Become a Member

By

Ben Barkow,

Ben Barkow

Opinion

The evil lies about a Jewish 'genocide'

January 8, 2015 15:06
Horrific: Hundreds of skulls of victims of the Rwandan genocide rest in a memorial near Kigali
7 min read

For someone in my line of work, among the most disturbing things in these disturbing times is how often, when I try to speak about the Holocaust and genocide, I'm met with one response, especially from the young. That response is, "well, but what about the Israeli genocide?" By "Israeli genocide" is meant the "genocide" that Israel is supposed to be perpetrating on the Palestinians. By "what about" is meant something along the lines of "the Jews are no better than Nazis and the world should treat them like Nazis".

Trying to explain why this accusation is grotesque and disgusting makes one feel like Sisyphus – you can get the rock so far up the hill but it always seems to roll back down again. The reason why it does lies at the heart of the matter: people won't accept the truth about Israel because it rubs the wrong way against deeply ingrained fantasies concerning Jews, which are the fruit of millennia. Jews are evil, Jews murdered Christ, Jews steal children and stage human sacrifices, Jews are in league with Satan, Jews wield immense power in secret and run the world.

The existence and longevity of these extraordinary accusations - coupled with the almost literally incredible facts of the Holocaust - mean that few can see Jews dispassionately. Jews appear forever through the distorting lens of history and prejudice. If it were possible to strip away these historical distortions, Jews would emerge plain and simple as human beings, flawed like anyone else, every bit as good and every bit as wicked, every bit as interesting or dull, every bit as cynical or sincere. But the image of Jews as sub- or super-human seems like a fly caught forever in amber; we cannot let it go.

The appalling use of the term "genocide" as a charge against Israel is rooted in this deeply distorted attitude to Jews. But what can we say about the reality of genocide in our new century?

To get more from opinion, click here to sign up for our free Editor's Picks newsletter.