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| Anti-Semites:
Enemies of Humanity |
By
Alan Caruba
Just
over a half century since the wholesale murder of Jews by the Nazis, anti-Semitism
is back in fashion. It is an obsession throughout the Middle East and gaining
growing acceptability in Europe, the scene of the Holocaust in the 1940’s.
In
early February, The Wall Street Journal reprinted an essay by Hillel Halkin
that had appeared in Commentary magazine. It was titled, "The Return
of Anti-Semitism: To be against Israel is to be against the Jews."
There
is a stark reality to this statement. "To be against Israel is to be against
the Jews." I am inclined to add that to be against Israel is to reject Christianity.
I say this because Jesus and all of his apostles were Jews. Jesus was born, preached
and died in Israel. To reject Israel, the nation that has come back to life out
of the ashes of the Holocaust, is to reject not just Jews, but Christianity as
well.
Christianity
as it evolved took a different path from Judaism, though it is mainly rooted in
Judaism. The primary exception is the Christian belief that Jesus was the Messiah,
the Son of God, and the entity through whom one can find personal salvation. Fundamental
to Judaism is the belief that one’s salvation is predicated on one’s own deeds
in life and there is no barrier between a Jew and his Creator. Each year, on the
holiest day of Yom Kippur, every Jew must renew his or her request to be forgiven
for their sins and to be inscribed in the book of life for one more year. This
is a very profound concept.
So
too is the central prayer of all Jews: "Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God,
the Lord is one. And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all they heart and
with all thy soul, and with all thy might." {Deuteronomy 6:25} There is no
equivocation here. God is singular in nature and, to be a Jew, one cannot accept
any other definition. God is to be loved—and obeyed—with every fiber of being.
Paul,
the former Saul of Tarsus, a Jew who was also a Roman citizen, proposed that God
was a trinity, the father, the son, and the Holy Spirit. He lived in an age and
time when the Emperor of Rome was a living god. He lived in an age when most of
the population was composed of slaves. The appeal of Judaism was widespread and
many "believers" attended Jewish synagogues, but did not make the full
commitment to the religion. The Romans, for the most part, granted special rights
and exemptions to Jews who composed, at the height of the Empire, at least ten
percent of the population.
The
Jews, however, were forever in contention with Rome. Ultimately, in 70 AD, they
were driven out of Israel and the emperor Hadrian, in an effort to stamp out all
memory of these stubborn people, renamed Israel Palestine, a Roman interpretation
of the enemies of the Jews, the Philistines. The name would take on new meaning
when modern era Arabs began calling themselves Palestinians and declaring that
they were a separate kind of Arab with rights to the land of Israel.
Bear
in mind that there has never been a nation called Palestine. There has, however,
always been an Israel, despite its occupation by Romans, Moslems, and, prior to
its independence, the British.
This
has not stopped the European Union from breaking ranks with the United States
to urge a Palestinian State in the midst of Israel. In December, members of the
United Nations celebrated a pro-Palestinian solidarity day. This is anti-Semitism
in the guise of diplomacy. No one is fooled by it. A Palestinian state is simply
a ploy in the effort to destroy Israel. No one should be surprised, either, that
France, one of the leading advocates of the EU, is experiencing a new spate of
anti-Semitic attacks. The Jewish community there is seriously worried. They should
be. During WWII, the French did not hesitate to hand over their Jewish citizens
to the Nazis.
Has
there been a rebirth of anti-Semitism in the world? Or has the anti-Semitism merely
been dormant in the wake of the genocide of World War II? I think it is the latter.
The
existence of Jews has always been a problem for Christianity. It poses
an even greater problem for Islam. If the latter is the true faith as preached
by Mohammed, the proclaimed last prophet, then there is no room in the world for
a single Jew, nor a single Christian. Nor Buddhist. Nor Hindu. Ad infinitum. It
took a millennium or more for the Vatican to renounce its hostility to Judaism.
To
align oneself with those who hate Jews is to align oneself with those within Islam
seeking the destruction of Israel and the Jews for whom it has been their birthright
for 3,500 years. To be a Christian and hate Jews is to hate Jesus the Jew, the
Jesus who preached in the synagogues.
I
do not know if there is more or less anti-Semitism in the world. For me, there
has always been anti-Semitism. It is the serpent in the garden of both Christianity
and Islam. It whispers that neither faith is valid so long as Jews exist. It is
Satan.
For
it is written that when God told Moses how to address Pharaoh, His words were:
"Thus saith thy Lord: Israel is My son, My first-born. And I have said unto
thee: Let My son go, that he may serve Me; and thou hast refused to let him go."
Things did not go well for Pharaoh after that.
"I
am the Lord, and there is none else, Beside Me there is no God." The prophet
Isaiah expressed the conundrum for those who are not Jews. "I form the light,
and create darkness; I make peace, and create evil; I am the Lord, that doeth
all these things."
Anti-Semitism
is a great and ancient evil; a rejection of Judaism and the people who live and
die for the Commandments God set before them. Yasser Arafat, Osama bin Laden,
Saddam Hussein, the ayatollahs of Iran, and others will learn what Pharaoh learned.
©
2002 Alan Caruba.
North American Serial Rights Only.
All other rights reserved.