web analytics
May 18, 2013 /9 Sivan, 5773
At a Glance
Blogs
Sponsored Post
jumping Following a Passion for Sports to Israel

In Israel, a new five month scholarship program being offered to young aspiring athletes – one of them could be you.



Home » Blogs » CIFWatch »

The Obligation to Avoid Anti-Semitic Behavior

By comparison, whites who avoid evoking anti-black narratives and imagery in America, by and large don’t bemoan the so-called “restrictions” placed on their artistic or intellectual expression.
tell a friend
One of the winners in the 2006 Israeli Anti-Semitic Cartoons Contest that ran with the slogan: "We'll show the world we can do the best, sharpest, most offensive Jew hating cartoons ever published! No Iranian will beat us on our home turf!"

One of the winners in the 2006 Israeli Anti-Semitic Cartoons Contest that ran with the slogan: "We'll show the world we can do the best, sharpest, most offensive Jew hating cartoons ever published! No Iranian will beat us on our home turf!"

The Gerald Scarfe Sunday Times cartoon controversy has followed a familiar pattern, with some arguing that the depiction of the bloody trowel wielding Israeli Prime Minister torturing innocent souls – published on Holocaust Memorial Day – evoked the classic antisemitic blood libel, while others (including Guardian contributors and cartoonists) dissented, claiming that Scarfe had no racist intent and was merely critiquing the policies of a head of state who happened to be a Jew.

In response to some who have noted, in Scarfe’s defense, that he had previously depicted Syria’s Assad using a similar blood motif, Stephen Pollard of The JC aptly noted: “But there’s never been an anti-Alawite blood libel, and the context matters. The blood libel is central to the history of antisemitism.”

Though Scarfe may have indeed possessed no antisemitic intent whatsoever, Pollard is stressing that the effect of the cartoon simply can’t be ignored, and that historical context matters.

When we talk about antisemitism at the Guardian and ‘Comment is Free’ on this blog we’re not claiming to possess some sort of political mentalism – a piercing moral intuition which grants us access to the souls of their journalists and contributors.  Similarly, we’re not suggesting that we can ever tell with any degree of certainty that, when we argue that criticism of Israel crosses the line to antisemitism, the writer who’s the focus of our ire is necessarily haunted by dark Judeophobic thoughts.

Rather, many of us who talk seriously about antisemitism are skilled at identifying common tropes, narratives and graphic depictions of Jews which are based on prejudices, stereotypes and mythology and which have historically been employed by those who have engaged in cognitive or physical war against Jews.

Though I’m now an Israeli, an apt analogy on the moral necessity of understanding and being sensitive about the racist context of seemingly benign ideas can be derived from my experience growing up in America.

Those who grew up in the U.S. and inherited not the guilt but the moral legacy of slavery and segregation intuitively understand that we owe African-Americans an earnest commitment to strenuously avoid employing the linguistic, cultural and political currency of racism’s tyrannical reign.  Though race relations have matured immeasurably by any standard, and codified bigotry all but eliminated, there are, nonetheless, unwritten prohibitions against language which, even though often unintended, hearkens back to the past, evoking the haunting memory of the nation’s past sins.

In America, comedians don’t do black-face routines, in which white performers create a stereotyped caricature of a black person.  A mainstream newspaper wouldn’t publish a cartoon depicting an African-American as lazy and shiftless, nor would any publication present a black public figure (in any context) as  a boot licking  ’Uncle Tom‘.  And, someone using the N-word (in public or private) would be rightfully socially ostracized or at least stigmatized as crude racist.

Such political taboos in America have developed organically over time in response to a quite particular historical chapter, and are recognized by most as something akin to an unwritten social contract on the issue of race.  White Americans can not ever fully understand black pain, the learned cognitive responses from their collective consciousness, but it is reasonable of them to expect that we not recklessly tread, even if without malice, on their sacred shared memory.

Further, whites who honor this implied covenant – and avoid evoking such narratives and imagery – by and large don’t bemoan the so-called “restrictions” placed on their artistic or intellectual expression, or complain that African-Americans are stifling their free speech.  Rather, such unwritten rules, social mores and ethical norms about race are typically understood to represent something akin to a moral restitution for a previous generation’s crimes.  While in the U.S., the First Amendment affords legal protection to those who would engage in anti-black hate speech, it is largely understood that responsible citizenship often requires self-restraint – the greatness of a people measured by what they are permitted to do, but decide not to in order to preserve national harmony, what’s known in Judaism as Shalom bayit.  

When Jews talk seriously about antisemitism they are asking those who don’t wish to be so morally implicated to avoid needlessly poisoning the political environment which Jews inhabit.

They are appealing to the better angels of their neighbors’ nature by asking them not to carelessly conjure calumnies such as the “danger” to the world of Jewish power or conspiracies , Jews’ “disloyalty” to the countries where they live, that Jews share collective guilt for the sins of a few, that they’ve come to morally resemble their Nazi persecutors, or that Jews intentionally spill the blood of innocents.

In short, we are asking that decent people avoid employing canards which represented the major themes in Europe’s historic persecution of Jews, and which, tragically, still have currency on the extreme left, the extreme right, and, especially, in much of the Arab and Muslim world today.

The Scarfe/Sunday Times row is about more than the cartoon itself, and it is certainly not about the “right” to offend. It’s about sober but passionate pleas by a minuscule minority that decent people not afflict the historically afflicted, and to recognize their moral obligations to not provide aid and comfort to anti-Jewish racists.

We are asking genuine anti-racists to resist becoming, even if unintentionally, intellectual partners or political fellow travelers with those who trade in the lethal narratives and toxic calumnies associated with the resilient Judeophobic hatred which has caused us immeasurable pain, horrid suffering and indescribable calamities through the ages.

Visit CifWatch.com.

tell a friend

About the Author: Adam Levick serves as Managing Editor of CiF Watch, an affiliate of the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA), and is a member of the Online Antisemitism Working Group for the Global Forum to Combat Antisemitism. Adam made Aliyah from Philadelphia in 2009 and lives with his wife in Modi'in.


You might also be interested in:


no comments

You must log in to post a comment.

No Responses to “The Obligation to Avoid Anti-Semitic Behavior”

  1. The US Constitution's Bill of Rights is built on the foundation that where there are 'rights', there are also 'responsibilities'. Both require the presence of the other. Your remarks in the article are the direct explanation of those responsibilities in terms of speech. The other rights have similar responsibilities, including the rights of the press.

    We can say what we want, but we have the obligation to restrain ourselves from provoking and offending each other in the name of 'freedom of speech, for example.

    This lack of understanding in Americans has helped fuel the problems we have today with Americans' social behavior. It is simply not mentioned in the press, ever, by individuals, nor is it taught in schools. They only talk of rights. That is only half the story in behavior involving other people.

  2. The US Constitution's Bill of Rights is built on the foundation that where there are 'rights', there are also 'responsibilities'. Both require the presence of the other. Your remarks in the article are the direct explanation of those responsibilities in terms of speech. The other rights have similar responsibilities, including the rights of the press.

    We can say what we want, but we have the obligation to restrain ourselves from provoking and offending each other in the name of 'freedom of speech, for example.

    This lack of understanding in Americans has helped fuel the problems we have today with Americans' social behavior. It is simply not mentioned in the press, ever, by individuals, nor is it taught in schools. They only talk of rights. That is only half the story in behavior involving other people.

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Current Top Story
Mandy Patinkin speaking at a Peace Now conference
Yet Another Jewish Org Poised to Honor a BDS Enthusiast (video)
Latest Blogs Stories
Of truth and belief

The Ruth story demonstrates how all Jews should treat the strangers among us.

7-SEVEN

Shavuot reflects the centrality of ‘seven’ in Judaism.

Egyptian Ambassador to Palestine Yasser Othman

The Egyptian ambassador warned against allowing Jews to pray at the Temple Mount even under a time-share system.

In June 2013 Iran will have elections to choose a new president.

A response to Ahmadinejad’s vitriol from a Jew of Persian descent.

the title rabbi (or its equivalent) is more than about recognition of achievement.

By agreeing with said gangsters that ‘Palestine’ is a state, Google is in effect agreeing that the Jewish people do not have a legitimate state.

Your daily dose of Hebrew.

A Jewish withdrawal from East Jerusalem would make the situation in Sderot look like paradise.

The proposed budget harms the poor more than the rich.

The issue is not our obligation to listen to our rabbinic leaders. It is about whether we should listen to the rabbinic leaders of others.

Shmuel Katz and a former Mapai MK Eliezer Livneh coauthored a pamphlet in 1971 arguing against the appeasement of Palestinian terrorists.

An interview with financial expert Jim Rogers, the author of Street Smarts:– Adventures on the Road and in the Markets.

Experienced and professional Fashion Styling is the art that could help.

לְפַנֵּק In many countries all over the world yesterday it was Mothers Day – יוֹם הָאֵם, in Hebrew. Here’s a song by Arik Einstein dedicated to his mother. I venture to say it might be sung for most mothers. One of the lines in the song is: אִמָּא, אִמָּא אַתְּ פִּנַּקְתְּ אֹתִי Mom, mom, you [...]

At campuses in the University of Maryland and California systems, pro-Israel students say they are harassed, pro-Israel events are interrupted, viciously anti-Israel speakers are brought into speak, anti-Israel students are even accused of of assaulting pro-Israel students.

If Assad is winning, Western governments should respond by helping the rebels to prevent Assad from crushing them.

More Articles from Adam Levick
shotei hanevuah2

A raw live version of the Israeli hit ‘Ein Ani’ performed in front of an IDF unit in 2012.

Idan Raichel

Israeli artist Idan Raichel blends African, Latin American, Caribbean and Middle Eastern sounds.

The mantra that terrorism is only used in reference to Muslims has no basis in fact.

Israeli artist Moshe Ben-Ari writes music with a blend rock, soul, reggae and world music.

Is there really any mystery as to why Vanunu is so admired by the Guardian?

The Guardian’s report noted that “Harding, who is Jewish, will also have to leave behind the pro-Israeli line of the Times.”

Rita’s music reportedly became an underground hit on underground radio stations in some Muslim countries, including Iran.

Nineteen year-old Israeli Arab Lina Makhoul won Israel’s “The Voice” reality show.

    Latest Poll

    Which is the most beautiful location in Jerusalem?









    View Results

    Loading ... Loading ...

Printed from: http://www.jewishpress.com/blogs/cifwatch/the-obligation-to-avoid-anti-semitic-behavior/2013/02/03/

Scan this QR code to visit this page online:

Close