How October 7 changed what it means to be Jewish
The October 7 attacks fundamentally changed what it means to be Jewish, especially in the Diaspora. Antisemitism is mainstream again. Here is a personal reflection on how to fight back.
I rarely write personal reflections. Usually, I draw on my experience as a journalist, media strategist, and commentator to write polemics about media and politics, especially regarding Israel.
However, the High Holidays are nigh, and it is almost one year since Hamas’ October 7 attacks on Israel changed the world for Jews, so it seems appropriate to don both my professional and personal hats.
Jews are now living in a different world to the one in which I grew up. It is with immense sadness I note that we are back in a world more similar to the one into which my parents, both in their 80s, were born. It means the progress we thought we had made through several generations was illusory. We have regressed to history’s dismal mean.
Data shows that antisemitism had been on the rise for some time before the October 7 massacre, but it unleashed a tsunami of hatred. The scale of it has been transcendently shocking.
Even before Israel had counted its dead and accounted for its abducted, and before Israel had responded, mobs in cities as far apart as London, New York, Jakarta, Sydney, and Kuala Lumpur, were openly calling for genocide.
No longer limited to the fringes of the Far Right, Jew-hatred has become mainstream on much of the Left, including in the progressive circles with which many in the Diaspora have traditionally been a driving part.
Antisemitic views are now common in public discourse, universities, multilateral institutions, governments, political parties, non-governmental organizations, and the mainstream media.
My generation enjoyed what may have been the best years in Jews’ long history. Israel’s recreation gave Jews sovereignty for the first time in 2,000 years, allowing generations of Jews to grow up, not as outsiders, but as normal people in their homeland.
Flourishing Western democracies and a Christian re-evaluation of Christian-Jewish relations after the Holocaust allowed Diaspora Jews to have their rights protected amid a broad social consensus that antisemitism was something uniquely egregious.
The fall of the Soviet Union allowed Jews from that former empire to emigrate to Israel, or the West, to pursue opportunities of which they previously could only have dreamed.
I went to high school with many Jews who had come from Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, as almost all of my friends were. My father once joked that we were the Tel Aviv Boys Club. Except for my school being half empty on Jewish holidays, this was unremarkable. We lived ordinary lives and gave it no thought.
That feels like a long time ago, now. Antisemitism is now so pervasive that Jews can no longer be confident that their classmates, neighbors, colleagues, and workmates are not antisemites. Jews now feel profoundly insecure. Their trust in their wider communities and societies has eroded.
Western governments’ failure to crack down on antisemitism means Jewish communities’ trust in government has plunged, too. Distressingly, governments in the US, France, the UK, Australia, and Canada have earned this loss of trust. Their leaders have condemned antisemitism, but not acted to stop it. They have even contributed to it by legitimizing the blood libels against Israel with unfair criticisms of Israel based on carefully constructed Palestinian lies.
Many Jews are now questioning whether it is wise or safe to be visibly Jewish, such as by wearing a kippah, or whether it is safe to send their children to school doing so. Those with obviously Jewish names - such as my good self - cannot hide, as the antisemitic sickness that appears regularly in my Inbox testifies.
What this means in the longer term is beyond this essay’s scope, but it has raised the more immediate questions of how Jews should respond, as a nation, a people, a community, and as individuals.
Here are three components that I see as necessary to an effective response.
Military response. The Jewish comedian Jackie Mason once joked that “the Israeli army is, man for man, the toughest army in the world, and as soon as you say that some schmuck at the back stands up and starts clapping.”
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF), a people’s army if ever there was one, is living up to its reputation and winning the war against Israel’s enemies in the Middle East. The IDF has smashed Hamas in Gaza, has Hezbollah reeling and weakening by the day in Lebanon, and has Iran feeling deeply vulnerable about how it might fare in a war against Israel.
While ignorant Western leaders keep calling for peace and making absurd demands for a two-state solution, Israel is correct that the surest path to peace lies in defeating its enemies, not accommodating them. There can be no peace without security, and it is axiomatic that Israel’s security is best served by diminishing its enemies’ capacity to harm it.
After October 7 and seeing the world’s morally anemic response, I decided I was not going to cede one millimeter of ground to vile antisemites, and not let any lies or antisemitism from any quarter go uncontested.
Narrative response: I am past war-fighting age and do not live in Israel, but the one war I am equipped to fight is the narrative war. Unlike on the battlefield, Israel is vastly outgunned in the narrative war. It is a war that must always be fought, but in this age of the internet and fake news, it has never been so fierce. This is the space where I feel I can contribute the most.
While the Jihadist Palestinians and their moronic Western supporters have flooded the internet and social media with toxic lies and antisemitic bile, it has been fantastic to see so many people - and not just Jews - stand up for truth and work to counter the so-called pro-Palestinian narrative. People of decency have built an online ark in response to this flood.
I have been overwhelmed that this Moral Clarity newsletter - which I created to provide accurate history and analysis, disrobe media lies, expose propaganda and show just how rotten the mainstream media and so many of our institutions have become - has been so well received.
This gives me confidence. It has shown me that there are still many people of decency who value the truth, know right from wrong, and who are fed up with the post-modernist dystopia that we have created.
Besides bringing moral clarity, I wanted it to give a voice to people who are feeling alone amid the insanity, feeling angry at antisemitism’s return, and feeling dismayed at Western governments’ abandonment of their Jewish communities and citizens.
I wanted people to see that not only is the IDF winning its war, but for people to go online and see that the narrative war is being fought with equal vigor and honor.
The days of weak Jews are over.
Reclaiming Jewish heritage: There is no topic Jews love discussing more than what it is, or what it means, to be Jewish. Judaism is a religion and an ethnicity. Jews hold many different beliefs, some hold none, and they come from many places. This lack of groupthink is a profoundly Jewish trait.
All Jews - whether observant or secular, religious or atheist, matrilineal or patrilineal, born Jewish or converts, right-wing or left-wing - must strengthen the Jewish nation by embracing and interacting with their history and traditions.
This will mean different things to different people. For some, it might mean becoming more observant. For others, it might mean celebrating Jewish holidays and rituals they normally pass over. It might be as simple as holding more Shabbat dinners. Maybe it is putting a mezuzah outside your house or simply wearing a Star of David necklace. People can find a way that is meaningful to them.
Much of this can be shared with the many people who are the Jewish people's friends - and I mean friends, not allies - religious and irreligious, who are equally disgusted by antisemitism’s return.
It does not matter how Jews choose to connect with their identity and history; it matters that they do so. This will strengthen us all.
It is common to hear that Hamas or Islamism cannot be beaten because it is an ideology and you cannot beat an idea. Yet, being Jewish is also an idea, so we must make it one that is hard to defeat. The best way to do that is by engaging with it, connecting with it, and claiming it as an identity, regardless of how any individual chooses to do this.
This is the defense that has kept the Jewish people alive against improbable odds for more than three millennia.
All the things my grandparents and parents experienced outside of the United States are now come home to roost. I always identified as an American and a Jew. I experienced few overt episodes of anti-semitism and they were all relatively mild. Now I look back and wonder about some other history and how my being a Jew may have affected interactions without ever knowing it was about anti-semitism.
You are correct, it's an unsettling feeling. You are also correct that we have to stand together. We must also defend ourselves. You may be past the age of military service, as am I, but we can still defend ourselves. We have no alternative. Diaspora Jews can't rely upon the IDF's presence. So physical defense is a thing to be understood and competency is to be sought. Jews have to know how to handle themselves. That's just the way it is. Survival is always a question for us unfortunately.
I still do not think most Americans ( I'll confine my comments to my home country) are virulent anti-semites. Certainly there are some on both the Left and Right, most of them are right here online. But now I am less confident in that assessment for all the reasons you point out. And I worry about my kids and what the future holds for them. But we will not be soft targets for creeps. You shouldn't be either.
Shanah Tovah.
Kol HaKavod! Every word. Shanah Tovah.