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David Aaronovitch

ByDavid Aaronovitch, David Aaronovitch

Opinion

Stereotypes aren’t always true

Heaven knows I prefer philosemitism to antisemitism, but only in the sense that I’d prefer dog mess on my shoe to dog mess in my dinner, writes David Aaronovitch.

August 10, 2017 08:15
Al Pacino Shylock.JPG
3 min read

"Inadvertent: not resulting from or achieved through deliberate planning.”

That’s how my dictionary defines the word, but it may be that Maurice Cohen of the Jewish Representative Council of Ireland uses a completely different source. Otherwise I am pushed to understand his description of Kevin Myers’s now infamous “Jews are not generally noted for their insistence on selling their talent for the lowest possible price” phrase as being a product of the author having “inadvertently stumbled into an antisemitic trope”.

What was inadvertent about this sentence? What was unplanned? Had Mr Myers meant to write “News Readers” and his spellchecker had let him down? Had a “not” crept in when Mr Myers wasn’t looking? Was he the victim of a brief moment of demonic possession in which the dark one guided his helpless mouse?

I suppose what Mr Cohen meant was that Mr Myers didn’t realise was that Jews being “good with money” was an inevitable product of the assumption that Jews as a rule are more concerned with money than non-Jews. Mr Myers, though deeply literate, made no connection between his generalisation and, for example, the words given by Shakespeare to Shylock: “My daughter, oh my ducats, oh my daughter!” Shylock, of course was not generally noted for his insistence on selling his talent for the lowest possible price. Half-a-millennium right there!