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Ben Judah

ByBen Judah, Ben Judah

Opinion

Ben Judah - 'I was in New York when the Goldene Medina lost its shine.'

November 10, 2016 13:18
2 min read

I didn't expect to say goodbye to my America so quickly. The America that I had heard about for so, so long but somehow only reached when I visited for the first time last year. The Goldene Medina, as they called it in the shtetl, the country that glittered, that was best for the Jews.

Growing up in Europe, I never really understood American Jews. But as I got to know them, I became jealous of their apparently seamless identity. Jewish, American, it seemed so easy. I was jealous of the way that American-Jewish identity seemed fused with the American story itself, woven into the fabric of the nation.

American Jews in turn looked at me full of pity and shock as I talked about everyday antisemitism in Britain and France. The dog-whistles, the Twitter trolls, the synagogue guards, the Facebook warriors, the nervous jokes about will-we-ever-end-up having to make Aliyah.

Impossible, they told me. Unimaginable. It can never happen here. Over and over, I was told America was structurally philosemitic. That, as Leon Wieseltier, put it, the last Jew leaving Europe for Zion or the Goldene Medina, should turn around, and - "spit."