ANTI-ZIONISM & ANTISEMITISM: IT’S NOT WHAT YOU THINK
Confronted with the potential that our opinions about Israel are clouded by bias, we come to the wrong conclusion because we do not understand the question.
Is anti-Zionism antisemitism?
The anti-Israel activists who are swarming the streets, unfurling banners outside synagogues, chanting “From the river to the sea!” and otherwise terrorizing Jews worldwide, say no.
Anyone with any sensitivity to the forms antisemitism has taken over time recognize strains of anti-Jewish animus in our political dialogue right now. Still, it is possible that the people who are responsible for this genuinely believe they are free of prejudice and are merely expressing political opinions and arguing for an end to the war.
I have written on this subject before and I will again. Because it is central to the discussion. Why? Because, whether or not our activism is having a positive impact on Palestinians and/or Israelis, if our positions are guided by bigotry, however deeply embedded and unconscious, our integrity is on the line. We can say that our motivation doesn’t matter if we come to the right conclusion — the ends justify the means — but what if we have come to precisely the wrong conclusion because prejudice drives our decision-making?
It is certainly understandable that people would react defensively when accused of antisemitism. None of us like to face charges of bigotry. Moreover, antisemitism has led to some of history’s greatest crimes against humanity. So the accusation is a bit weighted, to put it mildly.
But I’m not talking about the people who firebomb synagogues, as someone did recently in my hometown. Everyone agrees that is antisemitic.
I’m talking about a far more subtle thing. And we are not acknowledging this elephant because we do not understand the nuance at play.
The problem is that we come to the wrong conclusion because we do not understand the question.
When we are asked to address the role of antisemitism in the discourse around Israel and Palestine, we are not suggesting something as crude as the idea that activists hate Israel, therefore they must hate Jews. It is a little more complex and subtle than this. But when we dig around a little, we see some obvious indicators that the problem is not only that antisemitism absolutely does exist in the discourse. The bigger problem may be that the very people for whom confronting and unlearning racism is a sacred trust deny, in this case, that it even exists.
It is not the crime, in other words, so much as the cover-up.
The first sign something is deeply amiss is that the people who need to be thinking about this steadfastly refuse to do so. (What could be more dismissive and rejecting of introspection than the term “anti-Zionism is not antisemitism”?) We are talking (almost exclusively) about progressive, liberal, left-leaning people. In every instance, when confronted with the potential of bias, we interrogate ourselves and search for signs of inherent prejudice.
Except in the case of Jews.
In this instance — antisemitism — we shut down introspection and discussion. Prejudice? Of course! We all have it! Antisemitism? Not a chance!
How — why — do the very people who have made self-reflection on race a key element of our ideology and identity get it so wrong on this one issue?
There are so many reasons we cannot address them all here. One that I will explore in a later post is that we do not even understand what a Jew is. I have heard plenty of people dismiss antisemitism because “Judaism is a religion.” For people who are aggressively atheistic, any religion invites hostility. For those who are more moderate, if Jewishness is a religious identity, we do not need to be any more concerned about it than we are about bigotry against Mormons or Methodists. Antisemitism cannot be racism, so we needn’t worry about it.
This is a failure to understand the unique identities of Jewish people (to say nothing about dismissing what has proven to be one of history’s most dangerous hatreds). Judaism is a religion, yes, but it is part of a broader identity. Jewishness is an ethnocultural identity, a peoplehood, a nation. Antisemitism is different from other forms of racism, because Jewishness is different from other identities. The fact that our ignorance prevents us from understanding this does not grant us immunity to transgress our core values when it comes to this one people.
More at play, probably, are issues of confirmation bias and deeply ingrained prejudices.
To get to the root of this, we need to address some ugly ideas.
Israel has given up proportionately more land in peacetime than any country in history. In the faint hope of peace, Israel gave up the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt (that has bought decades of cold peace). Israel disengaged from the Gaza Strip (we know how that turned out). Israel offered almost the entire West Bank, as well as Gaza, to Palestinians during the Oslo Process and Arafat overthrew the negotiating table.
Despite all these historical facts, the prevailing narrative depicts Israel as a grasping, greedy entity that takes other people’s stuff.
A grasping, greedy entity that takes other people’s stuff is a classic antisemitic trope. That is how Jews have been collectively and individually viewed across centuries of antisemitism in Europe and elsewhere.
So, despite all the evidence to the contrary, when people hear Israel falsely accused of greedily expanding its territory, there is an ingrained bias deep in the minds of almost anyone raised in our culture that sets off a bell of recognition. Yes, says the atavistic rear part of our brain, that sounds about right.
This is confirmation bias. When you are raised on racist ideas about Jews — untrustworthy, devious, master negotiators — and then you hear pro-Israel voices recount the history of Arab-Israeli negotiations that almost led to Palestinian statehood but failed, your default, despite all evidence, is likely to blame the Jews.
The basic (anti-Israel) narrative of the Oslo Process is that the Palestinians never stood a chance. The negotiations were tipped against them. The scale was weighted to Israel’s advantage.
This is not just wrong — the entire world was dumbfounded when Arafat ended the constructive dialogue and launched the Second Intifada — it’s almost certainly founded on antisemitic premises.
They were never going to get a fair deal. No one can beat those people in a negotiation. The crafty Israelis must have talked rings around the poor, naïve Palestinians.
The surest proof is that, on a dime, global opinion sided with Palestinians and violence and against Israel and negotiations. It was so utterly illogical that something irrational was clearly at play.
There is a great deal more to say on this topic, but the first step to addressing a problem is acknowledging it exists — and that is what I’m trying to do here.
If this does not encourage activists to engage in introspection for the sake of Jewish people, maybe it will entice them to consider it from a perspective of crude self-interest.
When progressives, liberals and others declare “anti-Zionism is not antisemitism,” it is a betrayal not only of Jews, but of our own values. The presence of antisemitism in our movements — even a hint of it that is left unchallenged — undermines everything we do on every other issue.
Never mind the Jews. Antisemitism is an existential threat to progressive values.
“The bigger problem may be that the very people for whom confronting and unlearning racism is a sacred trust deny, in this case, that [antisemitism] even exists.”
Right here, in a single sentence, is what I’ve been patiently trying to explain to my progressive friends and former friends for the past ten years.
That patience is coming to its end. I’m finding it increasingly difficult to care what they believe. It’s hard to start over after half a lifetime in academia and progressive circles, but there it is.
“How — why — do the very people who have made self-reflection on race a key element of our ideology and identity get it so wrong on this one issue?” In my view it’s because it’s not one issue. It’s the framework of intersectionality that underpins current progressive thinking and reflection on race that blinds people to multiple bigotries, not just the one. Intersectionality redefines racism to exclude anyone perceived to have power or privilege from the possibility of being a victim of racism, only a perpetrator. Thus, no matter how much vitriol or actual discrimination is directed against white people, white men especially, it will always be denied by progressives that they are being bigoted in any way. Their bigotry is called justice. Now Jews too have been folded into the hierarchy as ‘white adjacent’ oppressors and therefore impervious to victimization. Whoopi Goldberg exemplified the mentality precisely when she claimed the Nazis were merely guilty of white on white crimes, not racism. All the antisemitic tropes, eg. Jews as greedy capitalists, fit right in.