Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 24 – Something new
and very disturbing has emerged in Putin’s Russia, commentator Leonid Nevzlin
says: “anti-Semitism lit” or perhaps “anti-Semitism with a human face” in which
those disparaging Jews do so not with the angry language of anti-Semites of the past but rather with humor and a smile
that even some Jews join in.
Nevzlin begins his commentary by
recounting a recent exchange on television in which the host told a Ukrainian
that he had always thought that “answering a question with a question is an indicative
aspect of another nationality,” a remark all his listeners understood to be
about Jews and to which those in the studio smiled (echo.msk.ru/blog/nevzlin/2355935-echo/).
But the fact that
anti-Semitism takes this form does not make it any less evil, the writer continues.
Indeed, it may in some respects make it worse because it makes such hatred or
contempt for Jews more insidious by implying that it is somehow acceptable when
presented in this way.
It is said, Nevzlin relates that
Yury Kanner, the president of the Russian Jewish Congress, “is not against
jokes about Jews. A few days ago, he told a Moscow newspaper that when he was
visiting Auschwitz, a waiter asked him whether he wanted his water still or
“with gas.” Kanner said he replied, he usually drinks water with gas, but in
Auschwitz, he’d rather have it without.
Other prominent figures engage in
similar kinds of unfortunate even sick humor at the expense of the Jews. Commentator
Vladimir Pozner, for example, in 2016 said that he knew what a Russian is and
what a Frenchman, but just what a Jew was was difficult for him to understand.
And television personality Petr
Tolstoy descended even lower. In 2017, he said that Jews protesting against
giving St. Isaac’s Cathedral back to the Russian Orthodox church were “the
grandsons and great grandsons of those who ‘destroyed out churches … emerging
from the pale of settlement with revolvers in 1917.”
Such comments mercifully do not
resemble those of the Nazi Der Sturmer or the imagery of Zionists in the Soviet
journal Krokodil; but that doesn’t make them innocent. The behavior of someone
like Kanner is especially noxious, Nevzlin says, but fortunately his influence
in the world “is equal to zero.”
But one must regret that since 2001,
the Russian Jewish Congress has “degraded to the point that such a personage”
has the right to be its head, someone like these others who does not understand
that normalizing anti-Semitism by humor opens the way to the kind of
anti-Semitism that they would be the first to decry.
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