How to Fight Anti-Semitism
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- 69,00 kr
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- 69,00 kr
Publisher Description
'This acutely argued book will engender a thousand conversations' Cynthia Ozick
The prescient New York Times writer delivers an urgent wake-up call exposing the alarming rise of anti-semitism -- and explains what we can do to defeat it
On 27 October 2018 Bari Weiss's childhood synagogue in Pittsburgh became the site of the deadliest attack on Jews in American history. For most of us, the massacre came as a total shock. But to those who have been paying attention, it was only a more violent, extreme expression of the broader trend that has been sweeping Europe and the United States for the past two decades.
No longer the exclusive province of the far right and far left, anti-Semitism finds a home in identity politics, in the renewal of 'America first' isolationism and in the rise of one-world socialism. An ancient hatred increasingly allowed into modern political discussion, anti-Semitism has been migrating toward the mainstream in dangerous ways, amplified by social media and a culture of conspiracy that threatens us all.
In this urgent book, New York Times writer Bari Weiss makes a powerful case for renewing Jewish and liberal values to guide us through this uncertain moment.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Weiss, a staff editor and writer for the New York Times opinion section, investigates the global resurgence of anti-Semitism and offers helpful tactics to prevent its spread in this impassioned wake-up call. She begins with the 2018 mass shooting at Tree of Life synagogue in her hometown of Pittsburgh, an event that "marked the before and the after" in her awareness that anti-Semitism is not a thing of the past. She then traces the history of "the Jew-hating disease" from Egypt in 300 BCE to 21st-century America, where President Trump's "dog whistling" draws conspiracy theorists, white supremacists, and anti-Semites to his banner. But Weiss argues that anti-Semitism is "more insidious and perhaps more existentially dangerous" when it originates on the political left, because "it pretends to be the opposite of what it actually is." She notes that liberal college campuses are hotbeds of anti-Zionism, where many Jews report "preemptively censoring themselves." Weiss outlines the best practices for Jews and their allies to fight back, including denouncing anti-Semitic ideas vocally, especially when they're espoused by progressives, and resisting "hierarchical identity politics" that rank groups on the degree to which they're oppressed. Weiss's refreshingly forthright opinions and remarkably thorough yet concise history lessons make this a must-read for anyone seeking to understand and stop the rise of a pernicious ideology.