Wednesday, March 19, 2025

"I Decide Who Is a Jew", Redux


Leo Terrell just reposted a prominent White supremacist's claim, in reference to Donald Trump declaring that Chuck Schumer is not a Jew but a "Palestinian", that "Trump has the ability to revoke someone’s Jew card."

Who is Leo Terrell, you may ask? Why, he's Donald Trump's "antisemitism czar". Can't make this up.*

But in reality, the claimed entitlement by (non-Jewish) conservatives to decide who does and does not count as Jewish has been waxing for some time now. In my "Liberal Jews and Religious Liberty" article, I made an observation about the contemporary salience of Vienna Mayor Kari Lueger's famous declaration "I decide who is a Jew":
Lueger made this statement in response to criticisms that there was an inconsistency between his publicly professed antisemitism and his private friendships with certain Viennese Jews; a contradiction resolved by Lueger simply declaring that the Jews he liked were not actually Jews at all. In the spirit of the old saw “a philosemite is an antisemite who loves Jews,” the modern iteration—where the hated Jews are denied to be Jews and the few acceptable Jews deemed the only actual Jews—flips Lueger’s pattern but fundamentally replicates it.

In that article, I grouped this practice into what I termed the "new supersessionism": "the ability of non-Jews to possess, as against actual Jews, a superior entitlement to declare what Jewishness is." The original supersessionism was theological: Christianity simply declares itself to be the true and proper evolution of Judaism; the Jews themselves got Jewishness wrong. Today's supersessionism is more often political: Christians informing Jews that holding Jewish positions on issues like abortion or gay rights mean they are not real Jews at all. And having declared that these Jews -- which is to say, most Jews -- are not "real Jews", there of course can be no antisemitism in hating them. 

In this way, contemporary conservatives can square the otherwise impossible circle: their self-identity of loving (their self-constructed image of) "Jews", and their actual practice of hating (real-life, flesh-and-blood) Jews. It is the natural terminus of that mode of thinking that a nominal leader of a taskforce against antisemitism would promote antisemitism of the most despicable kind -- we are not the Jews he ever intended to protect, we are the Jews he seeks justification to hate.

* In fairness, we all know how committed today's conservatives are to originalism, and originally speaking a "czar" absolutely refers to someone who promotes antisemitism, not one who combats it. Let it never be said that Donald Trump isn't taking conservatism back to its roots.

1 comment:

Doc_P said...

Similar to progressive groups rejecting Jews if they are Zionists.