In search of anti-semitism: what Christians provoke what Jews? Why? By doing what? - And vice versa.THE LETTER from Mr. Horan (a stranger) of Fort Smith, Arkansas Fort Smith is a city that lies on the Arkansas-Oklahoma state border, situated at the junction of the Arkansas and Poteau Rivers, also known as Belle Point. The city began as a western frontier military post in 1817 and would later become well-known for its role in the settling of , came in to the office in june 1991, soon after we had published an article by Joe Sobran to the effect that it was the Earl of Oxford Earl of Oxford was one of the older titles in the English peerage, and was held for several centuries by the de Vere family from 1141. It finally became dormant in 1703 with the death of the 20th Earl. who had written the plays universally attributed to Shakespeare. The writer caught what humor is to be found In Re Sobran and The Problem, and touches, however inadvertently, on some of the questions I intend to explore. Dear Mr. Buckley: Look, I love the hell out of Joseph Sobran Joseph Sobran (b. February 23 1946, Ypsilanti, Michigan) is an American journalist and writer, formerly with National Review and currently a syndicated columnist. Academic and professional career , but I think that he's getting a little kooky. In fact, I think that he's getting a lot kooky. I'd like to think that he inhaled a little too much sidestream smoke Sidestream smoke The smoke that is emitted from the burning end of a cigarette or cigar, or that comes from the end of a pipe. Along with exhaled smoke, it is a constituent of second-hand smoke. when he took his boy to see the Rolling Stones Rolling Stones, English rock music group that rose to prominence in the mid-1960s and continues to exert great influence. Members have included singer Mick Jagger (Michael Phillip Jagger), 1943–; guitarists Brian Jones , but that was two years ago. If Mr. Sobran is not peddling variants on the Blood Libel blood libel trials of Jews who allegedly murdered non-Jews for Passover blood. [Jew. Hist.: Wigoder, 95] See : Anti-Semitism , he's schmoozing with the Liberty Lobby Liberty Lobby was a political advocacy organization which existed in the United States between 1955 and 2001. It was founded by Willis Carto. Liberty Lobby was the subject of much criticism from all quarters of the political spectrum. , or running on (and on) about the Earl of Oxford, or moaning about how we're gonna get whupped in the Desert ... The boy needs a rest. Mr. Sobran is the best "Aginner" I have ever seen. Down my part of the country, an Aginner is a feller who is "against" most everything in general. By and by, these folks have to tell you what they are for, as a way of 'splaining why they are agin a·gin Chiefly Upper Southern U.S. prep. 1. Against. 2. Opposed to: I'm agin him. 3. Next to; beside; near. 4. By or before (a specified time). something that is going on as they speak. The world has done mostly turned Joe's way in the past three years. Hell, even the universities are getting sick of PC. In five years, Mr. Sobran is going to have nothing which he can legitimately be agin ! Well, who would've thunk In a PC, to execute the instructions required to switch between segmented addressing of memory and flat addressing. A thunk typically occurs when a 16-bit application is running in a 32-bit address space, and its 16-bit segmented address must be converted into a full 32-bit flat address. and Hallelujah Hallelujah (hăl'əl `yə) or Alleluia (ăl–) [Heb.,=praise the Lord], joyful expression used in Hebrew worship; cf. Pss. . But there's the rub. Aginners
would rather have a silly argument than a nice juicy steak and a roll in
the hay with a Genuine Hollywood Star The Hollywood Star was an idiosyncratic gossip tabloid published on an erratic schedule in Hollywood, California by William Kern, who wrote much of the magazine under the pseudonym "Bill Dakota. . So now Mr. Sobran is having to go
find things to ruckus about, and he has picked up a bunch of sure-fire
hellraisers: Jews and Shakespeare. Down here in the South, us dum ole
dirteaters would say: "Those is issues that deserve a good
lettin' alone."
Please impart that little bit of folk wisdom to my Good Buddy. And tell Mr. Sobran that "You should never try to teach a pig to sing: it can't be done, and it annoys the pig." Robertson v. White, 633 F. Supp. 954, 959 (WD. Ark. 1986). After all, it's The Law. Yours sincerely, Matthew Horan We'll let Shakespeare go, while making the point in passing that Mr. Horan is mistaken in suggesting that Joe is always caught up by something or another. Our association goes back twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights. 2. , and though it is true that he has a high capacity for sustained indignation, it is only Israel and The Jews that seem to have him semi-permanently obsessed ob·sess v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es v.tr. To preoccupy the mind of excessively. v.intr. ; yes, the right word, I think. I propose to inquire into the question by analyzing Joe Sobran (a close friend) to the extent necessary to explore contemporary anti-Semitism. This is not a history of anti-Semitism or of its causes. It is rather a look at it as revealed by the practices of a few journalists and intellectuals, and by the arguments they use. There is a great deal to be learned from the experience of Joe Sobran. Types of Anti-Semitism I HAVE some credentials in the area, among them my own father's anti-Semitism. It is probably never too early to distinguish the kinds of anti-Semitism we run into in the world. The apocalyptic kind was, of course: The Holocaust; and I'll be asking whether the shadow of the Holocaust is being made to stretch too far in contemporary polemics po·lem·ics n. (used with a sing. or pl. verb) 1. The art or practice of argumentation or controversy. 2. The practice of theological controversy to refute errors of doctrine. . This is different from denying that the Holocaust is, and will always be, one of the great historical ventures in denatured de·na·ture tr.v. de·na·tured, de·na·tur·ing, de·na·tures 1. To change the nature or natural qualities of. 2. human barbarism bar·ba·rism n. 1. An act, trait, or custom characterized by ignorance or crudity. 2. a. The use of words, forms, or expressions considered incorrect or unacceptable. b. . There are Jews who continue to fear that the fires that lit the Holocaust might one day be rekindled. But there are also Jews who, comfortable with the protocols built up around Auschwitz, are disposed, so to speak, to prolong the period of de-Nazification indefinitely. And fierce anti-Semitism of a threatening kind continues, for instance among the Palestinians. Probably a higher percentage of them hate the Jews than ever Germans hated the Jews in the Thirties, and the Holocaust is eloquent testimony to what a very few, moved by intense clinical passions, can accomplish. And then too, every now and again one comes across such as Amos Elon Amos Elon (born 1925) is an Israeli journalist and author. Elon was born in Vienna in 1925 and migrated to Palestine in 1933. In the 1950s and later, Elon served as a European and American correspondent for the newspaper Haaretz. , writing in The New Yorker (May 13, 1991): Anyone with more than a fleeting acquaintance with Vienna knows that for every Viennese hatemonger hate·mon·ger n. One who incites others to hatred or prejudice. Noun 1. hatemonger - one who arouses hatred for others depreciator, detractor, disparager, knocker - one who disparages or belittles the worth of something you read about there are many Viennese who are liberal-minded. And yet in a 1980 poll, 20 per cent of the Austrians who responded said they were in favor of legally prohibiting Jews from owning real estate and capital in Austria. A poll taken in 1984 by Vienna University Vienna University, at Vienna, Austria; founded 1365. It was reorganized in 1377, 1384, and 1850. It has faculties of Roman Catholic theology, Protestant theology, humanities, law and political science, medicine, philosophy, social sciences and economics, and natural sciences. social scientists showed that only 14 per cent of the population was "largely free of prejudice" against Jews. Sixty-four per cent said that Jews were "too powerful" politically and economically. Thirty-four per cent believed that "honest competition" with Jews was impossible. Fifty-seven per cent said that they shouldn't have to be reminded so often of the murder of millions of Jews in the extermination extermination mass killing of animals or other pests. Implies complete destruction of the species or other group. camps. Twenty-one per cent said that the removal of the Jews from our country [under the Nazis] has also produced positive results." In a more recent poll, 23 per cent said that "Jews should not occupy influential positions in our country," and 6 per cent confessed that they would be physically repelled if they had to shake a Jew's hand. My impression is that these are tabloidized findings, influenced in part by the national resentment over the (deserved) ostracism ostracism (ŏs`trəsĭz'əm), ancient Athenian method of banishing a public figure. It was introduced after the fall of the family of Pisistratus. of President Kurt Waldheim, and that some of the questions were on the order of, "Do you believe that the experience of slavery benefited the Negro race?" to which question 21 per cent of Americans might answer Yes--reasoning, with Booker T Booker T may refer to
Apprehensive Jews react in two different ways. On the one hand there is the Jew who, reacting to a remark unfriendly to his cause or his religion, deduces from it a potential to revive the spirit of the Holocaust. There is another reaction, opportunistic in character. There are Americans out there, I think, who would resist a Holocaust as fiercely as Elie Wiesel, who are nevertheless whispered about as anti-Israel and derivatively anti-Semitic, never mind that what they want to talk about or to urge on public policy has nothing to do with approval of anti-Semitism, let alone genocide; which leaves us with some people who don't talk about what they want to talk about for fear of being branded as anti-Semitic. My father and his generation lived in an age in which anti-Semitism was very widespread. I suppose there is no harm in revealing that it was McGeorge Bundy McGeorge "Mac" Bundy (March 30, 1919–September 16, 1996) was United States National Security Advisor to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson from 1961–1966, and was president of the Ford Foundation from 1966–1979. , former dean of Harvard, former national-security assistant to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, former president of the Ford Foundation, who told me one day at lunch, A propos of I forget what, that if he were to hear spoken today the kind of thing that was "routinely spoken at [his father's] lunch table," he would leave the room in protest. I knew exactly what he meant, because at my father's lunch table one heard (I must suppose) the same kind of thing. Interestingly enough, the bias never engaged the enthusiastic attention of any of my father's ten children (any more than of Mr. Bundy's four), except in the attenuated Attenuated Alive but weakened; an attenuated microorganism can no longer produce disease. Mentioned in: Tuberculin Skin Test attenuated having undergone a process of attenuation. sense that we felt instinctive loyalty to any of Father's opinions, whether about Jews or about tariffs or about Pancho Villa. Seven or eight children in Sharon, Connecticut Sharon is a town located in Litchfield County, Connecticut, in the northwest corner of the state. It is bounded on the north by Salisbury, on the east by the Housatonic River, on the south by Kent, and on the west by Dutchess County, New York. , among them four of my brothers and sisters, thought it would be a great lark one night in 1937 to burn a cross outside a Jewish resort nearby. That story has been told, and my biographer (John Judis John B. Judis is an American author and journalist. He is a senior editor at The New Republic and a contributing editor to The American Prospect. Bibliography:
When, a few years before the cross-burning near Sharon, Connecticut, a Jewish student was elected to a fraternity at Yale University Yale University, at New Haven, Conn.; coeducational. Chartered as a collegiate school for men in 1701 largely as a result of the efforts of James Pierpont, it opened at Killingworth (now Clinton) in 1702, moved (1707) to Saybrook (now Old Saybrook), and in 1716 was , a pig was burned outside its doors that night. Those were the years when Daniel Bell For the minimal techno artist, see . Daniel Bell (born 10 May 1919 in New York) is a sociologist and a professor emeritus at Harvard University. He is also a director of Suntory Foundation and a scholar in residence of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. , freshly graduated from CCNY CCNY City College of New York (obsolete) CCNY Collector's Club of New York (philatelic group) (the City College of New York “City College” redirects here. For other uses, see City College (disambiguation). CCNY was the first free public institution of higher education in the United States[3] ), decided to go to Japan to become a Sinologist. Why? Because he told me there was no wa in which he could achieve a tenured ten·ured adj. Having tenure: tenured civil servants; tenured faculty. Adj. 1. tenured chair at Columbia (his burning ambition) as a mere social scientist: "They just didn't give professorships to Jews," he explained. So his stratagem STRATAGEM. A deception either by words or actions, in times of war, in order to obtain an advantage over an enemy. 2. Such stratagems, though contrary to morality, have been justified, unless they have been accompanied by perfidy, injurious to the rights of was to become a Sinologist, who were in such short supply as to permit him the leverage of the seller's market. A world war spared him the effort, and of course he has just retired from a tenured chair at Harvard. But the professor who taught me philosophy was the first Jew to be given tenure at Yale.* Suffice it to say that anti-Semitism of the kind experienced by such as the above was pervasive in America and that what happened in Germany, Austria, and Poland during the Forties is, in the judgment of many Jews, the hideous result, if not exactly of animus Animus - ["Constraint-Based Animation: The Implementation of Temporal Constraints in the Animus System", R. Duisberg, PhD Thesis U Washington 1986]. expressed casually at the dining tables of New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt. and Paris, then of international indifference to such animus. It is not easy to pin down. There are flashes of memory. I think of the Spanish guide who led us by the great painting in the Prado of the Grand Inquisitor INQUISITOR. A designation of sheriffs, coroners, super visum corporis, and the like, who have power to inquire into certain matters. 2. The name, of an officer, among ecclesiastics, who is authorized to inquire into heresies, and the like, and to punish them. Torquemada, shown hurling the crucifix at the feet of Ferdinand and Isabella Noun 1. Ferdinand and Isabella - joint monarchs of Spain; Ferdinand V and Isabella I . She explained the drama to us: "Torquemada was demanding that the Jews in Spain who continued to deny Christ be expelled--otherwise, said Torquemada, throwing a crucifix down on the floor at the feet of his sovereigns, Crucifiquenlo de nuevo!' (Crucify him yet again!)" Their sovereign majesties signed the expulsion order, and the Inquisition began. Yes, 1492. The Jews were formally readmitted to Spain (easy to remember the date, which requires only a simple digital inversion) in 1942. Much can be written about the cultural and ethical meaning of those five hundred years of expulsion, but most Catholics would reasonably consider it a quirk of anti-Catholicism to link any present-day Catholic practice to the Inquisition. Anyone who preached that to yield to current Catholic political doctrine on, say, abortion would catapult us back onto the road to the Inquisition would be smiled at, or should be; raising the question whether certain kinds of statements about American Jews American Jews, or Jewish Americans, are American citizens or resident aliens who were born into the Jewish community or who have converted to Judaism. The United States is home to one of the largest Jewish communities in the world. , or about Israel, are responsibly interpreted as early-bird signs of a remobilization toward Auschwitz. And then too, in the immediate shadow of the Holocaust, a number of fragile formulations became modish and, in the general piety brought on by the Holocaust, were inadequately explored. I remember Gregory Peck in the movie Gentlemen's Agreement gentlemen's agreement, in U.S. history, an agreement between the United States and Japan in 1907 that Japan should stop the emigration of its laborers to the United States and that the United States should stop discrimination against Japanese living in the United . He fought bravely for the right of Jews to buy property in a suburban area previously restricted, informing the judge (jury? newspaperman? congregation?--I forget) that there was no such thing as a Jewish "race," there was only a Jewish religion. A valid taxonomic point which, however, should not be used to strip probably the majority of American Jews, who (like their Protestant counterparts) are not actively religious, of their ethnic pedigrees. The famous answer to the question, Who is a Jew? is of course, "Anyone who says he is a Jew." Jewish Orthodoxy Noun 1. Jewish Orthodoxy - Jews who strictly observe the Mosaic law as interpreted in the Talmud Orthodox Judaism Hebraism, Jewish religion, Judaism - Jews collectively who practice a religion based on the Torah and the Talmud has a more formal answer to that question, but we are not talking about doctrinal definitions. A Catholic who does not do his Easter Duty has committed a mortal sin mortal sin n. Christianity A sin, such as murder or blasphemy, that is so heinous it deprives the soul of sanctifying grace and causes damnation if unpardoned at the time of death. , and until relieved through confession is a spiritual expatriate, but is nevertheless thought by his neighbors, who in any case tend not to notice Sunday parietals Parietals may refer to:
And then another memory. As the editor of the daily newspaper at Yale, I would spend one hour every week (it was a tradition) with the president, in those days a relatively inaccessible figure. Charles Seymour Charles Seymour (January 1 1885 - August 11 1963) was an American historian and President of Yale University from 1937 to 1951. He was born in New Haven, Connecticut to Thomas Day Seymour. , historian and curator of the Colonel House collection, was an urbane New Englander New England A region of the northeast United States comprising the modern-day states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. New Eng , and one day he was reflecting, during our weekly colloquy col·lo·quy n. pl. col·lo·quies 1. A conversation, especially a formal one. 2. A written dialogue. [From Latin colloquium, conversation; see , on the effort being made by the legislature at Hartford (this was 1949) to enact a Fair Educational Practices Act that would require all colleges in the state to strip from questionnaires sent to applicants any question as to their religion, and to stop asking applicants for photographs. President Seymour was greatly irked by this statist stat·ism n. The practice or doctrine of giving a centralized government control over economic planning and policy. stat ist adj. imposition. The legislators do not realize, he said to me, that
among the functions of a university is to act as a collector of
materials. "We are in the business of amassing data, and what the
religious affiliation of a student is we have legitimate reasons for
wanting to know."
I remember taking it for granted that Mr. Seymour was not being disingenuous, though the Catholic chaplain of the university winked at me when I told him about it and divulged that each year a virtually identical percentage of Jews and of Catholics was admitted to the freshman class. A book on the general subject has been published (Joining the Club, by Dan A. Oren), and it is certainly true that, at Yale as elsewhere, there was an unspoken racial-religious quota system Quota System can refer to:
But in that same conversation Charles Seymour went on to say that there were certain taboos that had crystallized crys·tal·lize also crys·tal·ize v. crys·tal·lized also crys·tal·ized, crys·tal·liz·ing also crys·tal·iz·ing, crys·tal·liz·es also crys·tal·iz·es v.tr. 1. in the last generation, among them that one could no longer speak of the Jews as having any "group characteristics." Of course that is nonsense, he said. They do have group characteristics. "So do we Protestants. So do you Catholics. But you aren't supposed to say it." Many years later I repeated this conversation to an urbane Jewish friend, a journalist and author, who said that it was true that you can't ascribe group characteristics to Jews. But a little while later he was telling me that, as a Jew, he was proud of two traits common among Jews, the first a true thirst for justice, the second a "sense of the book," by which he meant a desire to learn; conversely, he disliked what he saw as a tendency to self-imposed tribalism and a tendency of some to violate their ethical precepts by a vulnerability to greed. This exercise is not for the purpose of attempting a social profile of the American Jew; the intention is much more modest, namely to build some context within which it becomes possible to evaluate what can defensibly be thought of as anti-Semitism and, at the same time, what is wrongfully thought of as anti-Semitic. If it is anti-Semitic to believe that there are group characteristics among Jews, then anti-Semitism indeed lingers. What about Joe Sobran? JOE SOBRAN was born in 1946 in Detroit, and I came across him when he was doing graduate work in English at Eastern Michigan University Eastern Michigan University, mainly at Ypsilanti, Mich.; coeducational; founded 1849 as a normal school, became Eastern Michigan College in 1956, gained university status in 1959. . My host showed me a letter Joe had written to a professor who had volubly objected, in the student newspaper, to my having been invited to speak in the first place. I spotted in that letter an extraordinary polemical skill, as also a capacity to arrange thought with lucidity and wit. I approached him. Soon after, he began flying to New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of from Detroit every fortnight to do editorials for NATIONAL REVIEW. A year or so later he emigrated to New York to work full time for the magazine; in due course he went to Washington, reducing his commitments to regular editorials and criticism, and coming in to New York once every month. Meanwhile, he had begun publishing a syndicated column. Early in 1986 I scheduled a private dinner with him at which I told him that I thought he should know that in his syndicated column he was gradually giving his readers the impression that he was obsessed on the subject of Israel. More, I told him that unlike obsessions with, say, Nicaragua or China or even Russia, an obsession with Israel at the expense of Israel gives rise to suspicions of an awakening anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitism, I told him, is a mortal disease in his profession. I even joked about it a little. William Scranton William Warren Scranton (born July 19 1917) is a former U.S. Republican Party politician. Scranton served as Governor of Pennsylvania from 1963 to 1967. From 1976 to 1977, he served as United States Ambassador to the United Nations. (I remember saying) had for a generation been among the two or three most influential Republicans in the country. Then President-elect Nixon sent him to the Middle East to survey the scene. He returned to say he thought the Nixon Administration should be "more evenhanded e·ven·hand·ed adj. Showing no partiality; fair. e ven·hand " in managing the
problems of the Middle East, and he has never been heard from
since!" We both laughed. One does laugh when acknowledging
inordinate power, even as one deplores it. It would not have occurred to
me, that evening, to suggest to Joe that he avoid anti-Semitism. Because
to do so would have sounded as patronizing and unnecessary as to warn
him against contracting syphilis.
But six months later I judged it to be crisis time. I called the senior staff of NATIONAL REVIEW together. We met three times, twice with Joe. What led to those meetings, and what issued from them, is compactly explained in the editorial note I published in the issue of July 4, 1986: IN RE JOE SOBRAN AND ANTI-SEMITISM Complaints have reached us concerning a series of columns written by my colleague Joseph Sobran under the aegis of his newspaper syndicate. It is charged that these columns constitute anti-Semitism. In the columns, Mr. Sobran, among other things, has declared that Israel is not an ally to be trusted; surmised that the New York Times endorsed the military strike against Libya only because it served its Zionist editorial line; and ruminated that the visit of the Pope to a synagogue had the effect of muting historical persecutions of Christians by Jews. In that last column, Mr. Sobran, exasperated, wrote, "But it has become customary recently to ascribe all Jewish-Christian friction to Christians. If a Jew complains about Christians, Christians must be persecuting him. If a Christian complains about Jews, he is doing the persecuting--in the very act of complaining. It simply isn't fair." And in his most recent column on the theme, Joe Sobran complains that he is criticized for being anti-Semitic unwarrantedly: "I find that the more I say what I really think, the more I'm accused of thinking something else." Again he says that "the word 'anti-Semite' is more potent than most of the charges of bigotry that are flung around these days. It carries the whiff of Nazism and mass murder. It means,' as a friend of mine puts it, 'that you ultimately approve of the gas chambers."' It is appropriate, on my own behalf and on that of my other senior colleagues, to comment on what is becoming a public quarrel involving Joe Sobran and those who impute impute v. 1) to attach to a person responsibility (and therefore financial liability) for acts or injuries to another, because of a particular relationship, such as mother to child, guardian to ward, employer to employee, or business associates. anti-Semitism to him. What needs to be said first is that those who know him know that Sobran is not anti-Semitic. Neither is he begin counting) a) anti-black, b) anti-Italian, c) anti-women, nor even d) anti-gay, to list some of the controversies he has got into that have resulted in such allegations. He is against a) some things done by blacks, b) some things done by ItalianAmericans, c) some things done by the women's liberation movement Women’s Liberation Movement appellation of modern day women’s rights advocacy. [Am. Hist.: Flexner, 396] See : Feminism , and d) some things done by gays. With learning and eloquence, his acute eye roams the universe day and night in search of paradox and irony. In doing so he finds his quarries; but sometimes, in exposing them, he expresses himself with excessive liberty from accepted conventions. Now ethnic sensitivities vary. It doesn't much matter what John Cheever or John O'Hara
John Henry O'Hara (31 January 1905 – 11 April, 1970) was an American writer. or John Updike or anybody else writes about them--you cannot really succeed, in America, in riling the WASPS. Their sense of security is as solid as Plymouth Rock Plymouth Rock site of Pilgrim landing in Massachusetts (1620). [Am. Hist.: Jameson, 395–396] See : America , and incidentally as insensate in·sen·sate adj. 1. a. Lacking sensation or awareness; inanimate. b. Unconscious. 2. Lacking sensibility; unfeeling: . Blacks, yes, are sensitive, but black lobbies are not powerful enough to punish non-political transgressors against such taboos. (A black book-buyers' boycott against a novelist would not impoverish im·pov·er·ish tr.v. im·pov·er·ished, im·pov·er·ish·ing, im·pov·er·ish·es 1. To reduce to poverty; make poor. 2. .) If the spoken or written offense is egregious enough, as in the case of the joke told [in 1975] to John Dean by Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz Earl Lauer Butz (born July 3, 1909) is a former United States government official who served as Secretary of Agriculture under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. Background , a Cabinet officer gets fired. If a district attorney is named to a federal judgeship and it is revealed that he once made a pot-valiantly genial reference to the Ku Kaux Klan, he can be defeated on the floor of the Senate. And no one running for office in a state in which the black population is significant would consider, post 1965, violating the taboo. On the other hand, there is discussion of such questions as relative black intelligence, sexual promiscuity Promiscuity See also Profligacy. Anatol constantly flits from one girl to another. [Aust. Drama: Schnitzler Anatol in Benét, 33] Aphrodite promiscuous goddess of sensual love. [Gk. Myth. , and upward mobility upward mobility n. The state of being upwardly mobile. upward mobility Noun movement from a lower to a higher economic and social status that still gets a sober hearing in sober surroundings. About the American Indians American Indians: see Americas, antiquity and prehistory of the; Natives, Middle American; Natives, North American; Natives, South American. one can say most things with impunity; about gays, progressively less as, emerging from the closet, they consolidate and give strength to their retaliatory powers. In respect of American Jews, the sensitivity is of an extremely high order, and for the best of reasons. The toniest "liberal" universities in America would not, until about the time Joe Sobran was born, give tenure to Jewish professors. To elect a Jewish student to most social fraternities was quite simply unthinkable a generation ago. The designation of Jews as mortal enemies of civilization by the same European power that had given us Bach and Goethe, Kant and Einstein, reminded the Jews (those Jews who survived) that no society, however civilized its pedigree, can complacently be trusted to desist from the most ferocious human activity: genocide. It is a far cry from Auschwitz to the suggestion (Joe Sobran's) that the Israelis are "frequently duplicitous" in their behavior toward America: but it ought not to surprise Sobran that such charges tend to alarm American Jews. And given Sobran's high intellectual acumen, one wonders that he should, on the one hand, quote with evident concurrence CONCURRENCE, French law. The equality of rights, or privilege which several persons-have over the same thing; as, for example, the right which two judgment creditors, Whose judgments were rendered at the same time, have to be paid out of the proceeds of real estate bound by them. Dict. de Jur. h.t. an anonymous friend's warning that the word "anti-Semitic" "... means that you ultimately approve of the gas chambers," and yet be surprised-indeed, be deeply hurt--by the intensity of the criticism he has experienced. When, 35 years ago, I wrote that an anti-conservative, anti-Christian consensus prevailed in the Yale faculty, I would not have been justified in registering surprise when conservative Christian scholars at Yale failed to achieve tenure. My own evaluation of the public question in which Joe Sobran is involved--and here I speak also for the other senior editors--is this: 1. The structure of prevailing taboos respecting Israel and the Jews is welcome. The age calls for hypersensitivity hypersensitivity, heightened response in a body tissue to an antigen or foreign substance. The body normally responds to an antigen by producing specific antibodies against it. The antibodies impart immunity for any later exposure to that antigen. to anti-Semitism, over against a lackadaisical lack·a·dai·si·cal adj. Lacking spirit, liveliness, or interest; languid: "There'll be no time to correct lackadaisical driving techniques after trouble develops" William J. Hampton. return to the blase bla·sé adj. 1. Uninterested because of frequent exposure or indulgence. 2. Unconcerned; nonchalant: had a blasé attitude about housecleaning. 3. Very sophisticated. conventions of the pre-war generation, which in one country led to genocidal catastrophe. Needless to say, this is hardly to dignify dig·ni·fy tr.v. dig·ni·fied, dig·ni·fy·ing, dig·ni·fies 1. To confer dignity or honor on; give distinction to: dignified him with a title. 2. the preposterous charges of anti-Semitism occasionally leveled, ignorantly and sometimes maliciously, at anyone who takes a position contrary to that of organized Jewish opinion, whether in Israel or elsewhere. 2. Any person who, given the knowledge of the reigning protocols, read and agonized ag·o·nize v. ag·o·nized, ag·o·niz·ing, ag·o·niz·es v.intr. 1. To suffer extreme pain or great anguish. 2. To make a great effort; struggle. v.tr. over the half-dozen columns by Joe Sobran might reasonably conclude that those columns were written by a writer inclined to anti-Semitism. A savage entering a Catholic church who absentmindedly chewed on consecrated con·se·crate tr.v. con·se·crat·ed, con·se·crat·ing, con·se·crates 1. To declare or set apart as sacred: consecrate a church. 2. Christianity a. wafers would not be thought blasphemous blas·phe·mous adj. Impiously irreverent. [Middle English blasfemous, from Late Latin blasph . The non-savage, doing the same thing, would. Naifs cannot commit a black mass; cosmopolitans can, and do. 3. Those who know Joe Sobran know not only that he does not harbor ethnic prejudices, but that he regards such prejudice as sinful, despised by God, and therefore despised by man. But the personal integrity of a private man is a matter adjudicated between him, his family, and his conscience. The integrity of a public figure is public business. If the public establishes a consensus that during the playing of the National Anthem hands should not be placed in one's pants pockets, then to do so from the dais is an affront on the assembly, never mind that the clinical argument can be made that hands in pockets are not intrinsically an act of disrespect. [I once passed by Lenin in his tomb, hands in pockets, and was told to remove them. I did so, understanding.] 4. In the last fifteen or twenty years, under the leadership of the Soviet Union, it became plain that institutional anti-Semitism was consolidating around the political Left, where, ideologically, class hatreds belong. A scholar, recently commenting on the drift away Verb 1. drift away - lose personal contact over time; "The two women, who had been roommates in college, drifted apart after they got married" drift apart from Communism by the American Left, acutely observed that their disillusion dis·il·lu·sion tr.v. dis·il·lu·sioned, dis·il·lu·sion·ing, dis·il·lu·sions To free or deprive of illusion. n. 1. The act of disenchanting. 2. The condition or fact of being disenchanted. with Communism was rather a reaction against Communism's "ungainly" cultural performance in literature and the arts, than against human depravity. In England, anti-Semitism (disguised as anti-Zionism) is the property of the political Left. So does the animus move in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , where The Nation magazine exhibits the same kind of toleration TOLERATION. In some. countries, where religion is established by law, certain sects who do not agree with the established religion are nevertheless permitted to exist, and this permission is called toleration. toward anti-Semitism (witness the recent essay there by Gore Vidal Noun 1. Gore Vidal - United States writer (born in 1925) Eugene Luther Vidal, Vidal , in which neoconservatives are dismissed as Zionist imperialists) that it shows to Fidel Castro Noun 1. Fidel Castro - Cuban socialist leader who overthrew a dictator in 1959 and established a Marxist socialist state in Cuba (born in 1927) Castro, Fidel Castro Ruz , the Sandinistas, and Alger Hiss <noinclude></noinclude> Alger Hiss (November 11, 1904 – November 15, 1996) was a U.S. State Department official involved in the establishment of the United Nations. . The movement of anti-Semitism from unexamined prejudice of the political Right to inchoate Imperfect; partial; unfinished; begun, but not completed; as in a contract not executed by all the parties. inchoate adj. or adv. referring to something which has begun but has not been completed, either an activity or some object which is agenda of the political Left is of epochal ep·och·al adj. 1. Of or characteristic of an epoch. 2. a. Highly significant or important; momentous: epochal decisions made by Roosevelt and Churchill. b. significance. The call, on the Right, fully to excrete excrete /ex·crete/ (eks-kret´) to throw off or eliminate by a normal discharge, such as waste matter. ex·crete v. To eliminate waste material from the body. its old prejudices is, accordingly, of first strategic and tactical importance. 5. NATIONAL REVIEW has, since its inception, declined association with anti-Semites, and indeed on one occasion went a generic step further. When it became clear, in 1957, that the direction The American Mercury was headed was anti-Semitic, I ruled, with the enthusiastic approval of my colleagues, that no writer appearing on the Mercury's masthead mast·head n. 1. Nautical The top of a mast. 2. The listing in a newspaper or periodical of information about its staff, operation, and circulation. 3. , notwithstanding his own innocence on the subject, could also appear on NATIONAL REVIEW'S. The relationship of this journal toward our highly esteemed and beloved colleague, Joe Sobran, is one that will ultimately reflect a mature and civilized resolution of our commitment to these positions. We know him not to be what he is thought by some to have become; but what they suspect is not, under the circumstances, unreasonable. Accordingly, I here dissociate dis·so·ci·ate v. dis·so·ci·at·ed, dis·so·ci·at·ing, dis·so·ci·ates v.tr. 1. To remove from association; separate: myself and my colleagues from what we view as the obstinate ob·sti·nate adj. 1. Stubbornly adhering to an attitude, opinion, or course of action. 2. Difficult to alleviate or cure. tendentiousness ten·den·tious also ten·den·cious adj. Marked by a strong implicit point of view; partisan: a tendentious account of the recent elections. of Joe Sobran's recent columns. We are confident that in the weeks and months to come, he will charitably and rationally acknowledge the right reason behind the crystallization Crystallization The formation of a solid from a solution, melt, vapor, or a different solid phase. Crystallization from solution is an important industrial operation because of the large number of materials marketed as crystalline particles. of the present structure of taboos, and that he will accordingly argue his positions in such fashion as to avoid affronting our natural allies. How They Reacted MY HANDLING of the Sobran crisis, as it turned out, didn't satisfy all our readers, didn't satisfy all our critics, and didn't satisfy Joe Sobran. He and I arrived at a private covenant: Whenever Joe set out to write about the Mideast, he would call and read me his column in draft form. The assumption here was that I was by experience better equipped than he to detect the formulation that was unwarrantedly provocative. Joe abided for a while by that covenant and read me two columns in the ensuing two or three months. He then stopped doing so, writing infrequently about the Mideast. But in the spring of 1990 he went back to the subject with, well, a vengeance. Meanwhile he had written me a long letter. Back in February of 1987 I had from my colleague Jeffrey Hart--a senior editor Of NATIONAL REVIEW, a professor of English at Dartmouth, a syndicated columnist Inc.com defines a syndicated columnist as, "[A] person hired by publications or broadcast organizations to produce written or spoken commentary about specific feature subjects. , and an occasional contributor to Commentary--a letter in which he relayed detailed complaints from Norman Podhoretz Norman Podhoretz (b. January 16, 1930) is an American conservative columnist and political scientist, a leftist commentator during the 1960's and associated with Neoconservative philosophy since the early 1970's. . Podhoretz is, of course, the editor of Commentary, and a principal figure in the neoconservative ne·o·con·ser·va·tism also ne·o-con·ser·va·tism n. An intellectual and political movement in favor of political, economic, and social conservatism that arose in opposition to the perceived liberalism of the 1960s: movement. Beginning twenty years ago he took Commentary from a position of highbrow high·brow adj. also high·browed Of, relating to, or being highly cultured or intellectual: They only attend highbrow events such as the ballet or the opera. n. flatulence flatulence /flat·u·lence/ (flat´u-lens) excessive formation of gases in the stomach or intestine. flat·u·lence or flat·u·len·cy n. The presence of excessive gas in the digestive tract. on the problem of Soviet imperialism and turned it into one of the most sophisticated and formidable weapons of the West in the cold war. Commentary is, officially, a publication of the American Jewish Committee
or kohen (Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male. . Podhoretz now wrote to Hart about an article appearing in NATIONAL REVIEW by Sobran criticizing NR's editorial policy on the Mideast. Mr. Podhoretz reasonably assumed that Jeff Hart Jeff Hart was a fictional character in the now defunct American soap opera, Love of Life. He was played by actor Charles Baxter. Rosehill's crooked mayor Jeff Hart was the monstrous mayor of the city of Rosehill, New York. would pass the letter on to me, and accordingly I replied to him directly: You wrote that you were "surprised and dismayed by the fact that NATIONAL REVIEW published such a piece" as Joe Sobran had written, and that my doing so "does damage ... lending credence to all those like Marty Peretz [the editor-in-chief of The New Republic] who have attacked me [Podhoretz] for being too easy on Buckley." The time is clearly overdue for a recapitulation recapitulation, theory, stated as the biogenetic law by E. H. Haeckel, that the embryological development of the individual repeats the stages in the evolutionary development of the species. of the relevant data. 1. I deemed Joe Sobran's six columns contextually anti-Semitic. By this I mean that if he bad been talking, let us say, about the lobbying interests of the Arabs or of the Chinese, he would not have raised eyebrows as an anti-Arab or an anti-Chinese. 2. I took the initiative in disavowing those columns and in pointing out the contextual danger of such language. In doing so, I proffered my own opinion, which is expert, on the question whether Sobran was in fact anti-Semitic. 3. I advised Joe that if he continued to write such columns, we would need to dissociate ourselves not only from the columns, but from him, on the grounds that he was invincibly ignorant of an ethical-cultural point which I deem critically important in modern discourse. 4. It would appear to me, based on your reaction to my publishing his essay, that you are under the impression that I should have shorn shorn v. A past participle of shear. shorn Verb a past participle of shear Adj. 1. him of his privileges as a senior editor of NATIONAL REVIEW. There is no compelling reason for you to be acquainted with to be possessed of personal knowledge of; to be cognizant of; to be more or less familiar with; to be on terms of social intercourse with. See also: Acquaint the protocols of this magazine, but for thirty years I have given to any senior editor the privilege of disagreeing with the policy of the magazine through the device of the so-called "Open Question." 5. So convinced is Sobran that the charges of anti-Semitism leveled against him are intellectually and objectively unfair that he asked for space in which to give the reasons why. I did not rescind NATIONAL REVIEW'S policies when I agreed to give him that space, which by organic arrangements he was entitled to. But I did, as an amateur diplomatist, urge him to recast his essay, when I saw the first draft of it, which, had I published it in the form presented, would in turn have required me to reiterate my livid livid /liv·id/ (liv´id) discolored, as from a contusion or bruise; black and blue. liv·id adj. objections to his six columns. He understood my point, substantially reconstructed his essay, and came up with 1,500 words to only a few sentences of which I have any objection whatever. . . . Moreover, you are strangely insensitive to the point that his essay is much more damaging to me than it is to you, for reasons I shan't patronize pa·tron·ize tr.v. pa·tron·ized, pa·tron·iz·ing, pa·tron·iz·es 1. To act as a patron to; support or sponsor. 2. To go to as a customer, especially on a regular basis. 3. you by elucidating. [By this I meant that Joe's scorn for the reasoning by which I and my colleagues were guided was very painful to read from a colleague, published in my magazine.] 6. Your letter to Jeff arrives at the strangest moment, when you profess yourself embarrassed by insufficient docility to Marty Peretz, whose criticisms of NATIONAL REVIEW you [evidently] now feel you must pay more solemn attention to. This notwithstanding an editorial paragraph by Peretz published in the contemporary issue [of The New Republic] which is as indefensible as anything ever done by Sobran. [Peretz, reacting to my defense of Cardinal O'Connor when he visited Israel, had written, ". . . his abundant ignorance of the Middle East cannot suffice as explanation. The old Catholic Right has always had trouble with the Jewish problem. This explains why Buckley has made things so cozy for an unabashed bigot bigot - A person who is religiously attached to a particular computer, language, operating system, editor, or other tool (see religious issues). Usually found with a specifier; thus, "Cray bigot", "ITS bigot", "APL bigot", "VMS bigot", "Berkeley bigot". like columnist Joseph Sobran."] Jeff Hart's covering letter [to me] touches on several subjects, one of them Peretz's attack. "Marty Peretz's remarks in TNR TNR The New Republic TNR Trap-Neuter-Return (controlling feral cats) TNR Times New Roman (font) TNR Antananarivo, Madagascar - Ivato (Airport Code) TNR Tonic Neck Reflex are outrageous. Maybe you should take them on in a column-except that it is so disagreeable to get into the ring with someone who can write in the terms Peretz employed." I note that you say that in the next issue of Commentary you will apologize for your treatment of me--who took the initiative in respect of Sobran--rather than for Peretz, whose frenzy causes me only to be grateful that he is not a representative of Catholic orthodoxy; he is your problem, not mine. I despise the low level of his polemics, even as I contemplate with genuine pride the invitation I received today to accept the annual award of the Anti-Defamat/ion League. Norman--of course--replied. 1. For the record, I deemed Joe Sobran's columns anti-Semitic in themselves, and not merely "contextually." On that issue, it seems we disagree. 2. As to whether Sobran himself--as opposed to what he has written--is anti-Semitic, I leave that judgment to God. Your own "expert" opinion carries enormous authority with me, of course. But shouldn't you be entertaining a doubt or two in light of what you say in point 5? [That his original draft had crossed the bearable bear·a·ble adj. That can be endured: bearable pain; a bearable schedule. bear line.] 3. Might not point 5 also have a bearing here? 4. I do not presume to advise you, or any other editor, on internal procedures. But the rubric RUBRIC, civil law. The title or inscription of any law or statute, because the copyists formerly drew and painted the title of laws and statutes rubro colore, in red letters. Ayl. Pand. B. 1, t. 8; Diet. do Juris. h.t. under which Sobran's article was published does not absolve ab·solve tr.v. ab·solved, ab·solv·ing, ab·solves 1. To pronounce clear of guilt or blame. 2. To relieve of a requirement or obligation. 3. a. To grant a remission of sin to. the magazine of responsibility for publishing it. [A serious point, worth pondering. Should an editor who traditionally cedes to a dissenting senior editor the space in which to register the reasons for his dissent suspend the convention rather than publish in it material he deems indefensible?] 5. In addition to the comments I have already made on this point, I have to say that I found Sobran's article (as I wrote ... ) "simultaneously disingenuous and unrepentant." Surely you can't disagree with Verb 1. disagree with - not be very easily digestible; "Spicy food disagrees with some people" hurt - give trouble or pain to; "This exercise will hurt your back" that characterization. 6. What can you mean by saying that Marty Peretz is my problem? That he and I are both Jewish? Why on earth should I apologize for him? He neither works for me nor speaks for me. Indeed, as it happens, I was so outraged by his editorial that I hung up on him when he too remained unrepentant in response to my call of protest. [A resourceful defense. Co-warriors in pro-Israelism don't in fact have to defend, or denounce, one another's tactics. But normally they exercise the right to do so, even if they are not thereby discharging a formal responsibility.] So that Joe Sobran: Chapter 1 left the concerned public confused. Since anti-Semitism is essentially a moral question, it pays to labor to dissipate at least such confusion as yields to reason. 1. Norman Podhoretz was clearly correct that Joe Sobran was unrepentant. 2. Commentary's editor thought NATIONAL REVIEW'S editor wrong to publish Sobran's defense of himself, on the grounds that it was, inherently, yet another anti-Semitic exercise. 3. Yet another editor (Peretz of The New Republic) goes on record as suggesting that Buckley, as a member of the "old Catholic Right," has a "problem" with Jewish questions, which is why he extends hospitality to an unabashed bigot" like Sobran. 4. Buckley et al., alarmed by Sobran's columns, had dissociated dis·so·ci·ate v. dis·so·ci·at·ed, dis·so·ci·at·ing, dis·so·ci·ates v.tr. 1. To remove from association; separate: themselves from the sentiments expressed and language used, but were not prepared to sever their links with Sobran. 5. Podhoretz et al. are terminally displeased dis·please v. dis·pleased, dis·pleas·ing, dis·pleas·es v.tr. To cause annoyance or vexation to. v.intr. To cause annoyance or displeasure. with Sobran, but only disappointed with Buckley. 6. Peretz is terminally displeased with Sobran and enough displeased with Buckley to denounce him in language that provokes a fellow editor, who is also Jewish, to hang up the telephone on him, while maintaining 7. that although a Jewish editor has no moral mandate publicly to dissociate himself from editorial outlawry Outlawry See also Highwaymen, Thievery. Bass, Sam (1851–1878) train robber and all-around desperado. [Am. Hist.: NCE, 244] Billy the Kid (William H. Bonney, 1859–1881) infamous cold-blooded killer. [Am. Hist. committed by a fellow editor who is himself Jewish and is addressing the same questions, a Christian editor who exercises direct editorial control over his own journal should not permit the appearance in it under any dispensation DISPENSATION. A relaxation of law for the benefit or advantage of an individual. In the United States, no power exists, except in the legislature, to dispense with law, and then it is not so much a dispensation as a change of the law. of material deemed indefensible. Today's Anti-Semitism IN SEARCHING out the meaning of contemporary anti-Semitism, it is useful to ask whether in order to qualify as a contemporary anti-Semite one needs to be anti-Israel. The anti-Semitism of days gone by obviously manifested itself in other ways, ranging (with Hitler's awful exception) from exclusion from certain country clubs to immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. barriers. I suppose there are people around who go berserk ber·serk adj. 1. Destructively or frenetically violent: a berserk worker who started smashing all the windows. 2. at the presence of a Jew, as the Vienna poll above suggests, but they cannot be numerous (I have never met one). In any event, no one is saying that kind of thing about Sobran. "People who call me anti-Semitic haven't the least idea what I'm about," he wrote me. It isn't only that the mere suggestion of such an ethnic allergy surprises him. "The fact is that I get bored in most places where there aren't a certain number of Jews, because there are so many really original thinkers among them [group characteristics?]. I need them. Even when I disagree with them I need their challenge." But Sobran quickly qualifies this, turning it right around. What he calls philo-semitism, he says, makes inordinate demands on intelligent people with live analytical minds. The people he criticizes, he says, [feel] victimized even when they have considerable power and aren't using it very creditably." Once again he alights on what Mr. Seymour would have called a group characteristic: It's hard to generalize about them, and yet they do have a discernible if not exactly definable character. . . . PhiloSemitism can overgeneralize Verb 1. overgeneralize - draw too general a conclusion; "It is dangerous to overgeneralize" overgeneralise extrapolate, generalize, infer, generalise - draw from specific cases for more general cases as preposterously as anti-Semitism. The fact that the one has replaced the other only means that the Jews' corporate fortunes have improved, not that people really appreciate them as they deserve to be appreciated. Real appreciation includes a certain amount of criticism, but even that has to rest on the assumption that they have the same rights as other people . . . But in our time, any criticism that doesn't sound like an after-dinner toast shocks the easy philo-semitism of people who just don't want any trouble. Joe then turns (these quotes are from the long personal letter addressed to me) to his reading of history. The ancient pagan charge against the Jews was that they were "misanthropes." At any rate, however the Jews now may differ from the Jews then, they've always been aloof debunkers of what they took to be the idolatries of people around them, including Christianity. This naturally irritates the natives-or maybe I should say the nativists. At times it irritates me. But you have to learn to respect that. Joe was writing during a period when he was so fiercely at odds with Desert Storm that he was attracted to anyone, Left or Right, who opposed the military intervention The deliberate act of a nation or a group of nations to introduce its military forces into the course of an existing controversy. in Iraq. I had to learn that [Noam] Chomsky is as much a native of this country as I am, and that it was silly to call him "anti-American." His integrity and courage show in his willingness to live with that sort of dismissal. He's also been as unsparing of Israel as he has been of the U.S., when he could have made his life a lot easier among the intellectuals by being discreetly selective in his criticism. To my mind he represents something deeper and more honorable in the Jewish character than the Jewish chauvinists do. He's a true Israelite, in whom there is no guile. Joe Sobran is convinced that it is only the policies of the State of Israel that attract his critical attention, and plague him. Whether it is policies that are distinctively, even uniquely, Israeli that upset him, or whether an anti-Israeli-anti-Semitic?-tropism manipulates his thought, it is an object of this essay to explore. His criticisms of Israeli policy are adamant, and incessant. When I talk to a Palestinian for an hour or two, I'm struck at how absolutely bizarre it is that an editor of The New Republic or Commentary can, any time he wishes, buy a plane ticket and, upon landing at Tel Aviv Tel Aviv (tĕl əvēv`), city (1994 pop. 355,200), W central Israel, on the Mediterranean Sea. Oficially named Tel Aviv–Jaffa, it is Israel's commercial, financial, communications, and cultural center and the core of its largest , assume a whole range of "rights" that are denied to the native Arab.... Zionism is actually the assertion of some very unusual prerogatives. [Sobran doesn't distinguish here, though he should, between Arabs in the conquered territories, who enjoy virtually no rights, and Arabs within Israel, who have equal rights except that those who do not serve in the military (Jews are required to do so) forfeit some rights, e.g., to government jobs.] "Anti-Semitism" only seems to show up nowadays in the context of discussion of Israel. Jews aren't beaten in the streets, snubbed, denied entry to Harvard, etc. By every other index, anti-Semitism is defunct. Yet the Zionist Apparat ap·pa·rat n. See apparatus. [Russian, the government organization or staff, from German Apparat, a political organization, from Latin appar wants to convince us it's raging, just beneath the surface." It talks about "polite" and "sophisticated" and "thinly veiled" anti-Semitism. For some reason the stuff never gets overt. It always has to be exposed by interpretation. These ostensible Apparent; visible; exhibited. Ostensible authority is power that a principal, either by design or through the absence of ordinary care, permits others to believe his or her agent possesses. qualifiers don't really qualify, either: when you're accused of "polite" anti-Semitism, your accuser is not saying: "Well, he may be an anti-Semite, but at least he's polite." He's saying: "This guy's politeness is phony. Strip away the fake good manners Noun 1. good manners - a courteous manner courtesy personal manner, manner - a way of acting or behaving niceness, politeness - a courteous manner that respects accepted social usage urbanity - polished courtesy; elegance of manner , and he's just another Hitler." The jury reasonably asks: Is the critic of Israel so possessed to indict in·dict tr.v. in·dict·ed, in·dict·ing, in·dicts 1. To accuse of wrongdoing; charge: a book that indicts modern values. 2. as to disfigure disfigure v. to cause permanent change in a person's body, particularly by leaving visible scars which affect a person's appearance. In lawsuits or claims due to injuries caused by another's negligence or intentional actions, such scarring can add considerably to what actually goes on in Israel? Is he vulnerable to the charge that selective indignation betrays him? Isn't it fair to point out an historical indifference to the policies of other countries with analogous domestic policies? (Joe Sobran never spent a lot of time blasting apartheid.) The column most frequently cited by critics of Sobran as dispositive dis·pos·i·tive adj. Relating to or having an effect on disposition or settlement, especially of a legal case or will. on the matter of whether he is an anti-Semite is the one in which he "praised" the magazine Instauration, a wild racist-nativist publication whose deranged de·range tr.v. de·ranged, de·rang·ing, de·rang·es 1. To disturb the order or arrangement of. 2. To upset the normal condition or functioning of. 3. To disturb mentally; make insane. editor has a certain aptitude for wit and trenchancy, skills not denied to exhibitionists, as students of Gore Vidal will acknowledge. What Sobran wrote in this column (May 8, 1986) was, "I know of only one magazine in America that faces the harder facts about race: a little magazine called Instauration. Its articles are unsigned, and the name of its editor, Wilmot Robertson, is apparently fictitious .... Instauration is an often brilliant magazine, covering a beat nobody else will touch, and doing so with intelligence, wide-ranging observation, and bitter wit." Now note this carefully: "It is openly and almost unremittingly hostile to blacks, Jews, and Mexican and Oriental immigrants. It is also hostile to Nazism, which makes things confusing. Furthermore, it is hostile to Christianity." It is characteristic of the critic on the chase that, yelping yelp v. yelped, yelp·ing, yelps v.intr. To utter a short, sharp bark or cry: excited dogs yelping; yelped in pain when the bee stung. v.tr. with glee over the discovery of Sobran on Instauration, he is indifferent to the qualifications Sobran entered. That Instauration is "hostile to blacks, ... Mexican and Oriental immigrants ...[and] Christianity" becomes simply unnoticeable. But even allowing for the qualification, there was no excusing what Sobran said. (The patron wisecrack wise·crack Slang n. A flippant, typically sardonic remark or retort. See Synonyms at joke. intr.v. wise·cracked, wise·crack·ing, wise·cracks To make or utter a wisecrack. highlighting the technique of the irrelevant excuse was that of Fr. George Tyrrell George Tyrrell (February 6 1861 – July 15 1909) was a Jesuit priest (until his expulsion) and a Modernist Catholic scholar. His attempts to interpret Catholic teaching in the context of modern knowledge made him a key figure in the Modernist controversy within the Roman , who said of his fellow Jesuits at the turn of the century, "Accuse them of murdering three men and a dog, and they will triumphantly produce the dog alive.") It becomes so-what time that the magazine also hates everybody else. Instauration demands of a morally sensible reader simply: denunciation DENUNCIATION, crim. law. This term is used by the civilians to signify the act by which au individual informs a public officer, whose duty it is to prosecute offenders, that a crime has been committed. It differs from a complaint. (q.v.) Vide 1 Bro. C. L. 447; 2 Id. 389; Ayl. Parer. . It assumes," Joe continued, "a world of Hobbesian conflict at the racial level: every race against every race. Knowing racial harmony is hard, Instauration takes a fatal step further and gives up on it." One sees here intellectual curiosity disinterestedly at work, a psychoanalyst probing inquisitively the character of Jack the Ripper Jack the Ripper, name given to an unidentified late-19th-century murderer in London, England. From Aug. to Nov., 1888, he was responsible for the death and mutilation of at least seven female prostitutes in the East End section of London. . But now Joe Sobran, Explorer, tells us that usually there are grounds for interracial in·ter·ra·cial adj. Relating to, involving, or representing different races: interracial fellowship; an interracial neighborhood. tension. "The liberal bromide bromide, any of a group of compounds that contain bromine and a more electropositive element or radical. Bromides are formed by the reaction of bromine or a bromide with another substance; they are widely distributed in nature. tells us that prejudice is the product of ignorance, [but] the truth is that racial antagonism usually comes from personal experience. And yet that same experience produces personal affections for individuals of other races, affections that rule out, for most of us, total racial hostility." This finding is very possibly true, and in any event not uniquely invidious in·vid·i·ous adj. 1. Tending to rouse ill will, animosity, or resentment: invidious accusations. 2. in respect of any particular race or creed. Sobran, in the end, was respectful enough of public opinion to recognize his mistake. He was writing, after all, as a syndicated columnist, not as a psychologist for the Parapsychology parapsychology, study of mental phenomena not explainable by accepted principles of science. The organized, scientific investigation of paranormal phenomena began with the foundation (1882) of the Society for Psychical Research in London. Review, in which role he would be as unconcerned for taboos as a computer. "My column," he wrote a few weeks later, "should have denounced Instauration more vigorously, and anyone else is certainly welcome to do so. I have since learned, for instance, that it favors abortion as a way of controlling the black population. There you have two ugly positions rolled into one Adj. 1. rolled into one - made up of several components combined into a single entity combined - made or joined or united into one , and I should have had the sense to deduce this from the magazine's general premises. Its racism is serious. What I called its bitter wit' is more often cruel sarcasm, compulsively cruel even when it can't be funny." In conclusion: Sobran made a serious mistake in applauding Instauration, whatever the stated qualifications. It is, however, a matter of record, first, that he entered these qualifications, and, second, that he withdrew his praise and publicly regretted having given it. He was nowhere (that I have seen) credited for this act of contrition Act of Contrition prayer of atonement said after making one’s confession. [Christianity: Misc.] See : Penitence , any more than for the earlier qualifications. One Idea at a Time? THE LESSON HERE is important. An editorialist isn't expected to weigh all the pros and cons pros and cons Noun, pl the advantages and disadvantages of a situation [Latin pro for + con(tra) against] of an argument or an article or indeed a book that contains outrageous thought or language, nor is he permitted to do so. I suppose an analogue would be the columnist who wrote one sentence praising any aspect of Hitler's character. Whatever else he went on to write, he would run the risk, in hostile circles, of being the man who praised Hitler, even as Joe Sobran became the man who praised Instauration (as I remain, in some quarters, the man who praised Joe McCarthy). A very strong case can be made, has been made, for evaluating the oeuvre of Ezra Pound without the compunction to critical immobilization Immobilization Definition Immobilization refers to the process of holding a joint or bone in place with a splint, cast, or brace. This is done to prevent an injured area from moving while it heals. upon encountering the anti-Semitic line. Ironically, Pound himself wrote that everyone's ideas should be judged one at a time. A columnist can't reasonably expect such treatment. Politicians, many of whom outlast out·last tr.v. out·last·ed, out·last·ing, out·lasts To last longer than. outlast Verb to last longer than Verb 1. critical writers, sometimes outpace the black little cloud over cloud over Verb 1. (of the sky or weather) to become cloudy: it was clouding over and we thought it would rain 2. their heads. Many Southern segregationists got by, most conspicuously George Wallace This article is about the American politician, former governor of Alabama and former presidential candidate. For other uses, see George Wallace (disambiguation). George Corley Wallace Jr. , as the passage of time washed away their earlier positions. Churchill had a line or two praising the early Hitler, and Truman said, "I like old Joe Stalin." But they went on to spend most of their public lives fighting totalitarianism, even as columnist James Jackson James Jackson may refer to:
n. 1. A long monotonous speech or piece of writing. 2. a. A strip of wood, plaster, or metal placed on a wall or pavement as a guide for the even application of plaster or concrete. b. . I expect it would be quoted against him if he perished on the Golan Heights Golan Heights, strategic upland region (2003 est. pop. 10,500), c.500 sq mi (1,250 sq km), SW Syria. It borders S Lebanon, NE Israel, and NW Jordan. It takes its name from the ancient city of Golan and was known as Gaulanitis in New Testament times. , planting there the flag of Israel
The flag of Israel was adopted on October 28, 1948, five months after the country's establishment. It depicts a blue Star of David on a white background, between two horizontal blue stripes. , in the manner of the great tableau on Iwo Jima. The question naturally then arises whether the gestating anti-Semite has gradually become fixated fix·ate v. fix·at·ed, fix·at·ing, fix·ates v.tr. 1. To make fixed, stable, or stationary. 2. To focus one's eyes or attention on: fixate a faint object. on the subject of Israel, whose every act at the bargaining table, in the West Bank, in Lebanon, advances the fetal little monster toward untethered Unattached to any data or power source by wire or fiber; in other words: wireless. Contrast with tethered. life. Sobran has a very difficult time of it. It is a common casualty of the world of polemics that critics don't always have the time, or take it if they do, for patient, detailed inquiry. Such inattentions to detail breed licentiousness Acting without regard to law, ethics, or the rights of others. The term licentiousness is often used interchangeably with lewdness or lasciviousness, which relate to moral impurity in a sexual context. LICENTIOUSNESS. . Sobran has written that "Israel is a deeply anti-Christian country; it has even eliminated the plus sign from math textbooks because the plus sign (yes, this: ) looks like a cross! Yet Israel depends on American Christians for tax money and tourism, so it has to mute this theme for foreign consumption." It is true that some hyper-orthodox Jewish sects oppose the use of the plus sign. But the taboo is not generally exercised in Israel. Besides which, there is the undistributed Adj. 1. undistributed - (of investments) not distributed among a variety of securities undiversified - not diversified middle in the syllogistic syllogistic Formal analysis of the syllogism. Developed in its original form by Aristotle in his Prior Analytics c. 350 BC, syllogistic represents the earliest branch of formal logic. Syllogistic comprises two domains of investigation. sequence. American taxpayers who give money to Israel give money for a Jewish homeland where it ought not to be expected that Orthodox Jews should respect the cross. For them the identifying profanation is, inevitably, the cross. American Christians who visit Israel do so for the most part as pilgrims going to the Holy Land. Jewish custodians of the Holy Land sites have never interfered with Christians who go to venerate. The distinctions are lost in Sobran's analysis. Israel's "prime minister, Yitzhak Shamir, is the former head of the Stern Gang, an assassin himself, it's rather as if Jimmy Hoffa had been elected President of the United States The head of the Executive Branch, one of the three branches of the federal government. The U.S. Constitution sets relatively strict requirements about who may serve as president and for how long. ." The analogy is a Trojan horse, demolishing Joe's point. Hoffa led a movement designed to give him autocratic control of a labor union labor union: see union, labor. . Shamir participated in a paramilitary movement, often bloody, designed to realize a great ethnic-religious-historical dream. That they both used guns no more fuses them morally than the Green Berets and John Dillinger become one because both used guns. In another column, Sobran wrote that Pulitzer Prize-winning Thomas Friedman of the New York Times had been suppressed by the editors when he "wrote a path-breaking story describing the massive Israeli bombing of Beirut as 'indiscriminate."' I found this difficult to believe when I read the column, and called Friedman, who told me hastily (he could not stay long on the telephone, because Rosh Hashanah was closing in) that the allegation was in all important respects incorrect, as recorded in an article he had written for the Columbia Journalism Review The Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) is an American magazine for professional journalists published bimonthly by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism since 1961. . He would be glad, he said, to give the whole story to anyone I designated. I wrote to Joe advising him of Friedman's correction and relaying Friedman's invitation. It was a long time before Joe referred to this letter. When you impugn im·pugn tr.v. im·pugned, im·pugn·ing, im·pugns To attack as false or questionable; challenge in argument: impugn a political opponent's record. my factual accuracy,' you hit a sore spot. I got my version of Friedman from a couple of conversations, and lazily didn't track the facts down to make sure. I take your word for it; and I'd have called on Friedman if I just hadn't been so damned overwhelmed at the time. Mea culpa." Let's face it, a juror juror n. any person who actually serves on a jury. Lists of potential jurors are chosen from various sources such as registered voters, automobile registration or telephone directories. could reasonably conclude that Joe is not industriously curious to uncover refutations of his burgeoning case against Israel. A week or so earlier, Sobran had cited a book, By Way of Deception: A Devastating dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. Insider's Portrait of the Mossad, by Victor Ostrovsky (the book, it transpired within a matter of months, is of dubious reliability), that alleged that Israeli intelligence had discovered before the fateful act that Syrian terrorists were planning to stage the attack that killed 241 U.S. Marines in Lebanon in 1983. Shamir, he wrote a few months later, is an "unreconstructed un·re·con·struct·ed adj. 1. Not reconciled to social, political, or economic change; maintaining outdated attitudes, beliefs, and practices. 2. Not reconciled to the outcome of the American Civil War. Adj. 1. thug." There are more illuminating ways to communicate what one wants to communicate about Shamir, however negative. "The Israeli state does not recognize intermarriage in·ter·mar·ry intr.v. in·ter·mar·ried, in·ter·mar·ry·ing, in·ter·mar·ries 1. To marry a member of another group. 2. To be bound together by the marriages of members. 3. between Jews and non-Jews as valid, which means that Israel's Jews as well as its Arabs are denied some of the rights we take for granted here." That isn't exactly correct. Israel, as a Jewish state, will not issue a license to a Jew to marry a non-Jew. But an intermarriage transacted abroad (e.g., in Cyprus or Rhodes) yields equal rights to the couple on their return to Israel. "Though Israel doesn't have a formal constitution, it does have what it calls its Basic Law, under which Jews are more equal than others. Israel's High Court has ruled that the Basic Law actually precludes equal rights for non-Jews. 'It is necessary,' the court says, 'to prevent a Jew or Arab who calls for equality of rights for Arabs from sitting in the Ynesset or being elected to it.' And even if a Jewish majority passed a law extending full rights to non-Jews, such a law would be invalid." It is difficult to comment on this because although laws passed by the Knesset are binding, it is true that laws defying the Torah are unlikely to get passed. What results, in a Jewish state with secular interests, is a congeries con·ge·ries n. (used with a sing. verb) A collection; an aggregation: "Our city, it should be explained, is two cities, or more of paradoxes, like that of the mixed marriage contracted abroad. Another is the right of return of the Jew-and his non-Jewish relatives. An estimated 30 per cent of the Russian immigrants are related to Jews, but not themselves Jewish. They will enjoy identical rights. In another column, Sobran writes, "John Kifner of the New York Times sums up his [Kahane's] position shrewdly: Jewish philosophy, Rabbi Kahane contended, was never based on Western democratic principles, but on Jewish ritual law, which he said forbade close contact with non-Jews."' Kahane was a fanatic, Sobran explained. "At the same time, he had enough empathy (he called it 'respect,' though that was stretching a point) for the Palestinians to understand that they would never be content to be semi-citizens of a Jewish state. In that sense [Kahane] was neither a fool nor a hater-just a keen-witted fanatic. His blunt conclusion formed the title of one of his books: They Must Go. He even hinted that violence against liberal Jews would be a mitzvah,' or good deed; they called him a Nazi, but in his own eyes he was being truer to authentic Judaism than they were." It is simply unrealistic to conclude that Joe is here suggesting anything other than that Kahane may have the truer insight into authentic Jewish theology-which position might be defended by here and there a Jewish theologian, but as applied to contemporary Judaic practice is self-evidently irrelevant, even as the suggestion that the late, excommunicate ex·com·mu·ni·cate tr.v. ex·com·mu·ni·cat·ed, ex·com·mu·ni·cat·ing, ex·com·mu·ni·cates 1. To deprive of the right of church membership by ecclesiastical authority. 2. Father Leonard Feeney of Boston (who preached the necessary damnation of unbelievers) was in fact the most authentic spokesman of the true Catholic faith is self-evidently false. Kahane's position was seen by the overwhelming majority of Jews as a narrow and extreme projection of Jewish law, and there is no serious movement to press his demand that the Israeli Arabs be expelled. The Great Bifurcation Bifurcation A term used in finance that refers to a splitting of something into two separate pieces. Notes: Generally, this term is used to refer to the splitting of a security into two separate pieces for the purpose of complex taxation advantages. IF WE WERE searching out theological genes that sired current tensions within Judaeo-Christianity, it is obvious that the great bifurcation came with the advent of Jesus, who is called a prophet by Jews but also, in the nature of the situation as viewed by Jewish orthodoxy, an impostor; while the Christian venerates Jesus as the Incarnation. The Roman church, which is senior in respect of religious taxonomy in the Western world, does not regard Judaism merely as schismatic schis·mat·ic adj. Of, relating to, or engaging in schism. n. One who promotes or engages in schism. schis·mat , like the Eastern Orthodox Church, nor even, like the Protestant denominations, as heretical he·ret·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to heresy or heretics. 2. Characterized by, revealing, or approaching departure from established beliefs or standards. . The Jews-never having been Christians-are removed one step further: on the negative side, they are "invincibly ignorant," refusing to acknowledge the truths of the Christian Gospel. On the positive side, they are the people of the First Covenant, presaging the Second. And if Jesus built his Church upon a Rock, that Rock sat solidly on the ground of Judaism. Joe Sobran is suggesting that there is something to be said for Rabbi Kahane's reading of the necessary derivative relationship between Christian and Jew. If he is right, then of course Kahane's anti-Christianity postulates a complementary anti-Judaism. In April 1986 Joe's column read, "Although the great Jewish theologian Moses Maimonides insisted that it was as wrong to kill a gentile as a Jew, it seems strange that this should ever have been a matter of controversy, and Maimonides was in some quarters regarded as a heretic. The Yiddish word for gentile, 'goy,' is contemptuous; 'goyishkopf'-literally, 'gentile-headed'-means 'stupid."' This is breakaway definitional polemicism, inasmuch as "goy" means, simply, "Gentile" and, to the extent that, historically, it has been used to denote those-who-are-not-of-the-true-faith, is no more invidious than any other interreligious sequestration sequestration In law, a writ authorizing a law-enforcement official to take into custody the property of a defendant in order to enforce a judgment or to preserve the property until a judgment is rendered. . It is as fair to say that "goy" is inherently invidious as it is to say that "Jew" is invidious. Joe dwelled often on the American, Jonathan Pollard, who spied for Israel. He acknowledged that the government of Israel insisted that the spying in America had been done outside its knowledge; Joe dismissed this denial as perfunctory and implausible, and belabored the Israeli government, denouncing it as a fickle friend of the United States. Friendly nations do not spy on one another is the-problematical-premise here. I myself hope the United States has spies in every country whose policies are of vital concern to us, whatever the temperature of our fraternal diplomatic relations with one another. I hope we have a spy or two operating in Israel, given our intimate concern to know everything that can be known about Israel's strategy. It would be something entirely different if Israel had turned U.S. secrets over to the Soviet Union. Joe did not make that charge. Seymour Hersh subsequently did, relying in his book The Samson Option on testimony given by someone widely thought to be a confidence man. Does Anyone Agree? WHEN I announced, with the backing of my colleagues, NATIONAL REVIEW'S dissociation from Joe Sobran's columns, the reactions were varied enough themselves to motivate an inquiry into the current understanding of anti-Semitism. Listen, at one end, to Richard Cohen. He wrote in his column for the Washington Post: Buckley, in an extraordinary move, has dissociated himself in the NATIONAL REVIEW from Sobran's writings but not-note-from Sobran himself. He remains one of the Review's three senior editors. What Buckley does is important. As the founding editor of the nation's most influential conservative journal and as both the friend and ideological mentor of President Reagan, Buckley is a figure conservatives look to for cues. Anti-Semitism is infecting attitudes toward the Middle East, and Buckley is in a position to say what is and what is not permitted ... from his friend and colleague. His is a painful task. But one can fairly ask how the Joe Sobran-bill Buckley relationship is, in essence, different from the one Jesse Jackson had with the Rev. Louis Farrakhan. Jackson initially went the Buckley route and dissociated himself from Farrakhan's statements. Finally, when others pointed out that those statements reflected the man, he severed the relationship entirely. [Comment: Jesse Jackson was running for President. The criteria that govern personal conduct are dominated by that consideration. Dwight Eisenhower deserted George Marshall in order to enhance his prospects of winning the White House. Editors are under stresses of a more reflective nature.] . .Buckley himself rejects particular Sobran writings, but embraces the whole man. But anti-Semitism can be deduced from the way a person conducts himself. In Sobran's case, the conduct in question is his writings, and those put his anti-Semitism beyond doubt.... As Buckley notes, American conservatism has come a long way since it was polluted by anti-Semitism-and some of the credit is his. But the continued presence of Sobran on the masthead of America's most influential conservative magazine is a step backward. Sobran is no martyr to the hair-trigger sensitivities of Jews but a victim of his own poison pen. Reconsider, Bill Buckley, before Sobran's ink stains your own cause. Occupying the middle ground was, for example, Professor Paul Gottfried (himself Jewish), who wrote to The New Republic: ". . . some neoconservatives reacted hysterically-even opportunistically-to Joe Sobran's observations about American Jews. But I do not believe that Sobran is blameless blame·less adj. Free of blame or guilt; innocent. blame less·ly adv.blame in this particular matter. His remarks on the Jewish persecution of Christians The persecution of Christians is religious persecution that Christians sometimes undergo as a consequence of professing their faith, both historically and in the current era. Christians are by far the most persecuted religious group in human history. [not here reproduced] reflect a woeful woe·ful also wo·ful adj. 1. Affected by or full of woe; mournful. 2. Causing or involving woe. 3. Deplorably bad or wretched: ignorance of history, and his praise of the neo-Nazi Instauration was inexcusably offensive." At the what's-going-on-here? end was, for instance, Manuel Tellechea of the New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. Tribune, who predicted that Sobran would resign from NATIONAL REVIEW rather than accept the rebuke of his colleagues. More, "If Buckley truly believes Joseph Sobran not to be an anti-Semite, he should dismiss as either malicious or misinformed anyone who would so slander him, Jew or gentile. It is a debt he owes to friendship and to justice." Mr. Tellechea has an explanation for my misbehavior. "Buckley is a national icon. In fact, not a few liberals have had a sort of crush on him for years. He is a fascist, of course, but what a wonderful writer."' Therein the explanation! "Buckley is [would be?] a man of iron not to have succumbed to such entreaties. But because he is so accustomed to adoration and so above the fray, he does not understand that the criticism he weathers so easily, when directed at one such as Sobran, who is not a national icon and not particularly lovable, can wreck a man's career and leave his reputation in tatters tat·ter 1 n. 1. A torn and hanging piece of cloth; a shred. 2. tatters Torn and ragged clothing; rags. tr. & intr.v. . He shouldn't recommend to Sobran that he ignore his enemies, nor should Buckley ignore them. And, of course, he shouldn't give Sobran's adversaries even an inch of rope with which to hang him. Buckley, after all, believes in Sobran's innocence, doesn't he?" The instinctive feel of the majority of the eighty-odd readers Of NATIONAL REVIEW who wrote in was to wonder whether I had knuckled under to trendy pressures. I replied (perforce per·force adv. By necessity; by force of circumstance. [Middle English par force, from Old French : par, by (from Latin per; see per) + force, force ) by form letter, immediately acknowledging that this was the device I was necessarily driven to. My letter included the following sentences: I have read your letters, many of them surpassingly sensitive and intelligent, with great care. The general positions I adopted ... reflect our considered judgment of the issues involved. Beyond reiterating this-we are bound, in the last analysis, to act with right reason, according to the dictates of conscience-there isn't anything I can usefully add.... I do hope that those of you most vexed will consider the possibility that you misread mis·read tr.v. mis·read , mis·read·ing, mis·reads 1. To read inaccurately. 2. To misinterpret or misunderstand: misread our friendly concern as prying. the editorial I wrote, and will do me the favor of rereading it. A month or so later a letter from a rabbi. Daniel E. Lapin wrote from the Pacific Jewish Center in Venice, California: Mr. Buckley, I am not sure that I fully understand the fuss about Sobran. The writing of Richard Cohen et al. strikes me as disingenuous. Sobran's "Pensees" in NR, December 31, 1985, on the other hand, laid the foundations of a dozen sermons in my synagogue. As you may remember from our brief meeting when you spoke for Brandeis Bardin Institute in Los Angeles, my rabbinic rab·bin·i·cal also rab·bin·ic adj. Of, relating to, or characteristic of rabbis. [From obsolete rabbin, rabbi, from French, from Old French rabain, probably from Aramaic credentials are adequate.... If there is any way I can be useful to you, Mr. Sobran, or NATIONAL REVIEW, I would be honored. Insofar in·so·far adv. To such an extent. Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice as there is something called anti-Semitism (as opposed to anti-Godism), I just don't believe Mr. Sobran is one. The range of opinion on NATIONAL REVIEW and Joe Sobran ran, thus, the gamut. Partial Resolution FOUR YEARS later, in September 1990, after reading two pieces by him which I judged indefensible, I resolved wearily and sadly to dismiss Joe from the board of senior editors OF NATIONAL REVIEW. I wrote out a personal letter: I read your column (9/20/90) last night, and this morning reread Verb 1. reread - read anew; read again; "He re-read her letters to him" read - interpret something that is written or printed; "read the advertisement"; "Have you read Salman Rushdie?" the piece you submitted to NATIONAL REVIEW ("Why NATIONAL REVIEW Is Wrong"). I can only conclude that you can't stay on as a senior editor Of NATIONAL REVIEW. You have made it plain that you are embarrassed by the positions we are taking [about the Iraq war and the need to move against Saddam Hussein by military force, positions motivated, Joe had said, primarily by the desire to help Israell. I don't want to "I Don't Want To"/"I Love Me Some Him" is the third single released from Toni Braxton's multiplatinum second album, Secrets. Written and produced by R. Kelly, this ballad describes the agony of a break-up. have to make plain how greatly embarrassed I am by the positions you are taking, but I am. Why don't you send in a letter of resignation as senior editor. Stay on as a contributor, if you wish. You know what I think of your talent, and I have to hope you have some idea of the sadness I feel about the turn of events. As ever affectionately ... I didn't send the letter. It was suddenly the season in which Pat Buchanan and Abe Rosenthal were locking horns on the subject of anti-Semitism and became the center of journalistic attention. I was persuaded by my colleagues that it would be a mistake to proceed against Joe on the eve On the Eve (Накануне in Russian) is the third novel by famous Russian writer Ivan Turgenev, best known for his short stories and the novel Fathers and Sons. of my resignation as editor-in-chief, distracting attention from NR's 35th anniversary and its special edition, the subject of a thousand hours of labor. Three months later-by which time Joe had become, for all intents and purposes Adv. 1. for all intents and purposes - in every practical sense; "to all intents and purposes the case is closed"; "the rest are for all practical purposes useless" for all practical purposes, to all intents and purposes , a member of the American pacifist movement-Joe agreed, most agreeably, to step down as senior editor, to occupy instead the position of critic-at-large, in which position he has no responsibility for editorial policy. And as such he writes for us, week after week, anthologizable copy about everything in the world west, south, north, and east of Tel Aviv. The basic question-when does it become necessary formally to dissociate a journal from an editor's views that are not congruent-had been dealt with empirically. But not, to my satisfaction, the moral-sociological question that animates this inquiry: What is anti-Semitism these days? Part 2 PAT BUCHANAN HERE IS WHAT Pat Buchanan actually said and did, or at least what he said and did that were the proximate causes of the explosion. On television (the McLaughlin program), he said: "There are only two groups that are beating the drums for war in the Middle East--the Israeli Defense Ministry and its amen corner in the United States." Later in the program he was more explicit, his purpose obviously being to emphasize the singular interest the Israelis and their friends had in stopping Saddam Hussein. "The Israelis want this war desperately because they want the United States to destroy the Iraqi war machine. They want us to finish them off. They don't care about our relations with the Arab world." At this point nothing had been said that was anti-Semitic, let alone arrantly ar·rant adj. Completely such; thoroughgoing: an arrant fool; the arrant luxury of the ocean liner. [Variant of errant. so. Any threatened nation is concerned for its own interests, over against which others' interests are understandably subordinate. What had been done, however, was to pronounce a massive inaccuracy in·ac·cu·ra·cy n. pl. in·ac·cu·ra·cies 1. The quality or condition of being inaccurate. 2. An instance of being inaccurate; an error. , namely that "only" two specified groups favored military action against Hussein. Any government will "beat the drums" to arouse opposition to its enemy, and therefore the Israeli government, in doing so, was engaged in conventional national activity. So unless Mr. Buchanan was prepared to define the "amen corner" of Israel as comprising approximately 75 per cent of the American people-that was the number the polls then told us were supporting Administration policies--he was deluding himself, or his listeners, or both. On the other hand, if he had quoted the extent of the public's support, he would have been suggesting that the Israelis manipulate 75 per cent of American public support even for causes that are strategically anti-American ("They don't care about our relations with the Arab world"). Inevitably, when an intelligent person makes an assertion that is manifestly absurd, he arouses suspicions. Why Did He Do It? WHY HE did it, some people concluded, was that he wished to draw attention to the exorbitant influence of the pro-Israel Jewish American community on foreign policy. If in fact there is huge sentiment out there to resist Saddam Hussein by the use of U.S. military force, then surely-it is his tacit premise-that sentiment was generated not by rational thought about containing aggressors in areas critical to Western commerce, but by the lobbying power of Israel. The listener will then find himself wondering whether it is right that so few should govern the emotions of so many. Curiosity of that kind can lead to resentment; and resentment can lead to hostility, informed or uninformed, to those who exercise such inordinate influence on U.S. public policy. But Pat was on a roll. Again on television, he came in with the wisecrack that Congress was Israeli-occupied" territory. Urbane newswatchers can't have objected to this hyperbole as uniquely invidious, given that such excesses are so often the idiom of polemics. A generation ago the Majority Leader of the Senate, William Knowland, was dubbed somewhere by someone as "the Senator from Formosa." This was thought to be amusing (actually, it was), reflecting as it did the bellicose bel·li·cose adj. Warlike in manner or temperament; pugnacious. See Synonyms at belligerent. [Middle English, from Latin bellic identification with a free Formosa (Taiwan) by Senator Knowland, a principal figure in a large public movement whose principal PAC was "The Committee of One Million against the Admission of Communist China to the United Nations." No historian would credit Israel with having less influence in Congress today than Formosa had in 1953. Still, it was all beginning to add up. Even as those who taunted Senator Knowland during the Fifties did so intending to generate sentiment against the government of Chiang Kai-Shek, so any reference to Congress as "Israeli-occupied" territory can be taken as encouraging resentment against the Israeli lobby and its backers. Breeding hostility, etc. Buchanan did not at that point wade back into shallower water; on the contrary. Coincidentally with his reference to the amen corner, he pronounced the names of four important men who influence public policy, whom he identified with the hyper-bellicose wing of the anti-Saddam forces. They were: A. M. Rosenthal Abraham Michael "A.M." Rosenthal (May 2, 1922 – May 10, 2006), born in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada, was a New York Times executive editor (1977-88) and columnist (1987-1999) and New York Daily News columnist (1999-2004). , the columnist and former executive editor of the New York Times; Richard Perle, former assistant secretary of defense and a leader of the hawkish legions during the cold war; columnist Charles Krauthammer, an influential moral-political strategist, with Wilsonian internationalist inclinations; and Henry Kissinger. They have in common many things. But in the context of the polemical offensive by Buchanan, the most conspicuous of these is that they are all Jewish. This common denominator assaults the analytical mind in a way it wouldn't if the four strategists had been uniquely identifiable as advocates of a tough line against Saddam Hussein. But A. M. Rosenthal, columnist, was no more belligerent on the Hussein issue than James Jackson Kilpatrick, also a columnist; Richard Perle no more than Frank Gaffney, his former colleague; Charles Krauthammer no more than George Will; and Henry Kissinger no more than one of his successors as secretary of state, Alexander Haig. Four Christians. The evidence that the Jewish factor was engrossing engrossing, in English law, practice of acquiring a monopoly of goods in order to sell them at an inflated price. The offense was ordinarily limited to monopolies of foods. Related practices were forestalling, i.e. Buchanan mounted. And then whatever coincidence might in desperation have been pleaded for this aggregation of all-Jewish anti-Hussein activists, its usefulness expired when Pat Buchanan went on to write that if we went to war, the fighting would be done by kids with names like McAllister, Murphy, Gonzales, and Leroy Brown." There is no way to read that sentence without concluding that Pat Buchanan was suggesting that American Jews manage to avoid personal military exposure even while advancing military policies they (uniquely?) engender. I see no other explanation for it. Perhaps it was done impulsively. The iconoclastic i·con·o·clast n. 1. One who attacks and seeks to overthrow traditional or popular ideas or institutions. 2. One who destroys sacred religious images. daemon having a night out on the town? In that case it is a pity that, after Abe Rosenthal exploded and the quarrel between them became a national engagement, Buchanan told a reporter from Time magazine, "I don't retract TO RETRACT. To withdraw a proposition or offer before it has been accepted. 2. This the party making it has a right to do is long as it has not been accepted; for no principle of law or equity can, under these circumstances, require him to persevere in it. a single word." Rosenthal Strikes Back WHAT HAPPENED three weeks later-and the three-week interval became something of a side-issue, having to do with the organization of the Jewish lobby-was the column by A. M. Rosenthal. It was extreme in its conclusions, and the moment is appropriate in this essay to look at what I wrote about the controversy on September 17, 1990, three days after the Rosenthal column appeared. I will repeat here that much of the column as is relevant to this narrative: The hot talk . . . is of Abe Rosenthal's column in the New York Times (September 14) in which he, well, reads Pat Buchanan out of civilized society. What he says, flatly, is that Buchanan's statements about the U.S. intervention in Saudi Arabia, combined with other positions he has taken dating back to his defense of President Reagan's visit to Bitburg, are the work of an anti-Semitic mind. He goes so far as to suggest that the kind of thing Mr. Buchanan says can lead to Auschwitz, and that he, Rosenthal, isn't going to let him get away with it, because he is guided by a famous moral injunction, delivered by Jesus on the Cross, on which Mr. Rosenthal improvises exactly to reverse its meaning, which becomes now, "Forgive them not, Father, for they know what they did." .. I write as a friend of both, though I have experienced A. M. Rosenthal, as it happens, ten times as frequently as Pat Buchanan, notwithstanding that Mr. Buchanan and I have occupied the same ideological foxhole since he became old enough to bear arms. I need to say this about the two gentlemen. About Mr. Rosenthal, that he has always walked about in rooms in which customized trip-wires wait confidently to ignite his footloose foot·loose adj. Having no attachments or ties; free to do as one pleases. footloose Adjective free to go or do as one wishes Adj. 1. emotional gyrations: and when he comes upon them, the resulting explosion knows no conventional limits. I deem his attack on Pat Buchanan to be an example of-. Rosenthal, gone ballistic. And I deem Pat Buchanan to be insensitive to those fine lines that tend publicly to define racially or ethnically offensive analysis or rhetoric. This is best described by illustration. If Scholar A, spending a lifetime in psychometric psy·cho·met·rics n. (used with a sing. verb) The branch of psychology that deals with the design, administration, and interpretation of quantitative tests for the measurement of psychological variables such as intelligence, aptitude, and anthropology, concludes that black Americans weigh in 15 points behind white Americans in conventional IQ tests, he runs a certain risk in publicizing his findings, though only the Know Nothings will denounce him as a racist for [doing sol. If, however, having done so he accepts an invitation to speak at a rally advocating an end to forced busing on the grounds that he is impelled im·pel tr.v. im·pelled, im·pel·ling, im·pels 1. To urge to action through moral pressure; drive: I was impelled by events to take a stand. 2. To drive forward; propel. by his findings to oppose the dilution of educational quality, sensitive moral calibrators are likely to suspect, even if they cannot successfully reason to that conclusion, that Scholar A is actively engaged in advocating invidious racial policies. Every one of Pat Buchanan's positions touching on Israel, weighed discretely, [is defensiblel-until his most recent one. It is unquestionably un·ques·tion·a·ble adj. Beyond question or doubt. See Synonyms at authentic. un·ques tion·a·bil the case that Israel's political influence is out of
proportion to Israel's strategic importance to the United States.
It is certainly arguable that Mr. Reagan's decision to visit
Bitburg was in the circumstances prudent. And it is conceivable that the
defendant Demjanjuk, recently tried in Israel as a war criminal, is
actually the wrong man. But these antecedent ANTECEDENT. Something that goes before. In the construction of laws, agreements, and the like, reference is always to be made to the last antecedent; ad proximun antecedens fiat relatio. positions, joined now with
Buchanan's statement, "There are only two groups that are
beating the drums for war in the Middle East-the Israeli Defense
Ministry and its amen corner in the United States," invite a
cumulative judgment. One is that Buchanan reveals himself as an arrant ar·rant adj. Completely such; thoroughgoing: an arrant fool; the arrant luxury of the ocean liner. [Variant of errant. anti-Semite-Rosenthal's verdict; the second (the overwhelming favorite), that Pat Buchanan is attracted to mischievous generalizations. It is simply a fact that independent analysts, who are neither Jewish nor Israel-bonded, enthusiastically endorse Mr. Bush's policies. The same day that Rosenthal wrote, Buchanan also wrote-a column in which he recorded that "Among those cheering loudest the new international order' is the conservative NATIONAL REVIEW, our old friends and new critics, who dismiss us now as Bug Out, America' types, for resisting their call for air strikes and pre-emptive pre·emp·tive or pre-emp·tive adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of preemption. 2. Having or granted by the right of preemption. 3. a. war against Iraq." I concluded my column with a paragraph that can only be characterized, and perhaps excused, as a Moral Peroration per·o·rate intr.v. per·o·rat·ed, per·o·rat·ing, per·o·rates 1. To conclude a speech with a formal recapitulation. 2. To speak at great length, often in a grandiloquent manner; declaim. . My uneasiness with the points it leaves unexplored prompted this further investigation. I concluded: The Buchanans need to understand the nature of sensibilities in an age that coexisted with Auschwitz. And the Rosenthals need to understand that clumsy forensic manners are less than a genocidal offense, and that when Christ pleaded for forgiveness for his executioners, He asked it on behalf of those who were blinded into doing the wrong thing. No one asked for that kind of forgiveness for the Nazis, and Pat Buchanan's trespasses are miles this side of the awful genocidal line in the sand. What seemed like everybody then got into the act. The Anti-Buchanan Case CRITICS OF BUCHANAN seemed eager to document that in laying special emphasis on the political motives of Mr. Bush's anti-Saddam policies, Buchanan was merely reiterating an ancient complaint against the power of the Israeli lobby. In recent years and months Buchanan seemed to have been attracted one after another to positions in which Jews had a special interest, almost always taking the contrary position. A summary of these was done by Joshua Muravchik, a scholar with the American Enterprise Institute The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI) is a conservative think tank, founded in 1943. According to the institute its mission "to defend the principles and improve the institutions of American freedom and democratic capitalism — limited government, . It was published in Commentary in January 1991, in an article entitled, "Patrick J. Buchanan and the Jews." His article was attacked vigorously and at substantial length in the letters column in an ensuing issue of Commentary, but Muravchik's subsequent defenses were mostly persuasive. It is a lengthy article (about nine thousand words), 1) describing every position taken by Buchanan over the recent past that has attracted the attention of the anti-anti-Semites, and 2) analyzing the reasons Buchanan has given, when he has given any, for taking such positions. Muravchik closed his long essay by making a point that can't be ignored in an inquiry seeking to explore personal motivations. He cites Buchanan's complaint that "'decent and honorable men, Left as well as Right, [have] had careers damaged and reputations smeared' by the accusation of anti-Semitism. Buchanan," Muravchik comments, "has not replied to my letters asking whom on the Left he had in mind, but in recent times public charges of anti-Semitism have been made in a sustained way against only two figures on the Left, Jesse Jackson and Gore Vidal. What can move Buchanan to such tenderness toward the likes of these two who, the Jewish question aside, represent everything he despises?" Now Mr. Muravchik's point is in one way perplexing per·plex tr.v. per·plexed, per·plex·ing, per·plex·es 1. To confuse or trouble with uncertainty or doubt. See Synonyms at puzzle. 2. To make confusedly intricate; complicate. . If he is saying that Buchanan is dismayed by unfair attacks even on figures on the Left whom he dislikes or disapproves of, then he is paying Mr. Buchanan a compliment for deploring undeserved un·de·served adj. Not merited; unjustifiable or unfair. un de·serv inferences even when at
the expense of leftist left·ism also Left·ism n. 1. The ideology of the political left. 2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left. left victims, but clearly Muravchik was not intending to do so. If he is suggesting that the Right, rather than the Left, is more greatly disposed nowadays to anti-Semitic thought, I think he is wrong. Most probably, he is merely challenging Buchanan's bona fides. In analyzing Buchanan's defenses, he brought up the singling out of four prominent Jewish geostrategists as distinctive in their support of George Bush's anti-Saddam Hussein program: Buchanan tried to argue that his litany of those seeking war in the Gulf consisted of Jewish names merely because his debate was with the neoconservatives," many of whom are Jewish. But why is Buchanan spoiling for a fight with the neoconservatives? The alliance between them and traditional conservatives like him has been based largely on foreign policy, which he himself says is the most important of all issues. And although the collapse of Soviet power heralds a new era in foreign policy, Buchanan remains at one with many neoconservatives in believing that Communism--their common foe-is not yet finished. Is Buchanan attacking Jews, then, because they happen to be neoconservatives, or is he attacking neoconservatives because they happen to be Jews? This is not an easy question for defenders of Pat Buchanan to handle, though he is hardly the only conservative who bitterly attacks neoconservatives without making it exactly clear why. And Muravchik is unanswerable on the particular point, namely that to the extent that one's interest is anti-communist foreign policy, the neoconservatives have been indispensable allies. But on to the closing paragraph in Muravchik's attack: Both the New York Post The New York Post is the 13th-oldest newspaper published in the United States and the oldest to have been published continually as a daily.[3] Since 1976, it has been owned by Australian-born billionaire Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation and is one of the 10 editorialist and Jacob Weisberg in his article in The New Republic said that they did not want to get into a "semantic" squabble squab·ble intr.v. squab·bled, squab·bling, squab·bles To engage in a disagreeable argument, usually over a trivial matter; wrangle. See Synonyms at argue. n. A noisy quarrel, usually about a trivial matter. over "anti-Semitism," indeed there may be no authoritative definition of the term. [Correct: there is not, there never can be: but attempts at periodic clarification are not a wasted effort.] But when a man falsely maintains that he is the victim of a "pre-planned orchestrated smear campaign" by the Anti-Defamation League Anti-Defamation League B’nai B’rith organization which fights anti-Semitism. [Am. Hist.: Wigoder, 33] See : Anti-Semitism [see below: 1) not pre-planned, 2) not self-evidently a smear; on the other hand, 3) very definitely orchestrated]; when he is hostile to Israel; when he embraces the PLO PLO abbr. Palestine Liberation Organization PLO Palestine Liberation Organization Noun 1. PLO despite being at adamant odds with its political philosophy; when he implies that Jews are trying to drag America into war for the sake of Israel [alone]; when he sprinkles his columns with taunting remarks about things Jewish; when he stirs the pot of intercommunal in·ter·com·mu·nal adj. Existing or occurring between communities: intercommunal strife. hostility; when he rallies to the defense of Nazi war criminals, not only those who protest their innocence but also those who confess their guilt; when he implies that the generally accepted interpretation of the Holocaust might be a serious exaggeration-when a man does all these things, surely it is reasonable to conclude that his actions make a fairly good match for [conventional anti-Semitism]. The Pro-Buchanan Case THE DEFENDERS of Pat Buchanan were in one respect unanimous: without any exception that have seen, everyone who has known and worked with him dismisses the charge that in his personal behavior Buchanan has ever shown any animosity whatever to Jews. On this point, Muravchik commented, "They [defenders of Buchanan] do not understand that anti-Semitism comes in a variety of forms. One variant, what we might call country club prejudice, consists in an aversion to associating with Jews, but may entail no particular political content. On the other side, political anti-Semitism holds 'the Jews' culpable Blameworthy; involving the commission of a fault or the breach of a duty imposed by law. Culpability generally implies that an act performed is wrong but does not involve any evil intent by the wrongdoer. of miscreancy, but may entail no dislike for this or that individual Jew. The latter type is infinitely more dangerous." Robert Novak, answering the vigorous anti-Buchanan article in The American Spectator by David Frum of the Wall Street Journal, put it this way: [Frum's] is a wicked caricature that bears no resemblance to the Pat Buchanan I have known for over twenty years as a news source, a colleague, and a friend. Personally, he is a man of unfailing good manners and discretion who does not faintly resemble Frum's ruffian. Professionally, his self-discipline enabled him to perform with strict restraint in two hitches as a White House aide and with unvarying fairness as a moderator on CNN'S Capital Gang.... Buchanan is no anti-Semite, as anybody who knows him well will avow." Buchanan's defenders can be seen to be reasoning roughly as follows: a) Anti-Semitism is a disgraceful mindset mind·set or mind-set n. 1. A fixed mental attitude or disposition that predetermines a person's responses to and interpretations of situations. 2. An inclination or a habit. . b) Pat Buchanan, given his exemplary character, has no disgraceful mindsets. Therefore, c) it has to be wrong to say of him that he is anti-Semitic. This is to reason a priori a priori In epistemology, knowledge that is independent of all particular experiences, as opposed to a posteriori (or empirical) knowledge, which derives from experience. , and there has seldom in modern controversy been a clearer case of a collision course between the two structures of logical thought. A posteriori [Latin, From the effect to the cause.] A posteriori describes a method of reasoning from given, express observations or experiments to reach and formulate general principles from them. This is also called inductive reasoning. reasoning would take what was said or written and reason to the mindset of the person who wrote those words, in this case excluding any possibility other than that they were motivated either a) by ignorance or b) by the desire to taunt or to express hostility. Time magazine's reviewer tended toward the second alternative-"what set them off," wrote William A. Henry III William A. Henry III (1950-1994) was an American cultural critic and author. Henry lived in Boston as a young man and began his career in journalism in that city, writing for the Boston Globe. of Rosenthal et al., "was a typical Buchanan crack, which wrapped a core of fact in a coating of hyperbole." But Henry would go no further on the central question than to say that "for years Buchanan has appeared to go out of his way to rile Jewish sensitivities." David Frum, replying to Robert Novak, did so with some exasperation: "It is simply bizarre to suggest-as Robert Novak seems to-that it is unfair to judge a writer by his writings. Patrick Buchanan has put millions of words into print; if the essence of the man is to be found anywhere it is there, and not in his friends' polite comments about what an affable chap he is." But if it is indeed anti-Semitism, or iconoclasm iconoclasm (īkŏn`ōklăzəm) [Gr.,=image breaking], opposition to the religious use of images. Veneration of pictures and statues symbolizing sacred figures, Christian doctrine, and biblical events was an early feature of Christian , is it obsessive, or merely passing misfancy? Novak had made a vulnerable point when he wrote that Buchanan has after all written millions of words that do not even touch on Jewish questions (the classic antecedent of this form of casuistry casuistry (kăzh`y ĭstrē) [Lat., casus=case], art of applying general moral law to particular cases. is the legendary Irishman being tried for murder who
volunteers to bring in thirty people who did not see him commit the
crime). As might have been expected, defenders of Buchanan made much of
the excesses of Abe Rosenthal, Novak going so far as to blame him
directly for the general onslaught "Abe Rosenthal's infamous
New York Times column triggered the campaign suddenly defaming Buchanan
as anti-Semitic").
This charge-that Rosenthal triggered the general reaction-was, up to a point (one or two other critics had here and there gone after Buchanan on similar grounds), chronologically correct, but ultimately irrelevant. You can accuse someone of doing more than he actually did and still take credit for being the first to point out an iniquity INIQUITY. Vice; contrary to equity; injustice. 2. Where, in a doubtful matter, the judge is required to pronounce, it is his duty to decide in such a manner as is the least against equity. . What troubled so many-perhaps most of the critical community who feel that they have an intellectual and moral stake in the questions posed-was the failure to resolve the relevant questions raised. This is clearly seen merely by examining the letters section of Commentary cited above (May 1991), after the attack by Muravchik, or of The American Spectator (September 1991), after the attack by David Frum. Although most of those who wrote in were violent partisans either of Buchanan or of his critics, what happened in those letters pages was not an example of thesis and antithesis producing resolution. Instead, one walked away from a reading of the collection with a heavy heart over the moral confusion: Just what are we dealing with here? Was Buchanan a Corporate Target? IT CAME AS something of a shock to the Buchanan camp when the New York Post (which prominently runs Buchanan's columns) defended Rosenthal. "When it comes to Jews as a group-not Israel, not U.S.-Israeli relations, not individual Jews-Buchanan betrays an all-too-familiar hostility. [Correction: It was not "all too familiar." That Buchanan had over the years taken positions opposed to those of organized Jewry surprised most people.] A. M. Rosenthal did not produce a 'contract hit.' [It wasn't strictly a "contract hit," but as we shall see, it transpired that he had received a docket of sorts on Buchanan.] He [Rosenthal] faced some painful facts." The question whether Rosenthal's attack triggered the ensuing general attack is in any event irrelevant (except to the question of how organized are the anti-anti-Semitic forces). Rosenthal's having called attention to a transgression does not make him responsible for a transgression of his own except insofar as he went beyond whistle-blowing whistle-blowing, exposure of fraud and abuse by an employee. The federal law that legitimated the concept of the whistle-blower, the False Claims Act (1863, revised 1986), was created to combat fraud by suppliers to the federal government during the Civil War. to make charges that were themselves indefensible. On the matter of why did Rosenthal blow the whistle, the Washington Times's Ralph Hallow hal·low tr.v. hal·lowed, hal·low·ing, hal·lows 1. To make or set apart as holy. 2. To respect or honor greatly; revere. asked the question most directly-why had no other columnist or commentator gone after Mr. Buchanan as an anti-Semite? [Rosenthal] responded that he has been receiving many calls from `people in our business who said they agree with me and that what I did was courageous.' He said these same people told him they had been afraid to attack Mr. Buchanan because he is widely published, appears on television, is written about abroad, and has lots of friends who defend him. [This is not inherently believable. It isn't dangerous, so far as one can see, to attack someone as an anti-Semite if the case against him is at least plausible.] [Rosenthal concluded], I didn't attack him because of what he said about Israel or Iraq but because he put it in anti-Semitic language.", The question quickly-and logically-arose, and was widely asked: Just how long had this kind of thing been going on in Pat Buchanan's forum? Heritage, a weekly newspaper in Los Angeles, ran an editorial referring to Buchanan as the "glib-tongued anti-Semite who was denounced by New York Times writer A. M. Rosenthal, for his nastiness and ugliness." Such language suggests that Buchanan's anti-Semitism had been as much a part of the forensic landscape as, say, Martin Peretz's philo-semitism. The New Republic editorialized (September 15): "Buchanan-watchers, students of prejudice in America, and political teratologists have known of Buchanan's anti-Semitism for years." And added, preemptively, a defense against a point that would be raised widely in the days ahead by Buchanan's defenders: "No, he is not like Hitler. Hitler, however, cannot be allowed to set the standard. Lesser bigots cannot be protected from criticism by the magnitude of Hitler's achievements in bigotry." The point is well taken. One need not, in order to qualify as an anti-Semite, defend the Holocaust or cry out for another one. David Harris, the director of the American Jewish Committee's Office of Government and International Affairs, wrote that "Buchanan's venomous venomous secreting poison; poisonous. streak, which knows no bounds, cannot be ignored," which of course begs the question why it was for the most part ignored until Rosenthal struck. Jack Newfield, writing for the New York Observer, said that "Mr. Buchanan's pathological hostility to Jews has been obvious to Jews like myself for many years. I have written about it in The Village Voice and the Daily News." One can only assume that these attacks on Buchanan, Anti-Semite, hadn't been read by anybody who took them seriously. Newfield went on, "Pat Buchanan and Joe Sobran are way over the line when it comes to religious, racial, ethnic, and sexual bigotry. They are hatemongers." The New Republic's Fred Barnes tried to clarify the simple point: Is Buchanan, based on his writings, an anti-Semite? "If your definition is someone who is personally bigoted big·ot·ed adj. Being or characteristic of a bigot: a bigoted person; an outrageously bigoted viewpoint. big against Jews, doesn't want them in the country club, I don't think Pat is that. If your definition is someone who thinks Israel and its supporters are playing a bad role in the world, Pat may qualify." The Special Role of Israel AGAIN AND AGAIN the issue of attachment-toIsrael as the litmus test litmus test n. A test for chemical acidity or basicity using litmus paper. arises. Elie Wiesel said to the Washington Post, "Although I very rarely use the word' anti-Semite,' I must say [Pat Buchanan] comes very close to fitting that category." Wiesel goes on to list the now-familiar compilation of Buchanan's presumptively pre·sump·tive adj. 1. Providing a reasonable basis for belief or acceptance. 2. Founded on probability or presumption. pre·sump anti-Jewish positions, and includes "a man who is constantly criticizing Israel." Allan Brownfeld, a syndicated columnist who is himself Jewish, wrote on the question in the January 1991 Chronicles, reaching very different conclusions from the critics, some of them highly provocative. On the matter of Israel fixation he is emphatic: Today, anti-Semitism in America has been redefined as anything that opposes the politics and interests of the state of Israel. One cannot be critical of the Israeli prime minister, concerned about the question of the Palestinians, or dubious about the value of massive infusions of American aid to Israel without subjecting oneself to the possibility of being called "anti-Semitic." Brownfeld cites the book The New Anti-Semitism, by Arnold Forster and Benjamin R. Epstein of the Anti-Defamation League, and says: The new definition includes "a callous indifference to Jewish concerns expressed by respectable institutions and persons . . . who would be shocked to think of themselves as anti-Semites." [Here is a classic example of circular reasoning: Henceforth, anyone who takes position A shall eo ipso be deemed an anti-Semite. X has just now taken position A. X is therefore now an anti-Semite.] Thus, the nature of the "new" anti-Semitism, according to Forster and Epstein, is not necessarily hostility to Jews as Jews or toward Judaism--which all men and women of good will deplore-but, instead, criticism of Israel and its policies. In a June 5, 1983, Washington Post article entitled Anti-Semitism Has Changed," [the late] Nathan Perlmutter, then national chairman of the ADL, expanded upon this thesis. He noted that the search for peace in the Middle East is "littered with minefields that endanger Jewish interests" and declared that the "fevered language" used by the media in describing Israeli actions during the invasion of Lebanon illustrated "how decent yearnings for peace' in an alchemy of historical ignorance, and hyperbole, stir anti-Semitic imagery." One of those who [have] freely used the charge of anti-Semitism to silence critics of Israel is Norman Podhoretz, editor of Commentary. In an article entitled J'Accuse" [Commentary, September 1982], he charged America's leading journalists, newspapers, and television networks with anti-Semitism because of their reporting of the war of Lebanon and their criticism of Israel's conduct. Among those so accused were Anthony Lewis of the New York Times, Nicholas von Hoffman Nicholas von Hoffman is an American journalist and author of German-Russian extraction, descendant of Melchior Hoffman and son of Carl von Hoffman. He became famous as a columnist for the Washington Post , . . . Joseph Harsch of the Christian Science Christian Science, religion founded upon principles of divine healing and laws expressed in the acts and sayings of Jesus, as discovered and set forth by Mary Baker Eddy and practiced by the Church of Christ, Scientist. Monitor, Rowland Evans, Robert Novak, Richard Cohen, and Alfred Friendly of the Washington Post, and a host of others. Of the criticism of Israel by these journalists, many of whom were Jewish themselves, Podhoretz declared: We are dealing here with an eruption of anti-Semitism." The episode to which Brownfeld refers is well remembered by readers of Commentary. It was the general judgment of the concerned community (I was among the critics, devoting a column to the subject) that Podghoretz's ears and condemnations were exaggerated, but in that respect he was hardly exceptional-the Israeli military offensive aroused high passions. Mr. Podhoretz on this occasion classified as anti-Semitic anyone who ascribes to Jews characteristics uniquely Jewish or, correlatively cor·rel·a·tive adj. 1. Related; corresponding. 2. Grammar Indicating a reciprocal or complementary relationship: a correlative conjunction. n. 1. , denies to Jews rights acknowledged in others. His particular point being that Israel's attack on Lebanon was justified by the conventional rights that inure To result; to take effect; to be of use, benefit, or advantage to an individual. For example, when a will makes the provision that all Personal Property is to inure to the benefit of a certain individual, such an individual is given the right to receive all the personal to beleaguered be·lea·guer tr.v. be·lea·guered, be·lea·guer·ing, be·lea·guers 1. To harass; beset: We are beleaguered by problems. 2. To surround with troops; besiege. countries, and that therefore to have singled Israel out for criticism, when others in similar circumstances would escape criticism, was anti-Semitic. The point is logically sound, but even so doesn't answer the broader question whether anti-Semitism was the presumptive pre·sump·tive adj. 1. Providing a reasonable basis for belief or acceptance. 2. Founded on probability or presumption. pre·sump prime mover prime mover: see energy, sources of. Prime mover The component of a power plant that transforms energy from the thermal or the pressure form to the mechanical form. in those who criticized Israeli practices. Brownfeld is justified in his exploration. He goes on to search out Israeli anti-Semitism: Norman Podhoretz was also willing to attack Israeli critics of Israel's policy in Lebanon, and did so publicly at the March 1986 International Colloquium col·lo·qui·um n. pl. col·lo·qui·ums or col·lo·qui·a 1. An informal meeting for the exchange of views. 2. An academic seminar on a broad field of study, usually led by a different lecturer at each meeting. of Jewish Journalists. The Jerusalem meeting focused on whether Jewish journalists in general and Israeli journalists in particular have a special obligation of restraint in reporting controversial aspects of Israeli life. Writing in the Jerusalem Post, columnist Moshe Kohn reported: "The debate was led off by Norman Podhoretz . . He opened by laying down the axiom' that 'the preservation of the Jewish people involves above all else ensuring the survival of Israel.' From this, he said, follows a second axiom: It is in Diaspora Jewry's own self-interest to man the ramparts in the relentless ideological war being waged against Israel,' which, he said, 'I take to be a war against the Jewish people as a whole.' So 'the role of Jews who write in both the Jewish and general press is to defend Israel, and not to join in the attack on Israel."' According to Brownfeld, Podhoretz was grilled on the spot. Mr. Podhoretz admitted that Jews have a right to criticize. However, when asked if he could think of an Israeli action of which be might [i assume he meant, publicly] disapprove, he declared, "The only decision by Israel that I know I'd criticize publicly would be one to join a Communist alliance." The point to ponder here isn't whether some of Israel's friends are uncritical to the point of losing their usefulness even to Israel. (My country right or wrong, but right or wrong my country is emotionally understandable when the fatherland fa·ther·land n. 1. One's native land. 2. The land of one's ancestors. fatherland Noun a person's native country Noun 1. is threatened, but less often sound advice for a patriot.) Our inquiry is into the organic composition of anti-Semitism. Having written in 1991 about a Podhoretz excess in 1982, Mr. Brownfeld would, one would assume, feel the responsibility to cite examples of Podhoretz's irrationality in leveling the charge of anti-Semitism with reference to the new criterion. But in his article for Chronicles he doesn't do this. Evidently he deems sufficient his citation of Norman Podhoretz's 1982 article. Israel's invasion of Lebanon and the deportment de·port·ment n. A manner of personal conduct; behavior. See Synonyms at behavior. deportment Noun the way in which a person moves and stands: of its army posed complicated questions and in 1982 generated much criticism of Israel's government. We are better off ignoring that divisive episode to concentrate on the implications of the later Podhoretz speech as judged by his own conduct. Does he in fact proceed as if any critic of Israeli policy, Jewish or Gentile, is eo ipso anti-Semitic? Logically we begin by asking, How did he react to the BuchananRosenthal exchange? Podhoretz reacted by publishing the long piece by Muravchik, described above. Nowhere in that lengthy essay is any demand made of Buchanan (or of anyone else) that is manifestly irrational. That is to say, it is nowhere assumed that mere opposition to an Israeli policy constitutes anti-Semitism. Since Mr. Podhoretz, in the nine years since 1982, hasn't left a trail of imputations of anti-Semitism against everyone who criticizes Israeli policy, we should assume that Podhoretz's speech in Israel, coming to us third hand, contained qualifications, either made explicitly and not recorded or else left implicit, that Mr. Brownfeld either is not aware of or else is disinclined dis·in·clined adj. Unwilling or reluctant: They were usually disinclined to socialize. disinclined Adjective unwilling or reluctant to quote. Even so, the point survives: Is criticism of Israel's policies a symptom of anti-Semitism, active or latent? It is almost universally agreed that this isn't so, and it is hard to maintain otherwise, if only because of the heated opposition within Israel itself to many Israeli public policies. But it is less clear whether the formal, organized American Jewish lobby stops short of assailing as anti-Semitic those whose only offense is opposition to this or that policy of Israel's. What about the Jewish Lobby? IT IS RELEVANT to inquire into the power of what one might just as well call the Jewish lobby. How much power does it have? If (arguendo) it were omnipotent, then it would be (should be) feared, if only for that reason: one doesn't want omnipotent lobbies arguing in behalf of anything, not even the Bill of Rights. Is it omnipotent? Nearly omnipotent? Dangerously potent? It is almost everywhere implicit, and here and there explicit, that such lobbies are at work and, in the case of Pat Buchanan, that they have been at work hoping--well, hoping to silence him. To inquire whether they are so engaged is not to pass judgment on whether they are justified in being so engaged. There are those, J. S. Mill most prominent among them, who believe that so long as a single person clings to a belief, the question whether that belief might be correct should not be treated as closed. I think of that as the acme of epistemological pessimism, the seedling from which, among other things, that notion of academic freedom prospered which holds that all ideas should, in a famous phrase, "start out even in the race." By that protocol, a college teacher should not indicate to a student reading the Communist Manifesto alongside the United States Constitution which of the two documents better harmonizes with democratic ideals.) But forgetting for the moment those who believe that every point of view should be evenhandedly e·ven·hand·ed adj. Showing no partiality; fair. e ven·hand ventilated ven·ti·late tr.v. ven·ti·lat·ed, ven·ti·lat·ing, ven·ti·lates 1. To admit fresh air into (a mine, for example) to replace stale or noxious air. 2. , the question to ask here is: In a civilized culture, should someone who is, in the opinion of the reasonable community, an anti-Semite be removed from public forums? This, obviously, not by the hand of the law, but by the exercise of a citizenry determined to discourage uncivilized and potentially dangerous thought. And if the answer to that question is, Indeed, such folk should not be given forums from which to preach their bigotries!-then who are the logical spokesmen for the public in urging their removal? Where will the pressures originate? Not from legislatures, not while there is still a Bill of Rights. Whence, then? Who? In response to pressures from whom? From the Israeli lobby? From watchdogs, like the Anti-defamation League, that monitor racial slurs? On whom should they put pressure? Editors and station managers and publishers? Book-sellers? And what are the appropriate pressures, in the 1990s? In 1945, superintending arrangements in West Germany, the victorious allies forthrightly and without apology forbade any pro-Nazi literature in the schools. As mentioned above in passing, we at NATIONAL REVIEW faced the problem in embryo in the Fifties. Ours was the nascent voice of responsible conservative thought. I had brought together men of immense learning and moral prestige, for instance John Dos Passos Noun 1. John Dos Passos - United States novelist remembered for his portrayal of life in the United States (1896-1970) Dos Passos, John Roderigo Dos Passos , Frank Meyer, Whittaker Chambers, Max Eastman, James Burnham. For a few months after leaving the CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency. (1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy). I had worked for The American Mercury, whose editor and publisher was William Bradford Huie William Bradford "Bill" Huie (November 13, 1910 – November 20, 1986) was an American journalist, editor, publisher, television interviewer, screenwriter, lecturer, and novelist. , a bright and enterprising editor and novelist (The Revolt of Mamie Stover stover stalks of maize plants from which mature corn cobs have been harvested as grain, or grain sorghum plants from which heads have also been removed. The stover is usually fed by turning the cattle into the field and is subject to fungal infection, sometimes causing mycotoxicosis. ), one of whose causes became equality for Negroes, as they were then called. He lost control of the Mercury, and I left it. It was sold to Russell Maguire, a wealthy munitions mu·ni·tion n. War materiel, especially weapons and ammunition. Often used in the plural. tr.v. mu·ni·tioned, mu·ni·tion·ing, mu·ni·tions To supply with munitions. maker who was, well, anti-Semitic. For two or three years he left the Mercury, untouched by his prejudices, in the hands of a Hearst lieutenant, but after a while the weeds began to creep up. I faced the problem that a half-dozen respectable names from the conservative movement were still associated with the Mercury, as "consultants" or "contributing editors," and that some of those names appeared also on the masthead of NATIONAL REVIEW. After reading a particularly blatant issue of the Mercury (this was about 1958), I thought the time had come to act decisively, and accordingly addressed a note to the writers on the masthead Of NATIONAL REVIEW and told them that those of them who were also on the masthead of the Mercury would need to choose from which masthead to retire. In almost all cases (there was only one exception), they stayed with us. Two or three years later, the Mercury was mortally stricken with advanced nativism nativism, in anthropology, social movement that proclaims the return to power of the natives of a colonized area and the resurgence of native culture, along with the decline of the colonizers. . For a while, the wild General Edwin Walker, who had been dismissed from his command in Europe for verbal irresponsibility, was made its editor. General Walker was supremely illiterate, which under the circumstances was a blessing. Some will remember that Lee Harvey Oswald Noun 1. Lee Harvey Oswald - United States assassin of President John F. Kennedy (1939-1963) Oswald , practicing for his big day on Dealey Plaza, aimed his rifle at General Walker one night, firing through a windowpane win·dow·pane n. 1. A piece of glass filling a window or a section of a window. 2. A pattern of thin lines forming large squares on a background of a different color. 3. Slang LSD. . (On that occasion, ironically, he missed.) How Does One Block Anti-Semitism? FORTY-FIVE YEARS after the death of Hitler, the penal code of Germany still forbids the advocacy of Nazi ideas, but not the distribution of Nazi literature, which presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. survives in Germany in the same sense that toxic cultures survive in laboratories. My understanding is that no serious observer of the German scene believes there is anything like a clear or remote danger of any serious rebirth of a Nazi movement, though there is concern, in my judgment primarily moral rather than political, over suppurations here and there of neo-Nazism. Probably (this is my guess, at any rate) the incidental wigwam wigwam (wĭg`wäm), dwelling found among the Algonquian of the Eastern woodlands area of the United States. The wigwam was usually conical, arborlike, or domed. Some were small, accommodating a single family; others were large communal dwellings. of a Nazi witch doctor would be ignored by the German government, rather than being destroyed and its owner prosecuted. If so, this is defensible civic conduct, taken by responsible men and women who while aware of the hideousness of what happened yesterday-more accurately, the day before yesterday-are confident that there is no prospect of its happening again; or else that the threat of any such thing is so remote as to fail to justify the kind of proscriptive pro·scrip·tion n. 1. The act of proscribing; prohibition. 2. The condition of having been proscribed; outlawry. [Middle English proscripcion, from Latin vigilance thought to be appropriate in 1945. On the question whether an anti-Semite should be given a forum in respectable company, David Frum has highly developed opinions, which he ventilated in that American Spectator article (July 1991). About Pat Buchanan he summarizes: "His real message is inseparable from his sly Jew-baiting and his not-so-sly queerbashing, from his old record as a segregationist seg·re·ga·tion·ist n. One that advocates or practices a policy of racial segregation. seg re·ga and his current maunderings about immigrants and the
Japanese. And it's not a message that can be accommodated in any
conservatism-big Government or Small-that seriously hopes to govern a
great and diverse country; in fact, it's exactly the kind of
message that William F. Buckley thought he had purged from American
conservatism back in the 1950s and early 1960s, when he chased Gerald L.
K. Smith and the John Birchers away from NATIONAL REVIEW."
Very well, then, if the objective is ostracism, how is this operation managed? Is it primarily the responsibility of the Jewish, or anti-anti-Semitic, lobby? During the controversy, Buchanan had asked out loud, Why was it that Rosenthal waited three whole weeks before firing back at him for the remarks he made on the McLaughlin show? Rosenthal talked vaguely, as, we have seen, about friends who had brought the Buchanan material to his attention. In fact, as the story developed, it was rather more formal than that. "Rosenthal based his attack upon Buchanan on material provided to him-and other journalists around the country-by the Anti-defamation League of B'nai B'rith," Allan Brownfeld was able to document. "Abraham Foxman, National Director of the ADL, acknowledges that the ADL issued a statement critical of Pat Buchanan. I'm sure that Abe Rosenthal saw it,' Foxman says. It wasn't a secret. He then did what he did."' (Foxman subsequently denied that his organization had "called a single editor to request removal of Buchanan's column, nor would we.") Brownfeld went on: "The ADL is part of a larger coalition of groups, some of which have assumed for themselves the role of attempting to silence those advocating ideas with which these groups disagree. The house organ of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) is a national advocacy group that lobbies for U.S. support to the nation of Israel. Founded in 1951, AIPAC has grown into a 65,000-member organization that is recognized as one of the most influential foreign policy groups in the United (AIPAC AIPAC American Israel Public Affairs Committee AIPAC Advanced Interconnection Technology for Electronics for Portugal (ESPRIT project 7502) ), Near East Report, urged its readers to exert pressure on local newspapers around the country to replace Pat Buchanan's column with that of another conservative columnist, such as George Will. Even Harvard Professor Alan Dershowitz, ordinarily an outspoken advocate of the First Amendment, declared that Buchanan should be removed from the national media. "CNN CNN or Cable News Network Subsidiary company of Turner Broadcasting Systems. It was created by Ted Turner in 1980 to present 24-hour live news broadcasts, using satellites to transmit reports from news bureaus around the world. should take him off the air and major American newspapers should stop running him,' Dershowitz told the Washington Jewish Week Washington Jewish Week is an independent community weekly newspaper serving the Jewish community of the metropolitan Washington, D.C. area. Founded in 1930 as the National Jewish Ledger ." Brownfeld tells us that on the other hand there was "widespread defense" of Buchanan. Now that can be thought to be good news abstractly, insofar as it is testimony to the liveliness of civil liberties and pluralism, but not-so-good news insofar as it suggests the toleration of bigotry or indifference to it. But an indifference to bigotry can't easily be thought to have motivated those specifically cited by Brownfeld, especially the "prominent Jewish Americans"-including Paul Gottfried, Leon Hadar, Ronald Hamowy, Sheldon Richman, Murray Rothbard, and Murray Sabrin-who were among the signers of a pro-buchanan advertisement in the New York Times in October 1990. Inevitably it will be surmised by many Jewish critics of Buchanan that his "Jewish defenders" are perhaps professional apostates, on the order of Alfred Lilienthal, whose principal occupation over the years has been criticism of Israel. But that charge cannot be sustained against persons of this intellectual quality. Where Israel Is Concerned ... IT IS the moment to note and ponder comments by Eric Alterman, a senior fellow of the World Policy Institute. Writing in The Nation (November 5, 1990), he took issue with Rosenthal-because he thought it wrong for him to assume that all American Jews were affronted by the criticisms made by Buchanan of our Middle East policy. To Rosenthal, Buchanan's indictment implicates all Jews, including, I imagine, my 11-month-old nephew. To anyone with the slightest degree of political sophistication so·phis·ti·cate v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates v.tr. 1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly. 2. , however, the quote [Buchanan's "amen corner"] implies "some Jews," or even "those few people, who happen to be Jewish, along with some non-Jews like Alfonse D'Amato." Interpreting criticism of particular Jews to embrace all Jews is itself a kind of anti-Semitism. Thus "the Jews," not Ivan Boesky or Dennis Levine, are behind the insider-trading scandal. "The Jews," not Karl Marx. . . , wrote the Communist Manifesto. "The Jews," not Abe Rosenthal, are responsible for the literary crimes that grace the New York Times op-ed page twice a week. On this point Michael Kinsley of The New Republic was in agreement. Daniel Lazare quotes him in the New York Observer (October 1, 1990): Something that sounds like anti-Semitism may not be. Mr. Finsley, for instance, pointed out that Mr. Rosenthal's column was devoid of evidence to back up his assertion that Israel's "amen corner in the United States" was an anti-Semitic codeword: "All the column said was, `J'accuse-I have refrained from saying it, but I can refrain no longer. I hereby say it. There, I've said it.' That was the essence of the column. It didn't have either evidence or argument. I'm not saying there is no evidence or argument to be mustered, but he simply didn't do it." Confronted with this objection, Rosenthal was simply impatient, as already cited: "I didn't attack him because of what he said about Israel or Iraq but because he put it in anti-Semitic language." Raising the question of how to avoid anti-Semitic formulations when criticizing Israeli policy. The diversity of opinion on Mideast policy among learned Jews comes through briefly but forcefully in a fundraising letter from the editor of Tikkun ("A Bimonthly bi·month·ly adj. 1. Happening every two months. 2. Happening twice a month; semimonthly. adv. 1. Once every two months. 2. Twice a month; semimonthly. n. pl. Jewish Critique of Polities, Culture, & Society"), which once described itself as a "Ieft-wing Commentary." Michael Lerner ("Ph.D.") writes to his supporters, Iraqi aggression in Kuwait has further complicated the task of the Israeli peace movement-particularly given the foolish action of many Palestinians in supporting Saddam Hussein. My editorial in the September issue attempts to explain their support for Hussein in terms of the continuing frustration they've faced with an Israel that repeatedly asserts its unwillingness to negotiate land for peace. But while I think Palestinian support for Iraq does not provide good grounds to discount their struggle for national self-determination, I must say that personally I find it discouraging that many of them identify with such a destructive and vicious person as Saddam Hussein. I understand why so many Israelis are scared-both by Iraq and by Palestinian support for Saddam Hussein. And it certainly makes things much more difficult for us in the peace camp: we must oppose Saddam Hussein and yet not allow Iraq to become the newest excuse for continuing to deny Palestinians the rights they deserve. In this process, we must also stress our solid commitment to Israeli security and survival. That statement could have been signed by Joe Sobran or Pat Buchanan, but passes unnoticed written by a Jew, addressed to other Jews, in language studiedly sober. Back to Eric Alterman in The Nation: "Jewish pressure" is thrown around all the time in Washington and it is done so proudly. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac), the "pro-Israel" lobby in Washington, has spent the past ten years purposefully building and enhancing its reputation for deploying its "Jewish pressure" on matters it deems to be of Jewish concern, from Egypt to El Salvador. In that regard, anyway, it has done a pretty fair job. Just what did Rosenthal think Aipac director Thomas Dine had in mind back in 1984 when he announced, after the defeat of Senator Charles Percy (who supported the establishment of a Palestinian entity), that "all the Jews in America, from coast to coast, gathered to oust Percy. And the American politicians--those who hold public positions now, and those who aspire--got the message"? Goyish pressure? Alterman goes on, nudging up against a critical point everywhere acknowledged abstractly, but with which some anti-anti-Semites have practical difficulties. The equation of anti-Semitism with opposition to Israel's government and with the "pressure" its supporters and operatives exert on the American political process demeans the lives of those who have suffered under true anti-Semitism-and there is no shortage of those--and silences legitimate debate on U.S. policy in the Middle East. A recent fundraising letter sent out by the American Jewish Congress
The American Jewish Congress describes itself as an association of Jewish Americans organized to defend Jewish interests at home and abroad through public policy advocacy, using diplomacy, and signed by its executive director, Henry Siegman, veered uncomfortably close to this territory as well. The letter accuses James Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute Founded in 1985, the Arab American Institute is a non-profit, membership organization and advocacy group based in Washington D.C. that focuses on the issues and interests of Arab-Americans nationwide. James Zogby, brother of pollster John Zogby, is founder and president of the AAI. , of being a proponent of "the new anti-Semitism" and appears to link him with neo-Nazi David Duke, as well as with the proudly anti-Semitic Louis Farrakhan, on the basis of Zogby's campaign to limit the influence of pro-Israel PACs in American elections. The AJC's objection, according to the letter, is that Zogby insists that five U.S. senators who received a great deal of pro-Israel PAC money are "not operating in the interests of the people who elected them." Is this action by AIPAC discriminatory in the objectionable sense? No, not really. Alterman cannot here be denied: A pro-Israel PAC would have to be stupid to raise money for people whom it did not expect to behave in its interest. Aipac and its related PACs have been accused of a great many things, but stupidity--particularly in the raising and spending of campaign contributions--is not one of them. Alterman is amused, or rather not amused, by AIPAC's gyrations on the matter of freedom of expression: Following on Rosenthal's column, Aipac sent an advisory to its 50,000 members, encouraging them to meet with newspaper editors in order to "ask them if they believe the Buchanans are presenting information their readers want." Aipac suggests that its members offer the names of Norman Podhoretz and other far-right-wing Shamir government cheerleaders Notable cheerleaders
Buchanan is perhaps being a bit paranoid when he suspects a "pre-planned, orchestrated smear campaign" designed to deprive him of his readership. But with Aipac and Rosenthal after him, need we remind ourselves that even paranoids have real enemies? We are left here with an American Jew who opposes Israeli policies 1) calling attention to the anomaly that any non-Jew who also opposes those policies runs the risk of being called anti-Semitic; and 2) defending an "Israeli" line as defined by Israeli lobbies, while raising the question whether defiance of that line warrants the anti-Israel tag, in particular to the extent that "anti-Israel" evolves into "anti-Semitic." And we are left with the question of how to train the moral faculties to distinguish between those whose anti-Israel positions evolve (whether or not they know it) from anti-Semitic impulses, and those anti-Israelis unaffected by the Jewishness of the Israeli nation. I find it impossible to defend Pat Buchanan against the charge that what he did and said during the period under examination amounted to anti-Semitism, whatever it was that drove him to say and do it: most probably, an iconoclastic temperament. So then, if such anti-Semitic impulses exist, do they usually also overwhelm rational faculties? Become obsessive? We know of historical examples in which this has in fact happened. ("I had a letter yesterday from Peg," Murray Kempton told me years ago, driving back from Westbrook Pegler's funeral. "I knew he was sick. He wrote seven pages and didn't once mention David Ben Gurion Noun 1. David Ben Gurion - Israeli statesman (born in Poland) and active Zionist who organized resistance against the British after World War II; prime minister of Israel (1886-1973) Ben Gurion, David Grun .") |
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