Tel Aviv University
Ran HaCohen calls Abraham Foxman, The director of the
Anti-Defamation League, “hypocrite” and “racist” for defending
Yisrael Beiteinu’s “No Loyalty – No Citizenship” bill; has a bone to
pick with ADL’s recent survey and calls it “biased”
If there
were a Nobel Prize for Hypocrisy, Abraham Foxman would have been a
great candidate. ... What does Abe Foxman have to say about that?
Well, Foxman actually
defends Lieberman, describing him as harmless: “He’s not saying
expel them. He’s not saying punish them.” Not at all: he’s just
demonizing them and threatening to deprive them of their
citizenship. No big deal. ... And Foxman criticizing one form of
racism while supporting another is despicable.
http://original.antiwar.com/hacohen/2009/02/17/abe-foxmans-anti-semitic-pandemic/
Abe
Foxman’s ‘Anti-Semitic Pandemic’
Posted By Ran HaCohen
February 17, 2009
If there were a Nobel Prize for
Hypocrisy, Abraham Foxman would have been a great candidate. The
director of the Anti-Defamation League, who
once interpreted even International Holocaust Remembrance Day as
an expression of the Gentiles’ latent desire to see Jews dead, has
published a
new survey on anti-Semitism in Europe [.pdf]. One of the
assertions respondents were asked to agree or disagree with was
“Jews are more loyal to Israel than to this country”; an affirmative
response was considered indicative of anti-Semitism.
Indeed, doubting the loyalty of a
minority is not nice. And the fact that many Zionists would
affirm that assertion, or at least expect a Jew to be more loyal to
Israel than to his country of residence, is a weak excuse for
agreeing with such a characterization of all Jews. But let’s put
things in perspective: even if about half of Europeans say it’s
“probably true” that Jews are more loyal to
Israel, not a single European party is
pledging to revoke Jews’ citizenship unless they prove their
loyalty. I haven’t heard of such a demand toward any other native
minority either, in Europe or elsewhere. Even the late Joerg Haider
did not go that far.
There is one exception, of course. The
foremost campaign slogan of
Avigdor Lieberman’s Yisrael Beiteinu Party has been “No Loyalty
– No Citizenship,” which is aimed at
Israel’s Arab minority. Thirteen
percent of Israelis gave Lieberman their vote. What does Abe Foxman
have to say about that? Well, Foxman actually
defends Lieberman, describing him as harmless: “He’s not saying
expel them. He’s not saying punish them.” Not at all: he’s just
demonizing them and threatening to deprive them of their
citizenship. No big deal.
So a private person who doubts the
loyalty of Jews in a telephone interview is a dirty anti-Semite to
Foxman. But a major political party that publicly defames Arab
Israelis and pledges to revoke their citizenship gets a pass from
the director of the Anti-Defamation(!) League, purportedly committed
to “Fighting Anti-Semitism, Bigotry, and Extremism”!
A Biased Survey
The ADL survey as a whole deserves some
critical analysis. Conducted for the second time in seven European
countries, the survey consisted of a short list of assertions
respondents were supposed to take a stand on.
Note that respondents were given only
two choices: they had to refer to each assertion as either “probably
true” or “probably false.” All the assertions were phrased in a way
that “probably true” was the choice considered anti-Semitic. This
suffers from the notorious “confirmatory bias,” which “inclines
people toward accepting assertions, rather than thinking more
extensively and seeing the flaws in those assertions” (see
Jon Krosnick, “Maximizing
Questionnaire Quality” [.pdf]). A serious survey would have
phrased some of the assertions in the negative to overcome this
natural bias. But the ADL followed its own bias: anti-Semitism
should always be found, and the more the better. In fact, if some of
this bias, as research indicates, is due to the desire of
individuals of lower social status to defer to individuals of higher
social status, this could explain why the ADL’s survey consistently
found that levels of anti-Semitism were higher among people who did
not continue education beyond the age of 17.
One also wonders whether the assertion
“Jews still talk too much about what happened to them in the
Holocaust” (note the suggestive adverb “still”!) has much to do with
anti-Semitism (cf.
Yehuda Elkana’s [.pdf] classical “The
Need to Forget” [.pdf]). And what on earth made the ADL waste
two of their six questions on almost identical assertions (”Jews
have too much power in the business world” and “Jews have too much
power in international financial markets”), which almost always
yielded the same result (correlation coefficient 0.922). Was there a
shortage of anti-Semitic assertions?
Just a couple of weeks ago, Foxman –
not a man of understatement – made it to the headlines by decrying “a
pandemic of anti-Semitism” as a consequence of Operation Cast
Lead: the crisis was “the worst, the most intense, the most global
that it has been in most of our memories.”
Operation Cast Lead began on Dec. 27,
2008. Now the ADL survey was conducted Dec. 1, 2008-Jan. 13, 2009;
that is, its last third was conducted during the devastation of
Gaza. If there is an “anti-Semitic pandemic” due to the Gaza events, as Foxman claims, a serious survey should have made a clear
distinction between data collected before and after the outbreak of
that “pandemic." Actually, the ADL should have simply read its own
survey to see the necessity of making such a distinction: one of its
findings is that “23 percent of those surveyed say that their
opinion of Jews is influenced by the actions taken by the state of
Israel.”
At any rate – careful scientific
distinctions aside – if all this were true, a survey conducted
partly after the outbreak of the Gaza atrocities would be influenced
by the alleged “pandemic” and show a significant rise in
anti-Semitism.
Was this the case? Not quite. Actually,
as the ADL admits, “A comparison with the 2007 survey indicates that
over the past two years levels of anti-Semitism have remained steady
in six of the seven countries tested.” Who was the party-pooper?
Great Britain, of course, home of some of the most effective
initiatives to
boycott Israel: “The United Kingdom was the only country in
which there was a marked decline” in anti-Semitism.
Steadiness in six continental countries, a marked decline in the UK
– and this in a survey conducted partly during an alleged “pandemic”
of anti-Semitism. Go figure.
Don’t Confuse Us With Facts
Obviously, the survey was reported
widely in the Israeli media. In fact, much like anti-Communism in
the U.S. during the 1980s, anti-anti-Semitism is (Jewish) Israel’s
national religion. Every non-Jew is an anti-Semite, potentially if
not actually – be it a bad-tempered waiter in a French restaurant or
even Turkey’s Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Anti-Semitism is our best excuse: We do
not believe in peace because all Arabs are anti-Semites. We must
attack Iran because all Muslims are anti-Semites and want to
annihilate us, and the rest of the world is anti-Semitic and doesn’t
care if we are annihilated. And of course every criticism of
Israel’s occupation is purely anti-Semitic.
Obviously, reports of steady or
declining levels of anti-Semitism is not what Israelis want to hear:
anti-Semitism should always be on the rise, to boost our national
cohesion.
Therefore both Ha’aretz (Feb.
11,
Hebrew) and YNet (Feb. 10,
Hebrew) used the partial data of “31% of Europeans Blame the
Jews for the Economic Crisis” as an ominous headline. Both focused
on the absolute figures of 2009 and kept the inconvenient trend to a
marginal penultimate paragraph. Even then, Ha’aretz
journalist Natasha Mozgovaya went out of her way to translate the
ADL’s “marked decline” in British anti-Semitism as “a small decline”
(not even bothering to mention what it was compared to), whereas
YNet omitted the adjective and wrote just “a decline.” And both
followed the ADL summary and quickly “balanced” the overall positive
trend by emphasizing the negative fraction of the findings.
Make no mistake: some level of racism,
including anti-Semitism, does exist in any society; racist Israel is
the last place to deny that. But just like real anti-Semitism
undermines the Palestinian cause, so do biased surveys and
manipulative declarations about anti-Semitism undermine the struggle
against racism. And Foxman criticizing one form of racism while
supporting another is despicable.
|