An Open Letter to Canadian and American Zionists: Remove Arab Motivation for Terror

Practical Proposal for Research and Policy Change that Could Save Lives.

A generation ago, the KGB and East Germany promoted the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) to perpetuate the plight of the Arab refugees of the 1948 war, subjected to the indignity of 59 UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) refugee camps. The goal was to make it appear as if the Palestinian Arabs represent a popular movement for national liberation, not a displaced population that should be settled in humanitarian conditions, like any other refugee population.

Analysis that summarizes the above idea.

Legacy of the KGB and East Germany

Today, Germany works with Russia, supporting an Arab terror network that brainwashes UNRWA refugee camp youth to overthrow the “Zionist entity” ie the State of Israel — not with a two-state solution, but with a two-stage solution, by force of arms.

Accordingly, the PLO has imposed a new violent school system on UNRWA that indoctrinates the next generation for total war.

UNRWA allocates 58% of its $1.6 billion budget to “education” — without adherence to UN principles of peace, rather countering the principles entirely.

Read here

UNRWA POLICY INITIATIVE

The Bedein Center for Near East Policy Research has hired professional staff, fluent in Arabic, German and Russian, to assemble audiovisual evidence in order to expose the renewed Russo-German alliance in support of the terror network of the PLO and UNRWA, while presenting UNRWA donor nations with a counter-proposal to current UNRWA policy, a policy that confines 6.7 million Arabs to refugee camps, in perpetuity.

The solution:

Six Policy Challenges, to Guide UNRWA Policy Reform

  1. Cancel the new UNRWA curriculum which incorporate principles of Jihad, martyrdom and an “right of return” by force of arms, in UN schools which are supposed to promote the UNRWA slogan of “Peace Starts Here.”
  2. Cease paramilitary training in all UNRWA schools UNRWA should demonstrate commitment to UN principles for “peace education”.
  3. Insist that UNRWA dismiss employees who are affiliated with Hamas in accordance with laws on the books in Western nations, which forbid aid to any agency that employs members of a terrorist organization.
  4. Insist that UNRWA cancel its contract with “youth ambassador” Mohammad Assaf to travel the world encouraging violence. Would this not be the appropriate time for donor nations to ask that UNRWA cancel that contract with a harbinger of war?
  5. Ask for an audit of donor funds that flow to UNRWA This would address widespread documented reports of wasted resources, duplicity of services and the undesired flow of cash to Gaza-based terror groups, which gained control over UNRWA operations in Gaza over the past 18 years.
  6. Introduce UNHCR standards to UNRWA to advance the resettlement of Arab refugees, after 67 years. Current UNRWA policy is that refugee resettlement would interfere with the “right of return” to Arab villages that existed before 1948.

How to make a Canadian tax deductible donation to help sponsor this vital activity?

Donate here

How to make a US tax deductible donation to help sponsor this vital activity?

Donations from the US can be made through 501(c)(3) tax exempt partner, The Lawfare Project. Indicate Funds are for Bedein Center for Near East Policy Research

For US Donations, click here

Deputy Leader of the Canadian Federal NDP has posted biased, antisemitic message about the riots on the Temple Mount

Alexandre Boulerice is the Deputy Leader of the NDP and an MP from  Quebec and below is his original Facebook post in French and the English Translation, followed by a letter from CAEF to the Leader of the Party, Hon Jagmeet Singh. The letter was headed: How Many Lies Can One NDP Member Squeeze Into a Facebook Post?
==================

Dear Mister Singh,

Let’s count the lies issued by Alexandre Boulerice, as it is quite incredible that in 2022, your Deputy Leader could get it so wrong and would dare to repeat age old antisemitic lies about Israel and the Jewish people. It is your responsibility to address this asap and to renounce the  lies, discipline your member and publicly admonish him, take down the post and try to heal the damage.
I will recount the lies in this translated version of his posting (shown below):
  1. There is NO such country as Palestine! The Temple Mount which holds the Al Aqsa Mosque is in Jerusalem, the capital of the independent, legal Jewish State of Israel, where people of all faiths have equal rights and opportunities.
  2. The photos by and large are either faked, or mislabelled or fail to show what is tragically really going on as Arabs attack Jews, throw incendiary devices and carry out a planned rampage against Israel during what should be a holy month of Ramadan, but is a planned month of terrorism, coordinated by the Palestinian Authority with plenty of support from Hamas.
  3. Israeli forced DID NOT ATTACK Muslims but did respond to attacks perpetrated by Arabs on Jews, and have done much to try to quell the riots, which have become an annual festival of hatred that is well planned and eagerly executed by individuals riled up by their Islamist leaders. Consider this–the Arabs stock piled rocks and incendiary devices within the mosque for weeks in advance. How is this preparation for peace, for a holy event? It is a plan to escalate violence, kill a few Jews, win international sympathy, and dupe people as ill-informed as Mr. Boulerice and other NDP members.
  4.  It is utter nonsense to claim that Israel is ridding Jerusalem of other ethnic or religious groups. It is absurd in the extreme; the population of both Muslims and Christians is in fact growing! Israel is the ONLY country in the Middle East in which the Christian community is increasing, where freedom of religion is paramount and practiced openly. There are NO Arab countries with the exception now of Bahrain and the UAE where Jews can practice their faith safely, after all of the North African and Middle Eastern Muslim countries ethnically cleansed themselves of all Jews, over 900,000 of which were refugees–NEVER recognized by the UN and never supported by any human rights agencies, except those within the global Jewish community.
  5. The Liberal government is just in supporting Israel–the ONLY democracy in the region. Israel has been facing antisemitic attacks, wars, terror from inside and outside from Arabs for over 70 years. Canada mistakenly sends money to UNRWA which is now educating yet another generation of Arab kids to kill Jews! Does the NDP not care about innocent civilians, if Jewish, if Israeli? Does the NDP wish to continue to ignore the incitement by Islamist fanatics intent on destroying Israel? There is no planned peace with the current two terrorist regimes dominating the Palestinian Arab communities.
  6. There has NEVER been apartheid in Israel and only a person who is totally sightless and reads nothing, could make such a claim. How does Mr. Boulerice explain the fact that Islamists sit in the Knesset, that Arabs are in the Supreme court, that the largest bank has an Arab CEO as does one of the largest hospitals?
  7. #FreePalestine is generally a genocidal call to eradicate Israel. It is unconscionable. There is no Palestinian country and never has been, and the people who are called Palestinian Arabs will only be free when they rid themselves of the evil Islamist dictators who govern their lives.
Mr. Singh, it is well time that you held an educational session for all your members, for your MPs and staff, to teach the truth, eliminate Jew hatred which this posting reveals. Stop allowing horrendous, antisemitic lies against the Jewish state to define your party!

Sincerely,

Andria Spindel,

Executive Director

Antisemitism & Social Work

Canadian Antisemitism Education Foundation is collaborating with social workers to investigate antisemitism as a topic that has, historically, been omitted from the social work curriculum, according to the social work literature. We hope to better explore the degree to which antisemitism is included in the social work curriculum in Canada. We are currently undertaking the following initiates:

A.  Community Petition,

B.  Research Study, and

C.  Facebook Group Specifically for Jews in the Social Work Profession, both     Practitioners and Students

A. Community Petition

Given reports that social work schools, colleges and associations are omitting the study of antisemitism in the context of Equity, Diversity & Inclusion (DEI) coursework, workshops and training, this is a moment for the Jewish community to request that social work educators include antisemitism whenever anti-racism training is being taught. We invite you to sign and share this petition.

B. Research Study

Hineni: a Pilot Research Study Which Explores the Experience of Jewish Social Work Students in Canada

Jewish social work students have been reporting many challenges with regards to the politicized academic environment. Now Jewish social work students across Canada can share incidents or circumstances they are confronting in the context of their education, specifically those that relate to the students’ Jewish identity. Students’ experiences will be captured in written surveys, interviews and by providing photos of PowerPoint’s or quotes from relevant course readings.

Researchers will prepare reports for national and provincial social work organizations, relaying incidents, readings and more information without identifying participants or their specific educational institutions. This study is designed to help us understand the experiences of Jewish social work students in Canada.

For more information about this study, follow this link.

To access the research survey for social work students who are willing to participate, click here.

C. Facebook Group for Social Workers, Social Service Workers and Students

Hineni: Jews in Social Work

Interact with others in the field, and stay in touch so you can hear about other CAEF initiatives relating to antisemitism and social work. Keep us posted about what you are experiencing in the field or at your school. Share readings, incidents; get support. Let’s unite! Invite your friends and colleagues to join the group!

To correspond with us, email research@caef.ca

Jerusalem Mayor Dismantles BBC Assertion That Israel Provoked Temple Mount Riots

The world instinctively blamed Israel for the violence at the Temple Mount this past weekend, ignoring almost entirely the facts of the events as they unfolded and Israel’s stated and demonstrated commitment to maintaining the status quo.

It was no surprise that Muslim nations were among the loudest to condemn Israel, though it was a bit disconcerting to find our new Abraham Accords allies among them. But that same day the United Arab Emirates also agreed to take part in Israel’s upcoming Independence Day celebrations, showing that we can disagree and still remain friends.

The most shocking reaction to the Temple Mount flare-up came from one of Israel’s oldest peace partners in the Middle East, neighboring Jordan.

Jordanian Prime Minister Bisher Khasawneh went so far as to openly praise the Palestinian Muslims who had engaged in violence against Israeli police and civilians.

“I salute every Palestinian, and all the employees of the Jordanian Islamic Waqf, who proudly stand like minarets, hurling their stones in a volley of clay at the Zionist sympathizers defiling the Al-Aqsa Mosque under the protection of the Israeli occupation government,” Khasawneh told the Jordanian parliament.

Israel Prime Minister Naftali Bennett called this incitement, though refrained from pointing a finger directly at Jordan or Khasawneh.

In a short video clip posted online, Bennett slammed those who “accuse Israel of the violence directed against us…those who are encouraging rock-throwing and the use of violence against the citizens of the State of Israel.”

“This is unacceptable to us,” he added. “This is a reward for the inciters, especially Hamas, who are trying to ignite violence in Jerusalem. We will not allow this to happen.”

Bennett stressed that Israel is committed to security and freedom of worship for all local residents, Muslims included, all of whom are harmed by the actions of the rioters.

And that was the point Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem Fleur Hassan-Nahoum had to reinforce when she was interviewed by a BBC journalist who had simply copy-pasted Hamas accusations as his talking points.

Suggesting that the Israeli police action had been entirely arbitrary, the BBC anchor asked: “Why did Israeli police storm the Aqsa compound at a sensitive time, during Friday prayers, during Ramadan?”

Hassan-Nahoum was having none of it: “Actually, the question is why did rioters come early in the morning with stones and fireworks and start throwing stones from the Temple Mount, from Haram al-Sharif, to the Wailing Wall? They showed up this morning to cause trouble.”

Indeed, ample social media evidence shows Muslim youth arriving early and stockpiling stones inside Al-Aqsa Mosque before engaging the Israelis.

 

 

Several clips also show older Muslim worshippers berating the youngsters and demanding that they stop disrupting Ramadan by attacking Israelis.

 

Hassan-Nahoum echoed Bennett in stating that the action of the Israeli police was aimed at restoring calm so that the majority of Muslims who arrived to the Temple Mount could enjoy Ramadan.

“Israel protects freedom of worship above anything else and that’s why we needed to get rid of the troublemakers so that the rest of the peaceful Muslim pilgrims could come and pray as they normally do every single Friday,” she stressed.

And that’s just what the rest of the Muslims did, unmolested by Israeli police, once the rioters had been forcibly ejected.

 

That wasn’t good enough for the BBC anchor, who persisted in his assertion that Israel’s actions had been disproportionate and provocative.

And that’s when Hassan-Nahoum sounded like she’d had enough and sought to set the record straight:

“Let me tell you something. I am the head of tourism for the city of Jerusalem, and I consider Haram al-Sharif holy to Jews and holy to Muslims. And we are so sensitive [to Muslim concerns] that by Israeli law Jews aren’t allowed to go and pray at Haram al-Sharif. There is freedom of worship for everybody in this city except for Jews who want to pray on the Temple Mount. That’s how sensitive we are.”

Palestinian responses to the terrorist attack in Tel Aviv and to the subsequent activities of the Israeli security forces in Judea and Samaria

Overview
At around 21:00 on April 7, 2022, a Palestinian armed with a handgun went to a crowded
bar on Dizengoff Street in the center of Tel Aviv. He shot at patrons sitting at tables outside, killing two, mortally wounding a third and wounding six others, three of them critically. The terrorist, a Palestinian from the Jenin refugee camp, fled the scene. He was located the following morning near a mosque in Jaffa, and was shot and killed in an exchange of fire with Israeli security forces.

It was the fourth deadly terrorist attack in an Israeli city in two and a half weeks. The attacks killed 14 people and wounded scores more. All four were carried out by lone-wolf terrorists who were not operatives of established terrorist organizations. Two were carried out by Israeli Arabs who identified with ISIS ideology and two by Palestinians from the Jenin region who were affiliated with the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, Fatah’s military-terrorist wing.

No connection was found linking the attacks, but they may have shared a common inspiration. Immediately after the attack in Tel Aviv the Israeli security forces began detaining suspects in the Jenin region, searching for weapons and apprehending members of the terrorist’s family.

Israel also announced steps restricting the residents of the Jenin district, while the
rest of Judea and Samaria would be allowed to continue enjoying the measures put in place
by Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz for the Palestinians during the Muslim religious
month of Ramadan.

E_057_22-1

The “Al-Aksa Is in Danger” Libel: The History of a Lie

Palestinians often hear from their leaders that a Muslim holy site in Jerusalem, al-Aksa mosque, is in danger of collapse – and the Jews are to blame. Whether printed in cartoons, preached in mosques or taught in schools, the lie is accepted as common knowledge across the Arab world. Millions of Muslims accept it as truth. The message is clear: Jews seek to expel the Arabs from Jerusalem.

This lie is nothing new. For the past century, Palestinian leaders have told the “Al-Aksa is in danger” lie in order to incite their people to attack Jews. It is important to expose and counter this fabrication because it remains a spark that can lead to bloodshed.

Click here to read full article 

Israel estimates Temple Mount riots ‘organized’ plot

The violent clashes on Temple Mount that broke out last Friday and resumed on Sunday, did not break out spontaneously.

The scope of violence required means and advanced preparation, which are the result of daily efforts by some Palestinians.

שוטרים בעיר העתיקה
Police troops in the Old City of Jerusalem on Sunday (Photo: Reuters)
The rioters on Sunday, were told to remain inside the al-Aqsa mosque, by activists in order to engage with the police.

Calls on loud speakers urge Palestinian youth to stay and ‘protect the Muslim holy sight’ claiming it was under threat from Jews, as the instigators called on the Hamas rulers of Gaza, to join in the defense of the mosques by launching rocket fire on Israel.
Police officials said on Sunday, that ahead of the visit of non-Muslims on Temple Mount, hundreds of Palestinian youth began accumulating stones and other objects and set up makeshift barrier to be used in the intended clashes.

הפרות הסדר ופעילות כוחות המשטרה בהר הביתA barrier erected by Palestinian youth to prevent the visit of Jews on Temple Mount on Sunday (Photo: Police Spokesperson)

“Police forces are working to remove the barriers and the stones from the site in order to ensure the safety of visitors,” the police said.
“We intend to enable visits to Temple Mount and the freedom of worship for all faiths,” the force said in a statement.

Jerusalem Mufti, Mohammed al-Husseini the Sunni Muslim cleric in charge of Jerusalem’s Islamic holy places, his deputy, the chairman of the Supreme Muslim Council, and the director of the al- Aqsa mosque are all charged with the management of the site.
Some among them are regarded by Israeli security officials as dominant forces behind the violence, Although the Waqf refrains from participation in the violence.
The Waqf officials condemned the police actions and their silence on the rioting, was seen as a tacit agreement to the violence.

 

אבטחה בהר הביתPolice troops on Temple Mount on Sunday

The protesting youth, police sources said, calling themselves, the gang of al-Aqsa, are mostly residents of east Jerusalem. They are affiliated with various religious political factions including followers of the Hamas terror group. Their numbers are in the hundreds and their motivation to clash with Israeli forces, is high.

According to sources, the youth who have been rioting, are led by a 43-year old resident of the city, Nihad Zreiyer who is close to the Fatah faction.
The group, the sources said is funded by the Palestinian Authority, contribution of local residents as well as funds sent from Turkey.

The group used fire crackers, stones and other objects that were hurled at the police. Those were smuggled into the mosque compound over days in advance, and prepared in several locations.
In their signs and chants, the rioters expressed support for the Hamas and Islamic Jihad

Antisemitic textbooks: holding UNRWA to account

Yesterday, Ivo Vegter wrote about the recent attacks on Israelis by Palestinians imbued with a hatred for Israelis and Jews. This article deals with one of the key issues that influence terrorist attacks in Israel.

The European Union has recently delayed the payment of millions of euros in annual aid to the Palestinian Authority (PA) after Hungary’s EU delegate accused PA school textbooks of containing ‘antisemitism’, according to the Israeli newspaper, Haaretz.

Oliver Varhelyi, a Hungarian diplomat and the Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement in the European Commission in Brussels, has proposed that aid to the PA requires the removal of ‘antisemitism and incitement’ elements in textbooks taught in Palestinian schools.

The delayed payment amounts to annual aid of €214m (R3 891 000 000) until a final decision is made.

An investigation into antisemitism in PA textbooks was first commissioned by Federica Mogherini, then EU foreign affairs representative in 2019. The study was conducted by the Georg Eckert Institute in Germany.

The study — almost 220 pages and completed in February 2021— was released in June 2021 by the European Commission, which pays for the textbooks, according to the Jerusalem Post and German newspaper Bild, both of which had obtained copies of the report.

The European Commission told the Jerusalem Post that it ‘takes this study seriously and will act on its findings as appropriate.’

The EU planned to work with the PA to promote compliance with UNESCO standards on peace, tolerance and nonviolence, which the Commission said were non-negotiable.

The Commission also reiterated ‘its unequivocal commitment to the fight against anti-Semitism’.

The 156 Palestinian Authority textbooks and 16 teachers’ guides that were studied showed ‘an antagonism towards Israel’ — with ‘frequent use of negative attributions in relation to the Jewish people’, the study found.

The books reviewed were mostly from 2017 to 2019 but included 18 from 2021.

There was a ‘conscious perpetuation of anti-Jewish prejudice, especially when embedded in the current political context,’ according to the New York Post’s review of the report. One religious studies textbook asks students to discuss the ‘repeated attempts by the Jews to kill the prophet’.

’Resistance’ is a recurring theme, along with calls for a revolution; with one book carrying a photo of five masked men toting machine guns, and calling them ‘Palestinian revolutionaries’.

The United Nations Refugee and Works Agency (UNRWA) is the main provider of education to primary school children under the aegis of the PA’s Ministry of Education and Higher Education.

How can a United Nations agency play such destructive role in the politics of the region?

The Palestinians are the only group of people in the world who have a dedicated ‘refugee’ agency to look after them. This has resulted in the provision of decades of aid, creating an unhealthy dependency and perpetuating the Palestinian refugee crisis. Unlike with any other definition of ‘refugee’, UNRWA allows the status of Palestinian refugees to be passed down ad infinitum.

Every other refugee grouping in the world is looked after by the UN High Commission for Refugees and its mandate is always temporary. UNRWA has its mandate renewed year after year. This bizarre situation is rooted in the Arab/Israeli War of 1948. UNRWA was intended to assist both Arab and Jewish refugees. As Israel settled all Jewish refugees, it was left to support Arab refugees under the diktat of the Arab states, which exploited the lack of settlement for political reasons.

Israelis fear that antisemitism in schools will hamper the ability of both sides to negotiate peace, as the PA exposes its children in their schooling and in the media to virulently antisemitic messages. Children grow up seeing Israelis and Jews as the enemy that must be destroyed.

@LahavHarkov

This picture from a Palestinian textbook portrays the Jews working to destroy the Dome of the Rock and the Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. It is a pernicious trope.

There is no truth in it but it is used every year to galvanise protests, particularly in the lead-up to the holy month of Ramadan. In 2021 it contributed to the war between Israel and Gaza.

According to the report, a maths textbook uses an image of Palestinians hitting Israeli soldiers with slingshots to describe Newton’s second law of motion.

The Islamic honorific bestowed on Muslims who embrace death in the cause against Islam’s enemies is ‘shahid’ or ‘martyr’. It appears throughout the textbooks. One ninth-grade maths book uses the term to refer to Fatah leader Khalil al-Wazir, who led the 1978 massacre of 38 Israeli civilians, including 13 children, according to Bild.

Most maps used in the textbooks entirely erase the state of Israel, dubbing it a ‘Zionist occupation’ and calling the entire region of Israel, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, ‘Palestine’.

Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in response to the findings of the report that they ‘prove Israel’s consistent claim that incitement is constantly present in Palestinian Authority textbooks’.

‘This is a claim that Israel has raised with the EU and its member states for many years.’

UN Watch, an NGO which monitors the UN’s approaches to human rights breaches, urged governments at an international donor conference for UNRWA in Brussels in November 2021 to demand accountability from UNRWA about allegations of antisemitism and incitement to terrorism by more than 100 teachers and other staffers.

UNRWA has reportedly suspended several of its employees after a report by UN Watch exposed over 100 UNRWA educators and other employees who have publicly propagated violence and antisemitism on social media, in breach of the agency’s proclaimed policy of ‘zero tolerance’ for incitement.

The suspension of UNRWA employees only came to light after the outraged reaction of Palestinians in Gaza was reported in Arabic-language media, including Al Jazeera and Al Araby, as a former UNRWA staffer – who was fired for his own ties to the Hamas terrorist organisation – accused the agency of caving in to ‘Zionist pressure’ for taking measures against the employees.

UN Watch executive director Hillel Neuer said: ‘I came here to Brussels today to urge our governments attending the UNRWA international donors’ conference to finally hold the agency to account for its teachers who poison the minds of Palestinian schoolchildren with incitement to antisemitism and terrorism.

‘I’m here urging delegations from the US, EU, Canada, UK, France, Germany, Sweden, Netherlands, Italy, Australia, Switzerland and many other countries to demand that their money to UNRWA – our taxpayer funds – not go to teachers who glorify Hitler.’

UN Watch welcomed the statement by Canadian Assistant Deputy Minister Sandra McCardell who underlined ‘the critical importance of UNRWA upholding humanitarian principles including neutrality in its work.’

‘Commitment to humanitarian principles, including neutrality, is unwavering for UNRWA,’ said Deputy Commissioner-General Leni Stenseth, addressing critiques by UN Watch and others.

She claimed, however, that ‘there are extraordinarily few verified breaches of neutrality’.

Neuer countered this. ‘The opposite is true. UNRWA has failed to respond to UN Watch’s August report on incitement, and failed to respond to our detailed follow-up letter in October to Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini.’

‘The agency has failed to provide even minimal transparency as to who it investigated from the list of 113 antisemitic teachers provided by UN Watch.’

UN Watch asked UNRWA to reveal which six of the 113 named employees were reportedly suspended.

The Biden administration recently restored more than $300 million in US funding for UNRWA, contingent on a Framework Agreement in which the agency promised ‘clear, consistent and prompt administrative or disciplinary action for staff violations of UNRWA’s Neutrality Framework.’

UN Watch is now calling for implementation of this pledge. ‘UNRWA owes basic transparency and accountability to its donors before they transfer vast sums of taxpayer dollars,’ said Neuer.

‘It’s time that UNRWA honors its solemn pledge to the US and other donors to apply a real “zero tolerance” policy, which means ensuring there is no place in the agency for teachers and other staff who incite racism, hate and violence,’ said Neuer.

If you like what you have just read, support the Daily Friend

Jews in Germany – “an uncomfortable existence”

http://www.winnipegjewishreview.com/article_detail.cfm?id=2939&sec=1&title=
_JEWS__IN__GERMANY_%E2%80%93_AN_UNCOMFORTABLE_EXISTENCE_

[ Editor’s note: The writer of this very thoughtful piece contacted me as a result of my article on the book I Sleep in Hitler’s Room.
http://www.winnipegjewishreview.com/article_detail.cfm?id=2823&sec=1&title=I_SLEEP_
IN_HITLER’S_ROOM:_U.S._JEWISH_AUTHOR_DISCOVERS_ALARMING_AMOUNT_OF_ANTI-SEMITISM_STILL_EXISTS_IN_GERMANY
.
I am very grateful that she did, and hope readers will read this piece carefully. It is a real eye opener.
Aliana Brodmann is a bilingual writer, translator and journalist in English and German. She is the daughter of Jewish Holocaust survivors from Poland. Her publications include: seven books, numerous articles and human interest stories in German and American newspapers and magazines. She was President of the PEN Centre of German Writers Abroad, the former German Exile PEN Centre, from 2003-2005.
Her new book of short stories in German SCHANDE- eine Liebe in Deutschland
(transl: DISGRACE – a love affair in Germany) is in progress.

JEWS IN GERMANY – AN UNCOMFORTABLE EXISTENCE

by Aliana Brodmann

Whenever I tell people abroad that I was born in Germany, or worse yet, that my parents- Jewish Holocaust survivors- never emigrated after World War II, the reaction is surprise and often outrage. How could they? How can they? The idea that people would voluntarily live among those who had murdered their families and robbed and abused them is inconceivable to others, particularly non-Jews and those who had emigrated under duress and with enormous sacrifices. The prevailing opinion is that Jews would only live in Germany because reparations of astronomic proportions were being paid to them or because they might be enjoying some other kind of extraordinary benefits, which compensate them for the unpalatable co-existence with their killers. Nobody seems to understand that most Post World War II Jews, particularly the Holocaust survivors, were emotionally too damaged to have been capable of any kind of coherent thought, not to speak of an ability to make sensible decisions about their lives. The Nazi persecution remained too much of an inescapable part of their daily existence. In addition they later suffered age-related impairments. Their descendents carry the multifaceted burden of their tragic legacy.


Medieval Gate leading into the city of Frankfurt
photo by Rhonda Spivak

Today two types of Jews live in Germany: those who were displaced or happened to find themselves there by the end of World War II and who had stayed for lack of opportunity or ability to leave, and those who built careers because they were Jews, in the media and in politics by conveying an amicable co-existence with Germans and thereby contributing to the desired image of a New Germany in which Jews appear to be living as equals alongside their German neighbors. These Jews call themselves proud Germans of Jewish faith, for which they are officially rewarded by German institutions with honors, grand gestures and decorations, while privately old attitudes and prejudices continued to prevail among the German public. In other words: both Jews and non-Jews are engaged in a strange sort of masquerade.

In discussing this self-representation, which is surely one of the strangest Jewish/ German phenomena, with a German non-Jewish journalist in New York recently, she protested: “What do you mean? I know many Jews in Berlin who consider themselves utterly German.”

Nobody seems to ponder, how and in what way Jews could possibly begin to imagine what it might feel like to be German, nor what kind of Germans specifically they think they are. But more importantly my colleague in New York didn’t even realize that her objection exactly confirmed my observation. It was only when I replied: “But that exactly is my point, since you for instance still see these so-called Germans as Jews,” that she fell silent and reproachfully so, as though I had deliberately trapped her.

My family, in any event, did not belong to this group, but rather to the first one, living a resolutely Jewish and pitifully deprived existence. We had little to do with the outside world and had only when absolutely necessary the most strained and uncomfortable exchanges with our German neighbors, who avoided us whenever they could. In the 50’s when I was growing up, one lived with a leaden silence that hung heavy and mercilessly above us, creating tension and fear of what would happen if it ever broke open. There was also a kind of stench that permeated the environment, incorporating the smell of burning coal in the winter-time that periodically threatened to suffocate you.

By what means my parents lived I could not understand, though it was obvious to me that they didn’t belong there and that they had endured something devastating beyond words that had ravaged their lives. This haunting mystery constantly preoccupied my mind and my imagination. I lived out my desperate lack of knowledge along with the sparse information I was able to extract from strange fantasies and terrible nightmares. My parents refused to talk about their painful past, which they must have felt too horrible for a child to know about. Of course, as we know today, that they simply lacked the language to communicate what they had endured. They felt, as most survivors, besmirched by what they had experienced and, contrary to today, nobody even wanted to know or hear anything about the Holocaust in Germany or any place else. The Germans kept silent for their own reasons.

I knew that there were these two groups living in this reeking ashen world: Germans and Jews. I also knew that our incredible sadness had something to do with them, that it was too devastating for my parents to talk about and that they, the Germans, pretended to have no clue as to what it had to do with them. There was an unwritten law that neither my parents, nor they could be asked about this disquieting circumstance. A horrible, huge thing that nobody wanted to talk about seemed to be stuck in everybody’s throat like some kind of indigestible obstruction, which everybody maneuvered around uncomfortably, accusing each other with highly charged silence. Despite this bizarre choreography, however, it became quite clear even to me with time, that the Germans had done something indescribably horrendous to us and that our fault lay in getting on their nerves by confronting them with it by our mere existence.

I was somehow made to understand, that we were guests, and that if one was a guest, one had to swallow whatever one was served, and even feign appreciation despite feeling like having to throw up. Because of my susceptibility to vomiting my mother introduced Princess Margaret to me as an example of exquisite refinement for having proven herself by eating live vermin with exemplary dignity as a guest in Africa. This was to convince me to work through the unappetizing muck I was served daily with just as much discipline. My mother couldn’t tell me, though, whether the princess hadn’t actually thrown up unbeknownst later somewhere in the jungle. She insisted that, no matter what, a lady, particularly a princess, wouldn’t be caught dead throwing up ever in any public place. That was why I usually threw up in private. Often I didn’t make it to the toilet in time, which was why I usually preferred to stay at home. In any event, I always felt sick. One lived with chronic nausea.

I eventually understood that my presence constituted a provocation to the Germans. I could tell by their looks of annoyance, particularly when I wore my chain with the Star of David around my neck or indicated may jewishness in some other equally provocative manner.

There were very precise distinctions as to what was German and what unGerman. And we were distinctly unGerman. This continued after World War II, when Germans resented that food and clothing be given to the refugees that had been displaced to Germany by force. They became particularly angry, when those tortured and robbed by the Nazis started asking to be reimbursed for their losses. Even those returning to Germany after the War, if they weren’t already despised for being Jewish, were taunted traitors, who had sunned themselves abroad while Germany suffered the War. The differentiation between them and us, German and unGerman had continued seamlessly.

No wonder, that decidedly ultra German authors like Thomas Mann, who returned from exile after the capitulation, were accused of an unGerman sentiment because of his critique of the Nazis. Any critical view of Germany, then as today, was and is considered unGerman, with a particular concern being Germany’s reputation abroad, which Thomas Mann was accused of having damaged. Actually the height of insolence: to rob, pillage, rape and kill, while demanding that one’s good reputation be preserved. There were only few and far between, who saw those returning emigrants as representatives of the true Germany, who had upheld Germany’s honorable name abroad and would be able to bring about a spiritual renewal at home. The majority of Germans confronted them with animosity. The playwright Berthold Brecht and the German Chancellor Willy Brandt are examples of those who had to bear the hostility Germans encountered upon their return from exile.

At some point I understood that Germans hadn’t accidentally killed Jews or had done so to comply with orders and under the threat of death, but on purpose and often menacingly for sheer sadistic pleasure. This I found extremely troubling because I had imagined deliberate killers to look visibly villainous, not oatmeal-colored and almost invisible as our neighbors in contrast to us Jews, who despite all efforts not to draw attention, always did.

Later I learnt, and with great emphasis, that not all Germans had killed. That some of them had even had Jewish friends. Only when they were asked about these friends, they never knew what had happened to them or where they had gone. Of course I wondered, what kind of friendships these might have been. After my initial relief to know that not all Germans hadbeen killers I realized that knowing this, one had to look really closely to see, who of them had blood on their hands and who didn’t. Also troubling new questions came up which were extraordinarily uncomfortable, such as: who exactly had done the killings, where, and how and why?

But there had also been – as we all know now – and what I of course had known all along- incredible looting. Everything belonging to Jews had been up for grabs. I knew about this because they had stolen my parents’ houses and everything in it. Even Jewish shops and entire businesses were officially confiscated from Jews. That, I figured, must have been extremely advantageous. Talking about the looting and stealing was especially taboo. Stealing couldn’t be explained away quite as easily as the destruction of people who had been declared a danger to Germany and unworthy of living. Stealing didn’t fit into the Nazi ideology of the Master Race. This was why the killing of undesirables eventually became a legitimate admission and an acceptable point of departure, not, however, any kind of reference to: when, where, how and everything else.

Some time ago I read that at a social gathering the late author, Primo Levi, had been asked by the wife of a German diplomat, where he had learned to speak German so fluently. When he responded truthfully: “In Auschwitz”, she had turned away with disgust, as though he had personally offended her. This incident reminded me of many experiences where I had caused irritation because of my honesty and naïveté. Jewish life experiences are considered insults, if not provocations to Germans.

A publisher of some of my books told me, that as a young girl after the War, she had been forced by the Americans to view documentary films about the concentration camps. I initially thought that she was expressing her outrage over the Nazi atrocities against the Jews. Only gradually did I realize that she had considered it offensive to be shown what her people had done to my parents and grandparents. The realization that she had considered the film and not the atrocities offensive explains the attitude of Germans to their crimes.

A high official in the German Foreign Service once remarked to me: “What is Germany actually being accused of (regarding the Holocaust)? After all, it is only because of our extraordinary abilities, our work ethics and discipline that we were able to perfectly execute what others have endeavored or are still endeavoring, isn’t it?”

Since I had long ago given up the habit of talking and therefore taken to writing, I didn’t respond, which gave him the opportunity to quickly conclude: ” Therefore one could really only accuse us of having extraordinary abilities, work ethics and discipline.”

In other words: not of robbing, killing, torturing or raping.

This attitude explains, why according to a German writer:”Most Germans have on a very basic level not understood, what they have actually done to the Jews.” It is no coincidence that no acceptable design for a Holocaust memorial in Berlin was generated for years, despite decades of effort. The vast compilation of ludicrous designs with even more ridiculous inscriptions for this memorial is symbolic of Germany’s evasiveness regarding her past.

The Germans simply haven’t understood what they did to us because they still don’t accept us as equals, human beings entitled to equal respect. And we are, among other things, speechless and unable to comprehend this gravely offensive mindset, which is infused with centuries of prejudices transmitted though Christian religions, folklore, literature, the arts and finally Hitler’s cunning propaganda.

For some of us the damage we have suffered manifests itself in a variation of the Stockholm Syndrome that presents as pathological submissiveness to Germans and shaming complicity. And not only those of us directly ravaged by the Holocaust, but even Jews around the world as renowned as Danny Goldhagen and Steven Spielberg, who were quoted as having said they considered their German honors to be the most significant ones they have received. Henry Kissinger described himself as touched to tears when he was made honorary citizen in his German hometown, which he had fled with his parents as a child. Even the late Jehudi Menuhin had shortly before his death allowed himself to utter statements, which could have well used some prior contemplation. These fellow Jews have all been unable to realize that the honors bestowed upon them were merely a ruse to generate prominent Jewish voices outside of Germany to hail Germany’s present day new image. It is still more important for Germany to have a clean reputation than to actually be clean, which is nowadays still best accomplished by positive Jewish voices abroad. Not only is Germany’s image in Germany is being promoted by display-Jews, but also Germany’s image in the world. While the sensationally talented Germans are slyly pursuing their interests the deeply disturbed Jews laud the non-existent emperor’s new clothes.

The gaping absence of wholesome Jewish life in current day Germany becomes apparent, where one generally looks for signs of life and continuity: in the condition of children and the state of their literature. The utter nonexistence of even just one story among all the children’s books on the market in Germany today which might refer to one live Jewish child in the country, speaks for itself. The fact that in stark contrast to this absence there are mountains of books about dead Jews must be contemplated.

The owner of a well-known children’s bookstore in Munich talked to me about the strange behavior of her customers who come into her store in the winter time to purchase Chanukah calendars, which she carries along with her Advent calendars for Christmas. She had noticed that the customers buying the Chanukah calendars take them to the cash register almost secretively, “as though they don’t want to be seen purchasing them”. She had given a perfect example of what it feels like to live as a Jew in Germany today: trying publicly to forever conform in quiet negation of one’s true identity, many Jews live two identities.

The most poignant testament to this impaired existence is a slim volume published by Kiepenheuer & Witsch with quotations by Jewish children. It is the only reference on the German book market that Jewish children exist there. In reading the quotations of these children I found that their fears, reservations and wishes in the 90’s were dreadfully similar to my own 40 years ago in the Germany of post World War II: their discomfort over notknowing whether their neighbors knew that they were Jewish; what they might do if they knew; all their associated insecurities together with their enormous fear about the general animosity towards foreigners.

The editor of a prominent children’s book publishing house said to me:” Stories about Jews don’t sell. They belong to the ” problem books like books about abuse etc.”

Ten years ago I surmised: “Normalcy will have arrived in Germany when Jews will no longer be integrated into literature because of their Jewish issues but as human beings, when they are called by their names like everyone else. Not: So-and-so the Jew, but Moritz Schwarz, the grocer, journalist or teacher.” Accordingly, we must still be light-years away from any kind of normalcy.

We are a people so impaired by our abuse from the Germans, that under the kindest of conditions it would take generations upon generations until we had regained our confidence and our dignity. Only this can explain the satirical novel by Michael Degen, Blondi, where a Jew is so desperate to be part of society that he doesn’t mind turning into Hitler’s dog. Our pain, our despair and our speechlessness are – as they were in the Thirties – their ticket to further digressions. Today there are again beatings of Jews in the streets of Germany with the police often unable to find the perpetrators, there are anti-Semitic declarations in public, which are being explained away as new unencumbered opinions, since of course they couldn’t possibly have anything to do with the old anti-Semitism due to the length of time that has passed since the 30’s. Nobody addresses the fact that after 1945 the same politicians, teachers, physicians and clerks remained in their positions and thereby promulgated their Nazi ideologies and contaminated the next generations. Nobody seems to believe that behavioral patterns, assumptions and beliefs within families and in the immediate environment influence the thoughts and actions of generations, particularly if nothing is being done to change these deeply ingrained patterns and with them the lack of German empathy for the Jewish soul.

In fact, the majority of Germans today want it to be understood, that they have no relationship to the past of their families or the history of their country. Or to quote the author Martin Walser, who voiced the collective German sentiment. When being honored with the venerable German Peace Prize for Literature he said that he: “chooses to look away whenever faced with the Holocaust,” starting an inflammatory public dialogue, which has been playing itself out ever since. A highly offensive statement to us Jews, still suffering the pain of the Nazi persecution, but also because we are a people defined by our collective memory, ever aware of how much our past is part of our present life. This too distinguishes us from the Germans: our awareness of how much the past is part of the present.

One worries, with what other kind of perceptional difficulties Germans are plagued and what else they choose to selectively include or exclude from their lives? We Jews in any event live with an ever present consciousness about our past, beginning with Abraham. We have a burning desire to know our individual family histories. We are aware that our individual as well as our collective history tells us, who we are and thereby gives us a sense of our possibilities in the world. We are taught that to claim the accomplishments of our predecessors, we must also bear the responsibility of any failings. We know that by looking away one becomes guilty.

No civilized human being turns away from a suffering person, but offers to ease the pain, particularly when he or she knows that this pain was inflicted by his or her parents or others in their immediate environment. To explain away a basic humanitarian responsibility by claiming: I was born later, this is none of my business, it all doesn’t concern me, is not only immoral and uncivilized. Today’s Germans, in fact, project a public image of commitment to humanitarian concerns of fighting diseases and human rights transgressions in the world. Hardly anyone would openly state that turning away from a person suffering AIDS or cancer is appropriate because they didn’t cause it. The call to turning away from Jewish suffering is grossly anti-Semitic. As it is to demand life threatening conditions that would be considered unreasonable for any other country as appropriate for Israel, the land of the Jews and only democracy in the Near East.

This reality is finally hitting home even to the German display-Jews, who had in their psychological confusion, their painfully established blind- and deafness tried to integrate themselves into the new Germany, but can now no longer keep up with the charade. To swallow the shame of having to witness Germans openly vocalizing in public forums what they had hitherto only dared to whisper among themselves is difficult to digest even for the most resistant Jewish stomachs such as Charlotte Knobloch’s, the former head of the Central Council of Jews.

A gaping absence in this public dialog are voices from all those Jewish institutions that claim to “ fight anti-Semitism” while living off their membership’s generous support. As in the past, the Anti-Defamation League, American Jewish Committee and others were complicitly silent when a recent public debate on circumcision ensued in Germany and escalated into condemnation of this religious ceremony practiced by Jews for over 4000 years as a human rights violation. Hannah Arendt might be turning in her grave.

Within this context it is obvious that the Peace Prize award to the Jewish author Fritz Stern was intended to temporarily placate the uproar against the disgrace of awarding it to Martin Walser the preceding year, regardless of how deserving Stern was of this honor.

This year’s bestowment of the Adorno Prize on the Jewish-American scholar Judith Butler, an extreme critic of Israel, can only mean that Germany is now also positioning itself to legitimize it’s increased distancing from the land of the Jews, which it had hitherto only begrudgingly supported to maintain appearances.

Copyright Aliana Brodmann 2000, 2012

Voluntary Servitude – Does it have to be in the DNA of the Jew?

By David Bedein,  A  HALF CENTURY SINCE THE CALL TO JERUSALEM

Full Disclosure:

It  was just before the  Seder more than 50 years ago that my father called me in Madison with the news:  

A letter of acceptance at Hebrew University for the Fall semester Jerusalem

My Bones shuddered.


Next Year in Jerusalem  would be 
this year in Jerusalem.

 The Seder took on new meaning

Yet Fellow Jews at the  Hillel seder in Madison were not impressed.

What I noted in a 1970 diary entry was ” the willingness of fellow  Jews to

live in slavery”

————————————

Most Jews  do not view israel as a step up from slavery.

Unlike other enslaved peoples, the Torah goes out its way, throughout the book of Genesis, to emphasize that  Jacob and his children, relocated to Egypt on their own accord, as a free people,  seeking  sustenance – for which they were ready to subject themselves  to a voluntary servitude of their souls.

“We shall be slaves to you, Pharoah!” היינו עבדים לפרעה  (Gen. 47:25) proclaim the people of Israel, represents the  opposite  theme of the Seder,   “We were slaves to Pharoah”

The Hebrew context of “willing servitude” says it best:

The Jews cried out:

היינו עבדים לפרעה

A full  generation before they cried out

עבדים היינו לפרעה

The Israelites  understood  slavemy in Egypt as a lifesaving moment

Therefore, Torah commentaries postulate  that only 20% of the Israelites chose to leave Egypt

Another reason to remain in Egypt was articulated on page 11 of the tractate Rosh Hashanah, which was  that the physical bondage of the people of Israel ended on Rosh Hashanah, seven months before the exodus from Egypt.

And Pharoah did not lift the spiritual oppression of the Jews when  he  ended their physical abuse as  slaves.

Pharoah offered to sustain descendants of Jacob in  Goshen,  as  slaves to  to the gods of Egypt

Indeed, the majority of Israelites opted for voluntary servitude in diaspora rather  than the  trials and tribulations of an uncertain trek to Israel.

In the “Amud HaAish”  TV  documentary series which documents the return of the Jews to Israel in the 20th century, Zionist leader Chaim Weizman laments   “Ayaecha”- “where are you” – to the people of Israel for not flocking  to Israel after the 1917 Balfour Declaration and the 1922 San Remo Conference, which bestowed international recognition and welcome  for the Jews to return.

Jews prefer voluntary servitude in suburban Goshen to life in Israel. Is that in their DNA?.

The challenge of the Jew is to reject that DNA.