Why Totalitarians Hate Jews (FrontPageMagazine.com) By George Jochnowitz 03/11/11)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2011/03/11/why-totalitarians-hate-jews/
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United in Hate: The Left’s Romance With Tyranny and Terror. By Jamie
Glazov. Los Angeles: WND Books, 2009. xxxii + 264 pp.
Jamie Glazov was born in the USSR in 1966. His parents were both
dissidents, who felt they had to flee. They left the USSR in 1972
and settled in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1975. Glazov grew up in a
family that knew about the horrors of totalitarianism. He eventually
earned a Ph.D. in history and is now the managing editor of Frontpage
Magazine, an online political journal that fights totalitarian
tendencies in leftist thinking. To a certain extent, Glazov is
continuing a fight against totalitarianism and anti-Semitism that was
begun by Hannah Arendt.
In 1951, Arendt wrote a book, The Origins of Totalitarianism, which
has since become a classic, exploring the 20th-century phenomenon of
totalitarianism. One-fourth of this work is devoted to the question
of anti-Semitism.[1] Arendt wrote the book shortly after World War
II, but her decision to link an ancient prejudice to a modern
political ideology is as valid today as it was then. Glazov, in his
book, provides us with a quotation to illustrate this connection.
Ulrike Meinhof, one of the founders of the terrorist Baader-Meinhof
Gang, said, “Auschwitz meant that six million Jews were killed … for
what they were: money Jews. … Anti-Semitism is really a hatred of
capitalism.”[2] Meinhof was proud of her anti-Semitism.
Meinhof, to be sure, was a terrorist. Unfortunately, many leftists
who have never committed acts of violence take positions approaching
hers. Noam Chomsky, for example, would never describe himself as an
anti-Semite and became famous for his writings on linguistics before
he had published anything about politics. Chomsky visited Hezbollah
in 2006[3] despite the fact that its leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah,
had said about Jews, “If they all gather in Israel, it will save us
the trouble of going after them worldwide.”[4] Chomsky showed by his
visit that he had chosen not to understand that Nasrallah was calling
for genocide.
Glazov feels that there are two basic reasons that the left has
joined Muslim terrorists to oppose Jews and Israel. “First … leftism,
like Islamism, detests modernity, individual freedom, and any value
placed on individual human life. … In addition, Jews are seen as
being synonymous with the oppressive structures of corporate
capitalism and globalization.”[5] Oddly, nowhere in the book are
Israel’s kibbutzim ever mentioned. Before Israel became an
independent state, its cultivated land consisted of either kibbutzim
(communal farms) or moshavim (cooperative farms). A kibbutz was
unambiguously a socialist enterprise; a moshav was partly private and
partly communal. Since farms take up much more space than cities and
towns do, most of the land owned by Jews during the days of the
British Mandate was either entirely or partially the property of
socialist communities. Corporate capitalism indeed! Leftist
opponents of Israel have chosen not to know this fact, and Glazov has
not reminded them or us about this piece of history.
Glazov’s book is divided into four sections: (1) The Believer, (2)
Romance with Tyranny, (3) The Death Cult Cousin: Islamism, and (4)
Romance with Terror. The first part sets the tone for the whole
book. Believers don’t question. They have faith. Marxism is not a
religion, but it does demand belief—blind belief—in the doctrines it
teaches. Leftists today may ignore Marx’s writings about economics,
but they support and have always supported regimes that suppress free
thought. As we saw above, Glazov says that rejecting modernity and
individuality is what links leftism to Islamism..
Some readers may disagree with Glazov’s allegation that leftism
detests modernity, individual freedom, and the value of individual
human life. At this point, we should remember that a liberal is not
a leftist For example, Nadine Gordimer, responding to an
interviewer who described her as a white liberal, said, “I happen to
be white, but I’m not a liberal, my dear. I’m a leftist.”[6] Glazov
writes of many leftists who certainly are not liberals but rather
supporters of totalitarianism, the various systems of thought control
that Arendt talked about in her 1951 book.
Hannah Arendt’s good friend, Mary McCarthy, praised North Vietnamese
society because she felt it had controlled thought and recreated
human nature. McCarthy wrote, “The phenomena of existential agony,
of alienation, don’t appear among the Vietnamese—probably in part
because they lack our kind of ‘ego,’ and our endowment of free-
floating guilt.”[7] It is amazing that a novelist as informed and
sensitive as McCarthy could actually believe that North Vietnam had
ended ego and free-floating guilt; it is even more amazing that she
could believe this was a good thing. McCarthy certainly was not
alone. Shirley MacLaine, who visited China in 1972, wrote that she
had never seen a quarrel in China and went on to say that “it slowly
dawned on me that perhaps human beings could really be taught
anything, that we were simply blank pages upon which our characters
are written by parents, schools, churches, and the society
itself.”[8] MacLaine is unambiguously cheering the idea of thought
control and the desirability of erasing human differences. I should
add a personal note here: I lived in China twice, during the spring
semesters of 1984 and 1989, and I saw and heard lots of quarrels.
MacLaine, of course, is echoing Marx and Engels, who said that after
the final stage of communism was achieved, people would no longer
have any disagreements and the state would wither away.
Glazov, as we saw above, said that the left had joined with Islamism
to oppose Jews since Jews were linked to globalism and capitalism.
But there is a more profound factor in the hostility that
totalitarians feel toward Jews: Jews argue. They think dangerous
thoughts. Marxist regimes reject thinkers and intellectuals.
Chairman Mao exiled teachers and writers to the countryside to learn
from the peasants. Pol Pot simply killed them. Mao and Pol Pot
didn’t attack Jews because there weren’t any in China and Cambodia
(the Jews of Kaifeng, China, had assimilated and become invisible
long before Mao ruled the country). Hitler, to be sure, never
explained why he had to kill people who were Jews or descended from
Jews. Perhaps he felt that the genetic flaw he had to eradicate was
the argument gene.
Since Jews argue, a variety of beliefs may be found among them.
There have certainly been Jews who were Communists; there are even
Jews today who are sympathetic to Islamism. All the same, it is
logical that argument and free thought are a problem for
totalitarians. Totalitarians hate Jews. Hitler’s decision to try to
eradicate Jews from the world was nevertheless irrational. Germany
was a country that always respected scholars and intellectuals, and
Hitler did not eliminate scholars the way Mao and Pol Pot did. Jews
were heavily represented among Germany’s academics and scientists.
Hitler knew he needed scientists because he wanted Germany to be able
to produce atomic weapons, but anti-Semitism took priority over this
need. Einstein fled Germany; Edward Teller and Szilard fled
Germany’s ally, Hungary. Enrico Fermi, who was not Jewish but was
married to a Jew, fled Europe when Mussolini extended Hitler’s racial
laws to Italy. Hitler, for reasons that will never be fully
understood, felt that killing Jews was virtuous and that virtue took
precedence over his country’s military needs.
Hitler was a music lover who admired the music of Anton Bruckner,
Richard Wagner, and Richard Strauss. He almost certainly would have
adored the music of Gustav Mahler, but anti-Semitism came first.
Mahler had been born a Jew, and so his music was banned, as was the
music of Mendelssohn, another composer of Jewish descent. Jewish
musicians fled, if they were lucky and able to do so. Those who
didn’t escape were murdered.
Today, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is echoing the irrationality that Hitler
put into effect 70 years ago. Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons has
led many nations to impose sanctions against it. Israel may decide
that it has to launch a pre-emptive attack against Iran’s nuclear
facilities. Ahmadinejad has no practical need for these weapons,
which are threatening his country’s security rather than protecting
it. But he is amassing atomic bombs as part of a policy announced by
moderate President Ali Akhbar Rafsanjani, who has in effect suggested
that Iran should turn itself into a suicide bomb. In the annual Al-
Quds (Jerusalem) sermon given on December 14, 2001, Rafsanjani said
that if one day the world of Islam comes to possess nuclear weapons,
Israel could be destroyed. He went on to say that the use of a
nuclear bomb against Israel would leave nothing standing, but that
retaliation, no matter how severe, would merely do damage to the
world of Islam.[9]
President Ahmadinejad, unlike Rafsanjani, is no moderate. How can
sanctions frighten him if he is not afraid of exposing Iran to
nuclear retaliation? Like Hitler, Ahmadinejad doesn’t care how much
damage he will do to his own people if that’s the price he has to pay
to act out his insanely murderous plans.
Hitler, as we have seen, eliminated Jewish musicians and music by
composers of Jewish ancestry, but he did not hate music per se.
Stalin attacked Prokofiev, Shostakovich, and Khachaturian for
composing music that was bourgeois—whatever that means—but he did not
hate music per se. On the other hand, as Glazov informs us, “The
Taliban illegalized music completely in Afghanistan, and Ayatollah
Khomeini banned most music from Iranian radio and television.”[10]
Lenin did not ban music, but he wouldn’t listen to it. “It makes you
want to say stupid, nice things and stroke the heads of people who
could create such beauty while living in this vile hell.”[11] During
Chairman Mao’s Cultural Revolution, the only musical works that could
be performed were eight revolutionary operas selected by Mao’s wife,
Jiang Qing. The idea of limiting and censoring music is at least as
old as the 4th century B.C.E., when Plato wrote that in the Republic
he envisioned, the flute and other instruments “capable of modulation
into all the modes” would be banned.[12] We don’t think of Plato as a
totalitarian, but he shared the totalitarian rulers’ fear of the
power of music to unleash the human spirit.
Plato expressed an idea that is related to thought control: he called
for the Noble Lie, a contradiction in terms if ever there was one.
In particular, he said that the people should be taught that Rulers
were made with gold, Auxiliaries with silver, and craftsmen with iron
and brass.[13] Chairman Mao also divided people into three
categories. The first was Mao himself; the second was the Party; the
third was the laobaixing, the ordinary people (literally the “old 100
surnames”). When I was teaching in China in 1989, during Beijing
Spring, passers-by approached me and asked questions, often in
Chinese. One man asked me whether, if Plato were alive today, he
would consider Chairman Mao an example of the Philosopher King. My
Chinese is not very good, but the man was very patient and made sure
that I understood his question. Since I disapprove of the politics
of both Plato and Chairman Mao, I said yes. The question led me to
understand that it was no accident that Mao and Plato both wanted to
ban certain kinds of music.
Plato said that literature should be altered so that people should
not fear death: “The poets must be told to speak well of that other
world. The gloomy descriptions they now give must be forbidden, not
only as untrue, but as injurious to our future warriors.”[14] We are
reminded of the perpetrators of 9/11, who willingly died so that they
could kill, even though their dramatic and well-coordinated plan
could not in any conceivable way have helped the cause of Islam. And
as Glazov writes, “Palestinian children blew themselves into
smithereens while their parents celebrated, proud that their
offspring had become shahid (martyrs).”[15] Totalitarians love death,
unlike Jews, which may be another factor in explaining why
totalitarians are so anti-Semitic. “Two of the most outstanding
Jewish characteristics are the love of life and the enduring struggle
to survive. For Islamists, as for Nazis and communists, this is an
egregious transgression against their faith.”[16]
Genocide was Hitler’s primary goal. Stalin engineered a famine in
his war against the kulaks that killed millions. Mao caused the
greatest famine in all human history. Pol Pot killed about a third
of his own people. The Kim Dynasty has caused years and years of
starvation in North Korea. Ahmadinejad is looking forward to
fighting a nuclear war against Israel. Totalitarianism is about
death. Life is about learning more every day. Those who fear
learning also hate life. As Glazov shows us, that is why
totalitarians are united in hate. (Copyright©2011
FrontPageMagazine.com 03/11/11)
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