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jerry kleiner's avatar

Two Jews walk into a bar .....

One Jew took that mandatory high school 4 year self-defense course that he/she had to pass in order to graduate and can definitely kick ass if he has to. He/she has never tried to understand the anti semite. He/she has no desire to psychoanalyze the anti semite.

The other Jew went to a school that did not offer the self defence course and doesnt know how to fight and protect him/herself. However, he/she has read so much about anti semitism and about the different kinds of anti semites blah blah blah.

Anybody want to guess who the anti semite will not bother with?

Bingo!

That was the easy part. Now comes the very hard part.

Can you get all the Yeshivas, Jewish Schools etc. unified to offer this 4 year defense course that is mandatory?

ahima, papa j

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Shelah Horvitz's avatar

I think of Einat Wilf's contention that the conspiracy theory that is antisemitism is largely the projection of a society's unresolved issues onto the scapegoat, hence South Africa accuses Israel of apartheid, progressives in the US accuse Israel of colonialism (excuse me? every single non-Native American is by definition a colonialist) and racism (because we're lily-white, no we're only white-presenting, no half the Jews in Israel are brown or black, no they're all whiter than white), the list goes on and on. Facts don't matter if they contradict the narrative.

As to "the Jew is an idea not a person," no, I've had a few close ex-friends, people who knew me well and who said repeatedly that they loved me, say straight to my face, looking in my eyes with this daring expression as if they're being heroic by finally — FINALLY — telling the Real Truth, that Israel or the Jews are the source of all evil, once someone they respect (e.g., Chris Hedges or some fundamentalist pastor or the UN) tells them all their problems are due to the Jooz. And this of course is worse if they then quote an As a Jew to prove that oh no, *they're* not antisemitic, a Real Jew said these things. Giving The Jew a face doesn't deflect antisemitism, I've encountered this since I was a child.

I think you're onto something when you talk about people needing to explain to themselves why they have had difficulties in life, and offloading personal responsibility onto a scapegoat can be such a relief. Offloading collective responsibility for unresolved societal ills plays the same role; Wilf notes that having the Jooz around to accuse allows a society to continue to avoid addressing their problems. It all comes down to a kind of cowardice and refusal to do what is necessary to change the problem.

There is also the historical pattern that a leader will blame the Jooz to deflect hostility and maintain his own hegemony when he's hated for something he's done or not done. Perhaps he has the added incentive of reneging on paying debts owed to Jews, or collecting the assets of the Jews he eliminated when he has inflamed the situation to a flashpoint of violence, see Edward I of England but it's happened so many times. Right now in the US, both far left and far right are constructing different narratives to offload personal responsibility for personal and societal ills, and these two groups that abhor each other meet with agreement that hey all of your problems must be due to the all-powerful Jews. This has happened pretty much every 50 years for 2500 years and we haven't figured out a strategy to stop it yet. I think that's because anything we say interferes with the nice pat worldview that clears people of the necessity to change things or accept that they caused their own problems, so we're not heard.

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