This year for International
Holocaust Remembrance Day on January 27, I joined the Congregation
Beth Israel of Merrimack Valley’s book discussion “People
Love Dead Jews” by Dara Horn, exploring why antisemitism
continues.
Twelve
days before, on January 15, during Shabbat prayer, a gunman held four
hostages in a standoff that lasted 11 hours at Colleyville’s
Congregation Beth Israel. The terrorist act was a hate crime, the FBI
stated emphatically.
The
ADL reported these attacks are up by 60 percent. What is happening in
America right now is not just a crisis for Jews, it is a crisis for
this nation as a whole. It is an assault on the very thing that makes
us all Americans. Antisemitism, we don’t see until something
awful happens.
Antisemitism
should be tied to other hate crimes, like racism, homophobia,
Islamophobia, to name a few, but understood as having a distinct
history and motivations. Holocaust Remembrance Day reminds us of the
history.
During
the Holocaust, six million Jews were killed. Nazi Germany’s
extermination plan of gay men is a classic example of how politics
informed their science. Paragraph 175 of the German Criminal Code
differentiated between the type of persecution non-German gay men
received from German gay men because of a quasi-scientific and racist
ideology of racial purity. “The polices of persecution carried
out toward non-German homosexuals in the occupied territories
differed significantly from those directed against Germans gays,”
wrote Richard Plant in “The Pink Triangle: The Nazi War Against
Homosexuals.” “The Aryan race was to be freed of
contagion; the demise of degenerate subjects peoples was to be
hastened.”
Although
laws against lesbianism had not been codified, and lesbians were not
criminalized for their sexual orientations as gay men were, German
women were nonetheless viewed as threat to the Nazi state and were
fair game during SS raids on lesbian bars, sentenced by the Gestapo,
sent to concentration camps, and branded with a black triangle. As a
matter of fact, any German woman, lesbian, prostitute or
heterosexual, not upholding her primary gender role - “to be a
mother of as many Aryan babies as possible” - was deemed
anti-social and hostile to the German state.
Hans
J. Massaquoi, former Ebony
Magazine editor, and the
son of an African diplomat and white German mother, in his memoir
“Destined to Witness: Growing Up Black in Nazi Germany,”
depicts a life of privilege until his father returned to his native
Liberia. Like all non-Aryans, Massaquoi faced constant dehumanization
and the threat of death by Gestapo executioners. “Racist in
Nazi Germany did their dirty work openly and brazenly with the full
protection, cooperation, and encouragement of the government, which
had declared the pollution of Aryan blood with ‘inferior’
non-Aryan blood the nation’s cardinal sin,” he wrote.
Consequently, the Gestapo rounded up and forcibly sterilized and
subjected many non-Aryans to medical experiments, while other just
simply mysteriously disappeared.
False
equivalence and revisionism of these facts are not only hurtful to
remaining Holocaust survivors, their families, and friends, it is
also dismissive of the human carnage and crime against humanity.
In
2017, President Trump’s public statement commemorating
International Holocaust Remembrance Day intentionally omitted any
mention of Judaism, antisemitism, or the Nazis’ systematic
program exterminating European Jewry. While the president’s
generic statement on suffering might have been intended to be an
all-inclusive acknowledgment of other groups killed - gays, Gypsies,
political dissidents, non-Aryans, to name a few - by the Nazis, it
did more harm than help. Elie Wiesel, at the ceremony in 1995,
marking the 50th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, stated
it best that “It is true that not all the victims were Jews.
But all the Jews were victims.” In other words, eliminating
Jews were the central organizing principle for the rise of the Third
Reich. The president’s statement acknowledging the Holocaust
and not mentioning Jews and antisemitism is similar to making a
public statement acknowledging American slavery and not mentioning
blacks and racism. At worst, the statement bolsters an already
existing worldwide population of Holocaust deniers and revisionist
historians because it erases the unique stories of survival, bravery,
and resistance.
When
Martin Luther King was invited to address the American Jewish
Committee convention in 1958, he noted the significant similarities
between Jews and African Americans, both of whom experienced hatred
and prejudice.
“My
people were brought to America in chains. Your people were driven
here to escape the chains fashioned for them in Europe. Our unity is
born of our common struggle for centuries, not only to rid ourselves
of bondage, but to make oppression of any people by others an
impossibility.”
On
January 6, 2021, the day of the Capitol Insurrection, history was
made in Georgia. Rafael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, a black male and a
Jewish male, won their Senate seats in the Bible Belt. In the Deep
South, Jews could be lynched as black men were. The historic 1915
lynching of Leo Frank in Georgia caused many Jews to “become
acutely conscious of the similarities and differences between
themselves and blacks.” The Anti-Defamation League was founded
in 1913 with understanding the interconnected fight of battling all
forms of hatred.
However,
antisemitism is so pervasive as to be invisible and normalized. One
reason is that too often we de-historicize Jewish people from their
suffering. For example, I know of Christians who love Jesus but hate
Jewish people. I tell them it’s similar to some white
Christians revering MLK and Obama, but hating black men. I remind
these same people that Jesus was crucified because he was a Jew, and
Emmett Till, Trayvon Martin, and Ahmaud Arbery were killed because
they were black.
Another
reason for antisemitism is because racist Jewish tropes won’t
cease until we confront them head-on. I remember when Rev. Jesse
Jackson’s 1984 presidential campaign stopped in New York City.
He referred to Jews as “Hymies” and the Big Apple as
“Hymietown.” During Trump’s presidential campaign,
he was condemned by Jewish leaders for what appeared on his
anti-Hillary poster, the Star of David layered over $100 bills. Trump
barked back telling his critics the star was a sheriff’s badge.
Jews
become easy scapegoats in turbulent times like this one.
In
August 2017, at the “Unite the Right” rally in
Charlottesville, VA, white supremacists threw Nazi salutes, waved
swastika flags, and shouted, “The Jews will not replace us!”
Last
July, Rabbi Shlomo Noginski was fighting for his life against a man
who attacked him with a knife and a gun outside a Jewish school in
Brighton, MA.
In
“People Love Dead Jews,” the premise is that there’s
too little respect for Jewish lives unfolding in the present.
To
stop antisemitism in society, we must stop it in ourselves.
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