Jewish Group
Related: About this forumWhy does antisemitism persist? Because the world wants it to. - Clive Gillinson WaPo
Like most Jews, I have long struggled to understand why antisemitism has persisted for thousands of years, seemingly immune to changes in history, culture, politics and geography. How has hatred for the Jews thrived through good times and bad, across nations and continents, in societies where Jews were prominent and those where they hardly existed? Why has antisemitism endured among people of vastly different religions, races and ideologies, often adapting to fit each eras prevailing prejudices?
I have read countless explanations: the Catholic Church long portrayed Jews as Christ-killers; the Nazis as racial defilers; communists denounced them as capitalists; capitalists as communists; they have been vilified as colonial oppressors and as rootless cosmopolitans. Some think it is about jealousy of their perceived success. However, none of these theories explains the enduring nature of antisemitism. Antisemitism predates most of these grievances, and it has continued to flourish in societies that were literate and illiterate, rich and poor, religious and secular, technologically advanced and undeveloped. Even today, in what we like to think of as an enlightened age, antisemitism reemerged with brutal force following Hamass barbaric atrocities of Oct. 7, 2023. The intensity of anti-Jewish and anti-Israel sentiment that erupted worldwide followed soon after it was already there, just waiting for an excuse to surface.
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All the more paradoxical then, that despite the enduring nature of antisemitism, Judaism continues to be seen worldwide as one of the worlds great religions. It is frequently grouped with Christianity, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism faiths with hundreds of millions or even billions of adherents. Yet Jews comprise only about 16 million people in total, representing a mere 0.2 percent of the worlds population, with far fewer active religious practitioners than that. How is it that a faith so numerically insignificant still commands such attention, hatred and admiration? Even more curiously, in a world where so many people despise Jews and Judaism, why is Judaism still acknowledged as one of the worlds great religions?
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In his essay on antisemitism, Jean-Paul Sartre wrote, If the Jew did not exist, the antisemite would invent him. This captures the true nature of antisemitism: it may well not be primarily about the Jews, but about the need for an eternal scapegoat. Maybe antisemitism survives because societies continually need another to blame. And Jews, in their stubborn refusal to disappear, have remained the ideal target.
In the end, no theory can fully explain antisemitism, because it is not based on a rational cause. It adapts to each eras anxieties and insecurities. When Jews are poor, they are despised as beggars; when they are rich, as exploiters; when they are religious, they are portrayed as fanatics; when they are secular, they are dangerous radicals. In every situation, antisemites have no problem adapting their prejudices. Thus, antisemitism, if it is about the need to have someone else to blame, may well not be about Jews at all. Jews have survived because they have no choice but to survive, and in doing so, they have outlasted every empire, ideology and movement that sought to erase them. Perhaps antisemitism still exists only because humanity has so often needed it.
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Richard D
(9,716 posts)Is to read the comments in any post about Israel and/or Gaza. It's thick, it's heavy, it's racist AF, and it's loaded with antisemite tropes.