Today’s Radical Chic (FrontPageMagazine.com) By Bruce Bawer 03/19/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/03/19/todays-radical-chic/
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In the June 8, 1970, issue of New York magazine, Tom Wolfe published
an article that has been recognized ever since as having perfectly
captured a critically important moment in the history of the American
cultural elite. “Radical Chic” was Wolfe’s devastating,
unforgettable account of a party he had attended at the Park Avenue
duplex penthouse apartment of Leonard Bernstein, then at the height
of his fame. The guest list broke down into two categories.
Category #1 was a who’s-who of world-class artists, celebrities, and
New York high-society types: actor Jason Robards, comedian Mike
Nichols, playwright Lillian Hellman, artist Larry Rivers, composer
Aaron Copland, photographer Richard Avedon, choreographer Jerome
Robbins, songwriter Stephen Sondheim, Hollywood director Otto
Preminger, Today show host Barbara Walters, and many, many more.
Category #2 was a selection of Black Panther leaders from around the
country, among them one Robert Bay, who just 41 hours earlier, as
Wolfe noted, had been “arrested in an altercation with the police,
supposedly over a .38-caliber revolver that someone had, in a parked
car in Queens at Northern Boulevard and 104th Street or some such
unbelievable place, and taken to jail on a most unusual charge
called ‘criminal facilitation.’”
One of the Panthers addressed the gathering. His theme: although,
for example, “21 members of the Black Panther Party” had been
indicted recently “on ridiculous charges of conspiring to blow up
department stores and flower gardens,” the Panthers were a peaceable
group whose real concerns were indicated by the clinics and
children’s breakfast programs they were setting up around the
country. “We recognize,” he said, “that this country is the most
oppressive country in the world, maybe in the history of the world.
The pigs have the weapons and they are ready to use them on the
people…ready to commit genocide against those who stand up against
them…..All we want is the good life, the same as you. To live in
peace and lead the good life, that’s all we want.” The Panthers’
lawyer compared the prosecution of the Panthers to the Reichstag
fire – both being efforts by tyrannical governments to eliminate the
opposition. And then the Panthers solicited contributions, in
response to which the glitterati shouted out pledges – a few hundred
dollars here, a few thousand there.
And then an art-gallery owner, depicted by Wolfe as a social climber
who had recently arrived from Chicago, shouted out: “Who do you call
to give a party?” Because this wasn’t the first and it wouldn’t be
the last party for the Black Panthers to be held in a fancy Manhattan
home. Holding parties for Black Panthers, in the upper-class
Manhattan of the very late Sixties and very early Seventies, was the
height of chic. While presented as an act of high morality, it was
in fact, as Wolfe explained, an example of “nostalgie de la boue, or
romanticizing of primitive souls.” It was also a way for upper-crust
folks to distinguish themselves from the earnest, middle-class types
who supported earnest, middle-class civil-rights groups like the
NAACP. At the root of it all, the fact was that the category #1
people at Leonard Bernstein’s party had everything, except for one
thing – namely, the freedom from guilt that goes with not having
everything. And so – as an act of atonement, of expiation – they
held and attended these parties, thereby not only liberating
themselves from limousine-liberal guilt but also lifting themselves
up, in their own eyes, to a moral high ground from which they could
look down upon the middle class with a pure, guiltless, delicious
condescension that made their lives, and their privilege, complete.
As Wolfe’s article made clear, in order to have a successful Panthers
party one had to steer delicately around certain awkward details,
such as the reality of these people’s violent criminal activity, the
reality of their revolutionary goals, and the reality of their
profound racism and anti-Semitism (Wolfe quotes a virulently anti-
Semitic poem from a Black Panther publication). Instead, one had to
keep the focus on the illusion that the Panthers were heroes of their
people, innocent victims, believers in All Good Things who had been
utterly misrepresented by a hostile media establishment.
Cut to March 14, 2012, and another address in Manhattan – namely, the
Jewish Community Center on the Upper West Side. The occasion: a
panel discussion entitled “Combating Islamophobia.” The panelists: a
rabbi, Marc Schneier, and an imam, Shamsi Ali. The moderator: Chelsea
Clinton. Among the 225 people in attendance, fortunately for us, is
the author Phyllis Chesler, who has now recorded this event for
posterity. Like Tom Wolfe in 1970, she has captured a twisted moment
in the history of the New York cultural elite in all its moral
vacuity, social irresponsibility, and unblushing self-congratulation.
For those of us unfamiliar with Rabbi Schneier, Chesler provides a
brief and helpful résumé: “He has landed in the media many times both
for his marital woes (four divorces) and for his interfaith work. He
runs a very popular synagogue in Westhampton Beach on Long Island,
which offers non-stop entertainment, lectures, films, gatherings,
communal hot lunches and dinners, as well as religious services. He
is also the son of Rabbi Arthur Schneier, the long-time rabbi of Park
East Synagogue who began the tradition of having politicians and
celebrities address his congregants.” One gets the idea.
Schneier is also “Principal Officer” of something called the
Foundation for Ethnic Understanding, which “reported gross receipts
of $825,638.00 for 2010” and “receipts totaling nearly 3.7 million
dollars for the period between 2006 and 2010.” Among the
foundation’s directors is billionaire Alexander Machkevitch, so “one
might conjecture that he has funded some of the work of this
Foundation.” In addition to his foundation income, Schneier earns “a
handsome salary and a rabbinical allowance” from the Westhampton
Synagogue.And who’s this imam? As Chesler reports, he’s the
successor to Sheik Muhammad Gemeaha, who blamed 9/11 on Jews and said
that if Americans had known the truth about that atrocity, “they
would have done to Jews what Hitler did.”
Chesler sets the scene:
I arrived at the Jewish Community Center and found that a protest
organized by Jewish, Hindu, Sikh, and Christian activists was in
progress. Banners held aloft read: “What Are Muslims Doing for Peace?
Burning Churches, Honor Murdering Women. Where is the Muslim
Protest?” “Since 9/11, Radical Islamists Committed 11,961 Attacks,
Killed 75,038, Injured 115,255.”
Inside, the panelists tip-toed through the tulips and landmines, with
a well-meaning, well-practiced display of earnestness, “goodness,”
love, mutual admiration, and perhaps some self-admiration as well.
There was no mention of terrorism, Islamism, or Islamic gender and
religious apartheid.
Ms. Clinton, poised and very blonde, noted that “We are being
protested against” which she considers a “positive sign. That means
we are talking about something important.”
While “Rabbi Schneier was stiff, pompous, and self-important,”
Chesler reports, the imam was “very likeable and charming,”
although “his stances on key issues are less so.”
Chesler quotes the self-important rabbi as saying that “seven years
ago, my friend, Russell Simmons, challenged me to close the divide,
narrow the chasm between Muslims and Jews. And now, we are now the
international address for Muslim-Jewish relations.” So what have the
name-dropping rabbi and the deceptively charming imam accomplished
together? Well, one thing they’ve done is to jointly protest Rep.
Peter King’s extremely important hearings about radicalism among
American Muslims. They’ve also sponsored so-called “twinning”
programs, each of which brings together members of one synagogue and
one mosque on an annual basis, presumably to talk about peaceful co-
existence and such. As Chesler notes, these programs take place in
North America and Europe but not, ahem, “in the Arab Middle East or
in Muslim Asia.” Chesler also mentions “the colossal failure of
their Buffalo ‘twinning’ program,” which apparently led to an
unpleasant confrontation between some “well-intentioned Rabbis” and
a “Jew-hating radical Sheikh.” Gee, who’d have expected that?
Ultimately, Chesler found the evening at the Jewish Community
Center “disappointing” and “boring” because “too much was avoided.
Too much ‘feel good’ Kool-aid was passed around. Everyone seemed to
be drinking it. What was not said was far more important than what
was said.” Chesler is far less rough on the imam than she is on the
rabbi, whom she describes, not (it appears) without ample
justification, as “a dangerous Court Jew who is profiting from the
gravy train of the ‘interfaith’ business. He is profiting from his
fiddling while Israel and the world burns. He is part of a grand
taqiyya effort to present Muslims in a time of Islamism as peaceful
partners. He is on a mission to persuade Jews to become agreeable
dhimmis ‘for their own good’; otherwise, things will go badly for
them and for other infidels. He thinks of himself as a great man. We
have seen his sort before.”
Indeed. At the Bernstein party, the beverage of choice was also feel-
good Kool Aid. What was not said on that evening in 1970, too, was
much more important than what was said. While the Black Panthers
were committing all kinds of violent mischief, Bernstein (though
not “fiddling,” strictly speaking, but rather tickling the ivories
and waving a conductor’s baton) was eager to present supporters of
Maoist revolution as peaceful partners in a quest for a better world,
just as Rabbi Schneier is out to whitewash the religion of jihad.
Bernstein and friends bowed and scraped to the Black Power movement
in hopes of escaping the firing squad should the Panthers’ hoped-for
revolution ever materialize; in the same way, Schneier is on a
campaign to dhimmify his flock for, as Chesler rightly puts
it, “their own good.” And just like the Bernstein party, the event
that Chesler has now immortalized was clearly, in its own way, a
sociological study that shines a bright light on (among other things)
upper-class New York narcissism and self-congratulation, shameless
social climbing, nostalgie de la boue, and a truly repellant
condescension toward the purported prejudices (read: legitimate
concerns) of the lower orders.
But there’s one major difference between then and now, between the
Bernstein party in 1970 and the Islamophobia event in 2012. “Radical
Chic” appeared in New York magazine, which was then the Sunday
supplement of the Herald-Tribune, New York’s “other” serious
newspaper. After the Bernstein party, moreover, the New York Times –
believe it or not – actually ran a stern editorial criticizing the
Park Avenue elite for romanticizing thugs like the Panthers. Today,
which New York establishment media organ would publish a piece like
Chesler’s? And need I add that none of us are holding our breaths
waiting for a Times editorial denouncing “Combating Islamophobia”?
(Copyright © 2012 FrontPageMagazine.com 03/19/12)
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