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Conferences Tackle Anti-Semitism

Direct from the Wailing Wall: | 10.05.2003 10:24

Conferences Tackle Anti-Semitism
Ruth E. Gruber
Special to the Jewish Times
Is the current global wave of anti-Semitism a virulent new strain of hatred, or an ancient prejudice mutated?
How deep does anti-Semitism run today and where has it spread the most? Why has Jew-hatred resurfaced, and how can Jews and others confront it?


MAY 09, 2003
Budapest

These are some of the questions to be debated next week at two high-profile international conferences taking place simultaneously in New York and Paris.

"These are rattled Jewish times," say the organizers of the May 11-14 conference in New York, titled "Old Demons, New Debates: Anti-Semitism in the West."

"In the aftermath of the terrorism of Sept. 11 and the terrorism of the Palestinian intifada, a shocking amount of anti-Jewish acts have been committed and anti-Jewish sentiment expressed," the New York organizers say.

The two gatherings come on the eve of a forthcoming book, "The New Anti-Semitism," which says anti-Semitism has become politically correct.

Author Phyllis Chesler contends that the new Jew-hatred is promoted by an unlikely coalition of Islamo-fascists, right-wing extremists, left-wing ideologues, pious academics, misinformed students, militant feminists and opportunistic European politicians.

It was the Sept. 11 attacks, which Osama bin Laden called a new holy war against a "Christian-Jewish crusade," that unleashed their "lethal activism," Chesler says.

After the attacks, she said, "we are all Israelis."

The New York and Paris meetings feature prominent participants from Europe, Israel and the United States. Both focus on the rise of anti-Semitism that started with the Palestinian uprising in September 2000 and was fueled by the Sept. 11 terror attacks and the recent war in Iraq.

The conferences tackle these issues differently, however.

The Paris conference, which runs May 12-14, is organized by the Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center in association with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO.

Titled "Educating for Tolerance: The Case of Resurgent Anti-Semitism," the summit groups policy experts and high-ranking political, governmental and religious figures.

The list includes Florida Gov. Jeb Bush; Israeli Cabinet Minister Natan Sharansky and former Chief Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau; Surin Pitsuwan, a Muslim and former foreign minister of Thailand; French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy; the archbishop emeritus of Canterbury, Lord Carey; the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Sergio Vieira de Mello; and the director of the European Monitoring Center on Racism and Xenophobia.

"We begin with a status check of the situation, then there will be sessions on how to counter anti-Semitism on different levels and also an interfaith session to pull together the good will of religious leaders," a Wiesenthal Center staff member in Paris told JTA.

The New York conference, sponsored by the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research at the Center for Jewish History, brings together pundits rather than politicians.

This gathering provides a forum for three dozen prominent writers, academics, journalists and public intellectuals to analyze the background and impact of what is happening.

"There is an urgent need to bring clarification to the phenomena that underlie this disturbing narrative," the organizers say in a package of material for the conference.

The aim is "to provide scholars, students and the general public with the context and analysis necessary to interpreting the new anti-Semitism and for deciding on appropriate reactions."

The conference will be Webcast live and later packaged on video and in book form.

Sessions include topics such as What's Old, What's New; Anti-Semitism in the Americas; Anti-Semitism, Anti-Americanism and Anti-Democracy; Anti-Semitism, Anti-Immigration, and the Problem of Otherness; Anti-Semitism and European Intellectuals; Jewish Responses to Contemporary Anti-Semitism; Anti-Semitism after the Holocaust; and Anti-Semitism, Anti-Zionism and Israel.

Participants include journalistic figures such as Christopher Caldwell, senior editor of the Weekly Standard; Roger Cohen, foreign correspondent at The New York Times; Jane Kramer, correspondent for The New Yorker; Martin Peretz, publisher of The New Republic; Hillel Halkin, correspondent for the Forward; and Mort Zuckerman, publisher of the New York Daily News and U.S. News & World Report.

Other figures include Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti- Defamation League; Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates; David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee; and Dutch historian Ian Buruma.

The twin conferences are the latest in a series of public meetings aimed at tackling a resurgent form of Jew-hatred that has been labeled the "new anti- Semitism."

A report released last month in Israel tallied 311 serious incidents of anti-Semitism worldwide in 2002, including 56 involving a weapon. This compared to 228 serious incidents in 2001, of which 50 involved weapons.

An ADL report in March said there were 1,559 anti-Semitic incidents reported in the United States in 2002, up 8 percent from 1,432 in 2001.

Last October, an ADL survey of Austria, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and Switzerland found that a median 21 percent of respondents hold strongly anti-Semitic views.

"These figures make unhappy reading," Dina Porat, head of Tel Aviv University's Project for the Study of Anti-Semitism, said when presenting the Israeli report. "Last year was the most worrying since we started tracking anti-Semitic incidents 11 years ago."

In April, the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam hosted its own one-day conference on the current anti-Semitic revival.

A museum located at the house where Anne Frank wrote her famous diary from hiding during World War II, the Anne Frank House includes a research and education center on racism and anti-Semitism.

The conference was meant "to place the growing problem of present-day anti-Semitism, here as in many other countries, more at the top of the priority list," said Jaap Tanja, one of the organizers.

The Anne Frank House "was not interested in a conference that only resounds with warnings," he added. "We are interested in teaching and being taught."

Before packed crowds, speakers outlined Europe's long history of "anti-Semitism without Jews" and noted how leftist, right-wing and radical Muslim anti-Semitism often converge.

Speakers said contemporary anti-Semitism seems tied to the Israeli- Palestinian conflict, from the anti-Semitism pervading Arab anti-Zionist rhetoric to the impact of new immigrant Muslim communities in Western Europe to the anti-Americanism among opponents of globalization.

In particular, the Internet, e-mail and satellite TV were identified as powerful new vehicles for disseminating anti-Semitic stereotypes and linking political extremists.

Since the 1990s, "there has been a dramatic increase in the number of home pages present on the Web from far-right groups and parties, which quite often also have ties to radical Islamic fundamentalists," said Juliane Wetzel of the Center for Anti-Semitism Research in Berlin.

Wetzel presented results of a wide-ranging survey of anti-Semitic incidents in the European Union over the past two years, which showed that most violent incidents were carried out by radical Islamists or Muslim youths who often were marginalized from mainstream society.

"Their aggressions are aimed against the Jews of their country because they use a worldwide common prejudice synonymous to a supposed Jewish world conspiracy which sees all Jews in the world as one group," she said.

 http://www.jewishtimes.com/News/3004.stm

www.jewishtimes.com/News/3004.stm

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Comments

Hide the following 10 comments

HIdden

10.05.2003 10:46

No evidence of the "jewish race hate groups" the article title mentions.

George's Bush


anti-semetism

10.05.2003 16:44

Opposing Sharon etc is not a 'new anti-semetism'. I think that the way the Israeli state and the Zionist groups claim to speak for all Jewish people really provokes anti-semetism as anti-semites can claim that its all Jews rather than just a small minority who happen to be Jewish. If you confuse opposing Israel with anti-semetism and go about accusing pro-Palestinian people of anti-semetism then in a way you're legitimising anti-semetism because the real anti-semites can claim its just a Zionist smear or something. All the Jewish conspiracy predujices etc are really annoying but only a handful of nuts actually believe them. The best way to try and stop anti-semetism would to be clear that its legitimate to oppose Israel, so the people who oppose Israel will be on the same side of the anti-anti-semites, rather than being pushed onto the side that is being accused of anti-semetism, next to the real anti-semites.

jabba


sweep it under the anti semitic carpet

10.05.2003 18:38

most of the article is uncorroborated fiction blended in with a few insignicant facts undoubtedly written by experts in propaganda/ marketing and with years of experience at media manipulation /control. it seems that they are stepping up their output just lately, a little crisis perhaps ?
The fact that more and more people are finding out that the israelis have become the new nazis might have something to do with it. Expert a lot more of the same probably getting more hysterical as the pogrom against the palestinians reaches it's climax ...
I don't think that sweeping all criticism of Zionists and Israel under the carpet is in the long term interests of the world wide jewish community.

meter


Martin Luther King Jr

11.05.2003 00:34

"Anti Zionism=Anti Jewish Racism", a quote by the great American Civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr

bassman


More importantly......

11.05.2003 01:31

Did self-righteous bunch-and-half discussed removing words like "goy", "goyim", "schwartzes" etc from nasty volcabulary?

Oft-used degoratory terms like those can offend blacks and every single everybody else who is not Jewish.

They are victims of persecution too.

Maybe these quick-to-play-victim types ought to help organise and finance a conference against those who are against everybody else!!!

New Yok, New Yok


Another bigger activity took place too

11.05.2003 01:39

Another bigger activity took place too
Another bigger activity took place too

True Jews protest against Zionism

ZioNazis Apartheid


WHAT IS ZIONISM?

11.05.2003 01:44

Judaism believes in One G-d who revealed the Torah. It affirms Divine Providence and, accordingly, views Jewish exile as a punishment for sin. Redemption may be achieved solely through prayer and penance. Judaism calls upon all Jews to obey the Torah in its entirety including the commandment to be patriotic citizens.

Zionism rejects the Creator, His Revelation and reward and punishment. Among its fruits are the persecution of the Palestinian people and the spiritual and physical endangering of the Jewish people. It encourages treasonous, dual loyalty among unsuspecting Jews throughout the world. At its root Zionism sees reality as barren and desacralized. It is the antithesis of Torah Judaism.

There is a vile lie, which stalks the Jewish people across the globe. It is a lie so heinous, so far from the truth, that it can only gain popularity due to the complicity of powerful forces in the "mainstream" media and educational establishment.

It is a lie which has brought many innocent people untold suffering and if unchecked has the potential to create extraordinary tragedy in the future.
It is the lie that declares that Judaism and Zionism are identical.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

Judaism is the belief in revelation at Sinai. It is the belief that exile is a punishment for Jewish sins.

Zionism has for over a century denied Sinaitic revelation. It believes that Jewish exile can be ended by military aggression.

Zionism has spent the past century strategically dispossessing the Palestinian people. It has ignored their just claims and subjected them to persecution, torture and death.

Torah Jews the world over are shocked and pained at this short-lived dogma of irreligiosity and cruelty. Thousands of Torah scholars and saints have condemned this movement from its inception. They knew that the pre-existing good relationship between Jews and Muslims in the Holy Land was bound to suffer as Zionism advanced.

The so-called "State of Israel" stands rejected on religious grounds by the Torah. Its monstrous insensitivity to the laws of basic decency and fairness appall all men be they Jewish or not.

We of Neturei Karta have been in the forefront of the battle against Zionism for over a century.

Our presence here is to refute the base lie that the evil, which is Zionism, in some way represents the Jewish people.

The reverse is true.

We are saddened day in and day at the terrible toll of death emanating from the Holy Land. Not one of then would have occurred if Zionism had unleashed its evil energies upon the world.

As Jews we are called upon to live in peace and harmony with all men. We are exhorted to be law abiding and patriotic citizens in all lands.

We condemn the current Zionist atrocities in the Holy Land. We yearn for peace based upon mutual respect. We are convinced that this proposed mutual respect is doomed to fail as long as the Israeli state exists. We welcome its abolition in a peaceful manner.

May we be worthy of true redemption when all men will join in brotherhood in His worship.

 http://www.nkusa.org/aboutus/whatzionism.cfm

pro-anti-zionists-semite-goy


Picture you want

11.05.2003 01:50

Picture you want
Picture you want

Absolutely not anti-Jewish

picture from  http://www.nkusa.org/activities/demonstrations/Montreal050703.cfm

ZioNazis Apartheid


bassman

11.05.2003 21:13

Sorry to disabuse you, my friend, but your quote is an oft-repeated hoax.

Visit  http://www.jewish-history.com/mlk_zionism.html for the truth.

It is possible to be an anti-Zionist without being an anti-semite - I know, because I am one.

Bri.

Brian


brian

12.05.2003 01:09

Brian, that quote from Martin Luther King Jr is 100% accurate. Your mind is so addled by your Jew hatred, that you are willing to accept any neo Nazi source as long as it supports your Jew hatred. You make Dr King's point--You mask your Jew hatred as anti Zionism!

bassman