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Yoni Birnbaum

ByYoni Birnbaum, Yoni Birnbaum

Opinion

Laughing at the antisemites

"...if we did not laugh, we would cry — at the immense loss, the pain of prejudice, the millennia of injustice. But we also laugh on Purim at the ridiculousness of the antisemites themselves"

March 13, 2017 16:12
Esther denouncing Haman by Ernest Normand
3 min read

In a Munich beer garden in 1932, a remarkable dialogue took place between Winston Churchill and Ernst Hanfstaengl, a close confidant and spin-doctor of Hitler. During the conversation, as recounted by Boris Johnson in his book The Churchill Factor, Hanfstaengl announced his intention to organise a meeting between Hitler and Churchill. He then asked Churchill what questions he would like to ask, so that he could plan the proposed meeting in advance.

“Why is your chief so violent about the Jews,” Churchill wanted to know. “I can quite understand him being angry with Jews who have done something wrong or are against the country, but what is the sense in being against a man simply because of his birth? How can any man help how he is born?”

Thankfully, Churchill’s proposed encounter with Hitler never transpired. But his bewilderment about antisemitism has certainly endured and seems more unfathomable today than ever.

Following the recent publication of the CST’s annual report showing elevated levels of antisemitic incidents, I was interviewed on several local radio stations. The presenters were hoping a rabbi would be able to provide some insight into how people in the Jewish community felt about these disturbing statistics. A question posed to me by more than one interviewer greatly disturbed me, however. “What do you think the Jewish community can do about antisemitism,”, I was benignly asked.