All About Change - Deborah Lipstat - Confronting Antisemitism
Episode Date: April 17, 2023Deborah Lipstadt is an Award-Winning Author & a Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies at Emory University. Originally part I of a special series on confronting antisemitism, please join... us as we revisit this timely episode of On All-Inclusive with Jay Ruderman. And, we’ll be back in two weeks with a brand new episode. For decades, Deborah Lipstadt has been a leading figure in writing about and combating antisemitism. She is most well-known for defeating Holocaust denier David Irving when he sued her for defamation. However, Deborah’s accomplishments span far beyond the trial that made her infamous. She is currently the Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish History and Holocaust Studies at Emory University and recently received a nomination by President Biden as Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism. In conversation with Jay, they discuss the history of antisemitism, why there has been an uprise in hate recently, and what we can do to combat it. Please find a transcription of this episode: https://allaboutchangepodcast.com/podcast-episode/deborah-lipstatSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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Hi, it's Jay. Whether you're celebrating Passover, Easter, Ramadan, or just happy to see spring come
around again, I want to wish everyone a very happy holiday season. All About Change is on a short
break, so we're going to air a rerun of my conversation with Deborah Lipstadt that focused
on anti-Semitism. Unfortunately, it's still as relevant today as it was when it aired back in November of 2021.
We'll be back in two weeks with a brand new show.
Let me just jump right in and ask you the pertinent question of why is anti-Semitism different from other types of hate?
It's a great question, and I could go on for that about that for an hour.
But let me give you a great question. And I could go on for that about that for an hour. But let me give you a short answer. It's similar in many respects, it's a prejudice. And you know, prejudice,
think about the etymology of the word prejudice, prejudge, don't confuse me with the facts I've
made up my mind, I know what this person is when I see them coming down the block, two blocks away,
and it assumes everybody in the group is the same. So in that sense, it's a prejudice and
other characteristics of prejudice as well. But it's different. I always find that the best
contrast can be done between most direct, though it applies to other prejudices too, between racism and anti-Semitism.
The racist does what I like to call punching down. The racist looks at the person of color,
black person, brown person, Asian person, Asian origin person, and says, if that person,
if they, and I put they, if we were on camera, I would put they in very big air quotes.
If they move into air quotes, again, our neighborhood, if their kids go to our kids' school, there goes the neighborhood, there goes the school.
They're going to drag us down.
They're lesser than us.
They're not as smart.
They're not as talented, et cetera, et cetera. The anti-Semite looks at the Jew and sees someone, oh, they're
smarter than us, but not smart in a good way, smart in a malicious, a conniving way. They're crafty.
They're small, but they're all powerful.'re rich they're all rich in my very nice neighborhood
in atlanta at the height of the pandemic uh there's a catholic family lovely family terrific
family who lives in the neighborhood but their young kids were playing outside and some jewish
kids walked by with yarmulkes i think it was shabbat so maybe even they had uh shabbat clothes
on or whatever and the young kids said oh those are Jews, stay away from them, they carry the pandemic.
And when the parents who were standing near, the Jewish parents heard this,
they spoke to the Catholic parents, the Catholic parents were appalled.
But somehow the kids had picked this up.
And if you look at some of the untrue stuff about the pandemic, it's often infused
with anti-Semitism. So the anti-Semite punches up, the Jew is more powerful, and punches down,
the Jew is disgusting. But that punching up is the main difference in that the Jew is not just
to be loathed, but for the anti-Semite, the Jew is to be feared for what they might do.
So do you think that Jews are seen in some sectors by anti-Semites as the white elite?
That's a great question. Some see them as the white elite. Some see them as non-white. You
know, it depends who the anti-Semite is.
You have anti-Semites on the left.
You have anti-Semites on the right.
You have anti-Semites who don't know where they stand politically.
So I think it would really depend on the person who is the source of the anti-Semitism.
Let me contrast anti-Semitism on right and left, because I know that's of interest to you with all the other work you've done in this arena.
For the person on the right, on the far right, for the murderer in Pittsburgh, or the murderer in San Diego, or the murderer in Halle, Germany, you know, three of the recent incidents that we've had in Halle, but for a lock on the
door, a door that had been reinforced with funds given to that community by the Joint Distribution
Committee, that would have been the biggest massacre of Jews on German soil since World War II.
For all those people, those were all right-wing, far right-wing extremists.
For all those people, the Jew was other. The Jew was not white. The Jew is other. And not only is
the Jew other, but the Jew is the one conspiring behind the scenes to hurt white people. That's
what you heard in Charlottesville. In Charlottesville,
when they were chanting on Friday night with the tiki torches, Jews will not replace us.
What did they mean by that? They meant that the white supremacist, and this goes back
to a theory propounded already in the late 60s, early 70s, as civil rights laws began to change,
as there seemed to be an ostensible change,
and there was a change, not far enough, as we well know, in the status and in the position
of Black people in the United States. White supremacists looked around and said,
remember my punching up, punching down thing? These people, they're not smart enough they're not talented enough to be achieving this on their
own there's got to be someone behind them someone smarter than them and smarter than us someone
wealthier than them and possibly wealthier than us who is conniving who is making this happen
who is the pup they are the puppets who is the puppeteer the jew is the pup? They are the puppets. Who is the puppeteer?
The Jew is the puppeteer.
So the Jew for those people
are clearly not white people.
I believe the murderer in Pittsburgh,
as he was being brought down
by the SWAT team,
was screaming at the people
in the synagogue,
many of whom he had just murdered,
you will not destroy the white race
in other words you're not white you're something other you're mud people whatever if you go to the
left and i'm not talking about everybody on the left norm i told me i'd be on the right but i'm
talking about the extremes but if you go to the anti-semite on the left the jew is white the jew
is white the jew is privileged now there are many jew. The Jew is privileged. Now, there are many Jews who can pass
as white who are white, however you wanted to find, and I'm one of them, which is one of the
reasons why if we were on camera, you would see I'm wearing a Jewish star. I started to wear a
Jewish star just about a year and a half, two years ago as anti-Semitism began to skyrocket,
and I didn't want to pass. But for them, the Jew is white.
The Jew is wealthy.
Remember my template of anti-Semitic charges.
The Jew is powerful.
And the Jew can't be a victim because they're white privilege powerful.
So it really depends.
If you're looking on how the Jew is seen's you have to ask who is doing the scene
so let me ask you something about the left um where does anti-zionism fit into this i mean
obviously you know you can be critical of israel um but sometimes those lines are blurred and and
anti-zionism uh being against israel blurs the line and becomes anti-Semitic.
Where do you see that happening?
It's a great question.
And it's a very, it's a difficult question
because there's so much nuance
embedded in both the question and the answer.
And you asked it in a very nuanced fashion.
I'm not surprised, but more power to you for that.
As you say, you can criticize Israel,
you can criticize Israel's policies. Read Haaretz. Certainly before the current Israeli
administration, Haaretz was a bedrock of criticism of Israeli policies, and it still is to a certain
extent. Go to the Knesset. You've sat in the Knesset. I'm sure you've been in there.
certain extent. Go to the Knesset. You sat in the Knesset. I'm sure you've been in there.
And, you know, they're yelling and screaming at each other. They're debating and criticizing Israeli policies. Go to the coffee shops of Tel Aviv, of Jerusalem, of Haifa, you'll hear
criticism. That's not anti-Semitism. And I say that, I say that, that we have to be, we,
particularly we in the Jewish community, have to be very careful.
Because if we call any criticism anti-Semitism, then when we confront real anti-Semitism, nobody's going to pay attention to us.
So it's not criticism of Israelis' policies.
I would argue that someone who says, I don't believe in the right of a Jewish state to exist, that I'm going to do everything in my power to make sure there is no Jewish state.
I would say to them, excuse me, there's six million Jews living in that strange number.
But yes, that's the approximate number.
There's six million Jews living in that state.
Many of them, of course, people of color.
They would be considered people of color or non-Ashkenazi at the very least.
Where should they go? What should happen to them? Now, if they tell me they should live happily in a binational state, I would say, you know, give me an example of one Muslim state with possibly the exception of Morocco, where Jews and other religions live and prosper as minorities.
A, you want to say the Jews as a people don't have the right to a national identity in the
national homeland. And B, you're glibly willing to do away with the state of Israel without
thinking of the personal consequences. I would say if
that's not anti-Semitism, it's pretty darn close to it. So it seems to me in my 55 years that
I've experienced more anti-Semitism in the past few years than I have in the rest of my life.
Do you think that over the past few years, let's say three to four years, that there's been an
uptick in violence,
both in America and Europe? And why do you think that is? Because antisemitism has been with us
for thousands of years. Right. It's rightfully called the oldest or the longest hatred.
I'm not sure if the late Professor Robert Wistrich was the one who coined that term,
but he wrote a book calling it that.
You're absolutely right.
It's been around.
I describe it as a herpes-like disease.
You know, someone who regrettably has a herpes-like disease can be mild, it can be more severe,
but they know that at moments of stress, it often will surface.
At moments of stress, it will often come out. And
there are certain kinds, though medicine has advanced now, and certain kinds can be eradicated,
can be gotten rid of. Some lay dormant in the body. And I think in that respect,
there's a similarity to a virus that lies dormant in your body and can't be gotten rid of.
in your body and can't be gotten rid of. Why more in recent years? I certainly think that we've just had an administration here in the United States with a president who did some
good things, the Abraham Accords and things like that, but who also his political strategy seemed to be based in dividing amongst groups rather than uniting groups and being what might be called in Yiddish or in certain German, a cooking spoon, stirring up the pot.
I'm not saying at all that he created it.
Not at all.
It was there.
It was there long before, but it was given
a certain legitimacy, open expressions of prejudice, open expressions of racism, of hatred,
of anti-Asian sentiments were made okay by that. And conversely, as we began to get in the wake of the murder of George Floyd and even before George Floyd, other murders and other tragic incidents like that, there began to be those in the African American community and the anti-racist community who, as I said earlier, began to look at Jews and say, what are you talking about anti-Semitism?
Anti-Semitism isn't real. Anti-Semitism is made up. You're just using anti-Semitism because you
want to be thought of as victims. I have a friend who just experienced it in a high-level
conversation group in her major metropolitan city where a group of prominent people and
emerging leaders had been brought
together to talk about problems of racism. And in the course of talking about problems of race,
and someone engaged in pure anti-Semitic stereotypes, and no one in the group,
there were about 20 people there, no one in the group said a word. She tried to intervene,
but by then the moment had passed. that anti-semitism in part because
jews we recovered quickly you know it's sometimes hard for people to remember i know you have no
trouble remembering it that but 70 years ago one out of every three jews on the face of the earth
was murdered and uh we never replaced those that that third of our population. But on the surface to
the general population, it looks like, well, they had a tragedy, and they pulled themselves up by
the bootstraps, or they got others to pull them up by the bootstraps, and they've recovered. So
people when we say, wait a minute, it's still there, there's a failure to understand it.
I know of your interest on the campus, and that's one of the issues we see on the campus,
that the administrations of different campuses and the wide varieties amongst them
fail to understand that though the Jewish student student who comes into their office into the
office of the dean of diversity or the provost for diversity inclusion and whatever you know
whatever the title might be and says i was a victim of anti-semitism they look at this student
this articulate nicely dressed student um not on scholarship, comes from a solid home, you know,
et cetera, et cetera. And they say, this is not the victim of discrimination that I see
most of the time in my office. This is what, what is he, what is she complaining about?
They don't get it. Or the other thing that we see happening is when students go in to complain about
this they're referred to the office of religious life you know every every campus has some sort of
chaplain's office or something because they say we don't deal with religion go talk to them this
is a religious thing and the failure to understand that a kid a kid an adult a person a jew
can be an atheist can be antagonistic to any form of religious belief,
but has a very strong Jewish identity.
So it's immediately boxed into the box of religion, of anti-religious sentiment.
So I think, and on top of that, we've gone through a period of upheavals, the pandemic,
the massive migrations from Africa, from Middle East, from South America.
And if you remember my comparison of a few moments ago of anti-Semitism to a virus that is always present, when there is that sort of tension in society, when you have a proliferation of conspiracy theories,
it often ends up in anti-Semitism. And I just mentioned a term which I probably should have
mentioned earlier, when we're talking about anti-Semitism, is anti-Semitism is the only
prejudice that's a conspiracy theory. That's what makes it different, going back to your very first question. And the conspiracy theorist, I think it was Yair Rosenberg,
who wrote a very insightful little article or blog post, I don't remember what it was,
and he was very correct. I've thought about this, I've written about this, but he really nailed it
in his comment. He said, the conspiracy theorist may not start out looking at or for Jews,
but they're going to end up looking at or for Jews. Many conspiracy theorists start right away,
who is conspiring to cause evil in the society, who's poisoning the wells, who's bringing down
the German mark, the Reichsmark in the interwar period, who's doing this, who's bringing down the German mark, the Reichsmark in the interwar period,
who's doing this, who's standing in the back of the Jews.
But there are conspiracy theorists who don't start there.
But if you're a conspiracy theorist,
you're looking for someone who is manipulating things,
someone who works the devil's work,
their evil handiwork, incognito,
someone who is crafty, who is powerful, who is well-connected,
who knows how to manipulate the sources of power. And what am I describing to you? I'm describing to you the anti-Semitic template. You know, if you go back to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion,
You know, if you go back to the Protocols of the Eldists in it, were made Jews.
And it's supposedly the protocols of these group of Jews sitting, I believe, in Basel, if I remember correctly.
I try not to read it too often.
Figuring out how to control the world.
So if you're looking for who is controlling, who is creating this pandemic, who is profiting from this pandemic?
Maybe the Chinese created it, says the conspiracy theorist, but who's profiting? Who's behind big pharma?
Who's doing this? They will often end up at the Jew.
So let me ask you, following on this discussion about conspiracy theories, and you've written about
this, but let's look at the insurrection, the attack on the Capitol on January 6th.
All sorts of people up there, they come, they attack the Capitol, they're trying to stop the
election, a lot of anti-Semitic shirts, flags, so forth. What does that have to do,
the issue at hand, which was trying to delegitimize the election?
For the first time in our conversation, I'm going to critique your question.
Okay.
And you make the same mistake that hordes of people make, lots of people make. You are looking for a rational
explanation. You're a rational man. I know that. You're looking for a rational explanation
for an irrational sentiment. You know, it goes back again to what I was saying earlier about
prejudice. Prejudice to prejudge, to decide when I see a black person, when I see an Asian person,
when I see a Jewish person, when I see someone who is ostensibly gay, and I assume I know what
they are, it's ridiculous. I don't know, I don't know what their personal behavior and personal
beliefs and personal ethics are any more than than I would know from a white, blonde, blue-eyed person. So prejudice is inherently
irrational. And to try to find a rational explanation as to why these people might
have turned to anti-Semitism is almost to legitimize it. I'm not saying that you're legitimizing it,
but it's the conundrum we who study,
and I have spent my entire academic career,
over 40 years, well over 40 years,
studying anti-Semitism, teaching about anti-Semitism,
pondering about anti-Semitism.
And it's such a conundrum
because you are trying to fight and expose an irrational
sentiment. And you're trying to explain something that's irrational using rational means. So going
back to the insurrection on January 6th, there's no way of rationally explaining it. There were
Nazi symbols all over that place,
and there were also Nazi symbols in Charlottesville.
As you probably well know, there's a civil suit that's beginning
in less than three weeks against the organizers of Unite the Right.
And I looked at all the flags and all the paraphernalia
and listened to tapes and read transcripts and emails of the
organizers of the Charlottesville Unite the Right. It was the first rally that the right tried to
come together as a coalition. And the anti-Semitic Nazi ideology, symbolism, rhetoric was just
overwhelmed. So that when these are people who believe in a conspiracy,
a conspiracy against white people, of which Jews are not in their view, those people storming
Capitol Hill believe there was a conspiracy. And even though there was some Jews again, amongst
them, they were looking for someone who was manipulating this, who was controlling this,
someone behind the scenes. And for many of them, that was the Jew. So let me jump to the left and the criticism of Israel that we touched on.
There are so many conflicts around the world where people are being treated unjustly, being killed,
being forced into camps. What is the fascination with Israel? And why is Israel gets so much more attention on the left than other injustices around the
world?
And not to say that you can't criticize Israel, but it seems to me that there is an undue
focus on what's happening in a very small slice of the world.
Right.
You're absolutely correct.
I won't critique that question because that's a spot on
question. There is a disproportionate attention. If you look at the UN Human Rights Council
Commission, the number of condemnations they pass of Israel and none of China for its treatment of the Uyghurs or the treatment of the Rohingyas in Myanmar
or other places in which there have been genocides.
It's just striking.
That's not to say, I'm not arguing that everybody does it.
Therefore, prejudice or oppression or mistreatment is right.
I'm not saying that at all.
And I'm not saying that everything Israel has done is right.
It hasn't. No entity of people can claim that they are, as I said, in traditional Hebrew,
in biblical, free from sin. We've all done wrong. We're human beings.
And if any religious identity recognizes that certainly as Judaism.
But this disproportionate attention, you just have to ask why?
What is it about? has to be also equally devoted to mistreatment of the Uyghurs in China or the Rohingya in Myanmar
or wherever other countries, whatever it might be. People have their particular niche. People
are concerned about a certain disease. That doesn't mean they don't think other diseases
are dangerous, but you have your focus. But the disproportionate, as I think you put it, the attention to this one issue, you've got to wonder why.
You know, I was once in a town giving a lecture and I was free in the evening.
And the big university in that town was having a lecture, something to do with the Middle East, with whatever.
So I just picked myself up by myself.
Nobody knew who I was and went and sat in the back of this.
And then it was some things bothered me some things I agreed with afterwards people were sort of standing around
chatting and I was just listening because I really wasn't there with anyone and um but one group had
sort of was you know welcomed me in or whatever and I was just listening and one guy said oh Israel
Israel doesn't have a right to exist because it displaced another people
now I thought about this and I wasn't going to get into a debate whether it displaced another
people how many people were there etc etc but there were certainly more people who were displaced we
know that and Israelis Israel acknowledges that but I said that you say because Israel displaced or in the process of the creation of the state, people were displaced by Israelis.
That delegitimizes its right to exist.
Like I said, absolutely.
I said, OK, I'm a historian.
Let me put that in historical context.
And let's think of other countries that have displaced people in the course of their creation. And let's start with the United States of America and certainly Native Americans, some
Native Americans prefer to be called Indians, whatever term you want to use, or even slaves,
you know, America being built on slaves, they weren't displaced, they were taken, stolen
from Africa.
Or go to Canada and the First Nation as the indigenous tribes in Canada are called and
the terrible schools in which these were paid or go to Australia and look at the Aborigines or New
Zealand and the Maoris. In other words, I didn't talk about China and I didn't talk about me. I
talked about countries that are held up as shining examples of Western democratic countries.
And again, I said, I wasn't saying because it happened in the United States, Canada, Australia,
the British Empire, no better example than that, that that makes it all right. I wasn't saying that,
oh, you know, he beats his wife, but so does he. So that makes it all right. Of course not.
oh, you know, he beats his wife, but so does he.
So that makes it all right.
Of course not.
But I was saying, you don't, you may say America mistreated its native population,
which it did, no question about it, and still does.
But you don't say that that questions its right to exist.
Australia mistreated the Aborigines.
And in many cases cases they still are suffering
terrible, terrible disproportionate status in society
but you don't question the right to exist
so I'm just saying when you pick out
when you make Israel the singular focus
I have to ask why
what's behind it?
what's underlying it?
and maybe not in all cases but I would say in many cases,
it's anti-Semitism, maybe unconscious anti-Semitism, but it's anti-Semitism.
Right. It's a great point. Let me ask you, you've written eight books on the topic of
anti-Semitism. What initially drew you to this topic? That's such a good question.
A couple of things.
I was a undergraduate in Israel in 19...
I went to the year 1966-67.
And that makes me very old.
Not so old.
I was there during the Six-Day War.
And I remember that fear.
I remember that concern. I remember that concern.
I remember those graves being dug in the public parks in Tel Aviv, expecting death of hundreds.
And that was very, very telling for me and very, very powerful experience.
I even had a powerful experience before the war.
I even had a powerful experience before the war in April of 1967, when no one knew a war was coming, including the IDF and security services.
I was in Greece.
I went that we had a break in school and I went to Beirut and went by car, Beirut, Damascus, Amman, across the Allenby Bridge into East Jerusalem and then through what was called the Mandelbaum Gate, which was the way tourists crossed from one side of Jerusalem to the other.
And I had to hide my identity as a Jew.
And I heard people say horrible things about Jews.
And that was also a striking, striking moment. And the third piece, it wasn't one thing.
The third piece of the puzzle, so to speak, was a trip I took to the Soviet Union in 1972.
I arrived there the day after the massacre at the Munich Olympics.
And that was already an unsettling thing.
And that was already an unsettling thing.
And I spent time meeting with people who were called, as you well know, refuse-nics, Jews who wanted to leave the Soviet Union, but who couldn't get visas to leave, even though the Soviets said we allow reunification of family and we allow people to freely emigrate.
But of course, that was all, you know, a lot of hooey.
I met people who were suffering directly and experiencing direct anti-Semitism from the Soviet regime. And then, on the day we were supposed to continue midway
through our trip, I was with one other person. And midway through our trip, we were detained by
the KGB, separated, held for a day, questioned, we didn't know what was going to happen. And finally, a release that allowed to go to Romania. So I saw that it was momentary. I'm not comparing it in any
manner, shape or form to what a Refusenik experienced. But I saw that hatred up close
and personal. And it was very, very striking to me. So I think when I put all those things together, I began to think about,
you know, the Holocaust, I hadn't really experienced, or I thought I hadn't experienced
anti-Semitism in my life. I'll tell you a funny, not funny, haha, but sort of strange story.
I was sitting around with a group of Israelis. It was after the Six-Day War, because I stayed on in Israel for another 12, 13 months.
And they were talking about, you know, Aliyah immigrating to Israel and anti-Semitism. I said,
well, I've never really experienced anti-Semitism. Now, shortly before in the conversation,
I had mentioned something about a kid from a Jewish kid, a kid from certainly if
they came from a major metropolitan area, where there was a large Jewish population, but if they
were Jewish, they had to be better than the non Jewish kid to get into the best schools, that it
was clear that they had a quota, you know, this is in the late 60s it still was there it was there you know sometimes they'd
make it a geographic quota um oh we want to limit the number of kids from new york and from chicago
philadelphia and miami or something like that and los angeles and then i had said the jewish
kid to get in has to be has to do better on their exams and do better in their grades etc
so someone sitting there looked at me and said you you just said you never experienced anti-Semitism.
What's that?
And I was taken aback and I said,
oh my God, they're absolutely right.
So all those things put together,
became sort of formed the puzzle
that shaped my professional life
and intrigued me by this topic.
And then as I began to study it and to write about it and write about the Shoah
and then Holocaust denial, of course, I then had the unlucky experience
of being sued by a Holocaust denier.
And in that courtroom, I saw anti-Semitism up close and personal,
sitting 10 feet away from me, sitting
in the gallery with his supporters, being accosted in the street by people who were his
accolades, his trainees, so to speak. I heard sneering remarks in a British courtroom about
Jews and even little things like Elie Wiesel, he would always say Elie Weasel, or a description of Simon Wiesenthal at one point, hook nose, beady eyes.
It could have come out of the most classic anti-Semitic work.
It could have been a description of Shylock.
things together reminded me that though I have lived a very good life, blessed life, you know,
and had many fabulous experiences and the chance to teach and to write, that it's out there, that it's out there. And that, you see, ultimately, I also became convinced,
and I'm more convinced now than ever, that certainly anti-Semitism is a threat to the Jew.
You know, it's the Jew whose ox is bored.
They're the ones who are directly going to experience it.
But it's not just a threat to the Jew.
It's a threat to the democratic society, which we so treasure and which Jews and many others have so prospered in so many
ways and I don't mean only financially but in terms of achievements and contributions.
Other groups have not had that same experience but let's hope that that improves as well.
But hatred, you see anti-Semitism, this goes back to my earlier comments about
conspiracy theories. Anti-Semitism creates doubts about the government, who's controlling the
government, who's lobbying, who's behind it, the banks, who controls the banks, the media,
who controls the media, who's controlling the judges, who's controlling
even the protest movements of people of color, etc. But it creates doubts about the fairness
of society. And once you succumb to what we saw, going back to your question of January 6,
once you succumb to this notion of a conspiracy, once you feel that the democratic society in which you live is being controlled by others and things are being done unfairly, you either have reached that point from a root of anti-Semitism or you're going to come back to anti-Semitism. So if you value this democratic
society, this fragile democratic society in which we live, you've got to fight against all forms of
prejudice, but anti-Semitism goes to the roots of the democratic society, which we treasure.
You know, Deborah, it's an excellent point that I think, you know, more people need to internalize, because most of us are against different forms of discrimination.
But as an academic, as someone who's been a professor for a long time, why do you think
it seems like younger generations of Jews have a very different view of Israel than their parents?
Jews have a very different view of Israel than their parents. And I want to follow that up by asking about the growing BDS movement, and what it's about, which is boycott, divestment and
sanctions against Israel. And has that contributed to anti-Semitism? I think, first of all, for the
parents of many of the young people, they still remember an Israel threat.
In Israel in 67, you know, where people saying, send us the children, get the, you know, are you going to survive the Yom Kippur War?
And Tebbi, words that are code words for so many Jews about a much more vulnerable Israel. And even those many people today who say, yes, Israel is stronger,
Israel is better equipped to fight,
but they also know that there's a certain vulnerability.
And the younger people don't see that.
They see a strong, prosperous nation,
strong, prosperous nation. And in a very sort of black and white, you know, no nuance,
view of the situation, they see a wealthy, prosperous nation that to them, and that's I'm borrowing the term is subjugating another people. Would I want to be a Palestinian living
in the in the West Bank, Judea, Samaria, occupied territories, whatever you want to be a palestinian living in the uh in the west bank
judaic samara occupied territories whatever you want to call the place it's the same geography
same place google maps will lead you to the same place no um but uh is it a genocide of course not
and you hear that very much um so you you hear these kinds of things. And universities are inherently liberal places,
and they challenge the status quo. And that leads me sort of to the BDS movement.
I think that the BDS movement, when it was founded, and those who found that if you go
back to its originating documents, which are available online, you see a movement that whose
ultimate goal is the destruction
of the state of israel there's no question about it you know free entry of all refugees and by the
way when the only refugee problem in the world when you talk about palestinian refugee and the
many refugee groups of refugees where it goes from generation to generation is in this particular conflict, this particular area.
So, you know, essentially it calls for all intents and purposes the destruction of the state of Israel.
But that doesn't mean that every young person or even adult who signs on to the BDS movement is an ipso facto, an anti-Semite. And we do ourselves a disservice
by immediately deciding, oh, you're from BDS, you don't believe, you must be an anti-Semite.
For some people, and again, I'm differentiating between the originators and some of the
adherents, it's a way of trying to change a policy, just like a previous generation tried to change and successfully
helped change, they of course didn't do it alone, the discriminatory apartheid policy
in South Africa.
We're going to boycott you and this will force Israel, we're going to divest from you and
this will force Israel to change its policies vis-a-vis the Palestinians.
So it becomes a sort of code kind of word.
And there is, you know, students as smart as they may be
and on some of the best campuses,
they also sometimes can be like lemmings.
You know, I don't know if you watch the Netflix series,
The Chair, but you see that there,
where a inept, you know, white professor
does something silly in class, imitating a scene from a movie in which he's doing the
Heil Hitler, and immediately the students label him as a fascist. There's a tendency,
not nuance gets lost, nuance gets lost. And, and, and as you know i've been uh i've had the
privilege of being nominated by the president for a special envoy in the state department and
should i be confirmed one of the things i hope to do is to bring back an attention to nuance to an
understanding of the um terrible threat this, and try to inject some nuance
into understanding not only the threat that it is, but how we might fight it.
You know, Deborah, you mentioned quickly in passing, which I think is very important,
that you were sued by a Holocaust denier, David Irving, and went on trial. And, you know, I'm sure that was a very
difficult part of your life. I would encourage our listeners to watch the film Denial with Rachel
Weisz, because I think it's a very, you know, moving film, and she portrays you in that film.
I'm wondering, you know, what you would say to people if they want to take an active role in combating anti-Semitism,
what can people do? What can your average person do? Yeah, it's a great question, Jay.
First of all, we have to become the unwelcome guests at the dinner party.
I often depict, you know, you come for Thanksgiving Thanksgiving dinner we've gotten through the Jewish holidays
the next thing on the calendar Thanksgiving or Hanukkah who knows what comes first anymore
but you arrive for Thanksgiving dinner and your host or hostess or whomever meets you at the door
and says listen uncle XYZ is here and you know he's a flaming homophobe racist anti-semite whatever
it is please don't get into a fight with him.
We've worked so hard. We want it to be a really nice afternoon and evening. You can't do that
anymore. You can't sit silently by. You can't sit silently by, A, because it's wrong, what the
person is saying is full of hate and venom, and B, because you're telegraphing a message to the other people around the table,
particularly the young people, that it's okay to talk like that.
And I think the thing to remember, and if anything,
my studies of the Holocaust has taught me this, it all begins with words.
Now, being the unwelcome guest at the dinner party won't stop this pernicious
hatred. We need action on state government levels, state levels, educational levels. We need our
educators to recognize its pernicious nature, as I've said a number of times through our time
together. But the little things, when you hear something,
say something.
Now, that means you got to know what to say
and you got to educate yourself.
So maybe start by educating yourself
what it is,
what's wrong with it,
why it's dangerous.
That's why I wrote my book,
as you mentioned,
my most recent book on antisemitism.
I wrote a series of letters to a student and a colleague because I wanted it to be accessible.
I wanted to give people some of the tools for trying to fight it.
It's not easy.
Too often you will think of the perfect thing to say at 1 o'clock in the morning when you've had the incident the previous evening.
You'll sit bulk upright in bed and say, that's what I should have said in the moment just passed. But one day you'll get it right. And we need that. We can't,
we won't eradicate it. It's the oldest hatred, but we can try to control it and to make people
sensitive to its dangers. Yeah, I do want to encourage my listeners to read your latest book called Antisemitism
Here and Now, because I think it's a very powerful book.
And it is an important conversation to have, both with an imaginary colleague and student.
And I think it's very powerful.
Let me end by asking you, some European countries have considered Holocaust denial hate speech
and have made that illegal.
Do you think the United States should be going in the same direction as these countries?
I'm not a lawyer and I don't play a lawyer on TV, but I don't think we can because there's
freedom of speech and freedom of speech makes that very difficult.
But what I like to say is people, first of all, have the right to their own to say things.
Holocaust denial is not an opinion.
It's a lie.
I have a TED Talk on that.
Go look at my 15-minute TED Talk where I explore exactly that.
They have a right to speak, but we don't have to give them a microphone. They have a right to speak, but we don't have to give them a microphone.
They have a right to speak, but we don't have to provide a platform. I don't debate deniers
because they are haters and they are liars. I will talk to someone who has been influenced by
denial and who I think I can show the lies, but I wouldn't get into a debate. They're not an other side. And that's something
we have to recognize. Deborah, it's been a pleasure having you as my guest on All Inclusive.
You've made such an impact on many of our lives. And I know you're going to go on and continue to
have a tremendous impact on our world and our country. So thank you so much. I wish you much luck and
success going forward. Thank you, Jay. And I appreciate this chance. And you do a great job
on this program in preparation. I listened to a lot of the podcasts and you're good.
Thank you. Thank you so much. Take care. Bye.
Take care. Bye.
All About Change is a production of the Ruderman Family Foundation.
Our show is produced by Yochai Metal and me, John Zulu.
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I'm Jay Rudiman, and I'll catch you next time on All About Change. Or if I Thought not goodbye