Become a Member
Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

By

Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll,

Shoshanna Jaskoll

Opinion

How to tell well-meaning critics from social media trolls

People ask if it is possible to criticise Israel without being called antisemitic. Of course it is. Here's a handy guide from Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

February 14, 2019 12:12
jpg (45).jpg
3 min read

The US and the UK are both currently struggling with various politicians and their supporters who cannot seem to criticise Israel or Jews without crossing the line between legitimate criticism of Israeli policy and antisemitism.

In a phenomenon that seems unique to the Jews, who defied odds by succeeding throughout millennia of persecution, the bigotry against them morphs through the generations, disguised as the current zeitgeist to the point that knowing the difference between valid criticism and antisemitism is hard for even good people to see. Bigoted tropes are forgiven or justified as being not about Jews, of course, but about justice.

Witness today’s trends of social justice and intersectionality, where the categories of oppressor and victim are a zero sum game — nuance is lost, historical accuracy and geographic context are considered irrelevant. The historical victim — the Jew — is recast as the oppressor based on those external successes that defied the context in which they were achieved to begin with.

Jews are often thought to be white, powerful, successful. As such, they are divorced from the victimisation of the past, and are not allowed to have fears for their safety. Israel is strong, stable and successful; it cannot be a victim or have legitimate fears for its security.