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Antisemitism pt 3: The old 'new antisemitism'

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The old new Antisemitism

I'm going to skip most of the details of the Holocaust. We all know that it was the most premeditated, industrialized, and intended to be the most complete genocide in history. Or, at least, for those of us who don't know that, there is no hope. Instead, there are a few questions surrounding the Holocaust that it is helpful to explore – the how and why. First, is how the whole of German society could allow such a thing to happen. For many, there are easy answers to this in the inherent evils of the "German nature," whatever that is. This series, however, is intended more for a left that won't give in to such bigotry, and I'm going to dismiss it entirely. There are also historical differences between nations that sometimes seem to explain, but we should be careful in how much power we grant to such explanations and careful to present more than merely a subtler form of essentialist, anti-German racism. Germany prior to the rise of the Nazis was, in fact, very much like other European nations, not notably more antisemitic than France or Britain. Neither, indeed was it much more nationalistic than France. And while much has been made of the character of German nationalism that developed out of friction between the different German states prior Bismarkian Germany, that development was not especially different from French or British consolidation into the nations they are today. Attempts at explanation that rely too much on German history (sometimes going back to the Protestant Reformation) often seem convincing until we realize that they don't explain the fundamental question they are meant to. Why then and there?

That German society overall was vulnerable to such ideologies has more to do with universal human psychology. That is not to say that human nature is corrupt, another right-wing answer, but that human nature has certain flaws. Stanley Milgram's psychological experiments, for instance, devised in response to the Holocaust, demonstrate how even good people who are not prone to sadism will, under certain circumstances, follow the orders of an authority figure to an extreme end. Other experiments and historical examples extend this explanation to other types of situations. And so, one of the lessons of the Holocaust, sometimes forgotten, is that such evils do not require especially evil societies, and so we mustn't simply say "It can't happen here." For anyone further interested in such analysis, I recommend the works of psychologist and historian, Robert Jay Lifton. This goes a long way to explaining how, but in recognizing that one does not need an especially sadistic or otherwise "evil" society for such things to happen, we reinforce the difficulty and importance of "why then and there?"

Historical analysis always struggles with looking for causes. There are both continuities and breaks in historical trends. There is always the question of how far back to look for "root" causes. I will not pretend that what is written here is a complete explanation for the Holocaust. However, it does seem very much to be a necessary condition for the Holocaust, one which helps to explain why then and there. And while it may not be a sufficient explanation in all respects, many of the important events it cannot explain (such as the Night of the Long Knives, and more generally the rise to prominence within the National Socialist party of someone like Hitler) seem inevitable over a sufficient period of time with certain conditions. I'm going to focus on the nature of antisemitism in Germany at the time.

This historiography begins in 1879, when Wilhelm Marr published Der Sieg Des Judenthums über das Germanenthum (The Victory of Jewishness over German-ness) and influenced a dramatic change in the nature of antisemitism. At the time, Jew-hatred was not especially common in German society or Western Europe in any open or blatant form. It was the Age of Reason, and such religious prejudices were looked down upon as an anachronism from a bygone barbarism. In the south of Germany, nearer central Europe, there were occasionally pogroms, but unlike the Russian pogroms, they were not instigated by the authorities of the state or church. When they did occur, those authorities responded quickly and effectively. (The Russian pogroms, unfortunately, are almost always under-emphasized in histories due to space concerns, and I'm going to repeat that injustice here. Although Jewish life in the Pale of Settlement vies for the title of worst oppression in Jewish history, even Jewish writers of the Pale focused instead on the West, where they saw their own future liberation predicted.) Discrimination against Jews, though still present, had subsided sufficiently that Jews nearly caught up to the rest of German society in simple measures like wealth. Legal emancipation was granted in 1871, and Jews began to turn toward fuller cultural acceptance. Already the most fully assimilated Jews in European history, they sought out positions in the arts and sciences to prove their ability as Germans to contribute to German culture. Rates of conversion and intermarriage were relatively high. Even when Jewish couples did not themselves convert, it was not unusual for them to have their children baptized.

In this atmosphere, Marr could not successfully agitate against Jews as Jews in open and obvious ways. As historian Shulamit Volkov notes, he repeatedly denied hatred of Jews:

"There is no Jew hatred in my heart," he writes, "even less some hatred of Jews on a religious basis; not even a 'hatred of this nation' or a 'hatred of this race' "

In Marr's case, we have reason to be skeptical of these claims. Even he admitted that

in the past I have sharply polemicized against the Jews, but I plead guilty of the charge... my politics has been nothing but an anachronism.

However, there is also reason to believe that he really did see himself as somewhat reformed. Racial "science" was coming into vogue, and he may have preferred it over medieval religious intolerance. Even so, his hatred that was not purely racial. In fact, his wife was Jewish and his worst vitriol was saved for German gentiles who were alike to Jews. What he hated most was "Jewishness," which was naturally most common in Jews. Whatever his personal motivations, the effect of his agitation for antisemitism rather than a rejected Jew-hatred was effective. Many people, Jews and non-Jews alike were unsure whether this antisemitism was a continuation of Jew-hatred or not. Many vocal opponents of Jew-hatred, which was not socially acceptable, openly embraced antisemitism, which was. But while this was often seen as completely different from Jew-hatred and therefore moral, it meant that a Jew could not escape their Jewishness merely by converting to Chritianity. Jewishness became an even more essentialized trait, and hatred spread against an even larger group of Jewish (or Jew-ish) people.

Marr's antisemitism was extreme. During this time of the Pogroms in Russia, Marr wrote that Israel was the most powerful nation in the world. There was no actual state of Israel, and hardly anyone who even dreamed of one, but Marr argued that the Jews controlled Britain and France and were winning in the struggle over Germany. He saw Russia – the culmination of Medieval European oppression and violence – as the world's last stronghold against the Jews. Yet the term antisemitism, by not referring to Jews directly as such, disguised his hatred sufficiently. According to Volkov:

Significantly, the term "antisemitism" did not refer directly to Jews or to Judaism. It spelled a rather vague opposition to "semitism," that is, to everything related to the existence of some obscure semitic race. According to all contemporary authorities, the Jews, who were known and familiar to the European nations from time immemorial, constituted only one segment of this race, whereas no one could precisely identify the others. Still, the new term created a larger semantic space as a vessel for a variety of desired contents. It had a scientific aura and could be placed on a par with such terms as "liberalism" or "conservatism," thus entering respectable linguistic company, no doubt.

Marr began his political career as a left-liberal. Although we can doubt his credentials as a leftist on some issues, there are others who were more clearly anti-racist. Paul de Lagarde, for instance, consistently viewed racism with abhorence, calling it "a crude form of materialism, scientifically meaningless." (In England just over a decade after Marr's first publications, similar antisemitism could be seen prominently among leftists with the most sterling anti-racist credentials in the movement against the Boer War.) It wasn't long before some other leftists, such as August Bebel, who called antisemitism "the socialism of fools," were writing to Friedrich Engels about the failures of the German left, worried that opposition to antisemitism was too late to muster sufficiently. The conservative right, with romantic notions of an older Germany, quickly adopted this antisemitism, which played a central role in redefining the right. They adopted formerly leftist nationalism (as in the French slogan "Liberty, equality, fraternity") to blamed inequality among Germans to foreign influence, while many on the left drifted toward the right. In this way, the right was able to entice many in the lower-middle classes away from their previous anti-aristocratic liberalisms with a perverted populism. This is not to say that the masses were antisemitic and wooed with antisemitism itself. Indeed, the early antisemitic political parties were very short lived. Yet many, even among those most favorable toward Jews, were willing to adopt this disguised bigotry under certain political circumstances.

What grew between the time of Marr and the rise of the Nazis was not so much blatant antisemitism but the centrality of "the Jewish Question." Where you stood on that question became a shorthand, a cultural code, for your politics, often the only idea connecting disparate policy stances and strange political allies. When the Nazis became a political force, their ranks included people from all over the political spectrum, including socialists. Hitler solidified his power by assassinating political opponents on the Night of the Long Knives.

But he solidified his mass appeal by repeating the tropes of medieval Jew-hatred behind the veil of antisemitism. While Marr warned that the Jews were engaged in war with the Germans – a delusion that probably grew out of the conspiracy theories that always accompanied the Blood Libel – Hitler took the argument to it's logical conclusion. If one is being attacked one must defend oneself. The German people had to defend themselves against the worldwide Jewish conspiracy. The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, published in 1903 in Russia (during the Pogroms, remember) claimed definitive proof that a global Jewish conspiracy was bent on world domination. Although the Protocols had been proved a forgery in 1921, copies sold almost as well as the Christian Bible or Mein Kampf. Yet still, even many Jews were in denial that this antisemitism was such an extreme hatred. Most expected just an anullment of the emancipation of 1871. Until Kristallnacht in November, 1938.

That Jewish conspiracy was blamed for manipulating history on a grand scale and starting all wars and losing all wars. World War I, the French Revolution, the Russian Revolution, the Boer War. The conspiracy didn't have to make much sense – after all, Jews were clever and ruled the world with many different "tentacles." Capitalism and Communist were both seen as Jewish inventions to forward the aims of the conspiracy. If nothing made sense, that was because the Jews were too devious. Though, as many people today are aware, Hitler told the Germans their ethnic purity had been diluted, and homosexuals were the first to be killed, but the immediate threat was the Jews. The threat that needed to be dealt with urgently, that called for action, was the Jewish threat. As in the Middle Ages, when Jews were said to be allied with Satan, Jews were again the greatest threat facing mankind. When faced with such a threat, one cannot remain passive, and so the demonization of Jews was an effective call to arms. Hitler talked about lebensraum to the East. To the South were Germanic peoples he said should be united inside a Greater Germany. Why did Hitler invade France? For no other reason than to kill every European Jew?

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{"commentId":494422,"authorDomain":"ignoblus"}

Part I, on why the left should care about antisemitism, is here.
Part II, on anit-Judaism in the Middle Ages, is here.

I had nearly abandoned this series, for numerous reasons, but always promised I would get back to it. Now, I've felt I had to.

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  • 3 votes
Reply#1 - Thu Jan 25, 2007 1:12 PM EST
{"commentId":495352,"authorDomain":"populistamerica"}

An interesting series - it obviously took a lot of passion to write it in it's entirety. Kudos to you on that! I didn't read all three deeply, but went through each piece in quick fashion. What I found interested was the apparent omission of the entirety of the Semitic peoples - instead choosing to focus on just one group....

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  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Thu Jan 25, 2007 9:47 PM EST
{"commentId":495516,"authorDomain":"ignoblus"}

In one sense, that would be like talking about Koreans in a series on Finnish history. Semitic is a language group, and there technically are no Semitic people. Speaking a language from the group doesn't necessarily imply close ties though. The Korean and Finnish languages are actually related!

Now, Jews and Arabs are more closely related than Finns and Koreans, but this was originally Marr's mistake. He pretended there were Semitic people besides Jews, but he had no idea who these people were. They only served as an alibi for his new form of Jew hatred, and it's merely coincidence that there is anyone who comes close to the description. And, in the terms of Marr's antisemitism, they wouldn't fit at all. Had he known more about other "Semitic" peoples, he would have had to come up with a different term.

Today, we preserve Marr's mistake for several reasons. One is just that it's consistent with the last 128 years of the word's history during which it has meant hatred of Jews. If we were to change the word, we would likely forget a lot of that history. Most importantly, though, it is to preserve the history of the invention of the word. In many ways, it was new words for the same old bigotry. We should keep that in mind, and remember that just because people use new words, it doesn't mean they're meaning is different.

When people say, "Arabs are Semites, too," they are almost always being quite disingenuous. What they are trying to say is that because Arabs and Jews have one thing in common, and they don't feel the same way about Arabs, they're bigotry toward Jews isn't ugly. That's like saying "If I don't call Finns 'gooks' then how can I be prejudiced against Koreans?" It's silly, really.

But also what people are often trying to do is to obscure the history of antisemitism. They don't want you to know that the history of antisemitism is filled with conspiracy theories and obsessions about Jewish power. If they can tell you that the antisemitism is no different from the bigotries against Arabs, they can go on about Jews controlling the Congress (or the media, or any important social institution) without you realizing what they're saying. They can spout pure bigotry and still pretend that they haven't the slightest hateful thought. Just like Marr.

In fact, during the first wave of antisemitic political parties, in some towns in the more tolerant North of Germany, the people took pride in being willing to even invite Jews into their homes for dinner, but then they voted 70 to 80 percent in favor of antisemitic political parties.

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  • 2 votes
#2.1 - Thu Jan 25, 2007 11:25 PM EST
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{"commentId":495680,"authorDomain":"jimmyhavok"}

It strikes me that Marr's antisemitism is a symptom of several of the aspects of ur-fascism identified by Eco in Fourteen Ways of Looking at a Blackshirt, particularly those relating to intellectualism, since he attacks not Judaism, but Jewishness, a quality which he does not limit to Jews. It has a parallel in the modern use of the word "liberal" as an epithet.

Distrust of the intellectual world has always been a symptom of Ur-Fascism, from Hermann Goering's fondness for a phrase from a Hanns Johst play ("When I hear the word 'culture' I reach for my gun") to the frequent use of such expressions as "degenerate intellectuals," "eggheads," "effete snobs," and "universities are nests of reds."

...Ur-Fascism grows up and seeks consensus by exploiting and exacerbating the natural fear of difference. The first appeal of a fascist or prematurely fascist movement is an appeal against the intruders. Thus Ur-Fascism is racist by definition.

...The followers must feel humiliated by the ostentatious wealth and force of their enemies....Jews are rich and help each other through a secret web of mutual assistance. However, the followers of Ur-Fascism must also be convinced that they can overwhelm the enemies. Thus, by a continuous shifting of rhetorical focus, the enemies are at the same time too strong and too weak.

{"commentId":495680,"threadId":"71013","contentId":"421452","authorDomain":"jimmyhavok"}
    Reply#3 - Fri Jan 26, 2007 4:01 AM EST
    {"commentId":495877,"authorDomain":"ignoblus"}
    ...The followers must feel humiliated by the ostentatious wealth and force of their enemies....Jews are rich and help each other through a secret web of mutual assistance. However, the followers of Ur-Fascism must also be convinced that they can overwhelm the enemies. Thus, by a continuous shifting of rhetorical focus, the enemies are at the same time too strong and too weak.

    Yes, very much so. And, no, not really.

    First, though, a note. Marr distanced his bigotry from any identifiable person. It was about an almost metaphysical enemy that could scarcely be described. He could claim alibis for his prejudice in many ways, among them, by saying that of course any one Jew might or might not be so Jewish. Stereotypes always make allowances for exceptions, but this is an extreme example. In part, it was a strategy to avoid criticism in a time when many prejudices were not openly acceptable.

    And that is, perhaps, why the Holocaust was not the emotional frenzy of the Pogroms, but an orderly and industrious undertaking with copious record keeping.

    The Holocaust was characterized by a sense of ideological mission, by a relative lack of emotion and immediate hate (as opposed to pogroms, for example), and, most importantly, by its apparent lack of functionality. The extermination of the Jews seems not to have been a means to another end. They were not exterminated for military reasons or in the course of a violent process of land acquisition (as was the case with the American Indians and the Tasmanians). Nor did Nazi policy toward the Jews resemble their policy toward the Poles and the Russians which aimed to eradicate those segments of the population around whom resistance might crystallize in order to exploit the rest more easily as helots. Indeed, the Jews were not exterminated for any manifest "extrinsic" goal. The extermination of the Jews was not only to have been total, but was its own goal—extermination for the sake of extermination—a goal that acquired absolute priority. [2]

    No functionalist explanation of the Holocaust and no scapegoat theory of anti‑Semitism can even begin to explain why, in the last years of the war, when the German forces were being crushed by the Red Army, a significant proportion of vehicles was deflected from logistical support and used to transport Jews to the gas chambers. Once the qualitative specificity of the extermination of European Jewry is recognized, it becomes clear that attempts at an explanation dealing with capitalism, racism, bureaucracy, sexual repression, or the authoritarian personality, remain far too general. The specificity of the Holocaust requires a much more determinate mediation in order even to approach its understanding.

    But, of course, the Jews of pre-Nazi Germany weren't wealthy or powerful. There can be no question that they were still very much oppressed. The small number of wealthy Jews, disproportionately few, still struggled to be accepted in "polite society". Many of their children sought jobs that wouldn't be financially rewarding but which they hoped would foster greater integration, such as in the sciences. (German society at the time did regard the sciences highly, though that changed over time.)

    One difference, often overlooked, between Nazi ideology and the German Romanticism that influenced it is that the Nazis were very keen on modernization and industrialization. German antisemitism is often linked to fears of modernity, so this requires some resolution. (Eco's article mentions it, but doesn't attempt any resolution.) Moishe Postone has argued that, much like some earlier agitators said they didn't oppose Capitalism per se but only the Jewish corruption of Capitalism, Jews became symbolic of the corruption of modernity. The Nazis could keep modernity by scapegoating Jews, since Jews were bizarrely seen as the anthropomorphism of intellectualization. So how did this prejudice land upon Jews?

    There is something in the history of antisemitism that makes Jews a particularly attractive target for this sort of thing. Jews become "the embodiment of all that is evil."

    I have one possible answer, but it has only recently occurred to me, and I don't know that I trust it yet. From this seed and this comment.

    {"commentId":495877,"threadId":"71013","contentId":"421452","authorDomain":"ignoblus"}
      #3.1 - Fri Jan 26, 2007 9:50 AM EST
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