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BOSTON JEWISH
ADVOCATE – DECEMBER 31, 2009
Where's our leadership?
By Charles Jacobs
![[Charles Jacobs]](images/charles_jacobs_01.jpg)
- We are a small people. We have multiple and powerful external enemies. Striving for Jewish political unity is our natural and rational impulse. Criticizing other Jewish leaders and mainstream Jewish organizations is usually just not
done.
- But these are extraordinary times. We face daunting challenges for which there are no known answers. Chief among them are Islamic anti-Semitism and the global jihad that pose enormous, unanticipated threats to Jews around the world.
- In my last column I criticized the Anti-Defamation League and its head, Abraham Foxman, for its inadequate response to these threats. In truth, it is not only the ADL that is failing: Few Jewish leaders and almost no mainstream organizations have alerted our community that we face a radically new and
potentially existential threat profile.
- Jews are caught up in a perfect storm: In Western societies, real danger to Jews no longer comes from Christian hatred of Judaism or from Nazi-like animus against our "race"; it comes instead from a hatred of the Jewish state and its Jewish supporters. That this animus comes mostly from the ideological left, with which a majority of Jews identify, is painful and confusing to
many.
- At the same time, blowing
in from the Muslim world is a different sort of anti-Semitism, one which
combines modern anti-Zionist themes with primordial Islamic theological
hatred. Jew-hatred now drives countless masses around the globe. Imbibing
this poison, Muslim radicals have attacked and murdered Jewish people
from Israel to Europe, from India to Seattle .
- Islamic hatred has indeed
come to America . In 1999, Sufi Sheikh Hisham Kabanni, head of the
Supreme Islamic Council, testified to the State Department that 80
percent of American mosques are in the hands of radicals. A study by
Freedom House, a Washington , D.C. policy center, found Saudi-produced
anti-Semitic literature in Islamic Centers around the country.
"Close Guantanamo , Re-open Auschwitz" has been shouted by
Muslims at anti-Israel demonstrations in Fort Lauderdale and posted on
Bostonbased Muslim Web sites.
- Jewish leaders, at least
at the national level, are not blind to these threats. Two years ago at
an international conference on global anti-Semitism in Jerusalem , the
heads of many major American Jewish organizations heard speakers like
Robert Wistrich, the director of Hebrew University 's Vidal Sassoon
International Center for the Study of Anti-Semitism, who described Muslim
Judeophobia as an existential threat. Last March, Wistrich wrote in
Haaretz that "the scale and extremism of the literature and
commentary available in Arab or Muslim newspapers, journals, magazines,
caricatures, on Islamist websites, on the Middle Eastern radio and TV
news, in documentaries, films, and educational materials, is comparable
only to that of Nazi Germany at its worst." Through the Internet,
this material is available to Muslims living among us here.
- Because the mainstream
media for various reasons downplay these threats, Jews who depend on The
New York Times, The Boston Globe or CNN mostly don't see how our
situation has been radically altered. And so the question remains: If
they know, why haven't our leaders told us?
- I suggest three reasons.
First is a fear of being attacked as racists, bigots and Islamophobes - a
line of attack that has been particularly effective against Jewish
organizations. Second is a fear of being targeted for
"defamation" suits like the one launched against activists and
media outlets in Boston who reported on, or asked questions about the
radical connections of leaders of the Saudi-funded Roxbury mosque.
"Lawfare" works: Legal defense costs can be crippling. But I
think the real reason that our leaders are silent is that they simply
don't know what to do. Rather than admit this, they stay mum and mostly
limit their public efforts to issuing reports and posting on their Web
sites.
- In this context, the
letter to the
- Advocate by ADL's New England head, Derreck Shulman - in which he protests that I am
"unaware of ADL's activism" against radical Islam - was a bit
disappointing. Shulman points to articles about Islamic extremists and
Arab anti-Jewish cartoons on ADL's Web site, instances of Congressional
testimony and consultations with world leaders. Surely this is not a
serious effort for an operation with a $50 million annual budget that
claims to be our chief defender. Where is the big-picture strategy?
- I don't blame Derrick - in
fact his letter exposing CAIR (Committee on American Islamic Relations)
just published in the Globe is a step in the right direction. The problem
resides in New York . Should Jews not expect Foxman - and our other
leaders - to level with us? To tell us what they know - about the
penetration of the Muslim Brotherhood into our communities and about the
proliferation of radical mosques across America , and about the
intimidation of Jewish students by Muslims on campuses?
- Help us, Abe. We cannot
continue with PC-denial and with timidity. Silence is potentially deadly.
Let us face this challenge forthrightly, and together.
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