Ariana Melamed Israel's Roaring Silence in the Face of Racist, Fascist Misogyny
He's not alone, and he's not in the minority. Likud MK Oren Hazan
is a frighteningly accurate litmus test for the mood in Israeli-Jewish
society. He unambiguously captures the
racist-fascist-misogynistic sentiment: religious and nationalist
arguments linked with a hatred of women – a hallmark of German and
Italian fascism.
See, for instance, the "Ten Commandments for Choosing a Spouse” by the Third Reich's public health authorities. Read, for example, chapter 11 of "Mein Kampf,"
which says: "The black-haired Jewish youth lies in wait for hours on
end, satanically glaring at and spying on the unsuspicious girl whom he
plans to seduce, adulterating her blood and removing her from the bosom
of her own people."
Hazan hasn't been blessed with Adolf Hitler's colorful writing style, but the sentiment he expressed about Lucy Aharish,
an Israeli Arab news anchor who on Wednesday married Jewish actor
Tzachi Halevy, is identical: The Arab Aharish "seduced" the unsuspicious
Jew. A real Lilith.
In racist ideology,
the scary "other" is always the one who initiates, who generates the
horror and violates the pure. The purpose of her "seduction" is to take
advantage of her non-Jewish womb, as Hazan says: "Preventing more Jewish
progeny from continuing the Jewish dynasty." No less important is the
motive: "With the goal of harming our country," as Hazan tweeted.
The
social-media uproar that Hazan's post caused juxtaposed two opposite
worldviews. In one, relationships and marriage are an individual choice,
and the state's only job is to stay out. In the other, relationships
are a demographic threat to the state, rendering its elected officials
obligated to interfere to channel every relationship toward a clear,
premeditated agenda.
Israel, which puts marriage and divorce in the hands of religious institutions,
already has trouble staying the course as it crisscrosses these
different positions. It doesn't let people of different religions marry
in its territory, though it recognizes such marriages if performed
abroad.
The
state is officially silent, of course, when it comes to the
intermarriage of Jews and Muslims or Arabs generally, but it gives the
stage to right-wing activists such as Lehava and the group's founder Bentzi Gopstein, who have repeatedly attacked Aharish. The only elected officials to condemn Gopstein have been left-wing and Arab MKs.
Behind the 65
legislators in Israel's governing coalition – the official face of
Israel, the face that said not a word of condemnation against Hazan's
racist post – stands a large constituency, a sturdy Jewish majority. If
coalition members thought otherwise, if they thought Hazan didn't
represent the values and beliefs of this community, they'd bother to
tweet. But as long as they're silent, everyone is party to his post.
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