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Ira Stoll-Antisemitsmo e crisi economica 10/04/2009
Wall Street Journal, April 6, 2009
ANTI-SEMITISM AND THE ECONOMIC CRISIS
Ira Stoll
Wall Street Journal, April 6, 2009

Walking down the street in my solidly upper-middle-class New York City neighborhood
the other day was a neatly dressed man angrily cursing into his cell phone about
 "Jew Wall Street bankers." I was headed in the opposite direction and didn't stop
to interview him about his particular grievances, but the brief encounter crystallized
for me a foreboding that the financial crisis may trigger a new outbreak of anti-Semitism.
It is a fear that is being articulated ever more widely. President Bill Clinton's
secretary of labor, Robert Reich, frets on his blog, "History shows how effective
demagogic ravings can be when a public is stressed economically." He warns that
Jews, along with gays and blacks, could become victims of populist rage....
At this juncture, the trepidation may yet seem like paranoia, or special pleading
akin to the old joke about the newspaper headline, "World Ends in Nuclear Attack:
Poor, Minorities Hardest Hit." Everyone is feeling the brunt of the recession; why
worry about the Jews in particular? After all, Jews today have two refuges: Israel
and America, a land where Jews have attained remarkable power and prosperity and
 have a constitutionally protected right to exercise their religion freely. In that
case, why worry about potential danger to the Jews at all?
One answer is that the historical precedents are exceedingly grim. The causes of
 the First Crusade, in which thousands of Jews were murdered, are still being debated,
but some historians link it to famine and a poor harvest in 1095. As for the expulsion
of the Jews from Spain in 1492, the foremost historian of its causes, Benzion Netanyahu
(the father of Israel's new prime minister), writes of the desire of the persecutors
"to get rid of their debts by getting rid of their creditors."...
Lest this seem overly crude economic determinism, consider that the Jews have been
victims not only of unrest prompted by economic distress but of attempts to remedy
such economic distress with socialism. Take it from Friedrich Hayek, the late Nobel
Prize winning Austrian economist. In "The Road to Serfdom," Hayek wrote, "In Germany
and Austria the Jew had come to be regarded as the representative of Capitalism."
Thus, the response in those countries, National Socialism, was an attack on both
 capitalism and the Jews....
So will the Jews come under attack? The existence of the Jewish state guarantees
 refuge for Jews around the world, but it carries with it its own risks. Hezbollah's
leader, Hassan Nasrallah, has said that if the Jews "all gather in Israel, it will
save us the trouble of going after them world-wide." It's a comment all the more
 chilling as Nasrallah's Iranian sponsors are on the brink of making a nuclear bomb.
As for the idea that Jewish professional, political, and economic success in America
is a guarantee of security, that, too, has its risks. As Yuri Sleskine recounted
 in his book "The Jewish Century," in 1900 Vienna more than half of the lawyers,
 doctors and professional journalists were Jewish, as were 70% of the members of
 the stock exchange. In Germany, after World War I but before the Nazis came to
power, Jews served as finance minister and as foreign minister. Such achievements
have a way of being fleeting.
It may yet be that the Jews escape the current economic crisis having only lost
fortunes. But if not, there will have been no lack of warning about the threat.
When Jews gather Wednesday night for the Passover Seder, we will recite the words
from the Hagadah, the book that relays the Israelite exodus from slavery in Egypt:
"In every generation they rise up against us to destroy us." This year, they will
resonate all the more ominously.

(Ira Stoll is the author of Samuel Adams: A Life.)

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