superiority altogether," and "it is extraordinarily difficult for American Jews to expunge the sense of
superiority altogether, however much they may try to suppress it." What an American Jewish child
inherits, according to novelist Philip Roth, is "no body of law, no body of learning and no language,
and finally, no Lord . . . but a kind of psychology: and the psychology can be translated in three
words: 'Jews are better."'
49
As will be seen presently, The Holocaust was the negative version of their
vaunted worldly success: it served to validate Jewish chosenness.
By the 1970s, anti-Semitism was no longer a salient feature of American life. Nonetheless, Jewish
leaders started sounding alarm bells that American Jewry was threatened by a virulent "new
anti-Semitism."
50
The main exhibits of a prominent ADL study ("for those who have died because
they were Jews") included the Broadway show
Jesus Christ Superstar
and a counterculture tabloid
that "portrayed Kissinger as a fawning sycophant, coward, bully, flatterer, tyrant, social climber, evil
manipulator, insecure snob, unprincipled seeker after power" - in the event, an understatement.
51
For organized American Jewry, this contrived hysteria over a new anti-Semitism served multiple
purposes. It boosted Israel's stock as the refuge of last resort if and when American Jews needed one.
Moreover, the fund-raising appeals of Jewish organizations purportedly combating anti-Semitism fell
on more receptive ears. "The anti-Semite is in the unhappy position," Sartre once observed, "of having
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a vital need for the very enemy he wishes to destroy."
52
For these Jewish organizations the reverse is
equally true. With anti-Semitism in short supply, a cutthroat rivalry between major Jewish "defense»
organizations - in particular, the ADL and the Simon Wiesenthal Center - has erupted in recent
years.
53
In the matter of fund-raising, incidentally, the alleged threats confronting Israel serve a
similar purpose. Returning from a trip to the United States, the respected Israeli journalist Danny
Rubinstein reported: "According to most of the people in the Jewish establishment the important thing
is to stress again and again the external dangers that face Israel.... The Jewish establishment in
America needs Israel only as a victim of cruel Arab attack. For such an Israel one can get support,
donors, money.... Everybody knows the official tally of the contributions collected in the United
Jewish Appeal in America, where the name of Israel is used and about half of the sum goes not to
Israel but to the Jewish institutions in America. Is there a greater cynicism?" As we will see, the
Holocaust industry's exploitation of "needy Holocaust victims" is the latest and, arguably, ugliest
manifestation of this cynicism.
54
The main ulterior motive for sounding the anti-Semitism alarm bells, however, lay elsewhere. As
American Jews enjoyed greater secular success, they moved steadily to the right politically. Although
still left-of-center on cultural questions such as sexual morality and abortion, Jews grew increasingly
conservative on politics and the economy
.
55
Complementing the rightward turn was an inward turn,
as Jews, no longer mindful of past allies among the have-nots, increasingly earmarked their resources
for Jewish concerns only. This reorientation of American Jewry
56
was clearly evident in growing
tensions between Jews and Blacks. Traditionally aligned with black people against caste
discrimination in the United States, many Jews broke with the Civil Rights alliance in the late 1 960s
when, as Jonathan Kaufman reports, "the goals of the civil rights movement were shifting - from
demands for political and legal equality to demands for economic equality." "When the civil rights
movement moved north, into the neighborhoods of these liberal Jews," Cheryl Greenberg similarly
recalls, «the question of integration took on a different tone. With concerns now couched in class
rather than racial terms, Jews Red to the suburbs almost as quickly as white Christians to avoid what
they perceived as the deterioration of their schools and neighborhoods." The memorable climax was
the protracted 1968 New York City teachers' strike, which pitted a largely Jewish professional union
against Black community activists fighting for control of failing schools. Accounts of the strike often
refer to fringe anti-Semitism. The eruption of Jewish racism - not far below the surface before the
strike — is less often remembered. More recently, Jewish publicists and organizations have figured
prominently in efforts to dismantle affirmative action programs. In key Supreme Court tests —
DeFunis
(1974) and
Bakke
(1978) — the AJC, ADL, and AJ Congress, apparently reflecting
mainstream Jewish sentiment, all filed amicus briefs opposing affirmative action.
57
Moving aggressively to defend their corporate and class interests, Jewish elites branded all opposition
to their new conservative policies anti-Semitic. Thus ADL head Nathan Perlmutter maintained that the
«real anti-Semitism» in America consisted of policy initiatives «corrosive of Jewish interests," such as
affirmative action, cuts in the defense budget, and neo-isolationism, as well as opposition to nuclear
power and even Electoral College reform.
58
In this ideological offensive, The Holocaust came to play a critical role. Most obviously, evoking
historic persecution deflected present-day criticism. Jews could even gesture to the "quota system"
from which they suffered in the past as a pretext for opposing affirmative action programs. Beyond
this, however, the Holocaust framework apprehended anti-Semitism as a strictly irrational Gentile
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loathing of Jews. It precluded the possibility that animus toward Jews might be grounded in a real
conflict of interests (more on this later). Invoking The Holocaust was therefore a ploy to delegitimize
all criticism of Jews: such criticism could only spring from pathological hatred.
Just as organized Jewry remembered The Holocaust when Israeli power peaked, so it remembered The
Holocaust when American Jewish power peaked. The pretense, however, was that, there and here,
Jews faced an imminent «second Holocaust." Thus American Jewish elites could strike heroic poses
as they indulged in cowardly bullying. Norman Podhoretz, for example, pointed up the new Jewish
resolve after the June 1967 war to «resist any who would in any way and to any degree and for any
reason whatsoever attempt to do us harm.... We would from now on stand our ground."
59
Just as
Israelis, armed to the teeth by the United States, courageously put unruly Palestinians in their place, so
American Jews courageously put unruly Blacks in their place.
Lording it over those least able to defend themselves: that is the real content of organized American
Jewry's reclaimed courage.
Footnotes:
1
Gore Vidal, "The Empire Lovers Strike Back," in
Nation (22
March 1986).
2
Rochelle G. Saidel,
Never Too Late to Remember
(New York 1996),32.
3
Hannah Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil,
revised and enlarged
edition (New York: 1965), 282. The situation in Germany wasn't much different. For example,
Joachim Fest's justly admired biography of Hitler, published in Germany in 1973, devotes just four of
750 pages to the extermination of the Jews and a mere paragraph to Auschwitz and other death camps.
Joachim C. Fest,
Hitler
[New York: 1975], 679-82)
4
Raul Hilberg,
The Politics of Memory
(Chicago: 1996), 66, 105 - 37. As with scholarship, the
quality of the few films on the Nazi holocaust was, however, quite impressive. Amazingly, Stanley
Kramer's Judgment at Nuremberg (1961
) explicitly refers to Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes's 1927 decision sanctioning sterilization of the "mentally unfit" as a precursor of Nazi
eugenics programs; Winston Churchill's praise for Hitler as late as 1938; the arming of Hitler by
profiteering American industrialists; and the opportunist postwar acquittal of German industrialists by
the American military tribunal.
5
Nathan Glazer,
American Judaism
(Chicago: 1957), 114. Stephen J. Whitfield, "The Holocaust and
the American Jewish Intellectual," in Judaism (Fall 1979)
6
For sensitive commentary on these two contrasting types of survivor, see Primo Levi,
The
Reawakening,
with a new afterword (New York: 1986),207
7
In this text,
Jewish elites
designates individuals prominent in the organizational and cultural life of
the mainstream Jewish community.
8
Shlomo Shafir,
Ambiguous Relations: The American Jewish Community and Germany Since 1945
(Detroit 1999), 88, 98, 100 - 1, 111, 113, 114, 177, 192, 215, 231,251.
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9
Ibid., 98,106,123-37,205,215-16,249. Robert Warshaw, "The 'Idealism' of Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg," in
Commentary
(November 1953). was
it
merely a coincidence that at the same time,
mainstream Jewish organizations crucified Hannah Arendt for pointing up the collaboration of
aggrandizing Jewish elites during the Nazi era? Recalling the perfidious role of the Jewish Council
police force, Yitzhak Zuckerman, a leader of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, observed 'There weren't
any 'decent' policemen because decent men took off the uniform and became simple Jews»
(A Surplus
of Memory
[Oxford 1993], 244).
10
Novick,
The Holocaust,
98-100. In addition to the Cold war, other factors played an ancillary role
in American Jewry's postwar downplaying of the Nazi holocaust ~ for example, fear of anti-Semitism,
and the optimistic, assimilationist American ethos in the 1950s. Novick explores these matters in
chapters 4-7 of
The Holocaust.
11
Apparently the only one denying this connection is Elie Wiesel, who claims that the emergence of
The Holocaust m American Life was primarily his doing. (Saidel,
Never Too Late,
33-4)
12
Menahem Kaufman,
An Ambiguous Partnership
(Jerusalem 1991), 218, 276 - 7.
13
Arthur Hertzberg,
Jewish Polemics
(New York: 1992), 33; although misleadingly apologetic, cf.
Isaac Alteras, "Eisenhower, American Jewry, and Israel,» in
American Jewish Archives
(November
1985), and Michael Reiner, "The Reaction of US Jewish Organizations to the Sinai Campaign and
Its
Aftermath," in
Forum
(winter 1980 - 1).
14
Nathan Glazer,
American Judaism
(Chicago: 1957), 114. Glazer continued: "Israel has meant
almost nothing for American Judaism [T]he idea that Israel could in any serious way affect Judaism in
America is recognized as illusory" (115).
15
Shafir,
Ambiguous Relations, 222.