Open Antisemitism Rears Its Head
Open antisemitism is becoming more and more common in the United States. The extreme political right has always included neonazis, White Christian nationalists and other antisemites. The extreme left has trafficked in ideas like the idea that the economy of our country is controlled by Jews. Now, the legitimate opposition to Israel's brutal and extreme actions in Gaza has had the side effect of bringing American antisemitism into the open. Jews in the United States who have never been afraid are afraid now. This open antisemitism has created a big rift among American liberals and progressives and threatens the Democrats' ability to win control of Congress in this year's general election. In addition, the increase in open antisemitism will have the perverse effect of strengthening American Zionism and will also weaken the solidarity of American society.
Zionism Was From Its Beginning a Response to Antisemitism
Zionism emerged in Europe at the end of the
nineteenth century as a response to antisemitism there. Judah Pinsker’ pamphlet
Autoemancipation
was written in response to the pogrom in Odessa in 1882. The pamphlet argued
that Jews could never be at home in countries that were not their own, and he
founded a society to promote settlement in the Land of Israel.
Theodor Herzl wrote his best-known work Der Judenstaat (The Jewish State) and founded the modern Zionist movement in response to the antisemitism displayed during the Dreyfus Affair in Paris in the eighteen nineties. There he saw mobs in the streets calling for “Death to the Jews,” and he felt that if that could happen in Paris, the world’s most enlightened city, there could be no hope to escape antisemitism anywhere except in a Jewish homeland.
After World War II, the State of Israel was created, and refugees
from the Holocaust as well as Jews who fled from the countries of the Islamic world went to settle there. However, few American Jews have been
interested in moving to Israel because antisemitism - while it has existed in
here – has not been a serious threat to
American Jewish communities.
Now, the situation has changed. On the political right, we
have seen neo-nazism and other forms of overt antisemitism. On the left, we
also see a range of antisemitic views. We see denial of the legitimacy of the
State of Israel, and we see a revival of older antisemitic tropes that say that
the world is controlled by a Jewish conspiracy (The
Protocols of the Elders of Zion) or that Jewish wealth controls the
economy. There have been attacks on synagogues, and many Jews who had always been very comfortable in the United States have now become afraid. Synagogues all
over the country have invested in improved security. This can only strengthen
the Zionist cause among American Jews. As in the past, many people will say that Jews can never really
be safe outside of their own homeland.
American Solidarity is Based on Acceptance of All Our Citizens as Real Americans
A second effect of rising antisemitism will be to weaken the solidarity of America society. People from all over the world have
made their homes in the United States, and we have built a unique society and a
unique polity. The United States invented the idea of citizenship as a
voluntary commitment rather than an expression of ethnic identity. A person who
becomes an American citizen is an American by the only definition that we have, and that definition is the basis of American solidarity.
That solidarity is the fact rooted in the fact that a person can be an American by choice. In a congressional hearing Fiona
Hill said that she was “an American by choice.” She is English by birth, but
now, she is American. No one could say that he/she was “an Englishman or Englishwoman by
choice.” A person can become a citizen of the United Kingdom, but a person cannot become a English. One must be born English. There is no other way to become English,
and most countries are like the U.K. in that respect. But not the United States.
The fact that people - including Jews - can become American is and always has been a source of strength for us. Immigrant workers powered the development of American industry. The American army in WWII was full of soldiers – including Jewish soldiers - who were the children of immigrants, and they fought valiantly for the country they saw as theirs. If we give up that inclusiveness by excluding Jews, we will have given up a part of the core of what it means to be American.
Moreover, we should not kid ourselves. The exclusion may begin with Jews, but
it will not end there. Already, we have J. D. Vance saying that only Christians can be Americans. Along with Jews, he would exclude the millions of Buddhists, Hindus and
Muslims who are part of the fabric of our society. His attitude, if it is accepted by most Americans, will break our society. It will destroy the solidarity of our people and the greatness of our country.