Commentary
 
 
Educated Mainstream: The Bastion of Western  anti-Semitism
 
Evelyn Gordon
 
February 25, 2014
 
 
It’s no accident that “Israel Apartheid Week,” an annual two-week  
extravaganza that began this week, focuses on Western college campuses. It’s 
not  
just because that’s where young, impressionable future leaders can be found.  
It’s also because, as a new study reveals, the educated mainstream is the  
mainstay of good old-fashioned anti-Semitism in today’s West. That  
counterintuitive finding explains why college campuses are such fertile ground  
for 
attacks on the Jewish state. 
Prof. Monika Schwarz-Friesel of the Technical University of Berlin reached  
this conclusion after studying 10 years’ worth of hate mail–14,000 
letters,  emails, and faxes in all–sent to the Central Council of Jews in 
Germany 
and the  Israeli embassy in Berlin. In an _interview_ 
(http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/jewish-world-news/.premium-1.576189)  
published in Haaretz  
yesterday, she said she fully expected to discover that most of it came from  
right-wing extremists. But in fact, right-wing extremists accounted for a 
mere 3  percent, while over 60 percent came from educated members of “the 
social  mainstream – professors, Ph.Ds, lawyers, priests, university and 
high-school  students,” she said. Nor were there any significant differences 
between  right-wing extremists’ letters and those of the educated mainstream,  
Schwarz-Friesel said: “The difference is only in the style and the rhetoric, 
but  the ideas are the same.” 
To be clear, these letters weren’t just criticizing Israel’s treatment of 
the  Palestinians; we’re talking about classic anti-Semitism–as evident 
from the  samples Haaretz cited: 
“It is possible that the murder of innocent  children suits your long 
tradition?” one letter said. 
“For the last 2,000 years, you’ve been stealing land and committing  
genocide,” said another. 
“You Israelis … shoot cluster bombs over populated areas and accuse people 
 who criticize such actions of anti-Semitism. That’s typical of the  Jews!”
That modern anti-Semitism is propagated mainly by mainstream intellectuals  
shouldn’t actually be surprising, as Schwarz-Friesel noted in the original  
Hebrew interview: “Throughout history, anti-Semitism and Jew-hatred never 
began  in the street, but with educated people – in the writings of the 
Church, in  poems, in novels and fairy tales” (a quote regrettably omitted from 
the abridged  English version). Yet this fact has been forgotten – or 
deliberately obscured –  in the modern West, which still sees anti-Semitism as 
the 
province of the far  right. 
Her research, originally published in German but due out in English next  
year, also led Schwarz-Friesel to another unambiguous conclusion: “Today, it’
s  already impossible to distinguish between anti-Semitism and 
anti-Israelism.  Modern anti-Semites have turned ‘the Jewish problem’ into ‘the 
Israeli 
problem.’  They have redirected the ‘final solution’ from the Jews to the 
State of Israel,  which they see as the embodiment of evil.” 
This conclusion is borne out by the samples Haaretz quoted. It’s  obviously 
easy to believe Israel murders innocent children if you think “the  murder 
of innocent children suits [the Jews’] long tradition”; easy to believe  
Israel steals land and commits genocide if you think Jews have been doing this 
 “for the last 2,000 years”; easy to believe Israel shoots cluster bombs  
indiscriminately if you think “that’s typical of the Jews.” Modern-day  
anti-Semites simply assume the Jewish state commits all the evils they deem it  
“natural” for Jews to commit, and no evidence will persuade them otherwise–
just  as no evidence will persuade them that child-murder isn’t part of the 
Jewish  tradition. 
Hence the genius of Israel Apartheid Week’s organizers: They’re hawking a  
blood libel against the Jewish state (the apartheid canard) precisely where 
it  will sell most easily, because the educated mainstream found on college 
campuses  contains a reservoir of people primed to believe blood libels 
against Jews.  Then, thanks to the myth that modern-day anti-Semitism exists 
only on the  far-right fringes, these people can in turn market it to their 
peers–the decent  folk who would never knowingly traffic in anti-Semitism–
secure in the knowledge  that the libel’s anti-Semitic roots will never be 
suspected. 
Thus to counter such libels, we must start by countering this myth. That  
means we must start challenging anti-Semitism in the places where it 
primarily  lives: not in the far-right fever swamps, but among the educated  
mainstream.

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