Paul Goble
Staunton,
April 24 – Perhaps the most searing self-indictment of those who watch the
onset of totalitarianism but do not protest because they remain convinced that
only someone else will be its targets and its victims was offered in 1946 by
German Protestant Pastor Martin Niemöller.
Speaking
in the ruble of the defeated Third Reich, he said “When the Nazis came for the communists,
I did not speak out; As I was not a communist. When they locked up the social
democrats, I did not speak out; I was not a social democrat …When they came for
the Jews, I did not speak out; As I was not a Jew.”
And then, he continued, “When they came for me, there was
no one left to speak out.
This week in the television studio of Russia’s Channel 1
such a moment came when confronted with the horror of openly expressed
anti-Semitism, the participants in a discussion had the chance to make a choice
between protesting the shadows of totalitarianism under Vladimir Putin or remaining
silent out of the self-delusion that they at least are safe.
In a commentary for Grani.ru today entitled “Crystal
Evening,” Vitaly Portnikov describes what happened. Leonid Yarmolnik walked out of the studio
after another participant made an anti-Semitic slur about him, but the host
ignored him and said he wanted both to remain (grani.ru/opinion/portnikov/m.240421.html).
Another participant, Iosif Kobzon, also of
Jewish background, ignored the whole thing because, as the Kyiv commentator put
it, he knows that “his status protects him from anti-Semitic attacks.” The problem, of course, is that many in
Russia do not have the same advantage – and many more may not be in the future
if such things are remain unchallenged.
Observing all this is very instructive,
Portnikov says. “At the time of the Third Reich, there wasn’t any television,
and no one could broadcast ‘Kristallnacht’ live, but now there is television
and it impartially registers the degeneration of the nation,” a trend that has reached the point that
people fight about whether to kill animals but not against hatred toward human
groups.
“In this studio,” he continues, “there
wasn’t to be found a single person, not a single one who in general understood what
Yarmolnik was talking about when he called for expelling the man who slandered
him -- or it one wants to be completely honest, someone who understood and approved.”
Even Yarmolnik’s
reaction was “also completely within the logic of a resident of the Third
Reich.” He subsequently explained that “anti-Semitism didn’t concern him much
because all his life he has lived in this country and is a Russian artist.” He
simply could not stand the idea that anti-Semitism was being expressed so
baldly and openly.
Kobzon in
contrast did not demonstrate even that level of civilization, Portnikov says.
But Yarmolnik has a background that is also instructive on this point. Not long
ago, he spoke in justification of the annexation of Crimea and the war in the
Donbas by making reference to the “bestial behavior of Ukrainians” he
experienced as “a Muscovite … during his Lviv childhood.”
Since the time
of his declarations about Ukraine, Yarmolnik has had to tell himself that “anti-Semitism
does not have anything to do with him as a Russian artist.” That may be understandable psychologically
for those who want to maintain “the illusion of comfort and security.” But
history suggests that it is a dangerous self-deception.
“In the Third
Reich,” Portnikov points out, “many successful and confident in themselves and
in the right of their country to ‘Lebensraum, also sincerely believed that
anti-Semitism didn’t concern them – and subsequently died in the same gas
chambers and barracks” with the millions of others.
Yarmolnik “certainly
does not now understand that having supported the occupation of Crimea and the
Donbas and converting his own state into a parody of Hitler’s, he himself has
opened the doors” to something potentially equally awful and that “no one is
left” to close those doors behind him.
The Russian
artist does have one great advantage that the Jews of Hitler’s Germany did not,
Portnikov concludes, Israel exists and if things continue as they are, that
country will take him in without asking questions “about his political views,
his subservience, his love for Putin, and his participation in the formation of
a new Reich. They will simply take him
in.”
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