Over the past year many words have crept into
our day-to-day language…. “Pandemic”, “lockdown”, “masking” “social distancing”
and “PPE” are some of the words that we used infrequently or did not know. When
asked about whether the Corona virus will ever go away, scientists often
respond that it will be “endemic”. I’m pretty sure unless you are an
“epidemiologist” -- another frequently heard word these days -- you
might not have known what “endemic” means. According to Wikipedia,
“an infection is said to be endemic in a population when that infection is
constantly maintained at a baseline level in a geographic area without external
inputs”. Merriam Webster defines “endemic” as “characteristic of or prevalent
in a particular field, area, or environment”.
By these definitions I think it is safe to
say that “antisemitism” is endemic to Western Civilization. It is always there,
under the surface, and it flares up now and then. Last February two disturbing incidents
appeared on network television. In the first, Saturday Night Live aired a
news parody where comedian Michael Che, playing a newscaster, reported that
Israel had vaccinated half of its population and then quickly added [quote],
“I’m going to guess it's the Jewish half,”. In the second incident, NBC aired a
scene of the program “Nurses” in which a young Orthodox man, named “Israel”,
complete with payus, lies in a hospital bed. His father, dressed in the black
worn by the Ultra-Orthodox, is standing by his bed as a young African American
doctor explains that the young man needs a bone graft for his leg. The doctor
explains that the bone graft would come from a deceased donor. To which his
Israel’s father responds with consternation, “A dead goyim leg … from an
Arab, a woman,” -- to which a female nurse responds, under her breath:
“Or, God forbid, an Arab woman.”
I needn’t tell you how these two scenes portray Jews as racist, hateful, and only concerned with themselves, three well-worn anti-Semitic tropes. These did not appear in some dark place on the internet. They appeared on national television only weeks ago!
Yes, antisemitism is indeed endemic, but as
you can see from the above two examples, its target has shifted over the past
50 years. The target is now Israel. Note how the young man in the hospital bed
is named “Israel”. Not so subtle. And of course, the Saturday Night Live
episode is a direct reference to Israel.
The endemic nature of anti-Semitism can be
the only possible reason that Israel, of all nations in the world, is singled
out for the harshest of criticisms, the harshest of judgements. The creation of
the State of Israel is the culmination of the two thousand year old dream of
the Jewish people -- to return to our ancestral homeland. The Jewish
people are the indigenous people of the Land of Israel, returning home
after 2000 years of exile. Yet we are often maliciously described as
“colonizers” displacing the “rightful owners” of the land. Israel is the only
democracy in the Middle East, and one of the great democracies of the world.
Yet Israel is frequently attacked as being the worst violators of human rights.
Israel was officially recognized by the UN as an independent nation in 1948.
Yet it is the only nation in the world whose “right to exist” is constantly questioned.
The state was founded after the Holocaust, in which 6.000.000 Jews were
murdered and the entire Jewish civilization in Europe was obliterated. Yet
Israel is regularly accused of being worse than the Nazis. Israel has suffered
thousands of casualties because of terrorism. Yet Israel is condemned whenever
she defends herself.
Scientists tell us that the Coronavirus is
here to stay. It can be controlled, but it will not go away. The Pandemic
nature of the disease will subside, but it will always be endemic. Anti-Semitism
is the same. When Theodore Herzl conceived of the idea of a Jewish State, he
hoped that it would solve the “Jewish problem” -- that antisemitism would be
eradicated if Jews could become a normal people in a normal nation state.
He was wrong, because anti-Semitism isn’t a “Jewish problem”. It is a “human
problem”, a problem of Western Civilization. Jews cannot solve the problem
because Jews do not cause the problem. It cannot be fixed by a change in our
behavior, or even the establishment of a Jewish state. The root of antisemitism
lies elsewhere. It lies with those who hate, not with those who are hated.
Nevertheless, the establishment of the
State of Israel in 1948 is the most important event in Jewish history in
the last 2000 years. No longer would Jews have to endure the powerlessness we
experienced living in the Diaspora. No longer would we live or die at the whim
of a king, a queen, an emperor. No longer would Jews suffer the torrents
of humiliation, hatred and violence in silence. No longer would we be merely a
tolerated minority in the lands of our dispersion. The establishment of the
state of Israel meant a return to Jewish dignity and power. Jews could now
determine their own fate. If Jews were attacked, Jews could hit back. For the
first time in 2000 years, Jews could protect themselves, defend
themselves.
Last Thursday was Yom Hashoah U gevorah,
Holocaust Memorial Day in Israel. We will commemorate the day with our
Holocaust Memorial program this Sunday at 10 am. CBS member Paul Bloom will be
our featured speaker. This coming Wednesday, April 14, Israel celebrates Yom
Hazikaron. This day commemorates all those in the Israeli military who lost
their lives in the struggle that led to the establishment of the State of
Israel and for all military personnel who fell while on active duty in Israel’s
armed forces. The following day is Yom Ha-atma-ut, Israel Independence Day.
These three holidays -- Yom Ha-shoah, Yom Ha-zikaron and Yom Ha-atz-mah-ut --
are the first new holidays on the Jewish calendar in 2000 years. They mark the
dawn of a new era in Jewish history. The message is clear. Out of the destruction
of the Holocaust, through the sacrifice of its people, a Jewish nation has
risen again to begin a new, hopeful, and exciting chapter of the Jewish
saga.
Shabbat Shalom
Photo Credit Lavi Perchik on Unsplash
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