Antisemitism is The Problem in Pittsburgh

by Michael Curtis

On January 27, 2017, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres delivered remarks at the International Day of Commemoration at the UN in memory of the victims of the Holocaust. The world, he said, has a duty to remember that the Holocaust was a systematic attempt to eliminate the Jewish people and so many others. He warned that antisemitism was alive and kicking, irrationality and intolerance are back.

Nothing could better illustrate the warning of Guterres than the murder by the 46 year old Robert Bowers of 11 Jews and injury of 7 others at the Tree of Life, Or L’Simcha, synagogue in Pittsburgh, PA, on October 27, 2018 during Shabbat services. It is probably the deadliest such incident in U.S. history. Its significance is crucial and vital. People will legitimately differ over political priorities which are countless, and preferential ranking of those priorities will continually change. But antisemitism, hatred of jews, is the continual manifestation, perhaps the only one, throughout the history of evil. Pittsburgh is but one illustration that antisemitic hate remains a potent factor. As Jeffrey Myers, Rabbi of the Tree of Life, sadly but wisely remarked in view of heated political differences in U.S. politics, hate does not know religion, race, creed, political party. It is and must be categorized as pure evil.

In spite of those political differences, the message could not have been clearer. The brutal murderer Bowers proclaimed, “All Jews must die.” Jews he alleged were committing “genocide to my people. I just want to kill Jews.” The brutal murder of middle aged and elderly pillars of the Jewish community in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh was an echo of the tragedies of the past suffered by Jews, the culmination of millennia of hatred and discrimination against Jews.

It should be clear. One can understand the existing strong political differences on a number of issues between President Donald Trump and opponents. But the massacre had nothing to do with so called political rhetoric by President Trump that has supposedly fuelled the increasing antisemitism in the U.S. as in many parts of Western Europe. Indeed it was a national disgrace that the simple ceremony by Trump, paying respects and offering condolences to the victims, the placing according to Jewish ritual of a small stone on the memorials to the 11 victims by the President and his entourage was not honored as such and that he was regarded as political opponents as not welcome. Many of those opponents of the President disgraced themselves by signing an open letter, up to 70,000, denouncing his supposed policy of “white nationalism.”

Shamefully, the New York Times on October 31, 2018 gave equal prominence to the “solemn marches of protest,” as to the honoring of the dead Jews. It emphasized not the carnage but the visit of Trump that “laid bare the nation’s deep divisions.” As Adam Schiff, the indefatigable searcher for Russian collusion in 2016, remarked, with no apparent relation to Pittsburgh, “The president’s modus operandi is to divide us.” He appeared to be less dismayed about the victims than about the political dimensions of the event.

The opponents and disrupters of the event shoud have remembered a number of pertinent things. Antisemitism has a long history in the U.S. and is still present. Peter Stuyvesant, Governor of New York, New Amsterdam, 1647-64, tried to block Jews from entering the city, stopped a synagogue, prevented Jews from joining the local militia,  confiscated Jewish property, and imposed a special tax on Jews. In December 1862, General Ulysses Grant issued  Order No 11 expelling Jews from Kentucky, Tennessee, and Mississippi. It was revoked by President Lincoln in January 1863.

The list of American antisemites over the last century or so is considerable and ugly: Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh, Charles Coughlin, Joseph Kennedy, General George Patton, Louis Farrakhan, Mel Gibson, John Galliano, Roald Dahl, as well as the list of Holocaust deniers and advocates of hate crimes. The current trial at Harvard is a reminder of the 1920s when the University imposed a quota on Jewish admission. Present figures show that antisemitic incidents, 1,986, in the U.S. in 2017, rose 57% from 2016. Antisemitism is well organized. A significant number of antisemitic messages on Twitter, 30%, come from automated accounts, bots.

Rabbi of Tree of Life, Jeffrey Myers, was in the synagogue when the murders took place, had a phone and called 911 to get police help. What is relevant here is that carrying a phone in synagogue is unusual, but he was advised to do so in August 2018 by a security adviser. There was no relation to current political discourse.

Pittsburgh now is in the general context of murders of Jews, Hyper Cacher, Copenhagen, Toulouse, Jewish Museum in Brussels, and in the ongoing antisemitism among the members of the British Labour Party, and the continuing refusal, unwillingness or inability by the Party leader Jeremy Corbyn to address the issue in forthright fashion. What is interesting here is that according to the Populus poll,  38% believe Corbyn is antisemitic, his actions and past history point to his being antisemitic. The poll was carried out when the issue of antisemitism in the Labour Party was no longer being reported in the press.

 A third issue is the impact of hatred and ensuing violence in the world. The prevalence of antisemitic myths and tropes has consequences. Jews may be hesitant to participate in Jewish traditional gatherings, or participate in public sphere as Jews. Jewish organizations may be spending heavy security costs, leaving less for cultural and educational activities. In all, they may be obliged to lead a less full communal and individual Jewish life, and Jewish identity.

Political liberals in the U.S. currently hold nearly all cultural power positions, in universities, art instititions, musicalevents, and the media. As the elite they should make clear the real meaning of Pittsburgh. Antisemitism is here in the U.S. and must be ended, whatever the existing political differences on other issues.

There should be no room for antisemitism and murder of Jews in the 21st century. All political forces should be on the frontline in the battle against this evil, rather than bypassing it as a simple derivative of other more important issues.

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3 Responses

  1. The atrocious acts against the Jewish population in the U.S. needs talking about more. This article is very well written. I don’t believe that it was started by Obama but i do know that it worsened a lot after he became the President. In pointing out the history of the Jewish Americans made it clear to me (as an immigrant that was not schooled in the U.S.) how sad such a great nation would be forced to carry such scars without acknowledgement.I grew up in Britain so I was taught about the war and the German atrocities against them not only at school but on my Fathers lap. As #3 British Commando he was the first to set some camps free. He told me that this terrible act of human tragedy should never be forgotten. Very sad when you consider that he passed away in the mid 90’s. Thank God he is not here today to see this.

  2. “The brutal murder of middle aged and elderly pillars of the Jewish community in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh was an echo of the tragedies of the past suffered by Jews, the culmination of millennia of hatred and discrimination against Jews.”

    That’s an ideological statement, not a statement of fact. Your examples of anti-Jewish discrimination in the past are no worse than what was experienced by many white subgroups–the Catholics, the Irish, all kinds of religious minorities back in the 17th century, when religious distinctions were politically important–who now see themselves fully as part of the majority, and who don’t seek any special treatment as historical “victims.” But the Jews want to see themselves as victims. That’s why they pass on stories of their past mistreatment to their children without the historical context, as if the world were just the way it is now and our ancestors were just like us (except for their penchant for wearing quaint costumes), as if all past mistreatment of Jews were alike and could be understood as instances of a homogeneous metaphysical substance called “antisemitism.” This is not truth but myth, intended to encourage certain attitudes and discourage others. The mere fact that the Jews have a collective historical memory spanning more than two thousand years, through which time they have lived among others as a religious and cultural minority, should lead one to expect that there would, at the very least, be no shortage of instances of past discrimination, human nature being what it is. What is surprising is that the Jews have survived at all!

    That said, the Pittsburg massacre was carried out by a real extreme antisemite properly understood, a person who seems to be mentally ill. My point is that the event has absolutely nothing to do with what happened to Jews in 17th-century New Amsterdam.

  3. When trying to understand the actions of a psychopath, it is like trying to orient oneself in a labyrinth as designed by Escher, but with even more recursive loops. Maybe Obama opened the way for more anti-Semitism. Maybe some thing that Trump said or did touched this guy in the wrong way. More likely, he read something on Reddit by someone equally disoriented. There is no real madrassa somewhere that is turning out these kooks, which is not to say that there aren’t real madrassas turning out real kooks. It is difficult to know what to do about kooks. Suffice it to say that if Obama or Trump said something that got this guy going, it is like trying to pin Manson’s “thought” and his actions on the Beatles. Yes, they put out the White Album, and maybe they meant something or another buy it, but Manson’s special understanding of the material remains his and his alone.

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