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Israeli Academic
Extremism
David Solway, World Renown Poet, on self-hating Jewish
"Intellectuals"
The same is more or less true of
another Jewish luminary, Avishai Margolit, feted as Israel’s
“foremost philosopher.” A founding member of Peace Now, which should
tell us all we need to know, Margolit insists that Israel should
lift the “siege” of Gaza, forgetting that the so-called siege allows
thousands of tons of supplies, medicines and electrical power to
transit from Israel into Gaza, except when the crossings are closed
owing to Hamas sniper fire and mortar bombardments or when the
Ashkelon generator comes under attack. The great philosopher also
appears untroubled by the prospect of suicide bombers and guerilla
fighters sifting into Israel as students, laborers and patients.
Further, Margolit does not seem aware of the fact - he has much
company here - that Israel is under no obligation, neither domestic
nor international, neither legal nor moral, to victual and replenish
an uncompromising enemy. What other nation on the planet would
commit a folly of this nature? Margolit may be an acclaimed
“thinker” but he is neither wise nor street-smart; the fatuousness
of his proposals is exceeded only by the dangers they would unleash.
In short, Margolit is a typical Jewish savant of emeritus caliber,
crowned with laurels and showered with awards, dispensing nuggets of
pseudo-sagacity, and completely irrelevant.
Then there are the Jews who embody
the yetzer hara, the propagators of lies and harms. These are Jews
like Neve Gordon of Ben-Gurion University, famous for describing the
country that pays his salary, which he is apparently in no hurry to
forgo, as an “apartheid state,” and for having raised his arms in
solidarity with Yasser Arafat in his Mukataa compound during the
last intifida. Or Bard College professor Joel Kovel who has
published a book titled Overcoming Zionism in which he condemns the
creation of Israel, places the term Islamo-Fascism in scare quotes,
traffics in barefaced lies (“Israel’s bombing of ambulances,” its
deliberate targeting of “humanitarian aid workers and UN observers,”
its causing of ecological disasters, etc.), and opts for the
one-state solution beloved of closet antisemites. Or poet Aharon
Shabtai who in his volume J’Accuse vilifies Israeli soldiers as
killers from the egg. Or author Shlomo Sand, celebrated in Europe
for his recently published The Invention of the Jews which argues
that the Jewish “nation” is a late social construct without
historical or biblical warrant. Or Kenneth Roth, executive director
of Human Rights Watch, who solicits funds from the Saudis and
flagrantly tilts HRW reports to excoriate Israel and “parrot
Palestinian testimonies.” Or filmmaker Shimon Dotan whose
documentary Hot House sympathetically profiles Palestinian terrorist
Ahlam Tamini who murdered fifteen Israelis, eight of them children.
Or the leftist daily Haaretz’s literary critic and belletrist
Yitzhak Laor who champions the late, fiercely anti-Israeli
Palestinian laureate Mahmoud Darwish (who compares Jews to “flying
insects”) and considers Israel as a country fighting a “dirty war,”
a killer of “unarmed Palestinians.” Or Middle East prof Mark LeVine
who believes Israel needs to be saved from itself and that the Gaza
war was unjustified, and cites highly contaminated sources like “a
joint Tel Aviv University-European study,” Jimmy Carter, a Hamas
spokeman in the Los Angeles Times, the United Nations Relief and
Works Agency (UNRWA), revisionist Avi Shlaim, Haaretz Israel-bashing
lefties Gideon Levy and Amira Haas, and of course the redoubtable
Neve Gordon, to support his bias. Of despicables like Noam Chomsky,
Norman Finkelstein, Naomi Klein and Ilan Pappe, nothing more need be
said; the very names are sufficient.
http://frontpagemag.com/2010/05/25/the-jewish-intellectual-predicament-2/
The Jewish Intellectual Predicament
Posted by David Solway
May 25th, 2010
I’ve written on this site and
elsewhere about the curious phenomenon of Jewish intelligence,
so competent across the disciplines and professions—approximately .04
per cent of the world’s population garnering 18 per cent of Nobel
prizes—and yet so feckless and inept when it comes to taking
stock of its precarious position in the world and working to ensure
its own perpetuation. I’ve suggested a heuristic distinction between
specialized intelligence and general intelligence, with Jews
excelling at the former and lamentably deficient in the latter.
Jewish accomplishments in music, mathematics, literature, theology,
economics, science and jurisprudence are legendary. At the same
time, millennia of social and cultural quarantine must have their
effect on the sensibility of a people, producing a creature who is
always in danger of contracting that wasting disease which Ruth
Wisse in Jews and Power has diagnosed as “the veneration of
political weakness”—not a smart move given the bloody historical
register.
There is also a powerful strain of self-loathing and
self-betrayal in the Jewish sensibility, exemplified by the
personage whom Wisse anatomizes as “the ubiquitous informer, or
moser…For every Mordecai and Esther who risked their lives to
protect fellow Jews, there were schemers who turned betrayal or
conversion to profit.” This is as true today as it was yesterday and
the day before that, and as it is likely to be tomorrow, assuming
there is one. We can plot the long chronicle of perfidy along a
continuum from the iconic to the picayune, let us say from Cain who
slew his own brother to Josh Levinger today, an MIT lab technician
and member of the anti-Israel International Solidarity Movement, who
invented the “Boycott Toolkit.” This is described in a
press announcement as “a resource where users can generate lists
of specific products and companies targeted for boycotts [and]
locations of stores that sell each product.” To paraphrase Lee
Kaplan of Stop the ISM website, who has
written about this latest development, in today’s high-tech
environment there’s even an app for treachery against Jews. And it
was provided by a Jew. This is only another way of refusing to be
one’s brother’s keeper.
Being Jewish myself, I have tried, intently if not quite
successfully, to understand this mysterious and self-destructive
tendency that prospers in the Jewish soul. It should be immediately
evident to anyone who thinks about it that such indifference to the
sanguinary lessons of history—whether out of a benign identification
with the supposedly universal aspirations of mankind, known in
Hebrew as the yetzer hatov, or the malign inclination toward
defection from principle and unscrupulous opportunism, the yetzer
hara—must inevitably lead to self-immolation. For that matter, to
these traditional Hebrew terms we might propose a third, the yetzer
ba’arout, or the inclination to ignorance, which is equally noxious
and no less widespread. All three yetzerim invite disaster. In the
last analysis, the antisemite does not distinguish between Jews;
even those he regards as accomplices would not be spared in a final
reckoning.
There is a passage in Amos Oz’s
A Tale of Love and Darkness which makes this running together of
distinctions painfully clear. Referring to the Nazi cleansing
operations in the Polish town of Rovno, he writes: “the Germans
opened fire and slaughtered on the edge of pits, in two days, some
twenty-five thousand souls…well-to-do and proletarian, pious,
assimilated, and baptized, communal leaders, synagogue
functionaries, pedlars and drawers of water, Communists and
Zionists, intellectuals, artists, and village idiots, and some four
thousand babies.” As I commented in
The Big Lie, “the message is that we’re all incriminated. Warm
Jews, lukewarm Jews and cold Jews are equally at risk. At the end of
the day, the antisemite never stopped to take their temperature.”
It matters little which of the three inner dispositions or
yetzerim governs Jewish thought and behavior, be it the tropism
toward the “good” that issues in a kind of unanchored evangelism at
the expense of one’s own well-being; or the inclination toward
communal infidelity, the breaking faith with one’s threatened
collective for one’s own sordid advantage; or just plain ignorance,
lethargy and intellectual vagrancy. Removed from the social and
political dynamic of what historian Robert Wistrich calls “the
longest hatred,” hatov, hara and ba’arout lean alarmingly toward
the same destination.
Psychologist Scot Gardiner in his recent publication
Roots, Episodes, Cohorts conceives of good and evil “not as a
dichotomy but as a dimension”; those “at the ends of the scale” are
still related. The same is true of the three yetzerim, the good, the
bad and the ugly, which all have the potential to divert attention
from the essential issue: continuation. In the absence of common
sense—which a commenter to a previous article of mine felicitously
renamed “uncommon sense”—grounded in a knowledge of history and a
willingness to survey and confront the world as it is, in other
words, in the absence of non-specific or general intelligence, none
of the three catalytic propensities has much survival value.
To begin with, the unreflected practice of the yetzer hatov is no
guarantee of divine favor and certainly not of earthly longevity.
The temptation to embrace the high abstractions of universal
justice, ecumenical peace and various lofty idealisms of purpose and
belief seems endemic to the ethical component of the Jewish mind.
Perhaps generations of Torah study and Talmudic speculation have led
inexorably to a passion for remote implausibilities and the esoteric
delight in intricate or elevated fantasies. Being lost in thought
leads to being lost in the world, specific intelligence and notable
accomplishments notwithstanding.
Albert Einstein, to take a resonant example, was by general
consent a pretty smart guy and one of the two or three greatest
physicists who ever lived. His mind could traverse the mathematical
contours of time, gravity and space—his proper discipline—but when
it came to Israel and the hard thinking necessary for ensuring its
survival in the boiling cauldron of the Middle East, he was a
veritable dummy. Much like that dubious glory of the Jewish people
Martin Buber, Einstein believed that Israel should strive to
entrench a form of cultural Zionism in its communal soil. But he
repudiated Zionism as a nationalist enterprise, which required the
maintenance of defensible borders and a spirit of martial vigor and
self-assertion. Speaking at a seder in New York, as reported in
Walter Isaacson’s
Einstein: His Life and Universe, he told his audience that his
“awareness of the essential nature of Judaism resists the idea of a
Jewish state with borders, an army, and a measure of temporal
power.” A political innocent, he could not see that absenting such
facts and qualities, Israel might never have come into existence or
would have been rapidly obliterated once it had.
The same is more or less true of another Jewish luminary, Avishai
Margolit, feted as Israel’s “foremost
philosopher.” A founding member of Peace Now, which should tell
us all we need to know, Margolit insists that Israel should lift the
“siege” of Gaza, forgetting that the so-called siege allows
thousands of tons of supplies, medicines and electrical power to
transit from Israel into Gaza, except when the crossings are closed
owing to Hamas sniper fire and mortar bombardments or when the
Ashkelon generator comes under attack. The great philosopher also
appears untroubled by the prospect of suicide bombers and guerilla
fighters sifting into Israel as students, laborers and patients.
Further, Margolit does not seem aware of the fact—he has much
company here—that Israel is under no obligation, neither domestic
nor international, neither legal nor moral, to victual and replenish
an uncompromising enemy. What other nation on the planet would
commit a folly of this nature? Margolit may be an acclaimed
“thinker” but he is neither wise nor street-smart; the fatuousness
of his proposals is exceeded only by the dangers they would unleash.
In short, Margolit is a typical Jewish savant of emeritus caliber,
crowned with laurels and showered with awards, dispensing nuggets of
pseudo-sagacity, and completely irrelevant.
Then there are the Jews who embody the yetzer hara, the
propagators of lies and harms. These are Jews like Neve Gordon of
Ben-Gurion University, famous for describing the country that pays
his salary, which he is apparently in no hurry to forgo, as an
“apartheid state,” and for having raised his arms in solidarity with
Yasser Arafat in his Mukataa compound during the last intifida. Or
Bard College professor Joel Kovel who has published a book titled
Overcoming Zionism in which he condemns the creation of Israel,
places the term Islamo-Fascism in scare quotes, traffics in
barefaced lies (“Israel’s bombing of ambulances,” its deliberate
targeting of “humanitarian aid workers and UN observers,” its
causing of ecological disasters, etc.), and opts for the one-state
solution beloved of closet antisemites. Or poet Aharon Shabtai who
in his volume
J’Accuse vilifies Israeli soldiers as killers from the egg. Or
author Shlomo Sand, celebrated in Europe for his recently published
The Invention of the Jews which argues that the Jewish “nation”
is a late social construct without historical or biblical warrant.
Or Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, who
solicits funds from the Saudis and flagrantly tilts HRW reports to
excoriate Israel and “parrot
Palestinian testimonies.” Or filmmaker Shimon Dotan whose
documentary
Hot House sympathetically profiles Palestinian terrorist Ahlam
Tamini who murdered fifteen Israelis, eight of them children. Or the
leftist daily Haaretz’s literary critic and belletrist Yitzhak Laor
who champions the late, fiercely anti-Israeli Palestinian laureate
Mahmoud Darwish (who
compares Jews to “flying insects”) and
considers
Israel as a country fighting a “dirty war,” a killer of “unarmed
Palestinians.” Or Middle East prof Mark LeVine who
believes Israel needs to be saved from itself and that the Gaza
war was unjustified, and cites highly contaminated sources like “a
joint Tel Aviv University-European study,” Jimmy Carter, a Hamas
spokeman in the Los Angeles Times, the United Nations Relief and
Works Agency (UNRWA), revisionist Avi Shlaim, Haaretz Israel-bashing
lefties Gideon Levy and Amira Haas, and of course the redoubtable
Neve Gordon, to support his bias. Of despicables like Noam Chomsky,
Norman Finkelstein, Naomi Klein and Ilan Pappe, nothing more need be
said; the very names are sufficient.
Perhaps the worst of this lot, in terms of the empirical harm
done to the Jewish state and by extension to Diaspora Jews as well,
is the South African jurist Richard Goldstone, crouching like a
spider at the center of a UN web of lies. On September 16, 2009,
Goldstone tabled his United Nations Report on Israeli conduct during
Operation Cast Lead, accusing Israel of crimes it did not commit
while effectively exculpating Hamas for crimes it did. Goldstone’s
strategy was initially to establish a moral equivalence between a
country defending its citizens and a terrorist organization
deliberately attacking that country’s civilians. As one delves
deeper into the Report, the strategy becomes ever more insidious,
presenting Israel and Hamas not merely as moral equivalents but as
political incompatibles, that is, Israel is depicted as a terrorist
regime and Hamas as a legitimate government. Goldstone also implied
that Israel, but not Hamas, might be referred to the International
Criminal Court. In the
words of Alan Dershowitz, with reference to the breaking scandal
of Goldstone’s apartheid past as a white South African hanging
judge, “Goldstone is an ambitious opportunist…He has always put
personal advancement over principle.” With Jews like Goldstone, who
needs antisemites?
All of these “haraites,” if I may coin a word, have profited in
one way or another from their moral delinquency, basking in public
renown, cashing in on book sales and lecture fees, furthering their
careers and assuming positions of public or institutional
importance. Apostasy pays.
The constituency of the ignorant, the negligent, the indifferent
and the apathetic is no less vast. The third yetzer is ubiquitous
among the Jewish population at large but flourishes most
conspicuously on university campuses. Leading the charge of the
Israel-divestiture movement at UC Berkeley, to take a representative
instance, is the Jewish group Kesher Enoshi which, as former head of
the Intelligence Studies Section of the International Studies
Association Abraham Miller
writes, “partners with the virulently anti-Zionist group
Students for Justice in Palestine.” Moreover, “fully one-third of
the Jewish Studies program faculty signed a petition on behalf of
the divestiture resolution.” Even Berkeley Hillel has become
problematic, “showcasing…Israel-bashing groups.” Jewish apathy, he
continues, along with Jewish left-wing politics, promotes the
Palestinian narrative while prejudicing the Zionist future.
Similarly, as Daniel Gordis, president of the Jerusalem Shalem
Center,
says of Brandeis University’s Jewish students who objected to
Israel’s ambassador Michael Oren delivering a commencement address,
“one is struck by an astounding simplicity, and frankly, an utter
lack of courage to stand firm against the tidal wave of unbridled
hostility toward Israel.”
These students are enormously energetic in pursuing their project
of delegitimizing the Zionist experiment which is Israel, but they
are nonetheless totally apathetic in undertaking the quest for
truth, that is, the effort to disambiguate the historical and legal
facts stifled beneath the many layers of propaganda to which they
readily succumb. A moribund curiosity and a lack of enthusiasm for
real scholarship are infallible symptoms of intellectual lassitude.
These students are obviously bright in their way, no doubt excelling
at their studies, yet the simplicity of mind is also startling in
their failure to recognize how they are ultimately delegitimizing
themselves. Apathy and simplicity together constitute the third
yetzer, the inclination to ignorance, of which these campus Jews are
the chief carriers and the heralds of things to come.
These three categories of desolation will overlap to some extent.
Where does one locate the plethora of anti-Zionist Jewish
organizations, like J Street, the New Israel Fund, the Committee on
New Alternatives in the Middle East, the Union for Progressive
Zionists, the Israel Policy Forum, the Jewish Alliance for Justice
and Peace (Brit Tzedek V’Shalom), Rabbis for Human Rights, Gisha,
Peace Now, B’Tselem, the American Jewish Committee, Choice (Breira),
the Canadian Council for Israel and Jewish Advocacy, Independent
Jewish Voices, the Union for Reform Judaism and most recently JCall,
among hundreds of simulacra? Some of their members will be motivated
by what they regard as a higher vocation, generally of a leftist
stamp, others are in the game to advance their own narrow interests,
and still others have little idea of the consequences of their
lobbying. But like their assorted compatriots, they too are tarred
by the promiscuousyetzer brush.
I have presented merely a random sampling from all sides of the
yetzerdivide—scientists, philosophers, poets, sophists, casuists,
professors, students, organizers, the whole megilla. What they all
share in various degrees is a specialized intelligence that
generates proficiency in their respective fields. But they have
something else in common too, namely, an inability to connect with
the reality of a world that has rarely managed to welcome or
accommodate the Jew in its midst. What is missing here isordinary
smarts.
There are, of course, exemplary figures blessed with prodigies of
(un)common sense and worldly perceptiveness, from, say, the great
Halachic scholar Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman (the Vilna Gaon) for whom
secular knowledge, particularly history and geography, were
paramount concerns, and the founder of the Zionist movement Theodor
Herzl, to contemporary political writers like Caroline Glick, Sarah
Honig, Barry Rubin, David Horowitz, David Hornik and Dennis Prager,
among others. I suspect they comprise the exceptions. But for so
many Jews, both among the acclaimed and the general public, an
education in the ways of the world is asine qua non. And especially
for Jews distracted by the yetzerim—even the admittedly noble yetzer
hatov—such an education would enable them to adopt the necessary
strategies for survival, to wit, waking consciousness, group
solidarity and a belated awareness that the state of the Jews is
inseparable from the Jewish state.
How to acquire this education, this inclination to worldly
knowledge and pragmatic intelligence—let us call it the yetzer
hada’at, the most essential impulse of all—is obviously another
question entirely. But one thing is certain. Knowledge of the
temporal domains of history, politics and culture, and of one’s
place in the unfolding drama of human relations, is the ground of
perseverance. Only thus can Jews subject to the enchantments of
rootless exaltations, venal self-aggrandizement and congenial mental
indolence finally repudiate the derisory pageant of the foolish, the
contemptible and the ignorant. For moral and intellectual redemption
is the condition of communal survival.
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