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Tracy-Ann Oberman

ByTracy-Ann Oberman, Tracy-Ann Oberman

Opinion

Jews are the Marmite of the world

The savoury breakfast spread apparently divides opinion and provokes strong feelings. Sound like anyone we know?

April 8, 2010 10:03
2 min read

Mr O and I have a regular tussle over the condiments that appear on the breakfast table. Stifle your yawn, reader, this is going somewhere. He cannot think of a morning piece of toast without thinly spreading a layer of butter and a layer of Marmite. For him this is breakfast heaven. It is my idea of breakfast hell. And don't even get my three-year-old on the subject. "Yuk, mummy. It's horrid and sticky and black."

Mr O tries to extol the virtues but is always flummoxed by Mistress O's perfectly reasonable question: why can't they make it pink? Marmite's marketing gurus hit the right spot with the advertising slogan: "Love it or hate it." The product can certainly muster a heated debate.

This Marmite debate raged among a few of my friends recently. And yes, it got quite heated. It then moved on to politics and then moved on to Middle Eastern politics which then nicely segued into growing global antisemitism (real or imagined). And then my mate Jules completed the circle beautifully by declaring that Jews are the Marmite of the world. It's true. You either LOVE us or you HATE us. You don't get many ambivalent reactions to Jews. For example, Woody Allen, Larry David, and Jerry Seinfeld are either adored as comedy gods or loathed as self-obsessed charletans as funny as cholera.

Or the strong stance of Israel is seen by some as the poster boy for the oppressed: a small and surrounded nation able to stand up for itself, protect itself at all costs and not be cowed by flimsy public opinion. Or it is reviled by others as a pariah state crushing the weak and vulnerable with its mighty army.

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