The
week of October 22 was a week in which three men committed acts of
right-wing, white supremacist terrorism, with two of them committing
race-based murder against innocent victims. Two of the individuals
murdered 13 people between them, but the incident in which Black
lives were lost has received scant-to-cursory attention at best,
lending credence to the notion that Black lives are viewed as less
important in American society.
White
Louisville resident Gregory Bush, 51, is accused of gunning down
Vickie Lee Jones, 67, and Maurice E. Stallard, 69, both of whom were
Black, in a Kroger grocery store in Jeffersontown, Kentucky, on
October 24. Prior to the murders, the gunman reportedly attempted to
enter a Black church, but was unable due to the church’s
security. Bush allegedly told a witness, “whites
don’t kill whites.”
Cesar
Sayoc sent pipe bombs via the mail to Democratic leaders, a media
organization and opponents of Trump, and reportedly had a list of
over 100 potential targets. And Robert Bowers, a man who harbored
hatred against Jews and immigrants on the far-right corners of social
media, faces 29 charges for shooting 11 people to death in the Tree
of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh on October 27, in what is described
as the largest mass shooting of Jewish Americans in history.
While
federal prosecutors are investigating the Kroger killings as a
possible hate crime, there has been some reluctance to name it as
such, with local officials claiming there was no motive. Media has
focused on the alleged schizophrenia,
mental illness struggles and lone wolf status
of the assailant, in an attempt to downplay his racist and political
motivations. Also mentioned were his history of domestic violence
against his Black ex-wife. In contrast, Bowers was immediately
charged with murder and hate crimes, with much focus on his ideology,
including a hatred for HIAS, a Jewish agency helping refugees from
Africa, Latin America and the Arab world, and the conspiracy theory
that the organization was bringing people to the U.S. to commit
crimes. “HIAS likes to bring invaders in that kill our people,”
Bowers posted on Gab. “I can’t sit by and watch my people
get slaughtered. Screw your optics, I’m going in.”
People
have taken to social media to comment on the disparate treatment of
the Kroger and Pittsburgh shootings, and the invisibility of the
Black victims in Kentucky:
“My
honest opinion it is not getting coverage for that very reason
because they are black that is further proof that black people in
this country do not matter.”
“The
family of Ms. Vickie Jones, one of the victims of the #krogershooting
here in Louisville is trying to raise $10,000 for family members to
attend the funeral. Her brother also died 2 weeks ago so the family
is going through. Give what you can. https://t.co/737ULNOJOO”
“The
shooter in Pittsburgh is being charged with a hate crime but Kentucky
hasn’t charged the white guy who killed 2 elderly black people
with a hate crime yet for the #krogershooting. What are y’all
waiting on?”
“The
Kroger murders were largely overlooked by media in past week as there
was such an effort underway to downplay the racist motives of mail
bomber. Now there’s this strained effort to describe
anti-Semitism as something other than racism, disconnected from white
supremacy”
Apparently,
Trump — who has called for the death penalty in the Pittsburgh
case, visited the city on Tuesday and claimed the synagogue should
have had armed guards — has not commented on the Kroger
murders. However, he did pledge his support for Republican Rep. Andy
Barr representing Kentucky’s 6th
District in Lexington: “Congressman Andy Barr of Kentucky, who
just had a great debate with his Nancy Pelosi run opponent, has been
a winner for his State. Strong on Crime, the Border, Tax Cuts,
Military, Vets and 2nd Amendment, we need Andy in D.C. He has my
Strong Endorsement!”
Meanwhile,
white right-wing voices, while ignoring the Kroger murders, have also
attempted to erase white supremacy, and specifically downplay a white
supremacist as the cause of the synagogue shooting, opting instead to
put a Black face on antisemitic violence. For example, NRA
spokesperson Dana Loesch placed the blame not on white supremacists,
but on leftists and Minister Louis Farrakhan:
In
an analysis on the white face of anti-Semitism, anti-racism educator
and speaker Tim Wise said the “shifting of attention from
right-wing, white bigotry and anti-Semitism to Farrakhan is a
predictable pivot and one the right has deployed consistently for
over thirty years, ever since Farrakhan became their all-purpose
bogeyman. It’s also a deflection marinated in false
equivalence, historically contextual ignorance, and supreme bad
faith.” Wise added that the source of any Black antipathy
towards Jews lies in the “adopted whiteness” of Jews who
have assimilated and lost touch with marginalized and oppressed
peoples.
Naftali
Bennett, the right-wing Israeli Minister of Diaspora affairs, invoked
the Palestinians in Gaza and Hamas militants rather than white
supremacist terrorism when he visited Pittsburgh. “From Sderot
to Pittsburgh, the hand that fires missiles is the same hand that
shoots worshippers. We will fight against the hatred of Jews, and
anti-Semitism wherever it raises its head. And we will prevail,”
he said at a Pittsburgh vigil. Bennett was a force behind the
expulsion of thousands of African asylum seekers from Israel, who are
known by the offensive term infiltrators. He said that “granting
legal status to 16,000 infiltrators will turn Israel into a paradise
for infiltrators.”
Israel’s
ruling Likud party emailed talking points to its members blaming the
synagogue mass shooting on the victims for promoting HIAS, which the
party characterized as a left-wing anti-Trump organization that
promotes immigration. Yoav Eliasi, a Likud member and hate rapper
known as The Shadow, justified Bowers’ killing spree, which he
said was a reaction to the “sick agendas” of progressive
Jewish leftists. “HIAS brings in infiltrators that destroy
every country. The murderer was fed up with people like you. Jews
like you brought the holocaust and now you’re causing
antisemitism. Stop bringing in hate money from Soros,” he said,
echoing the white supremacist sentiment of the killer.
Hannah
Sassaman connected the dots between the Sabbath murder of Jews to
other innumerable acts of white supremacy, noting the massacre is
“structurally tied” to the Kroger murders and the 2015
massacre at Emanuel
AME Church
in Charleston. “Jews can’t meaningfully challenge
antisemitism without challenging white supremacy as a whole,”
Sassaman said, underscoring the need for people to come together to
organize, vote and fight racism, poverty and oppression to get
through these hard times. “To end antisemitism and its
murderous fruits today and in the future, we must remember how all
these struggles are tied together, and face them with open eyes, and
with a commitment to — as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. framed it
—bending the arc of the moral universe towards a complete and
universal peace and justice.”
In
a seething commentary in The Forward, Lesley Williams, an
African-American Jew, had a message for his white Jewish friends, who
in his view cared little about the “cold blooded murder”
of two Black people in Kentucky and offered little more than the
“polite sympathy of outsiders.”
“A
Jewish community that sincerely valued its Jews of Colors would have
reacted with equal passion and sorrow to the black deaths in
Louisville last week. Where were the supportive calls to your black
Jewish friends, the counseling offers, the sobbing, the anger? Did
you even notice?” Williams asked. “Did it ever occur to
you that the rage and terror you are experiencing today is how I have
felt my entire life? It is not only that you have largely ignored the
anguish of your black community members, it’s that you have
once again directed the focus and outrage away from anti black racism
and centered it on yourselves.” Williams added that while Nazi
symbols evoke past trauma for Jews, they represent a “terrifying,
traumatic, unending present” for Black people. “White
Jews may be shocked at this undeniable evidence of US racism; African
Americans merely see more of the same. Black people did not need to
be reminded by hoods and swastikas that we live in a dangerously
racist country.”
A
deadly week of bomb threats and racially-motivated mass shootings
revealed that even in the face of white supremacist violence, the
Black victims of said violence are rendered invisible, while the
white supremacy itself is obfuscated and blame on the part of white
supremacists is deflected.
This commentary was originally published by AtlantaBlackStar.com
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