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July 18, 2019 9:09 am
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How Should Donald Trump’s Bigotry Be Treated by the Jewish Community?

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avatar by Cliff Rieders

Opinion

US President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Tokyo, May 27, 2019. Photo: Reuters / Jonathan Ernst.

I have written about the American Jewish community as a political football. Perhaps that was an understatement. Thanks to President Trump’s latest tweet war, it appears that the Jewish community, including Israel, is more like the European football — kicked, head butted, thrown from the penalty sidelines, and tossed into the stands.

President Trump recently suggested that US Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ayanna Pressley, Rashida Tlaib, and Ilhan Omar go back to the countries they came from (even though three of them were born here) and cure the problems in those countries. He also claimed that the four representatives hate Israel and are antisemites.

I could not help but think about the first time I was told to go back where I came from. I was nonplussed. Did the attacker want me to go back to Washington, DC, where I lived; New York, where I grew up; or the land of my ancestors, perhaps Swiss-Germany or Poland? Of course it did not matter. The antisemite who uttered those words simply did not approve of something about me and wanted a Williamsport that fit his image.

President Trump’s words were bigoted, notwithstanding that he was talking about some pretty awful people. The best way to give an enemy power, assuming that they are not physically attacking you, is to give them attention. Is it possible that President Trump wants to empower these four women who certainly do have a record of fomenting antisemitic fervor? Why would the president want to do that?

Powerful political people unite their own forces and try to cause derision among others. The president may feel that by uniting Democrats against him, he will solidify his own base. However, the president’s behavior may cause at least part of his own base to crumble.

The Jewish community was already heavily split over Donald Trump, who has made great efforts to combat antisemitism and support the only democracy the Middle East has ever or perhaps will ever know.

At the same time, his outrageous, offensive bigotry toward others has divided a Jewish community committed to the justice and humanity taught by our prophets and leaders. As Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, the former Chief Rabbi of the British Empire has pointed out, the entirety of Judaism is a rebellion against a status quo enforced by power and justified by tyranny. It is this wall of historical Jewish commitment to fairness and equality that President Trump has mindlessly crashed into.

The fact that President Trump has attacked those he perceives as his enemies and the enemies of the Jewish people cannot be condoned under any circumstances. The President has placed Jewish community leaders and the State of Israel in a completely untenable position.

No responsible and reasonable person in the Jewish community or Israel is going to support the President’s tweets, given their obvious ugly connotations. By the same token, it is true that the four congresswomen named have shown hypocritical and unjustified hatred towards the State of Israel, and a compete misunderstanding of the American Jewish community.

I have been asked many times in the past why more Jewish Americans are not Republicans. It was, after all, the Republican Party during the height of genocide against the Jewish people in World War II that supported a national homeland for the Jewish people in Palestine. The 1944 platform of the Republican Party, if carried out against the wishes of the Roosevelt administration, could have saved millions of Jewish lives from the European inferno.

It is also arguably true that there probably never would have been a State of Israel had President Roosevelt lived. Thankfully, President Truman thought differently. It is also correct that it was the Republican Party that realized, and understands today, that Palestine was given to the Jews numerous times since 1919 — by the League of Nations, by treaty between the United States and Britain, and by the United Nations as a national homeland for the Jewish people, which includes modern Jordan and the entirety of the west bank of the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea.

Although Israel has been willing to accept less and less as a safe and secure homeland, the world nevertheless continues its war of annihilation against the Jewish people in the Middle East. At the same time, the rights of Christians, Baha’i, Druze, and Muslims are protected in Israel as nowhere else in the Middle East.

A recent editorial in The Wall Street Journal entitled “Can Ilhan Omar Overcome Her Prejudice?” was written by a Somali woman who explains how she was taught antisemitism and how she has worked to unteach herself.

The American congresswomen Donald Trump attacked have a terrible track record when it comes to the exercise of fairness against anyone they consider to be their enemy. While the president has every right to criticize those he perceives to be in opposition to his policies, the president does not have a right to speak for the Jewish community anywhere in the world in a way that draws that community into a vortex of dissension and hatred.

President Trump’s bad judgment and at best questionable motives should not prevent any member of the Jewish American community from voting Democrat or Republican as they see fit. By the same token, the president and the Democrats need to stop using the Jewish or Israeli community as a football in the war against their enemies.

Cliff Rieders, a board-certified trial advocate in Williamsport, is past president of the Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association and a past member of the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority. None of the opinions expressed necessarily represent the views of these organizations.

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