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Either cancel antisemitic Dahl completely or leave his books alone

The language in his novels pales in comparison to the author's hatred of Jews

February 24, 2023 10:21
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British children's author, short-story writer, playwright and versifier Roald Dahl (1916 - 1995), 11th December 1971. (Photo by Ronald Dumont/Daily Express/Getty Images)
3 min read

One of the lesser-known tirades in the portfolio of anti-Jewish rants released by Grime star Wiley when he, um, had a bit of a moment a while ago, was a video which he posted on social media. I can’t find it now, which means I assume Twitter finally decided, in an out-of-character moment, to care enough about antisemitism to press the delete button.

But I remember that in it, Wiley walks around, as conspiracy theorists of all types like to say, “just asking questions” The principal one he asks, over and over, is: “Why? Why? Why did that happen between them and Hitler. Why did Hitler hate you? For nothing?”  

I bring it up now, because whether Wiley knew it or not, asking that question put him in a long tradition, exemplified decades earlier by another well-known antisemite, Roald Dahl. As I’m sure you know Puffin have republished his children’s books with a series of edits designed to tone down perceived offensiveness in his writing.

Words such as “fat” and “ugly” have been removed; references to witches wearing wigs rewritten to allow for the (completely true) fact that many women wear wigs who are not witches; “small men” has become “small people”.

The re-writing involved has been ham-fisted (it’s not impossible to re-edit a children’s writer for modern tastes, but in so doing you need to at least retain a flavour of the original prose). So far, however, no-one has edited an interview he gave in the New Statesman in 1982 where he said: “There is a trait in the Jewish character that does provoke animosity…I mean, there’s always a reason why anti-anything crops up anywhere. Even a stinker like Hitler didn’t just pick on them for no reason.”

It’s a great example of a particularly British clubbable disdain for Jews, embodied in the word “stinker” – a public schoolboy expression more appropriate for someone who steals from the tuck shop than for a perpetrator of industrial genocide - but it’s also more universal than that.