A Guest Post by Dr. Harold Goldmeier
Israel
advocates get their undies twisted in knots when enemies tag Israel an
apartheid state. Polish officials set off a firestorm that threatens
diplomatic relations between Israel and Poland by accusing Jews of
collaborating with the Nazis. Words matter.
Yet,
Jewish leaders in Israel and the Diaspora are unruffled and feckless at
the bigoted, racist and misogynistic hate speech from Israel’s Chief
and leading rabbis. I heard it all before in the 1960’s working the US
Civil Rights Movement.
Shame on Israel.
Shame on the government.
Shame on our Jewish community leaders.
Shame on Chief Rabbi Yosef.
Ignoring
hate speech encourages it. It molders the society. Hate speech embeds
self-aggrandizement that leads to demagoguery. Bigots attract followers
like flies to dung. Next, they block the entrances to schools and lunch
counters. They make the “others” sit in the back of the bus. They even
run for President of the United States and rise to positions of power
excluding Jews from equal rights marches.
A
spokesperson for Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef recently justified to the
Times of Israel (March 20, 2018), the Rabbi was quoting the Talmud when
referring to black people with a pejorative and “a black person a
‘monkey’.” Reminds me of the white preachers and ministers using God to
justify slavery and defy desegregation.
Say
such a thing today in any Western democracy and you’re sacked from
politics. The hater is a pariah in business, among the media, and in
most pulpits. I hear no such shock and dismay in Israel. I see no action
being taken that might reassure minorities and women the government and
society do not tolerate haters.
There
are no demonstrations outside Rabbi Yosef’s offices or home, at least
those being covered in the media. Reporters are not hovering demanding
at every turn explanations and further comments. There is no pot boiling
over his remarks.
Torah
scholars know words matter. They pick over every letter, word, and
expression in the Torah and commentaries to define how Jews must act.
It’s the words that define Judaism. Is Rabbi Yosef saying there is no
place in Judaism except for white folk? Careful, Rabbi Yosef. I’m told
there are Ashkenazim who think only Caucasians are truly Jewish.
Sephardim are on the outs.
Where
does the bigotry end? It doesn’t. It becomes institutionalized. There
are reports some Rabbis will not marry black couples. There are other
reports, Sephardi boys and girls are not allowed in schools run by
Ashkenazim. It’s the words that deracinate, promote hate and bigotry,
that justify and enshrine institutional racism.
Bad
stuff happens when the “others” are belittled. Segregation. Separate
but equal becomes the meme but the “others” never get their fair share
or parity. When women not living Judaism like “our” women are denigrated
and called “animals,” what’s the next step? Slaughtering them like
animals when they walk through the community? When rabbinic leaders paid
by the State of Israel consider women not fit for public service or
careers, as Rabbi Eli Sadan and Israel’s various Chief Rabbis are
alleged to have said, words turn into actions. One rabbi claims that
educated and financially successful women feel so independent they do
not want marriage and husbands. They forsake their role in family life
where they belong. Another Chief Rabbi attributes a lion’s share of
damage to the country “due to loss of morality,” because of women in
combat units of the IDF.
Moreover,
hate speech is the tool of useful idiots believing their words make
them stronger and more popular. They care little if their
mean-spiritedness undercuts the legitimacy of a society striving for
stability, equality and fraternity already a nation among nations that
delegitimize Israel.
The
ebb and flow of battles following official reports to uproot
institutional racism in Israel leave hatemongers free to raise their
voices unhampered. Dealing with institutional racism is the easy part.
Taking down those who espouse bigotry and lust after the recognition
racist speech brings is the hard part.
So
it will be interesting to learn if the findings in the new report from
the Israel Government Unit for Coordinating the Struggle Against Racism
spur any more reaction than previous reports? We know recommendations
from the reports largely languish and fade away, but will the findings
and comments finally beget action? Will Israel's Ethiopian Chief Rabbi
Yosef Hadane ever be included in photo ops with the other Chief Rabbis
of Israel or will Rabbi Hadane continue being treated with benign
neglect?
Dr.
Seuss said it, “Unless someone like you cares a whole lot, nothing is
going to get better, it’s not.” It’s time the government establishes an
independent Ministry to Combat Hate and Racism with the power and
free-hand to indict haters and racists with jail time and fines.
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