By
Haitham Sabbah • May 24th, 2009
1. ROLE OF JEWS IN UKRAINIAN FAMINE
One might think the worst holocaust deniers—at least the
only ones who command serious attention—are those who insist the Nazi
holocaust, as it involved the Jews only, was without parallel.
Guenter Lewy argues for example in The Nazi Persecution of the
Gypsies (Oxford University Press, 2000) that while the Gypsies were
gassed, shot and otherwise exterminated in great numbers, right alongside
the Jews, they were not true victims of “the” Holocaust (capital “H”) but
only of something collateral. Lewy even suggests the Gypsies invited their
own destruction with certain cultural traits—in particular, sharply
divergent moral standards for dealing among their own and with outsiders.
But pre- or anti-Enlightenment Judaism is hardly a less ethnocentric or
hostile moral system. As Edward Gibbon correctly notes in The Decline
and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol. 1, ch. 15 (1776), “the wise, the
humane Maimonides openly teaches [in The Book of Torts, 5:11] that, if an
idolator fall into the water, a Jew ought not to save him from instant
death.” See also Rabbi Simeon ben Yohai’s remarkable second-century exercise
in ejusdem generis: “The best of the heathen merits death; the best of
serpents should have its head crushed; and the most pious of women is prone
to sorcery” (Yer. Kid. iv. 66c; Massek. Soferim xv. 10; comp. Mek.,
Beshallah, Wayehi, 1, and Tan., Wayera, 20, all as cited by
JewishEncyclopedia.com). For “heathen” some translators simply write
“goyim”; for “prone to sorcery” they write “a witch.” Rabbi Simeon is
mentioned more than 700 times in the Talmud.
Israel Shahak and Norton Mezvinsky, in Jewish Fundamentalism in
Israel (2d ed. 2004), say (p. 1) “that in the usual English
translations of talmudic literature some of the most sensitive passages are
usually toned down or falsified,” and indeed (pp. 150-51) that “the great
majority of books on Judaism and Israel, published in English especially,
falsify their subject matter,” in part by omitting or obscuring such
teachings. For a fuller discussion of the point, see Shahak, Jewish
History, Jewish Religion: The Weight of Three Thousand Years, esp. ch.
2 (1994), available online. As to Jews, Gypsies or anyone else, of course,
ethnocentrism or even outright cultural hostility as a rationale for
genocide is obscene.
A particularly relevant parallel to the Nazi holocaust is the Ukrainian
holodomor of 1932-33, a state-created famine—not a crop failure—that killed
an estimated five million people in the Ukraine, one million in the
Caucasus, and one million elsewhere after the Soviet state confiscated the
harvest at gunpoint. Throughout the famine, the state continued to export
grain to pay for industrialization. See Robert Conquest, The Harvest of
Sorrow (Oxford University Press, 1987). Norman Davies gives the
following description in Europe: A History, p. 965 (Oxford
University Press, 1996). His first paragraph assembles quotations from
Conquest; the bracketed phrase is his own:
“A quarter of the rural population, men, women
and children, lay dead or dying” in “a great stretch of territory with some
forty million inhabitants,” “like one vast Belsen.” “The rest, in various
stages of debilitation,” “had no strength to bury their families or
neighbours.” “[As at Belsen] well-fed squads of police or party officials
supervised the victims.”
. . . All food stocks were forcibly requisitioned; a military cordon
prevented all supplies from entering; and the people were left to die. The
aim was to kill Ukrainian nationhood, and with it the “class enemy.” The
death toll reached some 7 million. The world has seen many terrible famines.
. . . But a famine organized as a genocidal act of state policy must be
considered unique.
See also Oksana Procyk, Leonid Heretz and James E. Mace, Famine in
the Soviet Ukraine, 1932-33 (Harvard University Press, 1986); Nicolas
Werth, “The Great Famine,” in Stephane Courtois, et al., The
Black Book of Communism, pp. 159-68 (Harvard University Press, 1999);
Edvard Radzinsky, Stalin, pp. 257-59 (1996); Miron Dolot,
Execution by Hunger (1985); Simon Sebag Montefiore, Stalin: The
Court of the Red Tsar, pp. 84-85 (2003); and the Commission on the
Ukrainian Famine, Report to Congress (1988). That report, at pp. 6-7,
cites estimates of the number killed that range as high as 8 million in the
Ukraine and 9 million overall.
Piers Brendon, The Dark Valley, pp. 248-49 (2000) gives this
description, drawn from still further sources, all cited in his notes:
A population of “walking corpses” . . . even
ate horse-manure for the whole grains of seed it contained. . . .
Cannibalism became so common-place that. . . local authorities issued
hundreds of posters announcing that “EATING DEAD CHILDREN IS BARBARISM.”. .
.
They staggered into towns and collapsed in the squares. . . . Haunting
the railway stations these “swollen human shadows, full of rubbish, alive
with lice,” followed passengers with mute appeals. . . . [They] “dragged
themselves along, begging for bread or searching for scraps in garbage
heaps, frozen and filthy. Each morning wagons rolled along the streets
picking up the remains of the dead.” Some were picked up before they died
and buried in pits so extensive that they resembled sand dunes and so
shallow that bodies were dug up and devoured by wolves.
Boris Pasternak says “what I saw could not be expressed in words. . . .
There was such inhuman, unimaginable misery, such a terrible disaster, that
it began to seem almost abstract, it would not fit within the bounds of
consciousness.” See Brian Moynahan, The Russian Century, p. 130
(1994). Nikita Khrushchev, in Khrushchev Remembers: The Final Testament,
p. 120 (1976), says “I can’t give an exact figure because no one was keeping
count. All we knew was that people were dying in enormous numbers.”
According to S. J. Taylor, Stalin’s Apologist: Walter Duranty, The
New York Times’s Man in Moscow, p. 202 (Oxford University Press 1990),
“. . .Soviet authorities
. . . require[d] that the shades of all windows be pulled down on trains
traveling through the North Caucasus, the Ukraine and the Volga basin.” At
pp. 239-40, Taylor says this famine “remains the greatest man-made
disaster ever recorded, exceeding in scale even the Jewish Holocaust of the
next decade.”
In September 1933, Duranty—who cultivated his relationship with Stalin,
and is remembered today for his public denials that any such thing was
happening—privately told fellow journalists Eugene Lyons (United Press) and
Anne O’Hare McCormick (herself from the New York Times) that the death toll
was 7 million, but that the dead were “only Russians.” (Sic: mostly
Ukrainians; and note the word “only.”) See Lyons, Assignment in Utopia,
pp. 579-80 (1937). Duranty’s number is described in Lyons’s book only
as “the most startling I had. . . heard,” but is revealed in Lyons’s “Memo
for Malcolm Muggeridge” (Dec. 9, 1937), quoted by Marco Carynnyk in “The
New York Times and the Great Famine, Part III,” available
online.
Several days after giving the 7-million number to Lyons and McCormick,
Duranty told the assembled staff at the British chancery in Moscow that the
toll for the Soviet Union as a whole might be as high as 10 million. See the
report of William Strang, the charge d’affaires (Sept. 26, 1933), quoted by
Carynnyk in the text accompanying n. 46. The British government referred
publicly to the ongoing situation as an “illegal famine.” Id., n. 46.
Duranty’s 10-million number may have come from Stalin himself. It’s
reputedly the same number Stalin gave Winston Churchill a decade later; see,
e.g., Eric Margolis, “Remembering Ukraine’s Unknown Holocaust,”
Toronto Sun, Dec. 13, 1998 (available online).
According to Arthur Koestler, The Ghost in the Machine, pp.
261-62 (1967):
In 1932-3, the years of the great famine which followed the forced
collectivisation of the land, I travelled widely in the Soviet Union,
writing a book which was never published. I saw entire villages deserted,
railway stations blocked by crowds of begging families, and the proverbial
starving infants. . . . [T]hey were quite real, with stick-like arms, puffed
up bellies and cadaverous heads. I reacted to the brutal impact of reality
on illusion in a manner typical of the true believer. I was surprised and
bewildered—but the elastic shock-absorbers of my [Communist] Party training
began to operate at once. I had eyes to see, and a mind conditioned to
explain away what they saw. This “inner censor” is more reliable and
effective than any official censorship. . . .
Some Ukrainian accounts, and that of Muggeridge, who covered the
holodomor for the Manchester Guardian, take the trouble to say that
this mass starvation was imposed largely by Jews. Lazar M. Kaganovich is
often identified as an architect of the policy. A photograph in Montefiore,
Red Tsar, above, shows him personally searching a farm for concealed
food. In Muggeridge’s novel Winter in Moscow (1934) he appears as
Kokoshkin, “a Jew” and “Stalin’s chief lieutenant.”
In 2003 Levko Lukyanenko, the first Ukrainian ambassador to Canada, was
said to have made an anti-Semitic embarrassment of himself on this subject.
But see Orest Subtelny, Ukraine: A History, p. 363 (2d ed.
1994)(“Jews were . . . disproportionately prominent among the Bolsheviks,
notably in their leadership, among their tax- and grain-gathering officials,
and especially in the despised and feared. . . secret police [emphasis
added]”); Montefiore, Red Tsar, above, p. 305 (as late as 1937,
Jews accounted for only 5.7 percent of Soviet party members, but “formed a
majority in the government” [emphasis added]); Yuri Slezkine, The Jewish
Century, p. 254 (Princeton University Press, 2004)(the secret police
was “one of the most Jewish of all Soviet institutions”); and Arno J. Mayer,
Why Did the Heavens Not Darken?, p. 60 (1988)(“As of the late
twenties . . . [a] disproportionate number of Jews came to hold high posts
in the secret police and to serve as political commissars in the armed
services. They. . . were. . . appointed to high-level and conspicuous
positions which called for unimpeach-able political loyalty. . . ”). Mayer,
a professor emeritus of history at Princeton, is himself Jewish, and had to
flee the Nazis as a refugee.
The Israeli writer Boas Evron says the leaders of the Soviet revolution
were scarcely less Jewish than the Zionists. See his book Jewish State
or Israeli Nation?, p. 107 (English tr., Indiana University Press,
1995): “The backgrounds of the two groups were much the same. . . . Only
differences of chance and temperament caused the one [individual] to be a
Zionist and the other a revolutionary socialist.”
On February 8, 1920, Winston Churchill published an article, “Zionism
Versus Bolshevism: A Struggle for the Soul of the Jewish People,” in
the Illustrated Sunday Herald (London), reprinted in Lenni Brenner,
ed., 51 Documents: Zionist Collaboration with the Nazis, p. 23
(2002). Among other things, Churchill said (pp. 25-26):
There is no need to exaggerate the part played in the creation of
Bolshevism. . . by. . . international and for the most part atheistical
Jews. . . . [I]t probably outweighs all others. With the notable exception
of Lenin [who had a Jewish grandfather and by some accounts a Jewish wife],
the majority of leading figures are Jews. Moreover, the principal
inspiration and driving power comes from the Jewish leaders. . . . And the
prominent, if not indeed the principal, part in the system of terrorism. . .
has been taken by Jews. . . . The same evil prominence was obtained by Jews
in the brief period of terror during which Bela Kun ruled in Hungary. The
same phenomenon has been presented in Germany (especially in Bavaria), so
far as this madness has been allowed to prey on the temporary prostration of
the German people.
Churchill’s views, as expressed here, resemble those of the Times of
London’s correspondent in Russia, Robert Wilton. See George Gustav
Telberg and Robert Wilton, The Last Days of the Romanovs (1920),
esp. pp. 222-30, 391 (“[t]aken according to numbers of population, the Jews
represented one in ten; among the komisars that rule Bolshevik Russia they
are nine in ten—if anything, the proportion of Jews is still higher”),
392-93 and 400. The French version of the book, Les Derniers Jours des
Romanofs, also published in 1920, contains a list of 556 top figures in
the Bolshevik regime, classified by ethnicity. The Jewish proportion is a
bit over eight in ten, including two-thirds of the leadership of the secret
police.
The non-Jews are divided among various small categories—Russian, Lett,
Armenian, German, Georgian, etc. The list is absent from the slightly later
English and American editions, but is available online. See also John F.
O’Conor, The Sokolov Investigation (1971)(a translation, with
commentary, of sections of Nikolai Sokolov’s Enquête judiciaire sur
l'assassinat de la famille impériale Russe), especially for the comments of
O’Conor and his sources on Wilton.[i]
Jews among the Bolsheviks who imposed the holodomor of 1932-33 would have
relished settling scores after the 40 years of bloody pogroms that followed
Czar Alexander II’s assassination in 1881—especially the still-recent
massacre of 50,000 to 100,000 Jews, mostly in the Ukraine, during the
Russian civil war of 1918-21. (Far greater numbers of gentiles, of course,
also perished in that war; estimates run well into the millions.)
Albert S. Lindemann, Esau’s Tears, pp. 442-43 (Cambridge
University Press, 1997) says that “[i]n. . . the Ukraine, the Cheka
leadership was overwhelmingly Jewish”; that “the high percentage of Jews in
the secret police continued well into the 1930s”; and that “[c]omparisons to
the secret police in Nazi Germany have tempted many observers.
. . . [T]he extent to which both. . . prided themselves in being. . .
willing to carry out the most stomach-turning atrocities in the name of an
ideal. . . is striking.” Lindemann adds that:
George Leggett, the most recent and
authoritative historian of the Russian secret police, speculates that the
use of [non-Slavic ethnic minorities in the secret police] may have been a
conscious policy, since such ‘detached elements could be better trusted not
to sympathise with the repressed local population’.[ii]
Of course, in the Ukrainian case that population had the reputation of being
especially anti-Semitic, further diminishing the potential sympathies of
Jewish Chekists in dealing with it. [Citing Leggett, The Cheka, Lenin’s
Political Police, p. 263 (Oxford University Press, 1981).] . . . .
Cheka personnel regarded themselves as a class apart. . . with a power of
life or death over lesser mortals. (Emphases added.)
Yuri Slezkine’s The Jewish Century, above, illustrates the
attitude of Jewish Bolsheviks toward dying Ukrainians. See Kevin MacDonald’s
review of Slezkine, entitled “Stalin’s Willing Executioners?”,
www.vdare. com/ misc/051105 /macdonald _stalin.htm (a much fuller
version of which appears in the Occidental Quarterly, fall 2005, also
available online):
Lev Kopelev, a Jewish writer who witnessed and rationalized the Ukrainian
famine in which millions died horrible deaths of starvation and disease as
an “historical necessity,” is quoted [on p. 230 as] saying “You mustn’t give
in to debilitating pity. We are the agents of historical necessity. We are
fulfilling our revolutionary duty.” On the next page, Slezkine describes the
life of the largely Jewish elite in Moscow and Leningrad where they attended
the theater, sent their children to the best schools, [and] had peasant
women (whose families were often the victims of mass murder) for nannies. .
. .
Kopelev did not offer his opinions from a distance. In his words, “I saw
women and children with distended bellies, turning blue, with vacant,
lifeless eyes. And corpses. . . . I saw all this and did not go out of my
mind or commit suicide. . . .” Moynahan, The Russian Century,
above, p. 149. Moynahan, by the way, gives a high-end estimate of the death
toll as “probably. . . 14 million.” Id. at 130.
Kopelev was then in his early 20s. (Koestler was six-and-a-half years
older.) Kopelev believed without question that “we were warriors on an
invisible front, fighting against kulak sabotage for the grain that was
needed by the country, by the five-year plan.” See vol. 1 of his memoirs,
The Education of a True Believer, p. 226 (1980). He gave speeches
to starving peasants at “several meetings a day,” telling them how much more
the state needed their grain than they did themselves. Id. at 229. The
peasants most often responded, “chop off my head”; they had nothing left to
give. Id. at 231.
Fifteen years later, Kopelev himself was in the Butyrka prison in Moscow,
where his fellow inmates, the writers Dmitri Panin[iii]
and Alexandr Solzhenitsyn, challenged his denial of his own Jewishness, and
the Jewishness of the revolution. See vol. 3 of Kopelev’s memoirs, Ease
My Sorrows, p. 18 (1983):
When I told Solzhenitsyn the history of the
various parties and reached the Socialist Revolutionaries, recalling the
leaders, Gorovits, Gershuni, Gots, he interrupted in astonishment, almost in
disbelief: how can that be— Jewish surnames, when the SRs were a Russian
peasant party?
* * *
Panin reproached me for the sinful rejection of
my people—for not wanting to avow myself “first and foremost a Jew. . . .
But it’s clearer to an outsider.” . . . Solzhenitsyn seconded him. . . . He
could not agree with. . . my self-definition: “A Russian intellectual of
Jewish descent.”
Notwithstanding Kopelev’s self-definition, he was incontestably Jewish
for purposes of the Israeli Law of Return, which came into effect well
within his lifetime.[iv] Moreover, while he became a
man of far more humane views as he grew older, there would be some irony in
excusing his “true believer” phase as a mere youthful folly. Compare the
unsparing treatment recently given Günter Grass, concerning service in the
Waffen SS that involved no complicity in atrocities, and ended in his late
teens.
The phrase “Stalin’s willing executioners”—with its echo of Daniel Jonah
Goldhagen—is Slezkine’s (p. 130). At pp. 183-84, translating from the
Russian, Slezkine quotes Ia. A. Bromberg (1931) on what Stalinism brought
out in its Jewish servitors:
The convinced and unconditional opponent of the
death penalty. . . , who could not, as it were, watch a chicken being
killed, has been transformed outwardly into a leather-clad person with a
revolver and [has], in fact, lost all human likeness. . . , standing in a
Cheka basement doing “bloody but honorable revolutionary work.”
II. PEASANT-JEWISH RELATIONS: "ARENDARS"
Shahak, in Three Thousand Years, above, ch. 4, traces Jewish
“hatred and contempt” for peasants— “a hatred of which I know no parallel in
other societies”—back to the great Ukrainian uprising of 1648-54, in which
tens of thousands of “the accursed Jews” (to quote the Ukrainian Cossack
leader Bohdan Khmelnytsky) were killed. Some say the number is more
accurately stated in the hundreds of thousands. Heinrich Graetz says the
number “may well be. . . a quarter of a million.” See his History of the
Jews, vol. 5, p. 15 (1856-70, English tr., Jewish Publication Society
of America ed., 1956).
The Jews at the time of the massacres were serving the Polish szlachta
(nobility) and Roman Catholic clergy on their Ukrainian latifundia as
arendars—toll-, rent- and tax-farmers, enforcers of corvee obligations,
licensees of feudal monopolies (e.g., on banking, milling, storekeeping, and
distillation and sale of alcohol), and as anti-Christian scourges who even
collected tithes at the doors of the peasants’ Greek Orthodox churches and
exacted fees to open those doors for weddings, christenings and funerals.
They had life and death powers over the local population (the typical form
of execution being impalement), and no law above them to which that
population had recourse. See Graetz, vol. 5, pp. 3-6; Subtelny, pp. 123-38;
Norman Davies, God’s Playground: A History of Poland, vol. 1, p.
444 (Oxford University Press, 1982); and Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski, Jews in
Poland, pp. 68-79, 283 (1993). According to the last three of these
sources, the arendars leased estates for terms of only two or three
years and had every incentive to wring the peasants mercilessly, without
regard to long-term consequences.
As Shahak points out in Three Thousand Years, chs. 3 and 5, a
non-Jew, in traditional Judaism, was never “thy neighbor” for purposes of
Leviticus 19:18—which was doubtless an advantage in such taxing work as an
arendar’s. Shahak has much to say about rabbinical pronouncements, abundant
in Israel even now, that gentile souls are closer to the souls of animals
than to those of Jews. Those pronouncements are grounded, at least in part,
on Ezekiel 23:20 (“[their] flesh [i.e., penises] is as the flesh of asses
and [their] issue [i.e., semen] is like the issue of horses”).[v]
Norman Cantor comments in The Sacred Chain, p. 184 (1994) that
“perhaps the Jews [of the arenda period] were so moved by racist contempt
for the Ukrainian and Polish peasantry as to regard them as subhuman. . . .
There is a parallel with the recent attitude of the West Bank Orthodox and
ultra-Orthodox toward the Palestinians. Judaism can be in its Halakhic form
an extremely restrictive and blinding faith.”
According to Chaim Bermant, The Jews, p. 26 (1977):
. . . [O]ne cannot see the events of [1648-49]
as entirely the result of crazed fanaticism or mindless superstition. . . .
[I]f the nobility were. . . the ultimate exploiters,the Jews were the
visible ones and aroused the most immediate hostility. Rabbis warned that
Jews were sowing a terrible harvest of hatred, but while the revenues rolled
in the warnings were ignored. Moreover, the rabbis themselves were
beneficiaries of the system.
Those rabbinical forebodings are also mentioned in Jacob Katz,
Exclusiveness and Tolerance, p. 152 (Oxford University Press, 1961).
Graetz (vol. 5, pp. 5-6) says of the Jewish arendars that they had lost
“integrity and right-mindedness. . . as completely as simplicity and the
sense of truth. They found pleasure and a sort of triumphant delight in
deception and cheating.” He adds that they “advised the [Polish noble and
ecclesiastical] possessors of the Cossack colonies how most completely to
humiliate, oppress, torment, and ill-use [those colonies]. . . . No wonder
that the enslaved Cossacks hated the Jews. . . The Jews were not without
warning what would be their lot, if these embittered enemies once got the
upper hand.”
Graetz (vol. 5, p. 7) also says Khmelnytsky had personal reasons for
leading the revolt: “A Jew, Zachariah Sabilenki, had played him a trick, by
which he was robbed of his wife and property.” It says everything, of
course, that it was possible by trickery to rob a Cossack of his wife.
The best-known contemporaneous account of the revolt is Nathan (Nata) ben
Moses Hannover, Yewen Mesulah, which appeared in Venice in 1653. An English
translation was published three centuries later as The Abyss of Despair
(1950). Hannover was well aware of the peasants’ grievances (see pp. 27-30
of The Abyss). He described the massacres in the grimmest of terms,
full of biblical allusions. He then gave the rest of his life to the holy
mysteries of Lurianic cabbalism. As Graetz puts it (vol. 5, pp. 21-22),
“that book of falsehoods, the Zohar, [had] declared that in the year of the
world 5408 (1648) the era of redemption would dawn, and precisely in that
year Sabbathai [Ze’evi] revealed himself. . . as the messianic redeemer.”
Sabbathai was a manic-depressive one of whose followers, Samuel Primo,
preached that “your lament and sorrow must be changed into joy.” Spinoza and
other rationalists were not amused. Thousands of Sabbathai’s flock even
followed him into “holy apostasy” when he converted to Islam in 1666. His
own conversion was under duress; theirs was not. Graetz’s highly-readable
account of the fervor (vol. 5, pp. 121-67) is similar in style and tone to
Gibbon’s account of the early Christian Church.
Arendas did not disappear after the Khmelnytsky uprising. See
Jewish FamilyHistory. org/ Grand_ Duchy_of_Lithuania. htm (“During the
18th century, up to 80 percent of Jewish heads of households in rural areas
[of what are now Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine and parts of Poland] were
arendars, that is, holders of an arenda”). Pogonowski, p. 72, describes the
return of the Jews to the Ukraine after 1648-54. Similarly, see Simon M.
Dubnow, History of the Jews in Russia and Poland, vol. 1, p. 158
(1916).
Shahak (Three Thousand Years, ch. 4) says that under the arenda
system, “the full weight of the Jewish religious laws against gentiles fell
upon the peasants.” As to the nature of those laws, see id., ch. 5,
especially under the heading “Abuse.” See also such passages as Psalm 2:8-9
(“. . . I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance. . . . Thou
shalt break them with a rod of iron; thou shalt dash them in pieces like a
potter’s vessel”); Psalm 21:8-10 (“[T]hy right hand shall find out those
that hate thee. Thou shalt make them as a fiery oven in the time of thine
anger: the Lord shall swallow them up. . .”); Psalm 79:6-7 (“Pour out thy
wrath upon the heathen. . . [f]or they have devoured Jacob [i.e., Israel],
and laid waste his dwelling place”); Jeremiah 10:25 (al-most identical);
Psalm 137:8-9 (“O daughter of Babylon, who art to be destroyed, . . . [h]appy
shall he be, that taketh and dasheth thy little ones against the stones”);
Psalm 149:7-8; Isaiah 45:14 (“Thus saith the Lord, . . . in chains. . . they
shall fall down unto [Israel]. . .”); Isaiah 60:12 (“. . .[T]he nation and
kingdom that will not serve [Israel] shall perish; yea, those nations shall
be utterly wasted” ); Isaiah 61:5-6 (“. . .[S]trangers shall stand and feed
your flocks. . . : [Y]e shall eat the riches of the Gentiles. . .”); and of
course Esther 8:11 through 10:3. As to the last, and the feast of Purim,
celebrated yearly then as now, see Elliott Horowitz, Reckless Rites
(Princeton University Press, 2006).
III. JEWISH ATTITUDE TO NON-JEWS, i.e. "ESAU AND EDOM"
The Babylonian Talmud, cabbalist treatises, and other rabbinical writings
extant during the arenda period were even harder on the gentiles,
particularly Christians. See Johann Andreas Eisenmenger’s hugely
controversial Entdektes Judenthum (1700), translated as Rabbinical
Literature: Or the Traditions of the Jews (1748). At p. 253 of that
translation we read that:
The [cabbalist] Treatise Emek hammelech, in the
Part entitled Shaar shiashue hammelech, gives us the following Passage. “Our
Rabbins, of Blessed Memory, have said, Ye Jews are stiled Men; because of
the Soul ye have from the Supreme Man (i.e., God; whom the Cabalists call
Adam Ahelion; that is, the Supreme Man). But the Nations of the World are
not stiled Men, because they have not, from the Holy and Supreme Man, the
Neshama (or glorious Soul). But they have the Nephesh (i.e. the Soul) from
Adam Belial; that is, the malicious and unnecessary Man, called Sammael, the
Supreme Devil.”
The next seven pages are filled with further such quotations. Eisenmenger
also discloses a rabbinical obsession with Esau and his nation Edom,
themselves deemed satanic (as to which see more from scholars discussed
below).
Jacob Katz, the author of Exclusiveness and Tolerance, above,
and a professor of Jewish history at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, is
hardly an admirer of Eisenmenger. Very much the contrary. But in From
Prejudice to Destruction, pp. 14-15, 21, passim (Harvard University
Press, 1980), Katz admits some important points:
[Eisenmenger’s] book was impressive both on
account of its size—some 2,120 pages in two volumes—and its tremendous
erudition. . . . [He] was acquainted with all the literature a Jewish
scholar of standing would have known. . . . Contrary to accusations that
have been made against him, he does not falsify his sources. He quotes them
in full and translates them literally. . . . The question is how did
Eisenmenger arrive at so darkly a negative picture of Judaism while quoting
its sources unadulteratedly?
* * * There was a nucleus of truth in
all his claims: the Jews lived in a world of. . . ethical duality—following
different standards in their internal and external relationships. . . .
(Emphases added.)[vi]
The anthropologist John Hartung comments, in an essay entitled “Love
Thy Neighbor: The Evolution of In-Group Morality” (1995, available
online), that “the half-life and penetrance of such cultural legacies are
often under-appreciated.” To illustrate Hartung’s point, “Pour out thy wrath
upon our enemies” (“shfoch hamatcha al hagoyim”) is even now a prayer at the
Passover seder.
David M. Weinberg, director of public affairs at the Begin-Sadat Center
for Strategic Studies of the Orthodox Bar Ilan University near Tel Aviv,
defends it as being “part of the Haggada text for a reason: to purposefully
exclude and ward off the placid, falsely high-minded thinking that has
overtaken so much of today’s Western world.” See Weinberg’s essay in the
Jerusalem Post, April 21, 2003 (available online). The English
translation “upon our enemies”—not “upon thine enemies,” or even “upon the
heathen”—is taken here directly from Weinberg. All those renditions seem
interchangeable in any event. The actual word, of course, is goyim.
According to Davies (God’s Playground, vol. 1, p. 444) the
oppressiveness of the Jews as arendars “provided the most important
single cause of the terrible retribution that would descend on them on
several occasions in the future. . . .” In 1986 the Stanford
history department voted 12-11 against offering tenure to Davies, then a
professor visiting from the University of London. Davies sued unsuccessfully
for defamation, which suggests the tenor of the discussion. Davies is now a
fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford. The queen awarded him a CMG in 2001.
Actually, the Jewish “hatred and contempt” that Shahak remarks on can be
traced back to times well before the events of 1648-54. Such attitudes can
be seen, for example, in medieval traditions in which Esau—portrayed in
Isaiah 63 and Obadiah as one with whom God himself is at war—came to stand
for agricultural Christian Europe. See Rabbi Tzvi Weinberg, “Esau-Edom:
Profile of a People” (Dec. 16, 2000), at
http://www .biu.ac.il/ JH/Parasha/ eng/ vayishlach/ wei.html. See also
Exclusiveness and Tolerance, above, p. 6, which says that in
medieval Jewish poetry Edom was synonymous with Christianity. In Malachi 1:4
“the Lord hath indignation for ever” against Edom; see also Jeremiah 49:7-8,
Lamentations 4:21-22, Ezekiel 35, and Amos 1:11.
IV. SLAVE TRADE
Edom was never geographically fixed. It followed the Jews wherever they
went—the nation allotted to Israel’s dehumanized twin, as ripe for righteous
predation as the original Esau.[vii] Edom’s presence
in Europe helped rationalize the Jewish role in the immensely profitable
slave trade of the eighth through the 10th centuries. European
boys—mostly in the East, but in the West as well—were kidnapped and
castrated by Vikings, sold to Jews, taken south down the major rivers, and
sold again as eunuchs in Muslim lands from Persia to Spain. See H.R.
Trevor-Roper, The Rise of Christian Europe, pp. 92-93 (1965). As
Trevor-Roper points out, the words for slave and Slav come from the same
root in every European language, a reminder of a commerce whose memory has
faded away in the West. The Arabic word for eunuch is from the same root.
Some trace this trade as far back as the fifth century. .
A related matter is Ashkenazic—though not Sephardic—eschatological
doctrine, which in the “late antique” period followed Jeremiah 46:28 (“Fear
thou not, O Jacob [i.e., Israel], my servant, saith the Lord: . . . for I
will make a full end of all the nations whither I have driven thee: but I
will not make a full end of thee. . .” ) and Psalms 110:6 and 94:1. See
Adiel Schremer, of Bar Ilan University, “Eschatology, Violence and
Suicide: An Early Rabbinic Theme and its Influence in the Middle Ages,”
at
research. yale.edu/ ycias/database/Files/MESV6-2.pdf: At p. 4, Schremer
says:
[T]he construction of the eschatological
redemption in terms of the total eradication of the nations, or at least in
association with such an expectation, has a potential of shaping a violent
personality and might contribute to. . . a violent mind-setting. For if one
is hoping for God’s redemption soon to come, and is inspired by the idea of
a total vanquishing of Israel’s enemies as an essential part of that
redemption, one’s violent inclinations are not entirely suppressed and in a
sense they are being fostered. (Emphasis added.)
Schremer’s paper was presented on May 5, 2002 at the Yale Divinity
School. The reference in his title to suicide concerns the year 1096, when
large numbers of Jews in the Rhineland killed themselves and their own
children, siblings and parents, rather than submit to Crusaders’ efforts to
convert them by force. By way of explanation, Schremer quotes Sigmund Freud:
“No neurotic harbors thoughts of suicide which he has not turned back upon
himself from murderous impulses against others.” Schremer cites many
biblical passages and rabbinical exegeses that might feed such impulses.
For a much fuller discussion of this whole set of issues, see Israel
Jacob Yuval, Two Nations in Your Womb (English tr., University of
California Press, 2006). At pp. 120-21 Yuval tells of prayers that:
. . . demonstrate the abyss of hostility and
hatred felt by medieval Jews toward Christians. And we have here not only
hatred, but an appeal to God to kill indiscriminately and ruthlessly,
alongside a vivid description of the anticipated horrors to be brought down
upon the Gentiles. These pleas are formulated in a series of verbs—“swallow
them, shoot them, lop them off, make them bleed, crush them, strike them,
curse them, and ban them. . . destroy them, kill them, smite them. . . crush
them [again], abandon them, parch them”—and in the best alphabetical
tradition, the string of disasters the poet wishes for the Gentiles goes on
and on.
Yuval collects an abundance of such material, from both before and after
the events of 1096. In agreement with Schremer, he says (p. 123) that “we
are dealing here with a comprehensive religious ideology that sees vengeance
as a central component in its messianic doctrine.” He repeats (p. 125) that
this vengeance was to be “against the Gentiles”—most of whom, it seems safe
to say, were peasants—and that the vengeance stood “at the very heart of the
messianic process.” He says tellingly (p. 134) that “the Christians were not
unaware of the Jewish desire to see their destruction.”[viii]
The ethnocentric hostility of the Jews—consistently commented on by the
peoples who have encountered them over the millennia—can be traced
ultimately to the origins of Judaism as set forth in the Torah, e.g.,
Genesis 9:25 (“Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall he be unto his
brethren”); Exodus 17:14-16 and 34:12-13 ; Numbers 24:8 (“God. . . shall eat
up the nations his enemies, and shall break their bones, and pierce them
through with his arrows”), 25:6-13 (wherein God commends Phineas for his
initiative in running a javelin through both parties to a marriage of Jew
and gentile), 31:7-19 and 33:50-56; and Deuteronomy 2:33-35 (“[on God’s
command] we. . . utterly destroyed the men, and the women, and the little
ones, of every city, we left none to remain”), 3:4-7, 7:1-5 (“thou shalt. .
. utterly destroy them”), 7:14-26 (“thine eye shall have no pity”), 20:10-17
(“thou shalt save alive nothing that breatheth”) and 25:19. Disdain for
ordinary labor—to be performed by Esau and Edom, but to be exploited by
Israel—appears as early as Genesis 25:23-27, as discussed in note vii below.
Ethnocentric hostility has lent itself to Jewish tax-farming. This can be
traced back to very early times, and has sometimes involved copious use of
deadly force, put at the disposal of the tax-farmers by their noble clients.
See Flavius Josephus, The Antiquities of the Jews, bk. 12, ch. 4 (1st
c.), available online (Syria violently stripped to its “bones” for Ptolemy
III); and Elias Bickerman, The Jews in the Greek Age, p. 120 (Harvard
University Press, 1988).
See also Rabbi Simeon’s lumping of gentiles with serpents, above;
Cornelius Tacitus, The Histories, bk. 5.5 (c. 109 A.D.) (“[the
Jews] regard the rest of mankind with all the hatred of enemies”); Gibbon,
ch. 15 (“the[ir] sullen obstinacy. . . and unsocial manners seemed to mark
them out a distinct species of men, who boldly professed, or who faintly
disguised, their implacable hatred to the rest of humankind”); and Emilio
Gabba, “The Growth of Anti-Judaism or the Greek Attitude Toward the Jews,”
in W.D. Davies and Louis Finkelstein, eds., The Cambridge History of
Judaism, vol. 2 (Cam-bridge University Press, 1990). At p. 629 Gabba
attributes to Hecataeus of Abdera (early 3d c. B.C.) an observation about
the hostility of the Jews. Gabba excuses that hostility, saying the Jews’
“misanthropic reserve” was understandable in light of the exodus from Egypt.
But the exodus—thought by Hecataeus to have been an expulsion, and by
Tacitus to have been an expulsion of lepers—was perhaps a thousand years
past even when Hecataeus wrote. At p. 645 Gabba cites Posidonius (134 B.C.)
on the advice given to his contemporary, King Antiochus Sidetes, to destroy
the Jews, “for they alone among all peoples refused all relations with other
races and saw everyone as their enemy. . . .”
Almost identical advice was given to King Ahasuerus (Xerxes I, 485-465
B.C.) in Esther 3:8-9. Some two-and-a-half millennia after Ahasuerus, the
Jews still celebrate on their most joyous holiday the vengeance he allowed
them: “sl[aughter] of their foes seventy and five thousand,” including “both
little ones and women,” and hanging not just of the man who gave the advice,
but of all ten of his sons. It was an occasion of “light, and. . . joy, and
honour,” and of “gladness and feasting.” Id., 8:11-17, 9:13-28.
Martin Luther’s comments on this story, in The Jews and Their Lies
(1543), fit with Yuval’s account of “a comprehensive [Jewish] religious
ideology that sees vengeance as a central component in its messianic
doctrine,” and Schremer’s account of Jewish hopes for “eschatological
redemption in terms of the total eradication of the nations”:
Oh how [the Jews] love the Book of Esther, which so nicely agrees with
their bloodthirsty, revengeful and murderous desire and hope. The sun never
did shine on a more bloodthirsty and revengeful people than they, who
imagine themselves to be the people of God, and who desire to, and think
they must, murder and crush the heathen. And the foremost undertaking which
they expect of their Messiah is that he should slay and murder the whole
world with the sword.
This passage—indeed, the whole 64-page essay—is often cited as evidence
of Luther’s pathological anti-Semitism, but Yuval and Schremer show that at
least on this point he knew whereof he spoke. As Yuval says, “the Christians
were not unaware of the Jewish desire to see their destruction.” Luther’s
comments also fit with the descriptions of Jewish arendars given above—men
who “found pleasure and a sort of triumphant delight in deception and
cheating” (Graetz); who sowed “a terrible harvest of hatred” (Bermant); and
who may have been “so moved by racist contempt for the Ukrainian and Polish
peasantry as to regard them as subhuman” (Cantor).
Go to the Conclusion of Holocaust and Holodomor
Republished with the permission of Gilad Atzmon from an
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