By Philip Klein
Monday, October 17, 2022
This is the season in which most of the major Jewish
holidays are clustered together (today and tomorrow are also a holiday, Shemini
Atzeret/Simchat Torah, during which we celebrate the Torah upon the conclusion
of the annual cycle of reading it). This year, the holidays have coincided with
some colorful discourse on Jews — about what we control, whom we are ungrateful
toward, how we spread sexual depravity to Christians, and how annoying it is
that you just can’t talk about Jews anymore without somebody raising a fuss.
To elaborate a bit further, the most recent round of
Jewish discourse in popular culture seems to have begun when Kanye West, in an
interview with Tucker Carlson, surmised that Jared Kushner made a peace deal between
Israel and Arab states for financial benefits, saying, “I just think that’s
what they’re about is making money.” West said a lot in that interview, so it
was easy enough to chalk it up to some beef he had with the Kushner family, and
perhaps it would have been forgotten amid all the other nutty stuff West says.
But just to leave no doubt that he did in fact have a problem not only with
Kushner but with the Jews, he later tweeted that he was going to go “death con
3 on Jewish people.” In the tweet, he pushed the Black Hebrew Israelite narrative that
claims that they are the true Jews, and then complained, “You guys have toyed
with me and tried to black ball anyone whoever opposes your agenda.”
Candace Owens, either because she doesn’t know what she
is talking about or because she is simply reluctant to burn bridges with
West, declared, “If you are an honest person, you did not think
this tweet was anti-Semitic.” She then set up the straw man that “this is not
representing the beginning of a Holocaust” and suggested that critics were
behaving as if West had ordered a military strike on Israel. She then lamented, “You can’t even say the word Jewish without
people getting upset.” Of course, back on planet earth, nobody was talking
about a Kanye-ordered Holocaust; people were just pointing out that the Black
Hebrew Israelite narrative (which erases the Jewish religion from the origins
of the Jewish people) coupled with claiming that Jews “black ball anyone
whoever opposes your agenda” is antisemitic language. It might be news to
Owens, but there are plenty of things that stop short of the actual Holocaust
that are nonetheless antisemitic. And yes, people might get a bit touchy if
somebody decides to use his celebrity platform to target the Jewish religion
and perpetuate the idea of a nefarious Jewish plot.
Just in case there was any doubt, however, West
gave another interview in which he said, “Jewish people
have owned the black voice. Whether it’s about us wearing a Ralph Lauren shirt,
or all of us being signed to a record label, or having a Jewish manager, or
being signed to a Jewish basketball team, or doing a movie on a Jewish platform
like Disney.” He then said, “They came into money through the lawyers,” claimed
the Twelve Tribes of Israel were black, and riffed about “Jewish business
secrets.”
Not to leave room to be outdone, he recounted that Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson have
sex by the fireplace “to honor their grandmother.” And this is all because of —
you guessed it — “Jewish Zionists” who are “about that life” and who are
“telling this Christian woman, that has four black children, to put that out as
a message in the media.”
While the Kanye West drama has been playing out, Donald
Trump decided it was a good time to drop this “truth” about Jews:
While Trump’s statement is not on the same level as
West’s, it is also not the ranting of a rapper with a history of mental-health
issues but, rather, a message from a former president who remains the most
influential Republican, as well as the front-runner for the 2024 GOP
nomination. Trump has previously let American Jews know that he thinks they are
ungrateful for his strong pro-Israel record. My guess is that he has been among
Jewish supporters who have vented about other Jews being liberal and
anti-Israel. American Jews are Americans, and Israel is a foreign country to
them, and, as such, they have different views about Israel and different levels
of interest in Israel. But it is not Trump’s place to swoop in, because of his
own bitterness about his 2020 election defeat, and start attacking American
Jews for being insufficiently appreciative of him and Israel. To offer a
parallel, I happen to know many conservative Catholics who have a lot of
complaints about the current leadership of the church. But if I decided to hop
on Twitter at a random moment and start ranting about Vatican II, Pope Francis,
and American Catholics, I bet it wouldn’t be received too well.
There are 15 million Jews out of 8 billion people on the planet, meaning we represent less than one-fifth of 1 percent of the world population. Yet we are the subject of a wildly disproportionate amount of hate crimes, conspiracy theories, and Internet hot takes. It remains true that there are plenty of people in the world who are, in fact, out to get us. So maybe just do us a favor. If you’re a celebrity or public figure with a very large platform, and you feel the itch to get something off your chest about the Jews, how about just don’t.
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