How far should a Jewish organization go to counter a person
with whom they disagree or consider a threat? That is the question.
Several weeks ago in Washington, senior officials of the Anti-Defamation League
and the American Jewish Committee contacted the Polish embassy. They told the
ambassador that a scheduled speech on Embassy premises by professor Tony Judt
would not be in Poland's best interest because of Judt's position on Israel.
The embassy then rescinded its agreement with an outside group to use embassy
space for Judt's speech that very evening.
Judt is a well-known New York University history professor, whose essays have
been published in The London Review of Books, The New York Review of Books, and
in Israel's Haaretz newspaper.
Although Judt is Jewish and his parents are Holocaust survivors, he has made
himself into a minor celebrity with his constant berating of Israel and his
argument that Israel should become a bi-national, no longer Jewish, state.
This is not the two-state solution often discussed, but rather one large state
where the high Arab birthrate, as well as new Arab residents, would leave Jews
in the minority position. It's hard to find one Jew in a thousand supporting
that future for Israel.
I received several calls from people in Washington alarmed that the story about
Judt being denied embassy space appeared in the Washington Post.
"Jews shouldn't deny free speech to those with whom they disagree," said a
person who knew that I worked with the Anti-Defamation League for two years
early in my career. (Today my contact with ADL is what I read in the press and
on its website.)
My response was that this was not an assault or abridgement of free speech;
though, it was, in retrospect, an unwise, even dumb, thing to do.
The American legal notion of free speech (sounds easy but argued in thousands of
cases and books) is that the government should not abridge speech (and
expression) of its citizens. The dirty tricks and threats by FBI director J.
Edgar Hoover to Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., were a clear denial and
restriction of King's free speech. The Polish Embassy controversy does not fit
that mold by a long shot.
Gathering information about opponents is common practice in America. Look who
does it: sports teams, political candidates, and business competitors. How they
collect it and what they do with that information are the important questions.
You don't steal somebody's mail. But you might send an observer to record what
an opposing political candidate says and does all day long.
Similarly, you don't phone in a cancellation at your opponent's next speech
venue or phone in a bomb threat during an opponent's rally.
Jewish defense organizations like ADL and the American Jewish Committee have
always kept tabs on hate-mongers, anti-Semites and others who would threaten the
Jewish community or ferment hate against Jews and other ethnic minorities.
What action to take with this information was always debatable and usually
subject to the situation at hand. Jewish organizations found that writing and
distributing fact sheets, pamphlets and books, reduced the hatemonger's ability
to raise funds and give speeches under phony rubric of religious symbols or
declarations of patriotism.
The enemies in the 1950s and 1960s were the likes of Lincoln Rockwell, the
American Nazi Party and Rev. Gerald L.K. Smith, of the Christian Anti-Communist
Crusade.
These mumsers were not shy about defaming Jews, African-Americans, and sometimes
Catholics; nor were they hesitant to urge death or deportation. (Similar hate
groups operate today, mostly on the Internet, and are being tracked and
exposed.)
Still, however objectionable is Professor Judt's position, he is not a
swastika-adorned, fascist and nobody should confuse that.
Yet, I do not scorn the ADL and AJC action. It's their call. Jewish
organizations do not issue death threats or burn embassies.
In the end, the Polish Embassy cancelled the event. But, a win it was not, when
factoring in the negative story appearing on page three of the Washington Post.
Moreover, Professor Judt came out receiving more publicity and probably more
future speaking invitations from this cancellation, than the original event
would have garnered.
I have a feeling (at least a hope) that ADL and AJC will not make that mistake
again.
|