Left discourses, antisemitism, racism and gender

By Daniel Mang | 2002 | www.hatifnattar.net

1. The discourse on antisemitism and the German-language radical left

The issue of antisemitism has been an important element of debates in the German-language undogmatic left over the last 15 to 20 years. The proposition that antisemitism is not some contingent prejudice, but a “structural” and necessary element of capitalist social relations has become increasingly accepted as true or at least a point of view to be taken seriously. With this ideological shift the issue of an antisemitism of the left has also come to be more accepted in many quarters of the undogmatic left as an issue that needs to be addressed.

This shift, that has occurred since the mid to late eighties, is due to no small part to the continued efforts of “antinational” tendencies who mostly base their political thinking on or are strongly influenced by the Frankfurt School of critical marxism. Over the years, “antinational” and “antigerman” groups in Germany and Austria have differentiated considerably: originally a pretty small scene with a relatively homogeneous ideology, dominated by male intellectuals politically formed in various marxist circles of the sixties and seventies, the scene today comprises a greater diversity of ages and political heritages, there are more women involved in it, although it remains by and large male-dominated in terms of numbers, who’s in charge and styles of comportment, and there are many different ideological subcurrents, some blending antinational critical theory with poststructuralist thought (anathema to “traditionalist” antigermans such as the ISF Freiburg), some aggressively sexist, some (few) relatively open to feminist concerns, some blatantly racist in their discourse on “islam” and “the palestinians” and some (not so many) at least not more so than the average German antiracist.

Continue Reading »

The Left’s Instrumentalization of the Holocaust

On Sunday, January 4th, the ninth day of Israel´s “Operation Cast Lead” in the Gaza strip, two activists of the Revolutionary Communist Party held a banner in front of the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York City, reading, “After the Holocaust, the worst thing that has happened to Jewish people is the state of Israel.”

The museum was not holding an event about the Gaza war, nor involved in making statements about the Arab-Israeli conflict. It is “devoted to the exploration of Jewish heritage and a living memorial to the Holocaust.”

It´s lack of direct political involvement in the current Gaza conflict does not appear to prevent it from becoming a target of criticism of the activists. As European Jews with little to no relationship to Israel are targeted for violence, Holocaust history and Jewish history itself are also seen by some Leftists as reasonable targets for political attack.

A press release was circulated by the activists against the use of the Holocaust to justify Israel´s current actions in Gaza. But who are they responding to? Defenders of “Operation Cast Lead” justify the war as a response to Hamas´rocket fire into Israel. The protesters were the ones making political use of the Holocaust, not the defenders of the military action in Gaza.

Continue Reading »

  1. News & Etc.

  2. Recent Comments

  3. Categories

  4. Donate