Decline of Jewish Social Conscience
by Larry Derfne
Progressive Review, Undernews,
December 24, 2005
As an American-born Jew who grew up in
an East European immigrant, Left-liberal household, I'm very happy
to say that democratic socialism has become the rising tide in
South America... There was a time, up to about 30 years ago, when
I would have been part of a worldwide Jewish rooting section for
the South American socialist upheaval. What's more, the assumption
would have been that South American Jews were heavily involved
in the movement, and Jews all over would have been worried for
their safety at the hands of the continent's old, wealthy, fascistic
elite.
But world Jewry has changed, in Israel and everywhere else. Today
its voice is the voice of wealth and power. The strongest Jewish
reaction to what's happening in South America - to the extent
that influential Jews know what's happening there - is alarm.
Fear. Fear that this poor people's movement could spread to other
parts of the world, and endanger the wealth and power of all the
Jews whose attitude toward the poor is more or less the same as
the Bush administration's.
I know - 70% of American Jews vote Democrat. But they don't offer
much dissent anymore on the subject of poverty. When Jews were
struggling immigrants in America, their economics was socialism.
For their children and grandchildren, it was liberalism. Today,
for the immigrants' great-grandchildren, it's conservative, businessman's
capitalism.
When the American labor movement was born in the early 20th century,
New York's Jewish immigrants were indispensable to it. This week,
with the city's subway workers going on strike, the dominant voice
of New York Jewry seems to be that of Republican billionaire Mayor
Michael Bloomberg. "This selfish strike is illegal,"
he warned. "We live in a country of laws where there can
be severe consequences for those who break them. Union members
are no different."
And in South America, the only Jews who might gain the sympathy
of world Jewry are the prosperous, those who would stand to lose
some of their wealth, even if only by higher taxes, in the new
economic order. . .
When I came to this country 21 years ago, being a socialist -
as distinct from being a communist - was a solidly Israeli thing
to be. The prime minister at the time, Shimon Peres, made a point
of describing himself as one. Israelis weren't saints, they weren't
monks - they envied the wealth and comforts of Western Jewry.
But fighting this envy was the pride they took in the lack of
pretension and nonsense in their way of life, and the contempt
they felt for the shallow, selfish lives of wealthy Jews abroad.
Yeah, well, times have changed, haven't they? Today Diaspora Jews
and Israelis are of like minds, all going for the gelt, all looking
out for No. 1, all agreed that the poor will always be with us,
so let's maybe throw them a bone (and put up a plaque). Most important,
we are all agreed that the world is divided into the haves and
have-nots, and we - Jews of the Diaspora and Israel together -
have become the natural allies of the haves, and the natural enemies
of the mobilized have-nots.
And it's not just the Palestinian issue or radical Islam that
divides world Jewry from the Third World. It's also the assimilation
of American Jewry into the conservative economic and political
establishment of their country, and Israeli Jewry's identification
and connection with it. You can add the Russian Jewish oligarchs
to the mix. You can also throw in the leadership of Jewish organizations
across the Diaspora, which are basically plutocracies - societies
ruled by the rich. . .
I don't know if Amir Peretz is as pure as he makes himself out
to be. I don't agree with everything he says, I don't know if
his policies would work, I don't know if he would make a good
prime minister. But I do know that for the first time in a long
time, there is a mass Jewish movement that stands for something
the Jewish people once stood for, but don't any longer: Compassion
for the weak. Identifying with the weak, instinctively, in their
fights against the powerful. I grew up with the understanding
that this, above anything else, is what it means to be a Jew.
It's the social meaning of our history. We've forgotten it, and
it's time we remember it again.
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