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Jeremy Jones The Enemies’
Friends
Regular readers of the print and on-line
publications of various Nazi apologists, anti-Israel fanatics and obsessive
antisemites will not have been surprised at the presence at the Iranian
Holocaust denier confab in December of a small group of individuals purporting
to be “Torah-True Jews”.
Neturei Karta, a numerically and theologically insignificant sect of
quasi-religious Jews, were a regular feature in media coverage of this
gathering of pseudo-scholars.
This sect, which counts amongst its members a small “travelling circus”
which can be found at many venues where other Jews would be decidedly
uncomfortable, enjoys a far higher profile amongst antisemites than Jews.
Despite
proclaiming that they are the exemplars of Judaism, it is difficult to think of
a single work of Jewish scholarship which this group’s members have
contributed.
Although
they boast of their higher morality and commitment to Jewish values, they have
no reputation for good works of charity, acts of compassion, or advocacy of
social justice.
When it
comes to even the basics of Jewish life, Neturei Karta has distorted priorities
to such a degree that it is understandable that they are no longer considered
as being even within the extraordinarily broad spectrum of orthodox and
chassidic Jews.
My first
contact with the group was at the infamous NGO Forum of the United Nations
World Conference Against Racism in Durban.
A
well-meaning friend from a church-based human rights group told me that she had
met an interesting young American man who was keen to meet a Jewish Australian.
She escorted me to meet one of the handful of Neturei Karta members who the day
before had been parading openly with a pro-Hamas contingent as part of the
Forum’s agenda of anti-Jewish intimidation.
I explained
that I had no interest in conversing with him and that the fact he appeared to
her to be an Orthodox Jew did not mean that a Jewish person viewed him that
way.
Two days
later, she told me she had walked past him holding a pro-terrorist placard at a
time I and other Jews were at Sabbath morning services, which convinced her
that it was he, and not I, who was distant from Judaism.
Neturei
Karta are not alone in making no contribution to Judaism or Jewish life but
being useful to overt enemies of Jewish people.
Last
November, at the Multicultural Eid Fair and Festival in south-west Sydney, I
spent some time perusing the various book-stalls and chatting with many Muslim
Australians.
One
book-stall was distinguished, if that is the correct word, by a display of
titles on why Muslims should not befriend non-Muslims, why particular
isolationist and supremacist Islamist writers should be revered and why every
problem encountered by Muslims is due to one or another conspiracy.
The one
work on sale which was locally published might have appeared incongruous, given
that it was written by a non-Muslim and had no comment on any aspect of Koran,
Hadith or Islamic philosophy.
That book, also promoted by far-right extremists such as the Australian
League of Rights and the participants in the Stormfront Downunder internet
forum, was My Israel Question by Antony Loewenstein - a work which is marred
by numerous inaccuracies and ill-informed argumentation.
The
bookseller made it clear to me that the book was not something he regarded
highly on any intellectual level, but was sold because he saw it as a useful
tool in his mission to “expose” Jewry and Judaism.
Neturei
Karta and secular left-wingers inhabit distinct cultural worlds with the values
and life-styles of the one often held in contempt by the other.
But to those with nothing but ill-will towards Jews and Judaism, their common utility as “useful idiots” is far more important than anything they say, do or believe.
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Copyright
© AIJAC 2007 |