Gary Weiss:
It’s not one of my earliest memories but it’s among the most vivid. My Uncle Irving, an auto mechanic who lived in the South Bronx, was driving us down the Grand Concourse. It was sometime in the late 1960s and he, my aunt, and my dad were talking about something that really teed them off.
Some vandals, never caught, their acts ignored by the press, had overturned tombstones at the Washington Cemetery, an old Jewish burial ground in Brooklyn. Porcelain photographs of the deceased, which were commonly embedded in tombstones in the early part of the century, were gleefully smashed. My uncle’s parents were buried there. I don’t recall if their graves were desecrated. I only remember the rage. My uncle talked about hiding in wait some evening—with a shotgun.
Today, a spate of anti-Semitic incidents has received justifiably massive media attention and across-the-board societal condemnation. The overturning of 200 tombstones at a cemetery outside St. Louis received widespread attention, including a double-bylined article in the New York Times. A Jewish cemetery in Philadelphia was attacked over the weekend. There are calls for the FBI to investigate a wave of threats against Jewish community centers. President Trump, after widely denounced hesitation, has attacked anti-Semitism by name, a reluctance that was condemned even after he finally uttered the words. The incidents have been widely perceived as inspired by his administration’s bigotry, by the anti-Semitism that supposedly lurks beneath the surface of his presidency.
That may be so. And I’m heartened by this sudden focus on anti-Semitism—at least when it is perceived as originating from the right. Yet somehow, I find myself uneasy. Something isn’t quite right. Something . . . well, as my Uncle Irving would have put it, something stinks. It’s the stench of cynicism, of rank hypocrisy, and of media double standards.
The press was largely uninterested in December 2010, when 200 tombstones were overturned—an assault just as large as the one in St. Louis—at the aforementioned Washington Cemetery in Brooklyn. There were no fundraisers by Muslim-Americans or anybody. It was covered by the New York Post and Brooklyn weeklies but otherwise largely ignored. Not a word in the Times. To be sure, this was not part of a “wave” of anti-Semitism, such as we have seen. Still, 200 tombstones is 200 tombstones. Two hundred families traumatized, assuming they knew. Not even worth a paragraph?
More recently, outside the pro-Israel echo chamber there was little interest in February 2015, when President Obama said—and his spokesman reiterated—that the attack on a Jewish grocery in Paris by Islamist terrorists was just a “random” attack on a bunch of “folks.” I doubt very much that the press would have accepted such mumbo-jumbo from Donald Trump or Sean Spicer.
Similarly, I have to wonder if Steve Bannon would still be in the White House if the allegations of anti-Semitism concerning him were half as serious as the ones that have dogged Keith Ellison. There has been coverage of Ellison’s statements and ties, to be sure, but nothing approaching the feeding frenzy that has pursued Bannon.
The reason, I would suggest, is that anti-Semitism has become politicized, and has become entwined in the widespread disdain for No. 45
Has it only been since Trump began running for President that not denouncing something is the same as supporting it?
More here:
http://legalinsurrection.com/2017/03/what-we-know-about-juan-thompson-arrested-for-threats-against-jews/#more-204518