Protocols
The Anti-Semitism of the Islamo-Fascists
One of the most vivid
experiences of my time as a graduate student at Harvard was a seminar I took
with the preeminent liberal political theorist John Rawls. The discussion
centered on Rawls's later work, in which he divorced his liberalism from the
claim of absolute truth. His argument was only cogent, he averred, if read and
understood by people who already shared some basic premises--the need for
consent, the reliance on reason, a tone of civility, a relatively open mind.
With characteristic tactlessness, I asked him what his response would be if
Hitler joined the debate and disagreed with him. Rawls answered that there could
be no discourse with Hitler. We would have to agree that he was simply crazy, a
madman at a Cambridge dinner party, a figure outside the conversation. To
Hitler, Rawls had nothing to say, except please go away.
But what if
Hitler refuses to go away? My mind has drifted back to that conversation
recently, as we try to grapple with the reality staring us in the face:
Something like Hitler is back, and it is waging war on the United States. Part
of the current crisis is that many of us simply do not have a philosophy capable
of countering him.
Is this a grotesque exaggeration? The argument ad
Hitlerum is, after all, such a high-school debating tactic that it should be
employed only with extreme caution. The reason I invoke it is not simply because
we have an irrational, lethal movement stirring many people across the globe in
a call to mass murder. But because one central element of that movement, which
we are doing our best to ignore, but which is increasingly unignorable, is
pathological anti-Semitism.
Yes, of course, the geopolitical differences
between anti-Semitism in Nazi Germany and anti-Semitism in the Arab world are
vast. Germany was the preeminent military power of its time; the Arab nations
are decidedly not. Germany had a large, and largely defenseless, Jewish
population within its borders and millions more on its doorstep; the Arab states
have only Israel, which despite its tiny size is hardly defenseless. But
ignoring a virulent ideology because we believe those who hold it to be weak is
the kind of thinking that recently enabled the murder of 5,000 people in New
York. So consider the following: According to a recent Newsweek poll, 48 percent
of Pakistanis believe Jews were responsible for the World Trade Center bombing.
A plurality of Egyptians agree.
This should come as no surprise. Vicious
anti-Semitism is now the official doctrine of most Arab governments and their
organs of propaganda. The official Palestinian Authority newspaper, Al-Hayat
Al-Jadeeda, for example, regularly contains references to the "Protocols of the
Elders of Zion," the loopy nineteenth-century hoax that suggests Jews run the
world. As one article put it (at the height of the Oslo peace process, no less):
"It is important to conduct the conflict according to the foundations which both
are leaning on... particularly the Jews... such as the Torah, the Talmud and the
Protocols [of the Elders of Zion].... All signs unequivocally prove that the
conflict between the Jews and the Muslims is an eternal on-going conflict, even
if it stops for short intervals.... This conflict resembles the conflict between
man and Satan.... This is the fate of the Muslim nation, and beyond that the
fate of all the nations of the world, to be tormented by this nation [the Jews].
The fate of the Palestinian people is to struggle against the Jews on behalf of
the Arab peoples, the Islamic peoples and the peoples of the entire
world."
Here's a summary of a gem that appeared in Egypt's Al Ahram, the
largest newspaper in that country: "A compilation of the 'investigative' work of
four reporters on Jewish control of the world states that Jews have become the
political decision-makers and control the media in most capitals of the world
(Washington, Paris, London, Berlin, Athens, Ankara) and says that the main
apparatus for the Jews to control the world is the international Jewish lobby
which works for Israel." It is worth noting here that every word Al Ahram prints
is vetted and approved by the Egyptian government, a regime to which the United
States--i.e., you and I--contributes $2 billion a year.
Or take Syria, a
thugocracy whose leader indulged in an anti-Semitic outburst in front of the
pope, but a state that Colin Powell nonetheless wishes to bring into his grand
coalition. In 1983 Syrian Defense Minister Mustafa Tlass wrote a book entitled
The Matzah of Zion, claiming that Jews murder Arab children to knead their blood
into matzahs for Passover. An article about the book that appeared in Al Ahram
one year ago (and was noted by the invaluable Middle East Media Research
Institute) concluded with the following sentences: "The bestial drive to knead
Passover matzahs with the blood of non-Jews is [confirmed] in the records of the
Palestinian police where there are many recorded cases of the bodies of Arab
children who had disappeared being found, torn to pieces without a single drop
of blood. The most reasonable explanation is that the blood was taken to be
kneaded into the dough of extremist Jews to be used in matzahs to be devoured
during Passover." If this is the "most reasonable explanation," can you imagine
an unreasonable one? But it gets worse. The Matzah of Zion will soon be turned
into a movie. According to memri, "the producer stated that the primary goal of
the film is 'to respond to all of the Zionist films distributed by the American
film industry, which is backed by the Zionist propaganda apparatus. Among these
films is Schindler's List, which supports the idea of the Jews' right to the
land of Palestine.'" Schindler's List versus The Matzah of Zion: just a battle
of ideas.
The sobering truth is that somewhere in my head, I knew all
this already. It is not a revelation that large segments of the Arab world--at
all levels of society--are not just anti-Israel, but fanatically anti-Semitic.
Bernard Lewis wrote in 1986: "The demonization of Jews goes further than it had
ever done in Western literature, with the exception of Germany during the period
of Nazi rule. In most Western countries, anti-Semitic divagations on Jewish
history, religion, and literature are more than offset by a great body of
genuine scholarship... In modern Arabic writing there are few such
countervailing elements." So why did I look the other way? Why did I discount
this anti-Semitism on the grounds that these are alien cultures and we cannot
fully understand them, or because these pathologies are allied with more
legitimate (if to my mind unpersuasive) critiques of Israeli policy? I guess I
was thinking like John Rawls. We in the West simply do not want to believe that
this kind of hatred still exists; and when it emerges, we feel uncomfortable. We
do everything we can to change the subject. Why the denial, I ask myself? What
is it about this sickness that we do not understand by now? And what possible
excuse do we have not to expose and confront it with all the might we
have?