masthead

Powered byWebtrack Logo

Links

Britian’s Tsunami of Anti-Semitism

In my book Don't Tread on Me: Anti-Americanism Abroad, I relate a story about an elegant Englishman in a pinstriped suit approaching a stall run by Zionist activists outside the Marks & Spencer store on London's Oxford Street. He challenges them -- infuriated that Jews have come to stage a counterdemonstration against a noisy contingent of "Free Palestine" supporters who congregate every Thursday to protest the "Zionist origins" of "M & S."

As the "Free Palestine" contingent chants slogans about the ruthless Zionist Marks family, he tells me that he is sorry "not enough Jews" are killed when suicide bombs explode in Israel. He wishes "more would die" with each attack. I confront him, but his anger boils over and he stomps off into the night.

I have never ceased to be astounded by the level of blatancy that attaches to British anti-Semitism. Back in 2003, Tam Dalyell MP complained in Vanity Fair about the "cabal of Jews" surrounding Tony Blair and George Bush. Journalist Richard Ingrams said he never opened letters with Jewish-sounding names on the envelopes.

By the same token, for decades I was told by shy Anglo-Jews that I "provoked" or "imagined" hate-speak. That changed when the distinguished scholar and Britain's Chief Rabbi Dr. Jonathan Sacks said Britain was "in the grips of a tsunami of anti-Semitism."

Let me tell you what happened to me on the day I sat down to write this piece for the Jewish Exponent. I had been invited to a friend's flat for tea. As a neighbor got up to leave, my hostess suggested he join her weekly book club group. He said, "You mean the one that meets at that synagogue?" (He spat out the word "synagogue.") As my head spun, he embarked on a discourse that could have been devised in medieval England, traducing thieving, cheating, greedy "Yids." Was I a coward to let him depart unchallenged? Perhaps. The battle seems unwinnable.

The incidents seem endless. One evening this past summer, on the "First Night of the Proms," a major London cultural event, I was having a lovely time at a post-prom garden party when a young man in a baseball hat sauntered over to me. He proceeded to spend what seemed an eternity arrogantly defaming Americans, Jews, Zionism and Israel. This man could have been a Nazi.

"It's always me, me, me -- the Jews, the Jews," he shouted. It was impossible for me to get away from him because every seat was taken, and I was hemmed in. Meanwhile, his little girl sat down on his lap and glowered at me as he ranted in an endless stream of anti-Semitic invective.

And what does this man do for a living? He is creative director of one of the main British television networks! The abuse I nobly tolerated was astonishing in the context that he is in charge of output for a main channel watched by millions. It was astounding to me that a man with such high responsibility could harbor such rabid sentiments.

I had dinner the following Friday night with an elderly English friend who suddenly popped out with a stern question that everyone seems to ask me at the moment: "Carol, you aren't a Zionist, are you?" He asked this with such horror as if to say I might be a member of a neo-fascist party. I gave him a quick history lesson about Theodor Herzl, the Dreyfus Affair and émile Zola's "J'Accuse." He was unimpressed, muttering: "My dear, the Jews stole the Arabs' land, and you mustn't associate yourself with these ghastly Zionists."

Enough said. An uncontainable tsunami? I fear so.

# reads: 172

Original piece is http://www.jewishexponent.com/article/22056/


Print
Printable version

Tell us what you think


Not long after the massacre at York in 1190, England became the first European country to demand Jews wear an identity badge and the first to expel Jews. As the Church forbade money lending, and Jews were held out of nearly all professions, the often afflicted Jew still saved money and was allowed by Jewish law to lend to non-Jews for interest. King Edward, always in debt, pilfered from the small community of Jews with extortion, terror and taxes that were prohibitive, only to finally expel them in 1290 as a means to expropriate their assets in one fell swoop. The traditional inability of monarchs to balance their budgets or manage their anger, turned into a basis for hatred, revenge and envy of Jews. Little has changed. At the heart of envy is deep rooted self contempt and a sense of inferiority and that inverts, especially in the case of small minorities and Jews in particular. Like in a school yard, it’s so easy for the ignorant, troubled big kids to pick on the few geeks who do well in class. Despite no longer being a feudal society, envy hasn"t left the core of the Englishman, and neither has his enmity toward the Jew. The fickle accommodations and ambivalence of the English toward their Arab funders, their bourgeoning Muslim enclaves, and the current recession certainly won’t make conditions better for the Jew. Perhaps, quite the opposite.

Posted by Brian_007 on 2010-11-01 08:53:36 GMT


British anti semitism is certainly nothing new...the high level of vitriole this journalist is surprised to be experiencing pales into insignificance when one reads of the history of the relationship between Britain and Jews in Palestine before, during and after WW1 and in the struggles after WW2! Who was it that put a blockade on boats carrying Jewish refugees escaping certain death in Europe and moreover sent them back to their deaths?

Posted by Ronit on 2010-10-21 06:06:50 GMT