My "Me, Too" story is here:
https://save-send-delete.blogspot.com/2017/12/me-too-asterisk-that-asterisk-makes-all.html
You can also read it at Front Page Magazine here:
https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/268776/me-too-asterisk-asterisk-makes-all-difference-danusha-v-goska
It's the back story for my book, "Bieganski, the Brute Polak Stereotype."
Thursday, December 21, 2017
Sunday, December 17, 2017
Jack Black's Polish Accent in The Polka King
The AV Club features an article about Netflix's "The Polka King." In the comments section, readers discuss whether Jack Black's Polish accent is offensive.
The film is about a Polish immigrant who becomes a Polka king and starts a Ponzi scheme, defrauding his fans and ending in jail. He wears outlandish costumes.
You can read "Jack Black’s Polish accent stars in the trailer for Netflix’s The Polka King" by Matt Gerardi here.
The film is about a Polish immigrant who becomes a Polka king and starts a Ponzi scheme, defrauding his fans and ending in jail. He wears outlandish costumes.
You can read "Jack Black’s Polish accent stars in the trailer for Netflix’s The Polka King" by Matt Gerardi here.
Friday, December 15, 2017
Monday, December 4, 2017
Tomasz Wroblewski: "Poland: Patriotic, not authoritarian There are legitimate reasons to criticize the Polish government. But accusations of fascism are absurd."
In Politico, Tomasz Wroblewski argues that Poland's Independence Day March was not the horror show many in the Western mainstream press have accused it of being. He says that a small minority participated in extremist behavior and those extremists were not representational of the larger march, which mostly consisted of average citizens who just happen to love their country. He suggests that a double standard is at work, and other countries like France -- whose Jews are fleeing for their lives -- are not judged and condemned as Poland is. You can read Tomasz Wroblewski's article, "Poland: patriotic,
not authoritarian. There are legitimate reasons to criticize the polish
government. But accusations of fascism are absurd" here.
Sunday, December 3, 2017
Maciej Kisilowski: PiS Is about Power, not Patriotism
Maciej Kisilowski, an associate professor of law and public management at Central European University
in Budapest, argues "Poland:
authoritarian, not patriotic: Jarosław Kaczyński is building a state apparatus
that will do whatever it takes to protect the regime," that PiS is about consolidating and maintaining power, not about patriotism.
Kisilowski points to PiS and the media, PiS and the judiciary, and PiS and public projects. PiS, he says, is currently aided by economically comfortable times, but when times get lean, PiS will tighten its grip to maintain power. Kisilowski points to fascist elements in the Independence Day March and asks why these elements were not prevented from participating, while, he says, peaceful anti-fascist marchers were arrested.
In the comments section under the article, readers curse in Polish at Kisilowski, wish him dead, and accuse him of being secretly Jewish.
One comment reads, "What an eye opener, one does not need need to live in Poland to experience fascism, even just looking at the comments of some of the fascist minded commentators here can immagine what really is going on in that country. The xenophobia, swearing at people, labeling anyone with a different vew a traidor, the hate aimed towards anyone who questions them. it is obvious that the PiS has found very fertile ground to sow its seeds of hatred"
Another comment reads, "the march itself was sponsored, among others, by the far-right ONR, something that the PiS authorities must surely have been aware of."
You can read the article here.
Kisilowski points to PiS and the media, PiS and the judiciary, and PiS and public projects. PiS, he says, is currently aided by economically comfortable times, but when times get lean, PiS will tighten its grip to maintain power. Kisilowski points to fascist elements in the Independence Day March and asks why these elements were not prevented from participating, while, he says, peaceful anti-fascist marchers were arrested.
In the comments section under the article, readers curse in Polish at Kisilowski, wish him dead, and accuse him of being secretly Jewish.
One comment reads, "What an eye opener, one does not need need to live in Poland to experience fascism, even just looking at the comments of some of the fascist minded commentators here can immagine what really is going on in that country. The xenophobia, swearing at people, labeling anyone with a different vew a traidor, the hate aimed towards anyone who questions them. it is obvious that the PiS has found very fertile ground to sow its seeds of hatred"
Another comment reads, "the march itself was sponsored, among others, by the far-right ONR, something that the PiS authorities must surely have been aware of."
You can read the article here.
Lifesite News: Western, Mainstream Press Misrepresents Poland's Independence Day March
Lifesite news ran an article arguing that Western, mainstream press misrepresented Poland's Independence Day March. I can't recommend the article. I don't think it brings much new to the table.
In the comments section, a couple of posters said, paraphrase, If, as you say, the fascists, neo-Nazis, and white supremacists were such a small percentage of the marchers, why didn't the majority of marchers demand that the objectionable element not participate? That's a valid question.
One comment argued that the fascists were paid agents of George Soros. A pretty far-fetched conspiracy theory. Another comment argued that homosexuals and abortionists are out to destroy Poland. Not a helpful point of view.
You can read the article, "Here’s What The Mainstream Media Isn’t Telling You About The Poland Independence Day March," by Dorothy Cummings Mclean here.
In the comments section, a couple of posters said, paraphrase, If, as you say, the fascists, neo-Nazis, and white supremacists were such a small percentage of the marchers, why didn't the majority of marchers demand that the objectionable element not participate? That's a valid question.
One comment argued that the fascists were paid agents of George Soros. A pretty far-fetched conspiracy theory. Another comment argued that homosexuals and abortionists are out to destroy Poland. Not a helpful point of view.
You can read the article, "Here’s What The Mainstream Media Isn’t Telling You About The Poland Independence Day March," by Dorothy Cummings Mclean here.
Friday, December 1, 2017
Trump Tweets "anti-Muslim" Videos from "Extremist, Right-Wing, Hate Group" and Bieganski
On
Wednesday, November 29, US President Donald Trump re-tweeted three videos from
Jayda Fransen of Britain First. The first video depicts a Muslim teen beating
up on a non-Muslim Dutch teen using crutches. The second depicts a Muslim
cleric destroying an image of Mary. The third depicts violence culminating in
murder. As far as anyone knows, these videos are authentic, and not staged.
Trump's
tweeting this material caused intense backlash. The world press condemned him
in the harshest terms ever used against him. The New York Times and other publications rushed to condemn the videos
and their sender, Jayda Fransen. Some alleged, without any evidence, that the
videos were staged or inauthentic.
The New York Times devoted many articles to
this topic. On the very day of the tweets, the Times rushed to print an
article, "The Stories Behind Three Anti-Muslim Videos Shared by Trump,"
that struggled to defuse the videos, and make them out to be innocuous. It was
as if the Muslim world were on trial, and the New York Times were the Muslim world's defense attorney.
A few
observations.
First,
the President of the United States should not use twitter. Twitter use demeans
the office and endangers the US.
Second,
I searched for over an hour to find any publication that supplied any facts to
support the characterization of Britain First as an "extremist, right-wing
hate group."
I
read articles about Britain First, visited their Facebook page, watched their
videos, and saw no extremism and no hate. They appear to be a small group of
older British people who walk around carrying crosses and Union Jacks and
distributing pamphlets encouraging patriotism. People spit at them and throw
projectiles at them, and they do not retaliate.
If
anyone has any information to support their status as an "extremist,
right-wing hate group" please feel free to supply that information in the
comments section.
Third.
The videos in question are not fake, and are not anti-Muslim. They do show
Muslims behaving badly, but there are an infinite number of videos that show
non-Muslims behaving badly; those videos arouse no outrage.
Fourth,
the gigantic furor aroused is very telling.
In
the mainstream press, academia, and popular culture, Poles are Bieganski.
That is, Poles are brutal haters who deserve every criticism. In recent days, world
press has condemned Poland for its recent Independence Day March. No one pulled
any punches in this criticism. In fact, mainstream news organs fabricated
especially inflammatory slogans and claimed that they appeared on signage –
there were no signs at the march that featured the inflammatory slogan.
No
one rushed forward to say that Poles cannot be criticized in this manner.
This
is what we call a double standard.
Poles
need to unite and resist Bieganski. For more on that, see here.
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Anti-Semitic Pole Bans Jews from His Guesthouse
Piotr Rybak has hung a sign outside his guesthouse in Poland saying that entry is forbidden to "Jews, Commies, and all Thieves and Traitors to Poland."
Read more about this Polish anti-Semite here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/11/27/polish-authorities-urged-act-far-right-activist-bans-jews-guesthouse/
Thursday, November 23, 2017
Disney Pixar's New Film "Coco" and Bieganski
Disney / Pixar has a new movie, "Coco," and it is going to be huge. It will be considered for an Academy Award for best picture. It will rake in huge sums.
Yesterday, Adrian Molina, the writer and director of "Coco" was on WNYC's Leonard Lopate radio show.
Molina, in virtually every sentence, said something like, "Our goal was to create a Mexican movie. We hired only Mexican or Latino actors. We strove to honor indigenous Mexican traditions. We had to interview six hundred children to find a worthy Mexican child. All the music is inflected with Mexican sounds. We had to be sure to use Spanish, because Spanish is more beautiful than English..."
And on and on and on and on.
"Coco" is a nationalist project.
In recent days, the world has been discussing Poland's recent Independence Day march. The world recoils from POLISH nationalism, insisting that it is an evil threat to world peace.
"Coco," a MEXICAN nationalist product, will be hailed and feted.
BTW, the nonsense about needing Mexicans to play the characters in an animated film. Benjamin Bratt, as his last name implies, is of Northern European, largely German ancestry. His mother is from Peru.
Peru is over four thousand miles from Mexico. That's greater than the distance from New York to London. That's TWICE THE DISTANCE from New York City to Mexico City.
There is no cultural similarity between the Incas and the Aztecs. The one thing they have in common -- both the Inca Empire and the Aztec Empire were defeated by tiny numbers of Europeans fighting with local, Native American Indian troops who were eager to see oppressive Native American empires fall.
I'm not protesting "Coco"'s nationalism. I'm not protesting the hiring of Mexican or Hispanic actors. I'm merely mentioning the painful and destructive double standards that elevates one ethnicity, Mexicans, and denigrates another, Poles. This is the dynamic I describe in my book "Bieganski: the Brute Polak Stereotype."
You can hear the Leonard Lopate show interview with "Coco" creator Adrian Molina here: http://www.wnyc.org/story/coco
Site says that "whites" should not review "Coco." Only Hispanics should review "Coco." http://remezcla.com/lists/film/latino-film-critics-review-pixar-coco/
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
Jacek Miedlar is a "Fanatical Hate Preacher" Says Warsaw Professor Rafal Pankowski
Jacek Miedlar is a "Fanatical Hate Preacher" Says Warsaw Professor Rafal Pankowski. See more details here: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/civil-war-coming-polish-far-right-priest-jacek-miedlar-speak-britain-first-telford-rally-1608459
Jacek Miedlar Referred to Jews in Poland as a "Cancer"
Former priest Jacek Miedlar referred to Jews in Poland as a "cancer." See more, equally disturbing, details in this Forward article: http://forward.com/news/breaking-news/351081/polish-priest-who-branded-jews-as-cancer-cleared-of-hate-crime/
Monday, November 20, 2017
Raise the Roof: Documentary about Recreating Jewish Synagogues in Poland
Raise the Roof: Documentary about Recreating Jewish Synagogues in Poland. See more here: http://www.polishsynagogue. com/public-television- schedule/
Poland to Build Warsaw Ghetto Museum
Poland to Build Warsaw Ghetto Museum, reports Times of Israel. See here: https://www.timesofisrael.com/poland-to-build-warsaw-ghetto-museum/
Sunday, November 19, 2017
"Pray for an Islamic Holocaust" Banner Did NOT Appear at Poland's Independence Day March: Reports
Source |
Newspapers reported that a banner at Poland's recent Independence Day March read "Pray for an Islamic Holocaust."
New news reports now say that no such banner appeared.
Read more here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/11/15/why-i-wrote-fake-news-for-the-washington-post/?tid=sm_fb_wd&utm_term=.d7b132068ae0
Read more here:
And here: http://www.thenews.pl/1/10/Artykul/335568,WSJ-admits-to-mistake-in-coverage-of-Warsaws-Independence-March
"How Hollywood Helped Hitler" The Hollywood Reporter Discusses "The Collaboration: Hollywood's Pact with Hitler"
Link to a 2013 Hollywood Reporter article discussing a then-new Harvard University Press book on how Hollywood "helped" Nazis and Nazism: https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/how-hollywood-helped-hitler-595684
Saturday, November 18, 2017
The Southern Poverty Law Center Condemns Poland's Independence Day March. Jacek Miedlar's Antisemitic Speech
The Southern Poverty Law Center has condemned Poland's Independence Day March, as has "Tell Mama," a pro-Muslim group in the UK.
Tell Mama included an excerpt from the speech by Jacek Miedlar:
"The fact that there can be synagogues here, on our Polish soil, the fact that Jews can revel in Talmudic hate inside them, is only a result of our tolerance bordering on lack of caution. Let them know that the streets are ours! Dear football fans, dear patriots, be merciless! Be radical in your fight against evil, against falsehood, against injustice, against lawlessness, against the destruction of Polish justice system and against Talmudism. We are at a war between good and evil and no Jewish Marxist horde will take away our flag or trample on Christ’s cross."
These words are indefensible.
Read the SPLC condemnation here: https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2017/11/15/white-nationalist-and-anti-muslim-sentiment-prevail-polands-independence-day-march
Read the Tell Mama condemnation here: https://tellmamauk.org/jayda-fransen-shares-platform-friendship-with-firebrand-antisemitic-former-priest-jacek-miedlar/
You can see some of Miedlar's speech here:
Tell Mama included an excerpt from the speech by Jacek Miedlar:
"The fact that there can be synagogues here, on our Polish soil, the fact that Jews can revel in Talmudic hate inside them, is only a result of our tolerance bordering on lack of caution. Let them know that the streets are ours! Dear football fans, dear patriots, be merciless! Be radical in your fight against evil, against falsehood, against injustice, against lawlessness, against the destruction of Polish justice system and against Talmudism. We are at a war between good and evil and no Jewish Marxist horde will take away our flag or trample on Christ’s cross."
These words are indefensible.
Read the SPLC condemnation here: https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2017/11/15/white-nationalist-and-anti-muslim-sentiment-prevail-polands-independence-day-march
Read the Tell Mama condemnation here: https://tellmamauk.org/jayda-fransen-shares-platform-friendship-with-firebrand-antisemitic-former-priest-jacek-miedlar/
Friday, November 17, 2017
Douglas Murray: Poland Remembers
Douglas Murray, British author of The Strange Death of Europe, says that Poland remembers.
Bieganski Threatens World Peace: Jan Tomasz Gross in The New York Times
Source |
On
Thursday, November 16, the New York Times
ran a racist, anti-Polish piece by Jan Tomasz Gross.
Gross
resorts to racist stereotyping in addressing Poland's resistance to the
Islamization of Europe.
This
is especially ironic given that Jan Tomasz Gross *appears to be* condemning racism.
But
he is resorting to racism.
We
all know why many people think that unvetted and unchecked immigration of
Muslims into Europe should be stopped.
Terrorism,
like the Bataclan.
Birth
rates. European women have rights, and can delay having, or even decline to have,
children.
Gender
apartheid strips Muslim women of rights. In Islam, given the example of
Mohammed, who married his favorite wife, Aisha, when he was over fifty and she
was six, there is no age of consent. Females can be married off quite young.
Men are allowed four wives and an infinite number of sex slaves. For these
reasons, Muslims are statistically more likely to have many children than
non-Muslims.
Western
Europe's immigration policies have created seismic change and social instability.
Women are less safe. Homosexuals are less safe. Jews are less safe.
Anyone
who cares about social stability will question whether or not mass, unvetted
and unchecked immigration is a good idea.
Jan
Tomasz Gross declines to note these obvious roots for Poles' focus on Islam.
Rather,
Jan Tomasz Gross plays the racism card. Poles qua Poles are guilty, disgusting,
racists. It is in their blood. It is in their history. Gross misrepresents
Polish history by presenting only one side – the racist side. Shame.
Poles
are terminally stained by the unforgiveable sin of racism.
I
have frequently defended Gross on this page, and I will defend him again. He
has produced important scholarship.
In
this New York Times piece, Gross is
nothing but a racist.
Shame.
There's
more.
The
solution to the nationalism and scapegoating of Muslims going on in Poland and
in the US today is *not* to demonize Poles – or Americans.
The
solution can be found on the left.
The
left has gone too far. It expresses contempt for its perceived enemies. It
rides roughshod over mainstream culture.
This
has happened before. A terrifying example can be found in the excesses of the
Versailles Treaty.
If
you push people too far, they push back. Solution? Stop pushing people too far.
Want
to weaken racists, xenophobes, and chauvinists in Poland – and in the US?
Stop
pushing people too far. Work for the change you want to see in a respectful
way, rather than in an arrogant, high-handed, contemptuous way.
Brief
clips from Gross' NYT piece below. You can read the whole thing here: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/16/opinion/poland-pure-blood-march.html
"Tens
of thousands of people -- many of them young men with crew cuts, but some
parents with children, too -- flocked to the Polish capital to celebrate
Independence Day in a march organized in part by two neo-fascist organizations.
They waved white and red Polish flags, they brandished burning torches, and they
wore 'white power' symbols. They carried banners declaring, 'Death to enemies
of the homeland,' and screamed, 'Sieg Heil!' and 'Ku Klux Klan!'"
Gross
goes on to say that "we are witnessing a resurgence of fascism in Poland."
"…Ever
since the Law and Justice Party won both the presidential and parliamentary
elections in 2015, Poland has been undergoing a disturbing political
transformation…Two years ago, the party bet that latching onto the refugee
crisis in Europe would give it purchase…"
The
governing party, he says, is using the threat of Islamization as is occurring
in Western Europe to radicalize Poles into violent xenophobia and dangerous, primitive
nationalism.
"Poles,"
Gross writes, "couldn't tell a Muslim or a Buddhist from Jesus."
Their
attitude toward Muslims, Gross insists, "springs primarily from a deep
pool of ethnic-cum-religious hatred, which is indigenous to Poland and has
historically been aimed at Jews."
Thursday, November 16, 2017
Monday, November 13, 2017
Blogger: Poland is Unsafe for Non-Poles,. Muslims, and Homosexuals
Source |
Source |
A blog alleges that Poland is unsafe for non-Poles, Muslims, and homosexuals.
Read the blog here
My thought, fwiw: the blogger is conflating many different things. Homophobia is not the same as resistance to Islamization. Beating up someone because the person is speaking German is a bad thing to do but to understand it one must understand Poland's recent history.
Conflating hostility to homosexuals, Germans, and Muslims obscures rather than clarifies.
Tuesday, November 7, 2017
SNL: He's a Polak, Dumb As a Box of Rocks
About the three minute mark. Saturday Night Live, November 4, 2017, a skit of Sarah Huckabee Sanders commenting that a Polak is dumb as a box of rocks.
Friday, November 3, 2017
Leon Wieseltier, Harvey Weinstein, and Bieganski
Source: Vanity Fair |
Leon
Wieseltier, Harvey Weinstein, and Bieganski
In a
previous post I mentioned that The Tablet, a Jewish magazine, had identified
Harvey Weinstein's sexual predation as being informed by his Jewish identity. That
Tablet article caused an uproar and the author was forced to apologize for it.
I
think the question should be asked and answered. Heaven knows enough people
conflate German identity with mass murder. Me, I don't see the connection.
Rwandans, Cambodians, Russians, Muslims, Comanches, are all capable of real or attempted
genocides.
OTOH,
Germans carried out their genocide in a typically German way. All that obsessive
documentation, for example, is very German. Photos. Bills of lading. Rwandans
didn't keep such scrupulous records of the bloated corpses they sent down the
Kagera River into Lake Victoria.
In
other words, crimes are universal and human but various identity groups can put
their own spin on crimes.
Bieganski
is the Brute Polak Stereotype. It is a cultural creation, not a reflection of
reality. It is supported by performances.
I
witnessed this particular performance many times. A purveyor of the Bieganski
stereotype would announce, "I am a virtuous person, and the seal of my
virtue is six million dead Jews. You, a Polish Catholic, are terminally filthy,
and the seal of your filth-as-identity is those same six million dead Jews.
You, therefore, cannot argue when I smear you as being a stereotypical
brute."
An
example of this dynamic. I was invited to a dinner party in Berkeley. My white,
wealthy, Nordic hostess was not Jewish. One of the guests, Neal, was. Over
dinner, apropos de rien, Neal told a series of offensive Polak jokes. I
protested. He immediately blurted out, "Poles were never lynched." An
interesting thing to say, given that lynching was, significantly, a white supremacist
crime against blacks, also given that Poles suffered under Mikhail Muraviev,
aka "The Hangman," who did indeed hang Poles. But Neal's message was
clear. He was Jewish. He suffered. His virtue status trumped mine. My job, as a
Polak, was to shut up and take his abuse.
There's
a species of huffy outrage that some not all purveyors of the Bieganski
stereotype perform when elevating their own words above any critique, and
lowering all Polish Catholics below any human respect or sympathy.
The Slate article, "'There’s This Gap
Between Your Values and Lived Reality' Former New Republic editor Franklin Foer
on Processing and Learning from the Leon Wieselter Sexual Harassment
Allegations," reports that everyone knew that Leon Wieseltier was a pig, a
serial violator of women. Everyone allowed him to do the disgusting things he
did. The article said that Wieseltier's piggery was an "open secret."
They didn't just allow Wieseltier to abuse women. They elevated Wieseltier to
the status of a modern-day prophet. You can read the article here.
Wieseltier
is a child of Holocaust survivors. People feel guilty and sad about the
Holocaust. People let Holocaust survivors' children get away with a lot of guff
and nonsense. I've witnessed this in real life.
I
think that that guilt helps fuel the Bieganski stereotype. I write about this
process in my book Bieganski.
Jews are popularly understood as victims. Polish Catholics are not popularly
understood as victims. When John Guzlowski was interviewed on the Leonard
Lopate Show, Lopate's first question for John was, paraphrase, "You write
poetry about your Polish Catholics parents' experience of being persecuted by
the Nazis. But the Nazis didn't persecute Polish Catholics, did they?"
So,
ignorant people playing a weird psychological game say, "Jews are victims;
we must accord them virtue and not judge their excesses; Polish Catholics are
not victims; we must allow them no quarter."
Of
course not everyone does this, and not everyone who does do this does this in
all circumstances. Too many people ready to sympathize with Jews and dehumanize
Poles in relation to the Holocaust or any aspect of Catholic history, are
perfectly willing to throw Jews under the bus when it comes to the mere
existence of the state of Israel. Muslims' status as symbols of suffering and
virtue trumps Jews' status for many liberals.
I
think that something similar happens in the US with African Americans. I think that's
part of the point of the play "Six Degrees of Separation." A black
con artist is able to fleece rich white liberals by pretending to be Sidney
Poitier's son. The liberals never expose this young man to the kind of basic
questions you would ask a white stranger who invades your home and pretends to
be a celebrity's son.
I
think it's possible that Wieseltier got away with being a pig, and not just a
pig but a holier-than-thou, Jews are too good to speak to Polish Catholics,
purveyor of the Bieganski stereotype at least partly because he is the son of
Holocaust survivors, and people paved his way with their own guilt and internal
psychological games. The game being, "If I am indulgent of the son of
Holocaust survivors, I am less guilty."
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
Leon Wieseltier and Jesus and Judaism
A Theological Debate by Eduard Frankfort source |
Leon Wieseltier
has recently been in the news as an alleged sexual harasser.
Below is an
account of hearing him, and others, speak at the Nextbook Conference,
"What's He Doing Here? Jesus in Jewish Culture." held at the Center
for Jewish History in Manhattan on April 29, 2007.
I wrote this as
a letter to a friend.
I was eager to
attend because of Jewish informants' astounding reactions to me when I did my
dissertation research on Polish-Jewish relations. I interviewed a lot of Jewish
people. I was trying to discover their stereotypes of Poles and Jews. As part
of those interviews, their feelings about Jesus came out. I did not elicit
this; none of my questions referred to Jesus. I did not expect this.
In one
mind-blowing encounter, I asked a twenty-something Jewish girl one question (I
think it was the purposely vague, "I'm asking my informants if they have
any preconceptions of what constitutes Jewish identity"), and she talked for
three hours, non-stop, in a monologue that was fascinating and made me
laugh and cry and would, with minimal editing, make a fantastic novella. Her topic:
her envy of, and attraction to, things Christian. She fell in love with a
Christian boy, and accompanied him to church, and loved church and Christianity
(and yet voiced no desire to convert) and it was driving her parents crazy.
This one-woman-show was all the more fascinating because she wasn't an
obviously intellectual, poetic or deep person. She spoke in kitchen-sink
vocabulary, noun-verb-noun sentences about all the big issues -- love, death,
God, family, loyalty, identity, prejudice -- as she worked them out through the
narrative of her upcoming wedding. Whether a rabbi or a priest would officiate,
whether the reception would be kosher, what toasts would be offered: all these
decisions carried the same weight as the decisions of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob.
Other
informants expressed rage. A rabbi told a thorny, squirmy tale of an attempt at
conversion made on her by someone using "Jews for Jesus" documents. A
smiling man told of growing up in Canada singing Christmas carols, along with
his other Jewish classmates. A man who was the son of a Holocaust survivor who
beat him to the point where he had to be removed from the home said that he
envied Catholic kids because they had the beneficent image of Mary, the
Madonna, to pray to, while he grew up in a world with no loving images.
My response to
these accounts is not triumphalistic. I don't try to convert people. My
lack of a desire to convert others, one might conclude, is based in post
Vatican Two political correctness. That's not the case. My lack of a desire to
convert others is rooted in an Eastern European peasant worldview.
When I was very
young, my mother and her friend Dave would sit around the kitchen table and
talk for hours. I learned that he worshipped on Saturday, while we worshipped on
Sunday. I could see that my mother was very comfortable -- no, happy -- with
Dave. I never saw her interact with my father with the warmth, spontaneity, and
enthusiasm the way she shared with Dave: talking, laughing, relaxing, telling
the kind of "in-jokes" and stories that rendered them, in some sense,
a couple. They reenacted the Old Country together. My mother never made any
attempt to change Dave's religion. Too, like a lot of Eastern European peasant
women, my mother worked in Jewish households. As a live-in domestic servant,
she raised a couple of Jewish kids. At home with us, she occasionally spoke
Yiddish, and cooked Jewish foods. We, reliably, had matzo every Passover, and
matzah brie. Jews were like any other element of the landscape that you don't
think of changing…
I really liked
the panel by Stephen Greenblatt, Robert Pinsky, and Ed Hirsch, but the rest of
the day felt like leftovers, to me. I felt that both presenters and audience
members were falling back on easy, unexamined postures: Jews are victims;
Anti-Semitism is a bad thing; Christians are arrogant and self-deluded; Jews
are the lone correctives in Christians' hegemonic self-delusion. Jesus was
barely mentioned. Jesus' appeal was barely mentioned.
Did we spend a
beautiful late April Sunday indoors just to hear platitudes? Yes, anti-Semitism
is a bad thing, but does anyone anyone takes seriously really think otherwise?
And, Christian hegemony? Have these folks read Michelle Goldberg or listened to
the Howard Stern show?
Demographics:
my guestimate: most conference attendees were women over fifty-five. Slightly
less than half seemed male; one could almost count those under fifty-five on
both hands. Why wasn't this topic appealing to younger people, or more
appealing to men? I don't know, but I wonder if those demographics, if correct,
had any impact on the intellectual / spiritual risk-taking going on. Very few people
seemed Christian (seemed Christian -- self identified as Christian, or wore
Christian symbols, or were wearing lederhosen and/or dirndls, or responded
appropriately when offered the secret Christian handshake.) Most seemed Jewish.
(Self identified as Jewish, wore Jewish symbols, spontaneously burst into
show-stopping numbers from "Fiddler on the Roof.") I wonder if the
lack of non-Jews had an impact on the risk-taking going on.
I would have
liked a conference where there were impassioned hallway debates, rather than
just endless, comfortable, head nodding. But, then, I've been trained in
martial arts.
One more global
comment. As has happened before when I've been in largely Jewish settings, I
overheard some astoundingly ugly statements about Christians. At one talk, a
woman behind me was going on and on about how STUPID and INSENSITIVE and
SELF-ABSORBED and DESTRUCTIVE Christians are. I finally had to turn around and,
as subtly as I could, get a peek at the source of this uncut hostility. As it
happens, the woman saying these things was large, ungainly, with a long nose,
several facial warts, and lots of make-up. I had the thought I've had before.
If I were someone like Claude Lanzmann or Marian Marzynski, I would, at such a
moment, whip out my camera, and start filming. I would use lighting and editing
to highlight the worst in this woman, without ever offering any context that
would aid in understanding of her hostility, or would aid to viewer to regard
her with compassion or note shared humanity. And I realized, yet again, how
different the mind of a Claude Lanzmann or Marian Marzynski is from anyone who
has any ethics, or who wants to work for healing, rather than more pain.
The first talk
I attended was "A Passion for Waiting: Messianism and the Jews,"
given by Leon Wieseltier and James Carroll. I looked at them up on the stage,
mere feet from me, and . . . What can I say. The fundamental lies Carroll tells
about Poland in Constantine's Sword; Wieseltier's refusal to so much as
converse with Polish people. Wieseltier's dismissal of Adam Michnik, one of my
heroes, a man whose shoes Wieseltier is not fit to untie. I sat and stared at
them and . . . I wished that, sometimes, the world worked according to the
rules of working class people. I wished I could go up on that stage, and say to
them, Carroll first, "Let's step outside, and settle this
mano-a-mano."
Wieseltier and
Carroll were gasbags. I wondered if narcissism, not the love of money, is not
the foundation of all evil. Anything either one ever said about Poland he said,
not to say something about Poland, but to advance himself one step further
toward fame, and, even, just mere attention.
Leon
Wieseltier's main point, as far as I can make out: Jews and Christians are
different. Jews are better. Christians are an apocalyptic people, uncomfortable
with the world, ready to blow it up. Jews are mellow and at peace with the
world as it is. This is all made clear when one compares the Jewish approach to
Messianism, and the Christian. Jews don't want to remake the world. The Messiah
is not a big feature of Judaism. Christians are bummed out because after Jesus'
life nothing changed (sic, and !!!), and so they have to want to blow up the world
to prove that something changed after Jesus' life. Jews don't want the Messiah
to come. To prove these point, Wieseltier read an exchange between debaters in
Medieval Spain.
Wieseltier also
said that Jesus was not Jewish. Jesus was an ex-Jew, Wieseltier insisted. I
suppose he could have gone farther, and insisted that he had DNA evidence to
prove that Jesus was Swedish . . .
Needless to
say, as he spoke, one example after another flooded my brain, from the story of
Noah, very firmly fixed in Jewish scripture, in which God erases the world
because he is so uncomfortable with it, to Moses, to verses from Jewish
scripture like "Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill
shall be made low: and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough places
plain," and "The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard
shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling
together; and a little child shall lead them," not to mention the disgust
with the world expressed in a verse like, "Babylon, may the Lord bless
everyone who beats your children against the rocks!" Then there are the
East European Jewish compensatory folktales in which Jews report that after the
Messiah comes Polish princesses will be scrubbing Jewish floors, to the Baal
Shem Tov meeting the messiah, to Sabbatai Zvi, to the full-page ads in the New
York Times suggesting that Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson is the messiah
. . . In other words, there is ample evidence that Wieseltier is incorrect, and
that Messianism and a desire to remake the world has a long and rich history in
Jewish culture.
Also,
Wieseltier's point that Jews qua Jews resist redemption wasn't convincing.
Augustine famously said, "not yet," in a prayer to God. Constantine
didn't want to be baptized till he was on his deathbed. We all resist God. If
we didn't, we wouldn't be here. In short, Wieseltier was wrong. Jews and
Christians aren't different. Jews and Christians are more importantly
alike than different. I tried to say that at the end of his talk, but the well-groomed
young lady with the nametag and the microphone would not let me have it.
Wieseltier's
association of Christianity with apocalyptic thought is every bit a function of
American popular culture, and the Tim LaHaye / Jerry Jenkins Left Behind
series of novels (in which the anti-Christ is an Eastern Europe named Carpathia
-- gotta love it) and not a reflection of Christianity. For example, Catholics
don't interpret the Apocalypse as something that is about to happen, but a
coded message about what has already happened. "666" is not the mark
of a coming anti-Christ, but code for Nero. The analog to Wieseltier's approach
would be to comment on Judaism by analyzing Madonna's relationship to Kabbalah.
I don't think
that James Carroll had a main idea. I can report that he was wearing very
shiny, very expensive looking, burgundy-colored leather shoes, just like the
pope wears. Well, I guess if they won't let him be pope, he can skewer popes in
print.
Carroll sat
back in his chair. He conceded every point Wieseltier made, almost before W.
made it. Carroll apologized, he effaced himself, he said Christianity had been
bad, bad, bad. And, yet, he seemed in firm control of the conversation, and
almost triumphalistic in his assumed humility. Wieseltier seemed to be racing
to catch up. I can't account for this. At first I assumed that Carroll must be
taller, but when they both stood, that didn't seem to be the case.
I have to
wonder if post-Holocaust political correctness on the part of Christians is not
the cause of Carroll's apparent dominance? In a world where the strong must
constantly apologize, does constantly apologizing make one appear strong? And
does the cocksureness displayed by Wieseltier make one appear to be on the
defensive? Dunno.
Carroll told a
Martin Buber anecdote. The messiah appeared. Jews and Christians, in order to
find support for their own positions, asked him if he had ever been here
before. The messiah, to be diplomatic, replied, "I don't remember."
Carroll then said that Jews and Christians should concentrate on what they have
in common, like a concern for social justice. Maybe that's what made Carroll
seem in control? His reaching out a hand to Wieseltier and offering
comradeship, and his refusal to play one-up-man-ship? The one time Carroll took
a firm stance in opposition was when a woman in the audience said, paraphrase,
"You are exceptional. The rest of those Christians are a bunch of
anti-Semitic loons; therefore, what you are saying does not count."
Carroll was firm. He said, paraphrase, "No, I am not exceptional, I am
representational. Mainstream Christians have rejected anti-Semitism and reach
out to Jews in comradeship." I admired this. I admired Carroll's taking a
stand, and taking a stand that lessened his own stature. He could have presented
himself as a wunderkind among benighted Christians.
Next I attended
Jonathan Wilson's talk, "Jesus' Pale Face, the Haunting of Marc
Chagall." Wilson was very charming, but, after his talk, I had a
"where's the beef?" reaction. Chagall painted a lot of crucifixion
scenes; when asked why it was important to be in Palestine, Chagall responded,
"To walk in the steps of Jesus," but Chagall remained Jewish. Okay.
No news there. I wonder if there wasn't some deep and heavy subtext we were
avoiding?
Finally, I attended
"Why I Think About Jesus," a panel discussion by Stephen Greenblatt,
the most successful English professor in the world, Robert Pinsky, and Edward
Hirsch, a poet who is current president of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial
Foundation.
I met Pinsky, briefly,
when I was a graduate student at Berkeley. I don't remember the event. I don't
remember what either one of us said. I didn't realize, at the time, how famous
or important he was. He was nice to me in a genuine way that I have never
forgotten. When I've seen him on TV in the intervening years, I have whispered
a silent prayer that God would bless him in all his endeavors.
Given that
Stephen Greenblatt is America's most successful English professor, I expected
him to have horns and a tail, and be surrounded by sulfurous fumes. Because
English professors, and academics in general, are such lowlifes, if he was the
most successful one, he'd have to be the lowest of the low.
In fact,
though, this panel was great. Each member was smart, and interesting, and
ethical, and admirable, and even understandable. No jargon, no elitism, no
posturing. Genuinely earnest efforts to communicate important ideas. I was
thrilled. It was one of those rare, gratifying moments when people live up to
their own press and you have hope for the future of humanity.
I tried to take
notes during this talk, as I had during the previous talks. I didn't take any
notes, I was just so interested in what was being said :-). So, I have no
notes. :-( Everything I wrote below is "As I remember it."
Greenblatt
spoke first. He talked about the ubiquity of anti-Semitic and/or Christian
imagery in Western civilization. He mentioned TS Eliot's poem
"Gerontion" and showed slides of abstract art that appeared divorced
from Christianity at first but contained Christian references. Greenblatt also
talked about how Protestants and Catholics have gone at each other's throats
with murderous fury. He said that Protestants and Catholics are entirely
capable of seeing, and treating, each other as "The Other" in a most
profound way. He implied, if I understood him correctly, that Protestants' and
Catholics' othering of each other has echoes today in people's othering of
Islam -- or maybe Muslims' othering of non-Muslims?
I felt a huge
appreciation for Greenblatt's statements about tensions between Protestants and
Catholics. Here's why: There are people who insist, wrongly, that anti-Semitism
is rooted in Christian theology. The US is one of the most Christian nations
that has ever existed, and yet Jews are, significantly, safe here. If Christian
theology were the root of anti-Semitism, that would not be the case. The
difference is that Jews don't occupy the Middleman Minority position here that
they occupied so paradigmatically in Poland. I never forget that Polish
peasants, who could and did commit atrocities against Jews, were also quite
happy to commit atrocities against upper class Polish Catholics. As Stanislaw
Wyspianski's upper class character says in The Wedding: "They sawed
my grandfather in half. But we have forgotten all of that." Those who see
anti-Semitism as rooted in Christian theology insist that the Holocaust could
not have happened without two thousand years of Christian theology preparing
the groundwork. This is a very flattering interpretation of humanity. In fact
we can kill with much less preparation. The fastest genocide in history took
place in Rwanda, using primitive weapons like machetes. Interahamwe hatemongers
were able to whip Hutus into a murderous rage against Tutsis and non-genocidal
Hutus with just a few months, not two thousand years, of radio broadcasts.
Greenblatt's
comments struck me as an ethical and courageous attempt to talk about hate as
hate, not as "hate against me/mine." And he was trying to do this in
a post 9-11 world where hate recruits new, ignorant troops everyday. I admired
his efforts.
Robert Pinsky
spoke next and I really wish I had had a tape recording going during his talk.
He correctly pointed out, paraphrase, "We are talking about anti-Semitism,
not Jesus." So Pinsky talked about Jesus. He read a poem about a, as he
put it, "Stephen King" Jesus, one who performs spiteful miracles that
screw people over. I felt that this stacked the deck. If the Jesus of Matthew,
Mark, Luke and John were a Stephen King Jesus, we wouldn't have been sitting in
that room. It is because the Jesus of the Gospels is such a new and compelling
figure, someone who does things that are both stunningly new and
stunningly right, a man who lives by the dictates that decide good poetry, that
we care.
But then Pinsky
talked about Dante, and I loved what he said, and I wish I had a transcription.
He said, as I remember it, that Dante said that hell and evil are absence.
That's why hell is cold. It is the absence of light, of warmth, of God. Pinsky
said, again, as I remember it, that more harm is done to people by what they do
to themselves than by what others do to them. As an example, he cited Dante
stewing over his own misfortunes. I think Pinsky said that he got this insight
from the Talmud, but that it meshes with Dante's Christian worldview (?). He
said that the greatest sin is despair. He said that these spiritual truths
found in the Divine Comedy are true to Dante because they are Christian,
but they are true to him, to Pinsky, because they are true. Again, all as I
remember it.
See, to me, the
reverse is also true. "These Christian teachings are valuable because they
are universally, spiritually true" is true in reverse: "These
teachings are Christian because they are universally true." Which is one
reason I am a Christian.
Ed Hirsch did a
very good job of moderating this panel. I loved his facial expression. While
Leon Wieseltier's facial expression was smug and unmovable, Hirsch looked as if
he were trying to figure things out, and to live up to the gravity of the
questions at hand, not as if he had the final answer. He looked as if he might
hear something he wasn't expecting, might be moved, might change his mind.
Lovely.
During the
question and answer session, the man sitting directly behind me, who had been
bad mouthing Christians and Poles before the panel commenced, spoke. He said,
paraphrase, "You all seem so self-confident and calm. I've never met Jews
like you. The world is full of violent anti-Semites. How can you be so calm in
the face of the ubiquity of Christianity in Western civilization? This isn't
POLAND!!!"
There it was.
That word. That one word. That word that can make me cry; that word that is
like a curse. Poland.
"This
isn't POLAND!!! You don't know what it's like to live your life under constant
threat! I once was critical of a Christian text in school, and I was given a C
minus!"
This man did
not have a microphone as he spoke. People in the back asked that the question
be repeated. Stephen Greenblatt, I think, repeated it, thus, "The speaker
received a C minus in school and is bitter." He wasn't being mean; this
was said in a jocular way.
The man behind
me was fuming. "How can you be so glib! You don't know what the horrible
POLES are doing! There is a church in Sandomierz that contains a mural that
depicts Jews in a blood libel! I have tried to have the mural removed, and the
bishop sent me a rude letter! This is very close to Kielce, where Jews were
murdered after a blood libel!"
Another man in
the back of the room spoke. He said, as I remember it, that he had read TS
Eliot, and other authors, including Celine and Ezra Pound, and he refused to
read them any more! That they were a bunch of anti-Semitic creeps and he'd show
them by refusing to read their works! After this man spoke, there was a burst
of angry, defiant, applause. I cringed. I cringed after the applause of the
people approving of not reading ideologically impure poetry in a way that I
hadn't cringed after the mention of the sins of the Polaks.
I was in awe
of, and fascinated by, the reaction of the men -- the poets -- onstage. I felt
as if they were in my position. As if they were being made ashamed not
because, like me, they were Polish Catholics; obviously, they were not, but
they had something in common with me. They had a dirty little secret. I am a
Polish Catholic; that's my dirty little secret.
Their dirty
little secret is that they had read, and enjoyed, poetry written by goyim, and
that, according to the suffering man behind me who had accused them of being
too self-confident, they had not suffered enough. I say that they felt like me,
as if they were in my position, because they had the looks on their faces that
I've seen Poles assume in such environments. Dignified, refusing to back down,
unapologetic, and yet aware of the volatility of the situation at hand. As if
they had entire essays' worth of words backed up in their brains, poised just
behind their eyes, but that they would not unleash them, because to be so
defensive would not be seemly in such a setting.
I don't
remember Stephen Greenblatt's exact words, but he said something, as I remember
it, about the importance of not giving in to censorship. He spoke with
authority, in "take no prisoners" mode. At that point, another clique
of defiant applause broke out, this burst of applause in defiance of the
previous burst of applause that approved of censorship, and I joined in this
new burst of applause.
I wanted to
stand up and shout at that man, "Buddy, look at me. I am a woman. A
woman, get it? If I stopped imbibing ideologically tainted art, the only
thing I could read would be Andrea Dworkin. And what a dreary world that would
be." I also wanted to say, "People who identify themselves as
ideologically pure, and establishing ideologically pure art, have a dismal
track record. Further, the ideologically pure, by advancing the Ralph Nader
candidacy in 2000, gave us the Bush administration. 'Nuff said."
And, after that
statement by Stephen Greenblatt, the gentlemen onstage -- because they were
truly gentlemen in this -- declined to comment further. I clapped wildly. They
weren't going to rise to the bait, they weren't going to be made ashamed of
liking poetry. I felt that I was joining in their victory vicariously as a
Polish Catholic. Why? Because poetry is beautiful, and tainted by this world,
and these poets refused not to love it, or even apologize for it. Because
Polishness is beautiful, and tainted by this world, and this Polak refuses not
to love it, or even apologize for it.
After the panel
concluded, I rose, turned around, faced the man who had received the C minus,
stuck out my hand, and said, "Hi. My name is Danusha Goska and I am a
Polish Catholic. I am sorry for the bad things that happened to you, and I am
sorry about that mural. Here is my email address [I handed him a piece of paper
with my email address.] Please contact me telling me how I can help in its
removal. Also, I can put you in contact with people working on Polish-Jewish
relations. Please contact me for that, as well."
I could have
said, but did not, "You know, those people who maintain that mural in
Sandomierz are bastards, and there is no excuse for them, and I hope we can
defeat them permanently. But just this morning, two men -- Leon Wieseltier and
James Carroll -- who lie about, and monger hatred for, Poles and Poland, took
this very stage. And they are showered with plaudits, money, and respect. Won't
it be a beautiful day when you join me in defeating them?"
And I could
have said, "I know about atrocities like the mural you mention. But you
and I both know that Poland has always been a place of philo-Semitism as well
as anti-Semitism, a place where Jews have their best allies. Why not mention to
this crowd, so ready to be outraged by your words, that you are not alone in
your efforts, that there is a thriving Polish-Jewish dialogue going on?"
Didn't say
that.
It's been a
week. He's not contacted me.
I asked the
man's name. "Jakov," he said, no last name. And he gave me no way to
contact him.
After the panel
was over, fans went onstage to chat with the panel members. I heard someone
say, "We were killed in the name of Jesus!" or words to that affect.
I wanted so badly to talk about that, to talk about the science and
paganism behind Nazism. Nazism was not Christian; if it were, they couldn't
have mass murdered Christians like Poles and Gypsies. I wanted to talk about
convents who, in the name of Christ, protected Jews. And so much more. But
there was no space for that, and I'm an old woman, who has tasted too much
frustration. After telling the panelists how very good I thought they were, I,
once again, gave up, and began my solitary walk home.
As I was
walking back on Fifth Avenue toward Port Authority, I heard a voice call out,
"I am catching up to you!" it was Jakov. He's short, and
thin-skinned, and blue-eyed. He didn't get those blue eyes in the Levant; he is
related to me, however distantly. As we walked, he talked about how horribly
Polish people have treated him. I wanted to say, (but, again, did not),
"Jakov, please. The Scientific Method demands that you do a controlled
study. Don't just tell me how horribly Poles treat Jews. Talk to me about how
horribly Poles treat Poles, and how horribly Poles treat their own bodies. We
are talking about a people who drink liter bottles of vodka in one sitting, who
smoke like chimneys, who can't unite to achieve any concrete goal. There are
wounds there, Jakov. These people are wounded, as are you, if you'd notice it,
and the cure is not to keep a running score of how much you've been hurt. The
cure is, actually, for all of us to follow the teachings of the Jewish guy
about whom we just attended a conference."
Ooooooh well.
If I hear from
Jakov, I'll let you know.
Times of Israel Blogger Sheldon Kirshner Reviews Bieganski
Sheldon Kirshner, a Times of Israel blogger, has reviewed Bieganski: The Brute Polak Stereotype. You can read Kirshner's review here.
Thank you to Jerzy Pankiewicz for altering me to this review.
Monday, October 30, 2017
Leon Wieseltier and Harvey Weinstein. An Anti-Polonist Faces Accusations
Source |
Bieganski
the Brute Polak Stereotype shows that anti-Polonism is NOT limited to any
ethnicity or religion, nor is dedication to the truth. There are plenty of
Poles who do their part to spread nasty stereotypes of their fellow Poles. Just
read the comments on the anti-Polonist "Notes from Poland" Facebook
page. One poster with a Polish name after another depicts all Poles as ignorant,
bigoted, drunken, worthless, Catholic primitives. And there are many Jews who
have done more to resist the stereotype than many Poles.
There
are some Jews, though, who have dedicated themselves to defaming Poles and
Poland. One: Leon Wieseltier. I quote a few of his anti-Polonist quotes in Bieganski, but those few brief mentions
do not begin to exhaust his output.
Leon
Wieseltier is now accused of workplace sexual harassment of women.
One
account, "Leon delighted in making young women sexually uncomfortable."
Another
article,
"Wieseltier was lecherous, objectifying, demeaning, and bullying. He
leered at his female employees, groped and kissed them at work functions, left
them thank-you notes for wearing miniskirts to the office, and humiliated them
when they rejected his advances.
What
does it mean that these men — and so many others liked them — held the power to
literally shape America’s political narrative? What does it mean, as New York
magazine’s Rebecca Traister noted on Twitter, that the story of, say, Hillary
Clinton’s public career was told by these sorts of men?"
Sometimes
we are shocked when a public figure is accused of being a monster. Bill Cosby
was so genial in his public persona. I am not at all surprised that Leon
Wieseltier was a pig to women.
Mahwah NJ: Orthodox Jews and Bieganski as a New Jersey "Redneck"
Photo Credit The Forward |
My
book Bieganski: The Brute Polak Stereotype describes
how empowered Westerners talk about Poles vis-à-vis Jews. Those empowered
Westerners use a different standard when they talk about Poles than when they
talk about any other group.
Bieganski objects to Americans saying, "There
are Jewish people in America and we Americans never behave like those monstrous
Poles did at Jedwabne." Jedwabne is the site of a notorious WW-II-era
massacre of Jews by Poles.
Statements
like that – Americans are nice and have never done what those extra bad Poles
did – have made it into scholarly books. And they could not be less helpful,
and more obscuring of the truth.
Poland
and America are not comparable. America has never experienced occupations
comparable to those – by Nazis and Soviets – experienced by Poles during WW II.
And Jews in the US are not comparable to Jews in Poland.
Jews
in Poland occupied a separate caste, with its own separate culture, language,
dress, hair styles, and economic status. Anti-Semitism in Poland was, more
often than not, not about religion, but about caste conflict. Its roots were
economic and cultural, and much less about theology.
Stephen
G. Bloom's courageous 2001 book, Postville:
A Clash of Cultures in Heartland America describes Orthodox Jews in a small
Iowa town, and their culture clashes with locals. I tried to post an Amazon
review but my review was blocked. I posted it on my blog here.
It's
taboo to talk about how some aspects of Orthodox Judaism are difficult for
non-Jewish neighbors to accommodate. That taboo against speech on an important
topic doesn't help anybody.
Non-Jewish
neighbors are now being accused of anti-Semitism in Mahwah, NJ. Orthodox Jews
are moving into this small New Jersey town. Residents are very uncomfortable
with some aspects of Orthodox Jewish culture, and how those aspects are
affecting local life. Those residents are now being accused of anti-Semitism.
Non-Orthodox
Jews are also being accused of anti-Semitism. Orthodox Jews erected an eruv in
Mahwah – piping on telephone poles that, they say, allows them to do things
like carry keys on the Sabbath without offending God. Here's a quote from the Forward:
"Fights
against constructing an eruv … come from self-hating Jews,' said Joseph
Kolakowski, an Orthodox rabbi who does chaplaincy work in the nearby Orthodox
enclave, in a YouTube video on the subject. 'It’s the secular Jews who want to
destroy all religions who are behind these things.'
Rabbi
Barry Diamond, who leads the sole Reform congregation in Mahwah, rejected the
idea that less religious or 'secular Jews' were opposed to the Orthodox
community. 'There is no animus toward the Hasidic community,' Diamond said.
But
Diamond, who supports the removal of the eruv, allowed that he does see the
growing Orthodox community to the north as separate from his own. Locals have 'legitimate
concerns' about how some Orthodox and Hasidic communities interact with the
wider community when they move into an area, he said."
Residents
fear that Orthodox Jews carry suitcases full of cash, and that they go to the
doors of neighborhoods they want to move into, and move non-Jews out of, knock,
and offer the cash to homeowners, who feel pressured to accept it, and move
out. Some have proposed anti-door-knocking legislation.
Residents
are afraid that their property values will plummet, and that their public-school
system will be destroyed, as happened in nearby East Ramapo. There have been
many press accounts, in the New York Times, the Forward, and This American Life, for example, of the scandalous destruction of public
schools in East Ramapo.
People
in Mahwah fear that something similar will happen to their schools.
Rushing
to accuse the citizens of Mahwah of anti-Semitism is not helpful. What would be
helpful would be a rational, fact-based discussion of the features of Orthodox
Jewish life that concern the residents.
It's
interesting that those accusing Mahwah residents of anti-Semitism are
themselves using hateful and stereotyping words. Mahwah residents have been
accused, in the press, of being "rednecks," "KKK,"
"Nazis," etc. It's interesting that these terms are NOT considered
hate speech or evidence of prejudice.
Here's
a comment by Jon Davis posted at NJ.Com: "Are you rednecks really that
stupid? What is it that you and your hate mongering residents don't get? … Look
at the video, it is eerily reminiscient [sic] of a KKK rally, only these people
are arrogant enough not to wear hoods. Go ahead, double down on your own
stupidity and fight the state. Then you can fight the Feds when they come in.
Then you can explain to your pitchfork wielding 'good folk' of Mahwah why their
real estate taxes will double"
Inflammatory,
stereotyping, hateful rhetoric like Davis' will not help anyone.
Mahwah
mayor accused of anti-Semitism. Recall effort read here
Mahwah
hit with a lawsuit. Read more here.
Residents
say Orthodox Jews from NY are "crowding" local parks. Read here
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