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Goodbye, America. It was nice knowing you

In the country of my childhood, Jews were an accepted part of cultural life, not enemies

December 8, 2022 12:47
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3 min read

Back in October, when Kanye West, the rapper who now calls himself Ye, began broadcasting his Nazi-grade antisemitism, swearing he’d go “death con 3 on the Jews”, there was a rush to put his remarks “in context”. Ye was mentally ill, wrote one prominent Jewish columnist, and Jews ought not to take seriously his unfortunate ranting about Hitler’s failure to finish the job; rather, they ought to pity him. Prominent non-Jews rushed to his defence too.Ye’s good friend, the conservative star Candace Owens, also stuck by her pal. In a recent conversation with the excellent Winston Marshall, host of the Marshall Matters podcast, it was shocking to hear the brainy Owens getting hung up on how Ye had meant to go “Def con 3” not “death con 3”, as he tweeted, on Jews, as if this made it alright.

Last week, Ye tweeted a swastika interlocked with a Star of David. This went too far even for Elon Musk, who banned him from the platform on grounds of incitement to violence.

It’s hard to believe that this is all happening in the country of my childhood — a place where light antisemitism sometimes marred small Waspy towns like the one I grew up in, or circulated within certain communities, but didn’t dominate the ether. On the contrary.

Entertainment in my childhood was an upbeat mix of the non-Jewish — The Wonder Years, Full House, Saved By the Bell — and the Jewish, largely in the form of Seinfeld and Woody Allen. I never winced when Jewish characters appeared in otherwise non-Jewish domains, like Ross, Monica and Rachel in Friends, because it was always done with affection and humour.