Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Please give us the chance to stop being antisemitic

When and how can a formerly antisemitic country become non-antisemitic? Never and no way, according to a recent Jerusalem Post article. The piece deals with Argentina's decision, a few weeks ago, to expel a Holocaust-denying British Catholic bishop who was illegally preaching his hateful message in a parish near Buenos Aires.

This should come as good news to anyone interested in the eradication of Holocaust denial. Not to the JPost, however, as the daily manages to turn this interesting development into a story of how Argentina is a land of endless antisemitism. The very first paragraph sets the bellicose tone:

Argentina's expulsion last month of Bishop Richard Williamson because his Holocaust denial "profoundly insults Argentine society, the Jewish community and all of humanity by denying a historic truth" smacks of a certain cynicism given its long history of denial concerning it own shameful role with regard to the Nazis. For 60 years it conducted a campaign to conceal its enthusiastic pursuit of an anti-Semitic and pro-Nazi policy before, during and after World War II. Only the tenacity of a handful of historical researchers, most notably the journalist Uki Goñi, finally forced Buenos Aires to begin admitting the truth.

Congratulations to Uki Goñi, who has told truths that are very uncomfortable to us Argentinians. The good news is that he can do it and be respected; he's never been called, er, a self-hating Argentinian.

The article goes on to describe Uki's findings:

The story of Directive 11 is a case in point. Secretly issued by the Foreign Ministry in July 1938 as Argentina sat at the Evian Conference table pledging to aid refugees, it instructed Argentine embassies to "refuse visas, even tourist and transit visas, to all persons that could be considered to be abandoning or to have abandoned their country of origin as undesirables or expulsees, whatever the motive for their expulsion" - in other words, Jews.

Good. Argentina refused to admit Jewish refugees while ostensibly committing itself to helping them. This helps the neutral observer to begin to understand why the country is a piece of crap.

But there's more still:

Of course, Argentina was not alone in officially refusing sanctuary to Europe's Jews. But it was the only country that refused to assist even its own Jewish nationals stranded in Nazi-occupied territory. And astonishingly, this refusal was, as Haim Avni documented in his 1991 study, Argentina and the Jews, effected in the face of repeated German requests that they be repatriated.

In January 1943, for example, the Argentine ambassador to Vichy ignored the authorities' request to evacuate 15 Argentine Jews from France, while in Berlin, the first secretary at the Argentine embassy, Luis H. Irigoyen, refused to issue visas despite being informed that Ribbentrop "would consider it an act of special courtesy if the Argentine embassy would cause all Argentine Jews to return to their homeland." Ribbentrop's officials even drew up lists of Argentine Jews living in Poland, Greece and Holland to expedite their repatriation, but Irigoyen still refused to comply. When, under intense Allied pressure, Buenos Aires finally broke with Berlin in January 1944, about 100 of these Jews, now stripped of diplomatic protection, were immediately transported to Bergen-Belsen and Auschwitz, where most are believed to have perished.

Enough to be tempted to throw one's passport in the trash can. Are there any redeeming factors? Possibly:

Buenos Aires continues to insist that its embassies did all they could to save Jewish lives, arguing that more Jews (about 40,000) entered Argentina during the Nazi period than any other Latin American country.

40,000 Jews admitted looks like an interesting figure; of course it does not offset the 100 Argentinian Jews who were shamefully allowed to be killed in the gas chambers when they could have been saved, but it's something. Only that:

What it carefully omits to mention, however, is that half of these were smuggled in illegally, while the others gained admission only by posing as Catholics or paying hefty bribes.

And, to top it all:

Bishop Williamson's expulsion order stated that "anti-Semitism is an ideological aberration which has cost millions of lives throughout history." But this rings hollow coming from a country that, amid accusations of studied incompetence and cover-ups, has yet to bring to justice any of those responsible for what The New York Times called "the deadliest single act of anti-Semitic terrorism since World War II" - the bombing of Buenos Aires's Jewish cultural center in 1994. Not to mention the fact that as recently as February 19, Argentina's Jewish community demonstrated against what it described as the government's silence and inaction regarding a resurgence in anti-Semitic agitation and attacks.

Which leads to the final indictment:

Indeed Williamson's expulsion, ordered the same day, looks very much like an attempt to counter this charge.

While Buenos Aires continues in its refusal to fully acknowledge it own anti-Semitic sins during the Holocaust and after, it lacks the moral authority to punish Richard Williamson for his. Until it puts its own (glass) house in order, it should stop throwing stones.


***

I like having a piece of shit of a nationality. It pushes you to do various things to give meaning to your life. If I were, say, Jewish, or American, I could brag about the Nobel prizes and the cultural influence, and would have less motivation to seek achievements of my own. I probably would have never wound up writing music for the piano or poetry for kids if I had a more prestigious nationality than Argentinian.

Also, when you have a piece of shit of a nationality and you still love your country, you know it's love, not pride. They're not the same. And I love Argentina.

That said, and precisely becouse I love the country, I'm prepared to take criticism of it, so long as it's reasonable. The JPost piece quoted above, however, goes far beyond the boundaries of reasonability.

Argentina has no moral authority to kick out a Holocaust denier. What the hell are we supposed to do, then? Not to expell him? In that case we would be decried as the country that allows a Holocaust denier to live within its borders. Damned if you do and damned if you don't.

Also, every step the country has taken, however positive, seems to be part of a conspiracy against the Jews, historical truth, decency or a combination thereof. The entry of 40,000 Jewish refugees only serves to highlight the country's corruption and sloppy policing of its borders. No mention whatsoever that a truly antisemitic regime would have quickly spotted the illegal Jewish immigrants and deported them. The expulsion of a Holocaust denier only shows how deceitful we are; we only kick him in the ass so that people won't realize we ourselves are antisemites with a horrible record back in the forties.

That was then and this is now. We have come a long way since the forties; we have acknowledged the existence of a shameful secret law, something few countries in the world have done (not because they don't have secrets, mind you). We have come a shorter, but no less significant, way from the year of the Jewish Community Center bombing in Buenos Aires; an Iranian ex-president has been indicted, even if it harms our relations with a key importer of our grain; no mention of this is made in the article.

The bottom line is, as always, that no matter what the world does, they're all a bunch of antisemites. If a country is not antisemitic now, the focus is on its antisemitic past. If a country is not antisemitic now and has never been so, then we focus on how it will hate the Jews in the future.

But they're all antisemites: that's the scare tactic Zionism uses to try and draw more Jewish immigration at a moment when no objective antisemitism exists in the major Jewish centers. But fewer and fewer people are buying into it. This includes the very Jewish community of Argentina, which, while toeing the official line that the country is a hotbed of antisemitism, votes with their feet -- or their failure to use them to emigrate to Israel.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

"If I were, say, Jewish, or American, I could brag about the Nobel prizes and the cultural influence"

Alberto, envy is a horrible emotion -- as is hatred. I am sorry you were born in Argentina and I also regret the fact you could never find your identity there (hence converting to Islam to fulfill yourself) but please, please, please stop blaming this on the Jews!

Anonymous said...

"This includes the very Jewish community of Argentina, which, while toeing the official line that the country is a hotbed of antisemitism, votes with their feet -- or their failure to use them to emigrate to Israel."

Are you kidding me?!?!

From wikipedia:

"Following the 1994 AMIA bombing in Buenos Aires, and in the wake of the 1999–2002 Argentine political and economic crisis, many Argentine Jews emigrated to Israel.

More than 10,000 Jews from Argentina immigrated to Israel since 2000, joining the thousands of previous olim already there."

So 5% of the Jewish population has emigrated just in the last 9 years. In total, almost 20% of all Argentine Jews have made aliyah. With the exception of the former Soviet Union, these numbers are historically unprecedented -- but perhaps to be expected from a country with a long history of fascism, pro-Nazism and antisemitism like Argentina.

Ibrahim Ibn Yusuf said...

I'm afraid you may not be aware of a phenomenon called yeridah.

There is also an "Israeli angle" to Argentina's dramatic improvement. Of the approximately 5,000 Argentine Jews who moved to Israel during the crisis, about 50 percent have since returned to Argentina. Telerman believes this is a "natural phenomenon." "During the crisis," he said, "Argentine society was crumbling. It was very hard at that time to find an Argentine who wasn't considering emigration. It was perfectly natural that many Jews would answer Israel's call and go there

Now that the situation has improved, it is equally natural that many are returning to Argentina. It is necessary to understand that this was emigration and not aliyah," he said, using the Hebrew word for immigrating for religious or national reasons.


http://news.haaretz.co.il/hasen/spages/830504.html

Anonymous said...

"Of the approximately 5,000 Argentine Jews who moved to Israel during the crisis, about 50 percent have since returned to Argentina."

So out of tens of thousands of Argentine Jews who made aliyah only 2,500 have returned to Argentina. You are making my argument for me!

David L said...

And completely off-topic but with two world cups and one Borges (didn't he win the nobel prize), you've plenty to boast about.

Nice to here that you've the same cognitive dissonance in Argentina as Europe, where 'community leaders' maintain as the lynchpin of communal cohesion the Zionist idea that they don't really belong where they are.

more anonymous than you said...

""Of the approximately 5,000 Argentine Jews who moved to Israel during the crisis, about 50 percent have since returned to Argentina."

So out of tens of thousands of Argentine Jews who made aliyah only 2,500 have returned to Argentina. You are making my argument for me!"



You've either got a reading comprehension problem or are simply applying faulty logic. The first quote specifically states "OF the approximately 5,000..." It is referring ONLY to that number when it mentions that 2500 have returned. We don't know what the figures are on the total number who returned over all years. You are leaping to a conclusion that your facts can't support.

more anonymous said...

And that wikipedia entry that is cited, and its two external links to JTA articles, illustrate some of the cognitive dissonance of Zionism. Zionism claims that all Jews have an innate longing for Israel but yet at the same time it uses every Jew that leaves his/her home country as proof of anti-semitism in that country. So, according to Zionism, Jews really really really want to be in Israel but at the same time, not so much, because it is only anti-semitism that pushes them there.

And as the external links point out, even though all real Jews yearn to live in Israel, but somehow fail to act on that yearning until they are forced out of their home countries by anti-semitism, it is necessary for Israel to offer generous economic incentives in order to get these desperately yearning Jews, beset by anti-semitism, to come to Israel.

I'd suggest reading those two links fro the Jewish Telegraphic Agency(JTA).

http://www.ujc.org/page.aspx?id=26877

http://www.jewishcharleston.org/page.aspx?id=46874

They make it pretty clear that most of the newer olim from Argentina came because of economic reasons, which include both the poor economic conditions in Argentina and the economic incentives from Israel. They also make clear that some of the olim have had difficulties adjusting to life in Israel, and that Israel, when it recruits, is not being fully honest about what its new Jewish citizens face.

Nevertheless, the bureaucracy in Israel and the differences between their former and new lives have made the adjustment difficult for many of the new arrivals.

"They don't talk about the bombings, or the job market when encouraging you to come here," Edelstein said. "And it might sound silly, but there's no night life here. It's very different than South America."
....
That's all well and good, but what the Jewish Agency has to do is make the realities of life in Israel clear to potential immigrants, Wainbuch and Edelstein agreed.

"People need to know that it isn't a Garden of Eden here," Edelstein said. "They need to understand the political situation and the economic situation. They need to know what real life is like here."

Anonymous said...

more anonymous:

there is perhaps "cognitive dissonance" for a non-Jew looking in at our situation, but there is no such dissonance for the Jews.

There is the understanding that it is important -- infact essential -- to have a strong diasporas as well as a strong Zion.

Take the 50% of Argentinian Jews who return to Argentina after a few years in Eretz. They embody a vital bond betwen Zion and the Diaspora.

This is not a new phenomenon. It occurs throughout the Torah (for instance the links betwen Jews in Israel and Jews in Persia, Midian, Moab, etc.) and at the time of the First Roman War there were huge Jewish communities across the Mediterranean and Middle East (see Josephus and Philo.)

So even two thousand years ago the Jews understood the importance of Diaspora + Israel. This is one of the things that gave them an edge over less adventurous nations. And they understood this edge without any cognitive dissonance. Just like we do today.

Of course a balance needs to be struck between aliyah and yeridah, Zion and Galut -- but I think we're doing a pretty good job right now, all things considered

The Red Condor said...

Greetings from Sweden!

This is f-ing hilarious! The same newspaper that named Argentina the most antisemitic country in the world has also named Norway and Sweden the most antisemitic countries in the world!

They really have to make up their mind!

Anonymous said...

Condor,

There's a lot of competition these days for antisemitic violence in case you havent noticed. (See the EU report that just came out to see how your country rates relative to others.)

But the most antisemitic country in the world is neither Sweden nor Argentina -- although don't get me wrong, both are certainly in the running -- the most antisemitic country is probably Egypt.

Although Turkey, Lebanon and Greece are also in the running...

Red Condor said...

Yes, I know there are anti-jewish incidents. But that's beyond the point. The point is that a newspaper, Jerusalem Post, has difficulties in making up their mind about which country is the most anti-jewish in the world! And if you read HOW these countries are anti-semitic, you laugh!

And people like you also make me laugh because you have more candidates and still haven't made up your mind!

About Medicine Blog said...

The good news is that he can do it and be respected;
he's never been called, er, a self-hating Argentinian.