Please read this
Jan. 25th, 2008 09:32 amI hate Jew-bashing like I hate few other things. And that being the case, you may imagine how I felt a few minutes ago when I began to read the article I now post behind a lj-cut, not because I am ashamed of it, but on account of space. Please read it.On December 1, 2007, two dozen heavily armed police staged a raid on a Jewish community center in Caracas where hundreds were celebrating a wedding. The police, the Venezuelan equivalent of the FBI, claimed to be seeking weapons and evidence of "subversive activity."
They found no weapons. As for subversive activity, well, in a proto-authoritarian state like Hugo Chavez's Venezuela, subversion is a very elastic concept. The mildest skepticism about Chavez's regime might easily qualify.
This bit of harassment theater was only the latest in a series of worrying moves by the Chavez government against its Jewish citizens. The same community center had been raided in 2004, in the morning hours when children were being bussed to school. The regime -- which boasts of cozy friendships with Ahmadinejad's Iran and Castro's Cuba -- has also engaged in steady anti-Semitic and anti-Israel propaganda. A little more than a year ago, Chavez declared in a Christmas Eve speech that "the world has wealth for all, but some minorities, the descendants of the same people that crucified Christ, have taken over all the wealth of the world."
During the 2006 war between Hezbollah and Israel, Chavez became increasingly shrill, accusing the Israelis of behaving like Nazis. On a recent visit to Washington D.C., Gustavo Aristegui, the shadow foreign minister in Spain's opposition party, told a group at the Hudson Institute that Hamas and Hezbollah are now operating freely in Venezuela. Publications by the government's ministry of culture have featured titles like "The Jewish Question" with cover art showing a Star of David superimposed over a swastika. Jews were accused of complicity in the murder of a prosecutor. An article in a leading newspaper, El Diario de Caracas, asked whether it would become necessary "to expel [the Jews] from the country."
Most recently, as the Forward has reported, Chavez has used the government-run television channel to engage in "lengthy rants about the presence of Mossad agents allegedly in the country working to unseat the Chavez regime with the support of the United States and opposition forces in Venezuela." The program's host interrupted to ask about the loyalty of Jews to Venezuela.
At the start of Chavez's rule, the Jewish community in Venezuela numbered about 30,000. Solid statistics are hard to come by but most estimates now put the number at between 8,000 and 15,000 today. About 50 percent of Venezuela's Jewish community had fled to the country to escape the Nazis during World War II. Neither they nor their children would require much prodding to sense danger. The raids, the propaganda, the hostile press, might have been enough. But then consider this: The man Chavez placed in charge of internal security is one Tarek al Assaimi, son of Saddam Hussein's envoy to Venezuela.
You might expect an outcry from other Jews around the world -- and there has been some. But within the U.S., many of the leaders of large Jewish organizations are seeking to stifle those, like Rabbi Avi Weiss and Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld of the Coalition for Jewish Concerns, who are urging members of Congress to hold hearings on the matter. Weiss reports that Rep. Elliott Engel (D., NY) was willing to call a hearing but was dissuaded by the Conference of Presidents of the Major American Jewish Organizations.
Dina Siegel Vann, speaking of behalf of the American Jewish Congress, published an op-ed in the Miami Herald scolding those who want to make as public a protest as possible. "Shouting and screaming from the safety of the United States may feel good to some," she wrote, "but the goal of the exercise is not to satisfy their needs; rather it's to ensure the safety and well-being of thousands of Venezuelan Jews . . ." Her title: "Let's use diplomacy, not public protests."
Well, diplomacy has its place, but this isn't it. When the Soviet Union was denying exit visas to Jews wishing to emigrate and persecuting those who sought to leave, only the loud and persistent protests of Jews in the United States and elsewhere (combined with congressional action) caused the Soviets to relent. Bill Buckley quipped at the time that he hoped the Soviets would release every Jew who wanted to emigrate except one -- to keep alive the Jewish pressure that was so helpful in the larger Cold War. The Venezuelan Jews themselves have asked for such international pressure. They believe Chavez is very sensitive about international opinion. It would be naive to place faith in diplomacy alone.
There may be little that any of us can do individually about an odious creature who rules somewhere else, but please remember what you read, and if any one of you ever has the opportunity to add a pebble's weight to the condemnation that this loathsome little freak deserves, please add it. You never know when one of you might be in the position of striking a blow, and if you ever do, I hope you will be ready.
They found no weapons. As for subversive activity, well, in a proto-authoritarian state like Hugo Chavez's Venezuela, subversion is a very elastic concept. The mildest skepticism about Chavez's regime might easily qualify.
This bit of harassment theater was only the latest in a series of worrying moves by the Chavez government against its Jewish citizens. The same community center had been raided in 2004, in the morning hours when children were being bussed to school. The regime -- which boasts of cozy friendships with Ahmadinejad's Iran and Castro's Cuba -- has also engaged in steady anti-Semitic and anti-Israel propaganda. A little more than a year ago, Chavez declared in a Christmas Eve speech that "the world has wealth for all, but some minorities, the descendants of the same people that crucified Christ, have taken over all the wealth of the world."
During the 2006 war between Hezbollah and Israel, Chavez became increasingly shrill, accusing the Israelis of behaving like Nazis. On a recent visit to Washington D.C., Gustavo Aristegui, the shadow foreign minister in Spain's opposition party, told a group at the Hudson Institute that Hamas and Hezbollah are now operating freely in Venezuela. Publications by the government's ministry of culture have featured titles like "The Jewish Question" with cover art showing a Star of David superimposed over a swastika. Jews were accused of complicity in the murder of a prosecutor. An article in a leading newspaper, El Diario de Caracas, asked whether it would become necessary "to expel [the Jews] from the country."
Most recently, as the Forward has reported, Chavez has used the government-run television channel to engage in "lengthy rants about the presence of Mossad agents allegedly in the country working to unseat the Chavez regime with the support of the United States and opposition forces in Venezuela." The program's host interrupted to ask about the loyalty of Jews to Venezuela.
At the start of Chavez's rule, the Jewish community in Venezuela numbered about 30,000. Solid statistics are hard to come by but most estimates now put the number at between 8,000 and 15,000 today. About 50 percent of Venezuela's Jewish community had fled to the country to escape the Nazis during World War II. Neither they nor their children would require much prodding to sense danger. The raids, the propaganda, the hostile press, might have been enough. But then consider this: The man Chavez placed in charge of internal security is one Tarek al Assaimi, son of Saddam Hussein's envoy to Venezuela.
You might expect an outcry from other Jews around the world -- and there has been some. But within the U.S., many of the leaders of large Jewish organizations are seeking to stifle those, like Rabbi Avi Weiss and Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld of the Coalition for Jewish Concerns, who are urging members of Congress to hold hearings on the matter. Weiss reports that Rep. Elliott Engel (D., NY) was willing to call a hearing but was dissuaded by the Conference of Presidents of the Major American Jewish Organizations.
Dina Siegel Vann, speaking of behalf of the American Jewish Congress, published an op-ed in the Miami Herald scolding those who want to make as public a protest as possible. "Shouting and screaming from the safety of the United States may feel good to some," she wrote, "but the goal of the exercise is not to satisfy their needs; rather it's to ensure the safety and well-being of thousands of Venezuelan Jews . . ." Her title: "Let's use diplomacy, not public protests."
Well, diplomacy has its place, but this isn't it. When the Soviet Union was denying exit visas to Jews wishing to emigrate and persecuting those who sought to leave, only the loud and persistent protests of Jews in the United States and elsewhere (combined with congressional action) caused the Soviets to relent. Bill Buckley quipped at the time that he hoped the Soviets would release every Jew who wanted to emigrate except one -- to keep alive the Jewish pressure that was so helpful in the larger Cold War. The Venezuelan Jews themselves have asked for such international pressure. They believe Chavez is very sensitive about international opinion. It would be naive to place faith in diplomacy alone.
There may be little that any of us can do individually about an odious creature who rules somewhere else, but please remember what you read, and if any one of you ever has the opportunity to add a pebble's weight to the condemnation that this loathsome little freak deserves, please add it. You never know when one of you might be in the position of striking a blow, and if you ever do, I hope you will be ready.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 01:41 pm (UTC)... Hitler.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 08:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 08:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 08:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 09:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 09:24 pm (UTC)I'm not sure that the differences are as important as the similiarities, especially in the context of a world in which liberal democracy has triumphed, so they are almost equally relics of the past.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 09:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 09:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 09:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 09:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 10:50 pm (UTC)If China is lucky, it will continue on the road to capitalism and will also reform its regime into liberal democracy. I doubt that anything good will come of the Communist elements in China -- they are already irreperably tainted by the murder of tens of millions of Chinese civilians under government control. Any appeal to Communism in China must thus be either inherently murderous, or dishonest.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-25 10:53 pm (UTC)Also ... and this is not unconnected with your point ... both repudiate democracy and demand the active allegience of their citizens to a complex and randomly-changing set of behavior. In short, both are "totalitarian."
And that they both have it in for Jews because Jews bear witness to the idea of an overriding moral law.
And because Jews, being cosmopolitan, have a tendency to have allegiences to and sympathies for ideals and polities beyond the control of the Leader of the totalitarian state. This is dangerous to a totalitarian Leader, because much of his power depends on his people identifying his personal rule with the only workable order in the Universe.
Philosemitism
Date: 2008-02-01 05:02 pm (UTC)The Twentieth Century, now thankfully behind us, is the one where words like "Genocide" and "Democide" had to be invented to describe the primary human activity, aside from industrial and scientific progress, which occupied the time and attention of the second and third world, when we were not fighting World Wars or Cold Wars, of course.
Christ in heaven, what a generation of vipers we have among us. Has the Twentieth Century, the most bloody century IN ALL HISTORY taught these people NOTHING AT ALL?
no subject
Date: 2008-02-01 05:03 pm (UTC)Amen. You said it, brother.
Re: Philosemitism
Date: 2008-02-01 05:28 pm (UTC)The saddest thing for me was that when I met Jew-bashing of the worst sort in my LJ, it was from an otherwise very nice person whom I liked a lot. And she seemed simply unable to understand why I would not tolerate conspiracy theories about Mossad and Bush blowing up the Twin Towers, or fables about Jews dancing with glee when they saw them come down. I have met people who said, and said out loud, "Yes, I am a racist", "Yes, I am a Fascist", "Yes, I a Communist"; but this person was genuinely unaware that she was the worst sort of Jew-basher. She had never in her life met with anyone who had ever challenged her attitudes. She was, you will not be surprised to hear, a left-wing American of college age; and she actually found it offensive that I should describe her as an "anti-semite". I was so unhappy with the situation that I did not even actually ban her; I tried hard to get through to her. She defriended me instead, and only then, bowing to the inevitable, did I defriend her back.
To such a point has evil reached.
no subject
Date: 2008-02-01 05:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-02-04 10:49 am (UTC)I have a strong urge to cuss, here.
I'm Catholic--I was brought up seeing the Jews as...pardon the bad metaphor, but wayward older brothers. We have the same Father, after all.
That was way before my folks let me know about the Holocaust.
I can't recall who said it, or where I read the quote, but someone recently mentioned that Jews are the canary in the coal mine for bad gov'ts. Folks start beating on the Jews and you've got a very good bet that moving is a good idea.
(Sorry such a late reply-- just came back from a cruise, which oddly enough was some 25 miles from the slime's country at one point. Tour guide mentioned it, along with mentioning that there were a lot of boat people coming over.)