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'To bigotry no sanction'
America must stand against a worldwide surge in anti-Semitism
from World Magazine
Editor's note: On April 25, seven Christian leaders wrote the
following open letter to President Bush in response to a
growing number of anti-Semitic incidents around the world.
DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
We write because, as Christian leaders, we can do no less. Our
faith and our reading of history lead us to ask you, as a man of
faith and as President of the United States, to publicly and
vigorously condemn an ugly specter that stalks today's world:
that specter is anti-Semitism.
Throughout history, calls to "blame the Jews" have always been
signals of imminent disaster--not only for Jews, but for others as
well. Likewise, complaints about "inconvenient Jews" who
would make the world a better place if only they would step
aside, if only their sacrifice were passively countenanced, have
always cloaked the march of evil.
They have also cloaked attacks on basic democratic values.
Harvard professor Ruth Wisse has rightly noted that
"[e]xperience ought to have taught the international community
that anti-Semitism is an instrument of anti-democratic politics."
She has also noted what we believe to be so:
"A society's deflection of energy to anti-Semitism is a sign of
its political demoralization; the more it whips up frenzy against
the Jews, the more it requires going to war to release that
frenzy. The rise of anti-Semitism ... correlates with the rise of
the politics of resentment against what Jews represent--an open
and democratic society, the ethic of competition and individual
freedom."
Simply stated, we know that you deeply believe the libel of
anti-Semitism to be one of the great lies of history.
And yet, barely 50 years after the collapse of the Nazi regime,
the scapegoating of Jews has become a powerful element of
world politics. It is increasingly heard at comfortable dinner
party tables, on campuses, at the United Nations, in foreign
ministries, and in many other "respectable" quarters. In its
starker form, it is now openly expressed in school textbooks,
official newspapers, and television broadcasts--often through
libels identical to those employed by the Nazis.
It must stop. It must be tirelessly and publicly denounced.
For this reason, we respectfully ask you to make clear that the
United States will actively confront all leaders, countries, and
movements that finance or propagate the lie of anti-Semitism.
There are of course serious differences over the best means of
achieving a just peace in the Middle East. Robust debate over
those differences, some of which may prove discomforting to
Israel, some of which may prove discomforting for Palestinians,
is an essential component of a meaningful peace process. But
the bounds of civilized debate must clearly be fixed if real
peace is to be achieved, and if the world is to avoid descent into
yet another spiral of hatred and devastation.
We call upon you to fix these boundaries with public
denunciations that strip the slightest veneer of respectability
from developments such as these:
- A recent reported dinner party remark by the French
ambassador to England referred to Israel as "that
[expletive] little country" and asked why "the world
[should] be in danger of World War III because of those
people."
- The stark anti-Semitism that permeated the ironically
named UN-sponsored Durban Conference against
Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related
Intolerance, and the singularly anti-Israel focus of the
46th Session of the UN Commission on the Status of
Women, the recent meeting of the UN Commission on
Human Rights and other UN meetings.
- Respectful references to the Protocols of the Elders of
Zion and alleged Jewish rituals of human slaughter in
government-controlled media outlets of many Middle
Eastern countries, repeated designations of Jews as
"pigs" by Islamist leaders, and government financed,
worldwide Islamic elementary school textbook
references to Jews in caricatured terms not seen since the
days of Hitler.
We also write to you because we believe that vigorous
condemnation of the overt anti-Semitism now practiced in parts
of the Middle East and elsewhere is as important to Muslims
and Islam as it is to all other people and faiths. Unless given no
quarter, anti-Semitism will become as effective a means of
hijacking Islam and oppressing Muslims as prior libels against
Jews captured and debased other great cultures of the world.
The great scholar of Islam, Bernard Lewis, who has written of
the "enterprise and ... openness" of classical Islam, has also
described the fanatical anti-Semitism now being preached in
many parts of the Middle East:
"The demonization of Jews goes further than it had ever done in
Western literature, with the exception of Germany during the
period of Nazi rule. In most Western countries, anti-Semitic
divagations on Jewish history, religion, and literature are more
than offset by a great body of genuine scholarship ... In modern
Arabic writing there are few such countervailing elements."
Andrew Sullivan has written of the "sobering truth" of
Professor Lewis's findings--and of the fact that he and others
have long known them to be true but have failed to say so. Mr.
Sullivan has asked, tellingly and movingly:
"So why did I look the other way? Why did I discount this
anti-Semitism on the grounds that these are alien cultures and
we cannot fully understand them, or because these pathologies
are allied with more legitimate (if to my mind unpersuasive)
critiques of Israeli policy? ... We in the West simply do not
want to believe that this kind of hatred still exists; and when it
emerges, we feel uncomfortable. We do everything we can to
change the subject. Why the denial ...? What is it about this
sickness that we do not understand by now? And what possible
excuse do we have not to expose and confront it with all the
might we have?"
Whatever the complexities of Middle East policy--and they are
many; whatever criticisms may be leveled against the countries
involved in the Middle East peace process, we believe that the
time has come for all people of goodwill to act by declaring
that anti-Semitism is a wholly illegitimate basis for political
action.
In his famous 1790 letter to the Hebrew Congregation of Rhode
Island, President George Washington summed up what we
believe to be a singularly positive contribution to the world--a
unique and timeless understanding of religious freedom:
"The Citizens of the United States of America have a right to
applaud themselves for having given to Mankind examples of
an enlarged and liberal policy: a policy worthy of imitation. All
possess alike liberty of conscience and immunities of
citizenship. It is now no more that toleration is spoken of, as if
it was by the indulgence of one class of people that another
enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights. For happily
the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no
sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that they
who live under its protection should demean themselves as good
citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support."
In the interest of a lasting Middle East peace, and of keeping
faith with our own virtues and the successful conclusion to the
war on terrorism that you rightly lead, we respectfully urge you
to let the world know, in the strongest terms, that those who
cherish freedom proudly recommit to George Washington's
sentiments: that we give "to bigotry no sanction, to persecution
no assistance." There is no more important time than now to
denounce the growing specter of anti-Semitism and to ensure
that it is never again permitted to become a tolerable element of
diplomatic, political, cultural, or religious expression.
Respectfully submitted,
Richard D. Land, D.Phil., President, Ethics & Religious
Liberty Commission, Southern Baptist Convention
Jay Sekulow, Chief Counsel, American Center for Law and
Justice
Janet Parshall, Nationally Syndicated Radio, Talk Show Host,
Salem Radio Network
Gary Bauer, President, American Values, Arlington, Va.
Glenn Plummer, Chairman and CEO, National Religious
Broadcasters
Leith Anderson, President, National Association of
Evangelicals
Fr. Keith Roderick, Secretary General, Coalition for the
Defense of Human Rights
Copyright (c) 2002 World Magazine.
Used with permission.
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© 1995-2008
Leadership U. All rights reserved.
Updated: 14 July 2002
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