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JEWISH HISTORY: PAST & PRESENT
Seth Lipsky: I feel fine about the term when it’s applied to me. I endorsed Bill Clinton twice when I was at the Forward. Amity Shlaes, my wife, voted for George H. W. Bush in 1992 and Bob Dole in 1996. She was on the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal, and I voted for
Wisse: Being Jewish had a lot to do with it for the neocons I know. Many started out on the left. Though they rarely talked about European Jewry or the rise of the State of Israel, what happened in the 1940s influenced them deeply as Jews. One of the ways it came out was in their turning away from an earlier indifference. They realized how wrong they had been in their diagnosis of domestic and foreign issues.
Lipsky: I made my first trip to in 1967 as an undergraduate, accredited to the Berkshire Eagle and with an assignment from the Jewish Advocate in
Wisse: Everyone I know who would define themselves as neoconservative became so simply because of changing their minds. So, you might almost call it a group of people who changed their minds in the same direction. My turning or my recognizing this started a little earlier than the 1960s.
In fact, it was a book, Lionel Trilling’s novel Middle of the Journey, that I would suggest is the original text of neoconservatism. It describes exactly what you were saying about your trip to
One could say that progressive attitudes toward
Lipsky: We’re certainly under attack, and I do think there is a war against the Jews being levied by the same people who are levying war against
Though there is a war being levied against us, there’s also a proactive element to conservatives—the creating of conditions for people to be free, Americans to be free, Jews to be free, other people, as George Bush often says.
Wisse: I’m talking about the defense of freedom and you’re talking about the obtainment of freedom. Maybe neoconservatism means putting a premium on freedom and taking it seriously—truly obtaining political liberty for all.
This may be why it’s so hard to define precisely. Freedom is both liberal and conservative. We have the story of the Jews breaking out of
Lipsky: The question of whether Judaism is mainly conservative is widely disputed, though. I take your point completely.
Wisse: Perhaps everybody has a liberal and a conservative tendency; if things go too far in one direction then you see movement in the other. But also, because Judaism is so tough and maybe because it’s so conservative, you always have movements like Christianity in its time or socialism in its time that say, let’s get beyond the Jewish condition. Let’s universalize the Jewish condition. Let’s think of bringing this to a higher level without the specific laws and restrictions. And if that goes too far, then it becomes an anti-Judaism.
Irving Kristol in 1949 wrote in Commentary, “Judaism today, and especially liberal Judaism, despite the horrors of modern totalitarianism, seems unable to recognize sin when it sees it. It does see the evil of individual wickedly-minded men (or nations) but it refuses to assign evil its full and menacing stature. It has preferred to dress itself up in the clothes of 19th-century liberalism in order to attend a 20th-century execution. The transcendental hope of Judaism has settled into uncomprehending, complacent euphoria.”
I believe Kristol is saying that Judaism was supposed to be hardheaded enough to deal with evil. That was really its greatest accomplishment—to delimit evil and to be able to keep evil in check. So how could the Jews be the ones, when so much evil is directed at them, to get caught up, to dress themselves up in the clothes of 19th-century liberalism in order to attend a 20th-century execution when that execution was their own? Neoconservatives are the ones who faced up to the evil and refused to attend the liberal masquerade in costume. Perhaps that’s what defines neoconservatism and proves its great virtue, especially for Jews.
Lipsky: I don’t know that I have felt a great deal of disappointment in liberal Jews. I just don’t agree with them in politics. You know, there are some streaks of liberalism that I admire a great deal still, although it’s more a European-style liberalism.
Wisse: Liberalism that created the modern liberal state. But what about people who are unwilling to take into account the political context within which liberal democracies are trying to flourish? In relation to
Lipsky: One of the formative passages in my own career was editing the Forward. I used to make habit of going back to read what the Forward, a tribune of progressive pro-labor or socialist worldview, said about things, and I was always startled at how conservative it was in terms of our current thinking. I bought a used microfilm reader for Lucy Dawidowicz to use in her apartment. She was a genius at teasing out of these files of the back issues of the Forward items that illuminated the ironies that we’re speaking of. We lost, when she died, the genius that she put into that column of items from back issues of the Forward. What Jews sometimes attribute to the neoconservatives today, are ideas not far off from what were mainstream liberal views of an earlier time. It’s like what Ronald Reagan said, “I didn’t leave the Democratic Party, it left me.” Lucy understood that much of the hostility was hostility to Jews and to the Jewish struggle. I think of that often these days.
Wisse: I want to read from a lecture that Leo Strauss delivered in 1962—republished as an essay called “Why We Remain Jews.” He writes, “The Jewish people and their fate are living witness for the absence of redemption. This, one could say, is the meaning of the chosen people; the Jews are chosen to prove the absence of redemption.” It’s a chilling but amazingly incisive way of formulating the issue. People who want to believe that the world has been redeemed or is immediately redemptive, would have to wish the Jews out of existence since the aggression against them so clearly contradicts this faith. |
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