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Opinion

Wearing a mask should be a Jewish tradition

Why mark the historical plague of the Talmud while ignoring the one afflicting us now, writes Miriam Shaviv

March 4, 2021 17:26
Mask london.jpg
Young teenager wearing a face mask whilst site seeing on a city break holiday. Taken in London in the UK. COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic.
3 min read

In 2017, the Anne Frank House told an employee who tried to wear his yarmulke to work to hide it under a baseball cap. It took six months of deliberation until they finally reversed course.

How was it possible that the guardians of Anne Frank’s legacy had asked a Jew to hide his own identity? Did they not see the irony? Author Dara Horn gave her answer in a famous 2018 essay: “People love dead Jews. Living Jews, not so much.”

Her thesis was that Frank’s enduring appeal is precisely that she didn’t live. So she never outgrew her youthful, idealistic belief in the goodness of other people and never tried to hold Europeans to account for the Holocaust — unlike many survivors, whose dark accusations were harder to hear.

Westerners love her upbeat message because it lets their society off the hook. By embracing Frank, they get to believe in their own moral righteousness and feel good about themselves, without facing uncomfortable questions. Back in their day-to-day lives, reality is more challenging and complex — and here they risk failing.