A Truth Most Jews Don’t
Want To Know About Anti-Semitism
By Alan Hart
February 09, 2015 "ICH"
- Much is currently being written and
broadcast about what a headline in the
Wall Street Journal proclaimed to be
The Return of Anti-Semitism
(loathing and hatred of Jews). It was over
an article by Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks, the
former chief rabbi of Britain. According to
him “An ancient hatred has been reborn.” He
went on:“Some
politicians around the world deny that what
is happening in Europe is anti-Semitism. It
is, they say, merely a reaction to the
actions of the state of Israel, to the
continuing conflict with the Palestinians.
But the policies of the state of Israel are
not made in kosher supermarkets in Paris or
in Jewish cultural institutions in Brussels
and Mumbai. The targets in these cities were
not Israeli. They were Jewish.”
In an article for TIME
under the headline It’s Time To Stop
Ignoring the New Wave of Anti-Semitism,
Michigan born-and-based Rabbi Jason Miller
quoted Sacks and was more explicit in his
assertion that an ancient hatred has been
reborn. (As well as being a rabbi Miller is
the president of an IT and social media
marketing company). He wrote:
“I certainly have the
capacity and amplification to voice my
concerns about the threat of anti-Semitism,
this time around emanating not from Nazism,
but from Islamism… As Rabbi Sacks makes
perfectly clear, the rise of anti-Semitism
in the 21st century is not about anti-Israel
sentiment… Plain and simple, 21st-century
anti-Semitism is the continuation of the
same Jewish hatred that has raised its ugly
head for centuries. It is the same
anti-Semitism that we saw 70 years ago in
Europe as 6 million Jewish men, women and
children were exterminated.”
In my Gentile view
Rabbis Sacks and Miller and all who think
like them are in complete denial of the link
between Israel’s actions which sometimes
amount to state terrorism and the
transformation of anti-Israelism into
anti-Semitism.
What this link is was put
into words more than a quarter of a century
ago by Yehoshafat Harkabi, a long-serving
Director of Israeli Military Intelligence.
(I have quoted his warning in several of my
previous posts but what he wrote bears
repeating, again and again and again). In
his book Israel’s Fateful Hour,
which contained his call for Israel to
withdraw from the occupied territories, and
his statement that the biggest real threat
to Israel is its self-righteousness, he
wrote the following.
QUOTE
We Israelis must be
careful lest we become not a source of pride
for Jews but a distressing burden. Israel is
the criterion according to which all Jews
will tend to be judged. Israel as a Jewish
state is an example of the Jewish character,
which finds free and concentrated expression
within it. Anti-Semitism has deep and
historical roots. Nevertheless, any flaw in
Israeli conduct, which initially is cited as
anti-Israelism, is likely to be transformed
into empirical proof of the validity of
anti-Semitism.
It would be a tragic irony if
the Jewish state, which was intended to
solve the problem of anti-Semitism, was to
become a factor in the rise of
anti-Semitism. Israelis must be aware that
the price of their misconduct is paid not
only by them but also Jews throughout the
world. In the struggle against
anti-Semitism, the frontline begins in
Israel.
UNQUOTE
Another way of saying that
an ancient hatred has been reborn is that
what used to be called the “sleeping giant”
of anti-Semitism is waking up. Putting it
that way makes understanding possible and
here’s why.
After the Nazi holocaust,
and because of it, this giant went back to
sleep and might well have died in
its sleep if Zionism had not been allowed by
the major powers to have its way and Israel
had been required to be serious about peace
on the basis of an acceptable amount of
justice for the Palestinians and security
for all.
To avoid being
misunderstood I must qualify that statement.
There will always be some
Jew haters and Nazi holocaust deniers. (I
accept that there is room for debate about
the number of Jews who were exterminated but
I regard Nazi holocaust denial as an evil on
a par with the mass murder of Jews and
others). So what I mean when I say the
sleeping giant of anti-Semitism might well
have died in its sleep is that it would not
have come back to life again as a force
capable of seriously threatening the
wellbeing and security of the Jews.
The evidence which gives
great weight to that analysis can be
obtained from just a few moments of
reflection about the history of the whole of
the second half of the 20th century and much
if not all of the first decade of the 21st.
What stands out with regard to the Jews is
the wellbeing of those who were/are citizens
of the Western nations. They were not only
secure, they had influence in political,
economic and many other spheres out of all
proportion to their numbers. (Which is why,
generally speaking, I have always regarded
the Jews as the intellectual elite of the
Western world. And that in turn is why I am
amazed that most Jews allowed themselves to
be brainwashed by Zionist propaganda and are
beyond reason on the matter of justice for
the Palestinians as a consequence).
It was Israel’s
“misconduct” (what a charming Harkabi
euphemism for defiance of international law,
on-going colonization and ethnic cleansing
by stealth!) that set in motion the rising,
global tide of anti-Israelism which, as he
warned, is showing signs of a creeping
transformation into anti-Semitism.
Put another way, it was
Israel’s policies and actions which
guaranteed that the sleeping giant would not
die in its sleep and would wake up to go on
the prowl again.
In its recent report the
Community Service Trust (CST) said the
number of anti-Semitic incidents in the UK
doubled in 2014 – up from 513 in 2013 to
1,168, of which 81 were violent. The
non-violent ones included what the CST
described as a widely shared image of Hitler
with the caption “Yes man, you were right.”
What was the biggest
factor behind the rise in the number of
anti-Semitic incidents in the UK? In the
CST’s own words it was “anti-Semitic
reactions to the conflict in Israel and
Gaza.” In its own way that finding is surely
an indicator that Israel’s policies and
actions are the prime cause
of the transformation of anti-Israelism into
anti-Semitism. It also underlines Harkabi’s
point that Jews need to understand “that
foreigners’ criticism of Israel stems not
only from opportunism, hatred and
anti-Semitism, but from what they may see as
fair and moral considerations.”
My conclusions?
The only people
who can stop the transformation of anti-Israelism
into anti-Semitism gathering momentum are
the Jews themselves, with those who are
citizens of the European nations and America
taking the lead.
How could they do it?
Short answer – by
declaring that Israel does not speak for or
represent them and that they condemn its
defiance of international law and denial of
justice for the Palestinians.
If they don’t do that
there will most likely be a final Zionist
ethnic cleansing of Palestine followed at
some point by a wide awake sleeping giant of
anti-Semitism going on the rampage again.
If it really is the case
that the sleeping giant of anti-Semitism is
waking up, it’s time for European and
American Jews to wake up to the fact that
the title of my book – Zionism: The Real
Enemy of the Jews – is what Ilan Pappe
described it as being… “THE
truth in seven words.”
Alan Hart has been engaged
with events in the Middle East and their
global consequences and terrifying
implications – the possibility of a Clash of
Civilisations, Judeo-Christian v Islamic,
and, along the way, another great turning
against the Jews – for nearly 40 years…http://www.alanhart.net/