By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
In the wake of the terrorist attack on a kosher market in
Paris, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu asked French Jews to come
home.
I don’t particularly like that advice. I think it would
be a tragedy if centuries of Jewish French culture had to die out because Jews
were chased out by Islamist thugs. The French government agrees — for now at
least — and has posted armed soldiers everywhere Jews live and gather.
Still, what Netanyahu understands is that there is strength
in numbers. The more Jews there are in Israel, the stronger Israel will be. The
flip side is that the fewer Jews there are in France — or Europe or America —
the weaker Jews as a whole will be.
But no matter how you slice it, Jews are at a numerical
disadvantage.
People understand that in a democracy there will always
be strength in numbers. The politician who gets the most votes wins, the
constituency with the most voters gets heard the most, etc. This also tends to
be true of intellectuals, activists, and businesses. If China didn’t have more
than 1 billion people, Hollywood wouldn’t kowtow to Chinese sensibilities. And
if Duke University didn’t have a growing number of Muslim students, no one
would have thought to broadcast calls to prayers from its chapel bell tower.
And if there were a billion Jews in the Middle East,
HarperCollins would never have edited out Israel from its atlas. The publisher
was recently embarrassed by the revelation (first reported by the British
Catholic magazine The Tablet) that it had been selling an atlas “developed
specifically for schools in the Middle East,” promising “in-depth coverage of
the region and its issues” that nonetheless left Israel on the cutting room
floor. A spokesman for the subsidiary that put out the map told The Tablet that
including Israel would be “unacceptable” to their customers in the Persian Gulf
and elsewhere. And the customer is always right.
A similar attitude pervades the leaders of the so-called
international community. Tiny Israel manages to chafe the sensitive pinstriped
derrieres of the State Department and foreign ministries around the globe.
According to “realists,” Israel is a problem because the majority of nations —
and many Muslims in the West — don’t like it. It was this sort of thinking that
prompted French president François Hollande initially to ask Netanyahu not to
attend the unity march in Paris against terrorism. It’s also probably why
Hollande ostentatiously walked out on Netanyahu’s remarks at the Grand
Synagogue.
Realism itself is not anti-Semitic. But it’s often hard
to tell where realism ends and anti-Semitism begins, as when a French diplomat
in 2001 famously used a common epithet to describe that “sh***y little country
Israel” and blame it for all the troubles in the world. He added, “Why should
the world be in danger of World War III because of those people?” Many had
similar attitudes about Czechs and Poles before World War II.
Since 2006, the U.N. Human Rights Council has condemned
Israel 50 times. It has denounced human-rights violators such as Iran, Saudi
Arabia, and China zero times.
Nearly every conversation about the Charlie Hebdo
cartoons makes reference to the fact that there are 1.6 billion Muslims
worldwide, as if there’s an obvious correlation between the number offended and
the nature of the offense. This is less about manners and more about power
worship. A musical mocking Mormons (15 million worldwide) has been a smash hit
on Broadway for years. Yet according to many of the same people who leap to
defend Muslim sensibilities on cable TV, defending Mormon sensibilities marks you
as a rube.
In much of the Muslim world, newspapers frequently run
vile anti-Semitic cartoons depicting, for instance, Jews dressed as Nazis
eating babies. Perhaps if Jews outnumbered Muslims by roughly 115 to 1 rather
than the other way around, we’d hear more about those blasphemous drawings.
Anyone who cherishes democracy understands that numbers
matter. But the key word in “liberal democracy” is “liberal,” not “democracy.”
A mob can be of one mind on an issue, but that doesn’t make it right. And giving
into the mob simply because it is large and dangerous may be realistic, but a
better word for it is “appeasement.”
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