The Invisible Victims of American Anti-Semitism
Last edited Thu Feb 23, 2023, 01:53 PM - Edit history (1)
**Big snip**
Why do some anti-Semitic incidents capture broad attention, while others languish in relative obscurity? What distinguishes comments made by leaders of the Womens March from the actions of New Yorktownship officials, or a synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh from one in Los Angeles?
In my decade reporting on such stories, Ive come across many answers. Only one has consistently held true: Anti-Semitism is acknowledged when it conforms to one of two overarching partisan narratives that many journalists know how to tell and the public knows how to digest. On the one hand, there is the anti-Jewish bigotry that stems from white supremacists and neo-Nazis. This prejudice is right-coded, and typically attributed to conservatives. On the other, there is the anti-Jewish animus that results when anti-Zionism strays into anti-Semitism and criticism of Israel turns into vilification of Jews. This prejudice is left-coded, and typically attributed to progressives. Although these stories are simplifications, they should sound familiar because debates over them dominate our public discourse, not just in the press, but in the halls of Congress and the hothouse of social media.
What youll also notice is that all of the very real instances of anti-Semitism discussed above dont fall into either of these baskets. Well-off neighborhoods passing bespoke ordinances to keep out Jews is neither white supremacy nor anti-Israel advocacy gone awry. Nor can Jews being shot and beaten up in the streets of their Brooklyn or Los Angeles neighborhoods by largely nonwhite assailants be blamed on the usual partisan bogeymen.
Thats why you might not have heard about these anti-Semitic acts. Its not that politicians or journalists havent addressed them; in some cases, they have. Its that these anti-Jewish incidents dont fit into the usual stories we tell about anti-Semitism, so they dont register, and are quickly forgotten if they are acknowledged at all.
*snip*
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/02/anti-semitism-media-coverage-political-partisanship/673184/