By Ben Shapiro
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
This week, The New
York Times Review of Books printed an interview with Alice Walker, Pulitzer
Prize–winning author of The Color Purple.
The interviewer asked Walker to list the books on her nightstand. Most were
unobjectionable. One was not: a book titled And
the Truth Shall Set You Free, by David Icke. Walker described the book
thusly: “In Icke’s books there is the whole of existence, on this planet and
several others, to think about. A curious person’s dream come true.”
As Yair Rosenberg of Tablet
noted, this is a bit of problem. As it turns out, Icke is a rabid anti-Semite,
and And the Truth Shall Set You Free
is a tome of vitriolic Jew-hating garbage. Rosenberg explains that in the book,
“The word ‘Jewish’ appears 241 times, and the name ‘Rothschild’ is mentioned
374 times. These references are not compliments.” The book itself suggests that
the infamous Protocols of the Elders of
Zion, an anti-Semitic hoax tract written in the late 1800s, was indeed
genuine.
The Times
itself has received the lion’s share of the blame for Walker’s reference. But
the more interesting question is why Walker herself has been able to escape
censure. As Rosenberg points out, Walker has repeatedly praised Icke’s work,
has written openly anti-Semitic poetry (“Simply follow the trail of ‘The /
Talmud’ as its poison belatedly winds its way / Into our collective
consciousness”), and has personally refused to allow The Color Purple to be translated into Hebrew. Yet she is still a
well-respected member of the leftist intelligentsia.
And Walker isn’t alone. In fact, anti-Semitism is often
accepted by prominent black intellectuals on the left. Marc Lamont Hill
trafficked in anti-Semitism for years before losing his CNN contributorship
over preaching a Hamas slogan before the United Nations. Cornel West suggested
that Israel was born because “Jews jumped out of the burning buildings of
Europe in a Jew-hating Europe led by a gangster named Hitler, right? They
landed on the backs of some Arabs in the 1940s.” Toni Morrison explained that
“a lot of black people . . . believe that Jews in this country, by and large,
have become white. They behave like white people rather than Jewish people.”
James Baldwin suggested the same thing, explaining, “The Jew profits from his
status in America, and he must expect Negroes to distrust him for it. The Jew
does not realize that the credential he offers, the fact that he has been
despised and slaughtered, does not increase the Negro’s understanding. It
increases the Negro’s rage.”
And these are the intellectuals. A bevy of black
“community leaders” have been similarly anti-Semitic, and survived and thrived.
Rabid anti-Semite Louis Farrakhan was still welcome at Aretha Franklin’s
funeral, where he hobnobbed with Bill Clinton. Al Sharpton, whose anti-Semitic
record includes helping to incite a riot against Jews in Crown Heights in 1991
and an arson in 1995, has a show on MSNBC, and Democratic presidential
candidates come to pay him homage. And while we tend to downplay it now, it’s
rather telling that Barack Obama sat in the pews of anti-Semitic pastor
Jeremiah Wright for two decades.
It’s a mark of the Left’s intersectional priorities that
anti-Semitism from minority groups has been so widely ignored. It is a simple
fact that anti-Semitism in the United States does not break down evenly by
race. An Anti-Defamation League survey in 2016 found that 23 percent of black Americans
had “anti-Semitic propensities,” as measured by an eleven-factor survey,
compared with 10 percent of white Americans. That disproportion has been the
norm since the ADL began the survey in 2007. Similar disproportionate
anti-Semitism exists in the Hispanic community as well. But none of that draws
any media coverage. As the New York Times
admitted in its survey of anti-Semitic violence in New York City, “bias
stemming from longstanding ethnic tensions in the city presents complexities
that many liberals have chosen simply to ignore.”
Ignoring anti-Semitism depending on the perpetrator’s
ethnicity or background is simply lending cover to anti-Semitism. Alice Walker
should be just as toxic for her anti-Semitism as David Duke is for his. After
all, they push the same message when it comes to Jews. Failing to acknowledge
as much lends credence to the anti-Semitic idea that Jews have somehow earned
their hatred from certain groups.
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