote about the traditions of his own
people: "Beware of the goyim, his elders told Jacob ... They are
goyim, foes of the faith, beings of darkness ... drunkards and
bullies, swift with the fist or bludgeon, many in species, but the worst
of the goyim are the creatures called Christians." [GONEN, p.
133]
Nathan Glazer still felt confident
in publishing the following in 1972 in his classic volume, American
Judaism:
"There are different branches
of Judaism today, and they take
somewhat different attitudes to
assimilation, but even the most liberal
interpretation of Judaism must
fight the assimilation of the Jews ...
Jews have been prominent in the
fight to forward the assimilation of
ethnic groups ... [Yet] there
comes a time -- and it is just about upon
us -- when American Jews become
aware of a contradiction between
the kind of society America
wants it to become -- and indeed the kind
of society most Jews want it to
be -- and the demands of the Jewish
religion. This religion after
all, prohibits inter-marriage, asserts that
Jews are a people apart, and
insists that they consider themselves in
exile until God restores them
to the land of Israel." [GLAZER, p. 9]
(In a footnote Glazer partially
exempts the Reform Judaism
movement who "don't consider
themselves in exile; they do
disapprove of intermarriage.")
Richard L. Rubenstein, among many
Jewish intellectuals, increasingly echoes such entrenched
"particularist" themes (and, hence, Zionism) in the 1990s, arguing that:
"The secular humanist is most cognizant of abstract universal values
that are shared with other human beings ... [but] one must be a
particular kind of person to be a person at all. The conception of
humanity in general is a meaningless and tragic abstraction."
[RUBENSTEIN, R. p. 238]
"Cultural pluralism," says Henry
Feingold, "... became part of a strategy to permit more space for the
expression of Jewish particularity ... some argue that, in its
unwavering support of Israel, American Jewry had gone beyond its bounds.
If that is true, it is a measure of America's extraordinary tolerance of
American Jewry's particularity." [FEINGOLD, p. 149] "Legitimizing the
preservation of a minority culture in the midst of a majority's host
society," says Howard Sachar, "pluralism functioned as an intellectual
anchorage for an educated Jewish second generation ... until the
emergence of Zionism in the post-World War II years swept through
American Jewry with a climactic redemption fervor of its own."
[MCDONALD, p. 299]
Strident activists at all levels in
shaping American culture, Jewish organizations have long fought for open
and diverse immigration to America, mainly to divert the homogeneity of
Christian culture around them. In an increasingly diverse society, Jews
are less easily singled out for criticism or attack. "Increasing ethnic
heterogeneity," noted Jewish activist Earl Raab, "as a result of
immigration, has made it even more difficult for a political party or
mass movement of bigotry to develop." [MCDONALD, p. 300] "Jewish
influence on immigration policy," observed Kevin McDonald, "was
facilitated by Jewish wealth, education, and social status. Reflecting
its general disproportionate representation in markers of economic
success and political influence ... [Jews] were able to command a high
level of financial, political, and intellectual resources in pursuing
their political aims." [MCDONALD, JEWISH, p. 301]
In the 1920, Horace Kallen's
ideological counterpoint, American sociologist Edward Ross, criticized
"the endeavor of Jews to control the immigration policy of the United
States," [MCDONALD, p. 319] especially in lobbying for more and more
Jewish immigrations to America. "The systematic campaign," complained
Ross, "in newspapers and magazines to break down all arguments for
restriction and to calm nativist fears is waged by one and for one race.
Hebrew money is behind the National Liberal Immigration League and its
numerous publications." [MCDONALD, p. 312] (Even today, 300,000 Israeli
citizens are living in America; from a total Jewish Israeli population
of about four million people, this means that every thirteenth Israeli
lives in the United States, extremely favorable American immigration
policy towards that country).
Later, as part of a concerted
strategy, notes Irving Kristol,
"Ever since the Holocaust and the
emergence of the state of Israel,
American Jews have been reaching
towards a more explicit and
meaningful Jewish identity, and
have been moving away from the
universalist secular humanism that
was so prominent a feature in their
prewar thinking. But while American
Jews want to become more Jewish,
they do not want American
Christians to become more Christian."
[in FEIN, p. 245]
Jewish deconstructive attack upon
the Christian world view may be noted more recently in an incident in
1994 when the preeminent Jewish American "defense agency", the
Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, turned on the conservative
Christian community with venom, publishing a report entitled The
Religious Right: the Assault on Tolerance and Pluralism in America.
It proclaimed that the conservative Christian movement was an
"exclusionist" movement seeking to "restore what it perceived as the
ruins of a Christian nation by seeking more closely to unite its version
of Christianity with state power." [SILK, p. 296] The ADL attack caught
the Christian community by surprise. Outraged, they pointed out that
their own struggle for a voice in America was no different than anyone
else’s, including Jews.
A major focus of the ADL assault was
upon Pat Robertson, a leader of the Christian Coalition and the
Christian Broadcasting Network, a man who has for years even hired a
formal Jewish liaison -- Ben Waldman -- to act on his behalf in the
Jewish community. (The head of Robertson's legal center, the American
Center for Law and Justice, is Jay Sekulow, a Christian who was born
Jewish. Another Christian, Lou Sheldon, head of the Traditional Values
Coalition, was also born to a Jewish mother). [LAPIN, D., 1999, p. 275]
Robertson was particularly outraged by the Jewish attack, and noted his
stellar record in supporting Jewish and Israeli issues. The Christian
Broadcasting Network, for example, had donated hundreds of thousands of
dollars to the United Jewish Appeal and other Jewish charities;
Robertson had also lobbied American politicians against arms sales to
Arab adversaries of Israel. He even was involved in supportive
activities for convicted Jewish American spy (for Israel), Jonathan
Pollard. [SILK, p. 297] The Christian Coalition responded with its own
report that documented the inaccuracies and offenses in the ADL's
efforts to stifle Christian expressions within the context of religious
pluralism, A Campaign of Falsehoods: The Anti-Defamation League's
Defamation of Religious Conservatives.
A rare voice of reason in the Jewish
community, Rabbi Daniel Lapin, noted publications by both the ADL and
the American Jewish Committee (for example, its The Political
Activity of the Religious Right: A Critical Analysis) that defamed
the Christian community, writing:
"[The ADL] published a book filled
with unfair and untrue defamation
of religious conservatives. It
contained such unrestrained invective
as, 'The religious Right brings to
the debate over moral and social
issues a rhetoric of fear, suspicion
and even hatred.' As a rabbi and
a Jew, I was embarrassed at the tone
of both of these books. Had any
Christian association published
anything comparable about the Jewish
community, cries of anti-Semitism
would have rung out far and wide --
and been justified ... [LAPIN, D.,
1999, p. 40] ... Even a quick glance
at publications and direct-mail
appeals from the Anti-Defamation League,
American Jewish Committee, American
Jewish Congress and others,
reveals a level of rhetoric that far
exceeds the bounds of civilized
political discourse. Their words
demonstrate that many Jewish
organizations do not merely consider
devout, politically active
Christians to be misguided -- they
consider them evil. I believe that
if the term anti-Semitism is to
retain any intellectual and moral
integrity, we must also today admit
to the term anti-Christianism. If
one is to be fought, then surely both
should be." [LAPIN, D., 1999, p.
41]
(Meanwhile, a Jewish ethnic magazine can feature, merely as a
curiosity, a "Modern Orthodox" rabbi, Mayer Schiller, for his
championing of "race separation." The magazine explains that the rabbi,
a teacher in good standing at the Yeshiva University High School for
Boys, doesn't teach "hatred for racial minorities, but a rejection of
post-Enlightenment universalism and secularism.") [EDEN, A., 4-13-01]
Jewish anti-Christian bashing is
expressed in many ways. In 1999, Rabbi Fred Guttman wrote an angry
editorial in a Greensboro, North Carolina, newspaper, complaining about
an earlier article in the paper about a Christian business directory.
"The guide," the directory's publisher had explained, "performs a
service for the Christian consumer, enabling him to find and do business
with fellow believers." [WILLIS, V., 1999, 11-15-99, p. B1] Incredibly,
not only did Rabbi Guttman decide for everyone that the story had no
news value, he also had the profound gall to compare the nature of such
a directory (that sought merely to network in business with other
dedicated Christians) to be parallel to Nazi intent! How so? "As
a Jew reading this article," he complained,
"I could not help but recall the
Nuremberg laws of 1935 [the Nazi
race laws]. These laws mandated a
boycott of all non-Aryan businesses
in Germany ... The guide implies
that there should be an economic
boycott of non-Christian businesses.
Thus, the parallel to the Nuremberg
laws is certainly fitting. Even more
disturbing was the forum that the
News and Record chose to give
such free and positive publicity to
such a nonnewsworthy item. It
saddened me that a group that
encourages bias and bigotry through
de facto economic boycotts
would receive support from the
News and Record. At the very least,
the News and Record should
consider taking an editorial stance against
this so-called 'Christian' yellow
pages." [GUTTMAN, F., 11-26-99, p.
A22]
Rabbi Gutman's outrageous attack
upon, and defamation of, a local Christian interest in networking with
like-minded people created a stir in the Greensboro area. Gutman's
hypocrisy is breath-taking. Throughout multi-cultural America there are
Iranian business directories, Arab business directories, Armenian
business directories, Muslim business directories, and many others
including, of course, Jewish business directories. (See, for example,
the national Jewish "yellow pages" by Sharon and Michael Strassfeld. Or
the one called The Jewish Yellow Pages: A Directory of Goods and
Services by Mae Rockland Tupa. Or note England's Benjamin Cohen who
became a millionaire at age 17 for his Jewishnet Internet site.
He "started Jewishnet from his bedroom and aimed to provide a
business directory for the community.") [DAILY MAIL, 1-6-2000, p. 83]
And the intensity of Jewish collective support for each other has few,
if any (as we will continue to explore), equals in modern America.
In another version of the usual
Jewish double standard and anti-Christian attack, in 2000, Texas
governor and presidential candidate George W. Bush, was publicly
assailed by the American Jewish Congress for declaring June 10, 2000 as
"Jesus Christ Day" in Texas (formal state recognition of the tenth
anniversary of a grassroots "March for Jesus" day). The AJC complained
that the governor "affixed his signature and the seal of the state of
Texas to a proclamation establishing 'Jesus Day' [which] demonstrates
the willingness to place the imprimatur of government literally on one
faith." Bush's office responded by noting that the AJC never complained
when the U.S. Congress had earlier proclaimed a day commemorating
ultra-Orthodox Hassidic rabbi Menachem Schneerson. Nor did the AJC
complain about Bush's formal Texas proclamations that created an "Honor
Israel Day," a "Holocaust Remembrance" day, a day honoring Austin's
Orthodox Chabad House, a commemorative day for the Baha'i religion, and
a special day of honor for a community of Sikhs. Even Bush's Republican
(partisan) colleague, Matt Brooks, head of the Republican Jewish
Coalition, observed that "This is again a sad example of the American
Jewish Congress and other organizations showing their anti-Christian
bias. The Jewish community has to stop beating up on Christians for
belief in their faith." [FINGERHUT, E., 7-13-2000]
Four months after Bush's "Jesus Day"
proclamation, a New York Times reporter, Laurie Goodsein, still
was reporting that
"What seemed purely ceremonial has
turned into a controversy for
George Bush. As word of Texas's
Jesus Day has spread through
the email, Jewish newspapers and
church-state separatists, the
Republican presidential nominee has
come under criticism for
insensitivity to people of
non-Christian faiths and a disregard for
the First Amendment." [GOODSTEIN,
L., 8-6-2000, p. 14]
As scholar Kevin MacDonald writes
about the undercurrent at work in such Jewish anti-Christian activism:
"It is not surprising that a
powerful strand of Jewish intellectual activity
in the twentieth century has
been to pathologize highly cohesive,
collective gentile social
structures, gentile nationalism, gentile
authoritarian political groups,
and gentile ethnocentrism. It is clearly in
the interests of Jews to
advocate the continuation of the quintessential
Western cultural commitment to
individualism as the best environment
for the continuation of Jewish
collectivism." [MACDONALD, p. 264]
"Nothing is more foreign to the
spirit of Judaism," noted influential pre-Zionist author Moses Hess in
the 19th century, "than the idea of the egoistic salvation of the
isolated individual." [WEISBERGER, A., 1997, p. 126]
The implications of Jewish
collectivism in capitalist society were addressed by a prominent Jewish
socialist, Bernard Lazare, in France, in 1894:
"Bourgeois society is based entirely
upon competition between man and
in the field of the daily
necessities of life. It affords us the spectacle of
individuals fighting bitterly one
against the other ... In this state of society
Darwin's principle of the struggle
of life dominates ... If we conceive,
then, in the midst of such a
community, based upon egoistic action,
associations of citizens strongly
organized and gifted, animated for many
centuries by the spirit of common
action, and knowing by instinct and
experience, the advantages which
they may derive from union, it is
certain that such organizations by
directing their activity towards the
same end as that pursued by the
scattered individuals around them will
possess such an advantage in the
struggle as to assure them an easy
victory. This is just the role
which is being played by the Jews of the
middle class in modern society ...
[LAZARE, p. 168] ... The Jew ...
increases his advantage by uniting
with his co-religionists possessed of
similar virtues, and thus augments
his powers by acting in common with
his brethren; the inevitable result
being that they out-distance their rivals
in the pursuit of any common end. In
the midst of a disunited middle
class, whose members are engaged in
a perpetual struggle against one
another, the Jews stand united as
one. This is the secret of their
success." [LAZARE, p. 169]
In our own day, the effect of an
economically empowered Jewish "extended family" actually enforcing a
disempowered Gentile individualism has profound political implications,
grossly advantageous to Jews. Following the classical pattern of Jewish
and upper strata Gentile collusion against the non-Jewish masses (as
evidenced throughout history with everything from Court Jews in league
with absolute monarchs to Jewish communists as an integral part of
Russian totalitarian elite), one recent study suggested that, even
today, high status non-Jews tended to be individualist in attitude,
disinclined to join groups, but were often found in economic and
political association with Jews. [MACDONALD, p. 264]
The typical institutionalized
Jewish device these days to "pathologize" Gentile group affiliations is
to stigmatize them as being anti-Semitic in nature: morally, and --
more importantly -- legally, impermissible in the American
universalistic fabric. (Hence, a rabbi can gain public forum and be
taken seriously in declaring that local Christian efforts to
economically collectivize is a manifestation of Nazi fascism, while, at
the same time, a cornerstone of Jewish identity to this day is that
very same thing). The Jewish polity (led by its collectivized
"defense agency" heads -- the Anti-Defamation League, American Jewish
Committee, American Jewish Congress, over 100 Jewish "community
relations councils," et al) functions as a massive, unified "attack dog"
to destroy any semblance in others of a solidarity similar to their own,
or, rather, any that could pose a power threat to Jewish collectivism.
Some Jews believe, says Benedict Viviano, "that Jews ... are safest when
Christians are weak ... Thus [such Jews] ... foster publications which
blame the Church for all the suffering of the Jews throughout history in
an undifferentiated fashion." [VIVIANO, p. 354] In historical overview,
as Jewish author Walter Jacob notes,
"The Jewish scholars of the
mid-nineteenth century realized that the
Church could now be attacked without
fear of retaliation. Its power
had faded, and its influence was
constantly diminishing. The decline
of Christianity was a hopeful sign.
Jewish scholars saw it as beneficial
for Judaism and mankind, for they
believed that Judaism or a new
religion akin to it would eventually
become dominant. Although this
optimism is gone, the weakening of
Christianity is still welcomed by
many contemporary Jews." [JACOB, W.,
1974, p. 230]
Jewish-born Sigmund Freud and
psychoanalysis has come to play a profoundly influential role in modern
America. Jewish scholars Stanley Rothman and S. Robert Lichter note
Freud's views of Christianity, at root in this psychological movement:
"Though it is sometimes forgotten today, Freud's work was
profoundly
subversive to the cultural underpinnings of European Christian
society,
a subversiveness of which he was not unaware. There is evidence
that some
of the impetus for the creation of psychoanalysis lay in his
hostility to
Christianity." [ROTHMAN/LICHTER, 1982, p. 125]
These two scholars also note the nature of the widespread modern
Jewish leftist/liberal/radical assault upon the Christian world:
"In sum, the aim of the Jewish radical is to estrange the Christian
from society, as he feels estranged from it. The fact that the
United
States is no longer 'Christian' in any real sense, or that Jews
have
moved to positions of considerable power and influence, is of
little import. Its Christian base is still unconsciously identified
as the decisive oppressive element ... Thus many radical Jews,
even when they do not identify with Judaism, unconsciously
retain a generalized hostility to Christian culture. Again, Portnoy
[the leader character in Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint]
is a
good example. Only on the analyst's couch is he willing to admit
the hostility he feels." [ROTHMAN/LICHTER, 1982, p. 125]
Russian-Israeli author Israel Shamir notes that Jewish hatred for
Christians and Christianity is a consi