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A Rumor About the Jews: Reflections on Antisemitism and the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion

A Rumor About the Jews: Reflections on Antisemitism and the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion

Book Review: A Rumor About the Jews: Reflections on Antisemitism

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The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion was a forged pamphlet, probably created by the secret police of Imperial Russia in the late 1890's. The goal was to get people to believe that it was actually the minutes of meetings of Jewish leaders plotting to take over the world. What it attacked, however, was not simply Jews but in fact the entire project of the Enlightenment - religious diversity, freedom, toleration, and social progress.

Summary

Title: A Rumor About the Jews: Reflections on Antisemitism and the 'Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion'
Author: Stephen Eric Bronner
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
ISBN: 0195169565

Pros:
•  Clear, understanable introduction to development of modern antisemitism
•  Provides insights into how and why modern reactionaries identify humanists as 'the enemy'

Cons:
•  None

Description:
•  Explains context in which the Protocols of the Elders of Zion was written and gained influence
•  Shows how modern anti-semitism is largely a reaction against modernity
•  Demonstrates the dangers of allowing reactionary forces to identify any one group as scapegoats

 

Book Review

Why should this topic interest nonbelievers and skeptics? There are two obvious reasons and one less obvious reason. First, the 'Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion' represented a continuation and political expansion of traditional Christian antisemitism. Understanding it can help explain how religious opposition to Judaism developed into the political and racial movement known as antisemitism:

    The Protocols unifies the religious, the social, and the political elements of Judeophobia in a particularly striking way. It expresses the resentment of a Christian world against the undermining of its faith and it seeks to close public life to the Jews. ... The Protocols made Judeophobia part of a more "total" and distinctly modern, form of political anti-modernism: it crystallized the idea of the Jew as scapegoat.

The second reason is that the 'Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion' is perhaps one of the world's most famous and persistent forgeries. Gullible people have believed its veracity almost since it was published, and even though it has been decisively debunked, it continues to hold people's attention and influence the political machinations of far-right extremists. American militias, for example, treat it as a sort of scripture and basic explanation for why they must exist.

Finally, and perhaps more interestingly, the 'Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion' is about a lot more than the threat of world domination by Jews. Indeed, much antisemitism is not about the Jews - they are simply made to be the scapegoats for the fears and problems of members of the extreme right. When the Protocols, or any other similar document, complains about what the Jews are doing, what we find is in fact a litany of what people fear most about the modern world.

Reflections on Antisemitism
A Rumor About the Jews: Reflections on Antisemitism and the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion

The Protocols, for this reason, are an example of what traditionalists have long found most distressing about modernity. It is a diatribe not so much against Judaism as it is against the Enlightenment and the liberation it represented from traditional restrictions on religion, gender, economics and social status:

    The Protocols solidifies the connection between the true believers in Christianity, those nineteenth-century reactionaries intent on combating the Englightenment, and the fanatics of a seemingly antireligious and revolutionary Nazi movement desirous of establishing the primacy of a single race. Christian institutions and the first genuinely reactionary movements, no less than the Nazis, overwhelmingly aligned themselves against the modern ideas and values generated in the age of democratic revolution: secularism and science, rationalism and materialism, tolerance and equality, capitalism and socialism, liberalism and marxism. Antisemitism was never simply an independent impulse. It was always part of a broader project directed against the civilizing impulse of reason and the dominant forces of modernity.

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