Daniel Greenfield November 19, 2023 @ Sultan Knish Blog
On a Tuesday in November, around a
third of a million American Jews left their jobs, skipped class and
headed to Washington D.C. Some didn’t make it. In Detroit, bus drivers
deliberately stranded hundreds of Jews heading to D.C. Others ran into
less widely reported problems.
Even among those who arrived, tens of thousands
never made it through into the secured area. In the final count,
290,000 people passed through the metal detectors at the ‘March for
Israel’.
This was not only the largest ever rally by American Jews, but the largest gathering against Islamic terror.
Having
a third of a million people show up at the National Mall is not
completely extraordinary. Farrakhan’s Million Man March did manage to
turn out 400,000 black people from a total population of 34 million. The
‘March for Israel’ brought over 300,000 out of 4.2 million Jews.
There are an estimated 4.2 million American Jews by religion. 7% of them showed up.
Accounting
for the very old and very young who could not have made the trip,
that’s 1 in 10 American Jews traveling to be in D.C. on a random Tuesday
on fairly short notice.
The demographic equivalent would be 3
million black people, 4.5 million Latinos, 1.2 million Asians and 14
million white people rallying on the National Mall.
While the
Million Man March received widespread media coverage at the time and in
succeeding anniversaries, and was immortalized in movies like Spike
Lee’s ‘Get on the Bus’, the media offered less coverage of the ‘March
for Israel’ than it did of far smaller anti-Israel events.
The
March for Israel ruined the media’s narrative that American Jews are
turning on Israel. And so the media did what it always does: it
protected the narrative by spinning and suppressing..
The
Washington Post. which recently censored an anti-Hamas cartoon, falsely
claimed that only “thousands” had attended the rally even though its
own photos clearly showed far more than that. The AP began its coverage
with the false claims of “thousands” and later updated it to the still
false claims of “tens of thousands”. It’s easy to see from aerial photos that this is not true.
While the Post put the Women’s March, which turned out 470,000 participants, on its front page, it buried the ‘March for Israel’ in its metro section.
But despite the predictable media bias and
the flaws of the rally, organized by liberal groups, it was an
important statement of where American Jews stand. After weeks of the
media providing disproportionate coverage to pro-Hamas rallies of
hundreds of people by hate groups like If Not Now, hundreds of thousands
of Jews stood with Israel and its war against Islamic terrorism.
In
contrast to the pro-Hamas rallies in D.C. where flags were burned and
monuments vandalized, the pro-Israel rally was a sea of American flags
and attendees sang the anthem. Police officers were assaulted at pro-Hamas rallies and thanked at the ‘March for Israel’.
It
wasn’t just across the ocean that the difference between Israel and
Hamas was made clear, but right here in America. Pro-Israel rallies
don’t break down into violence, vandalism and orgies of hatred for
America. It’s the pro-Hamas rallies that turn into riots over and over
again.
The ‘March for Israel’ had plenty of flaws. Like most
liberal Jewish establishment projects, it sacrificed meaningful
commitments for simple truisms (Hamas is bad, Israel is good) even if
these truisms are now being disputed by academia, the media and large
parts of the Left. Rather than taking a direct position on the issues
being debated in D.C., pauses in the fighting, trading a ceasefire for
hostages, and whether the PLO will take over Gaza, the march sought the
broadest possible unity platform which maximized turnout, but didn’t
break new ground.
Some rally speakers pledged support for a
two-state solution: meaning an Islamic terrorist state inside Israel,
whose existence is the reason for thirty years of terrorism against
Israelis. The only Israel they seemed to be willing to support was one
willing to give its enemies every possible chance until they finally do
something so horrific that fighting back becomes justified.
There
was little concept of who the enemy was, apart from Hamas, and what the
issue was, apart from antisemitism coming from undefined sources,
including on college campuses. And so there was also little concept of
what standing for Israel actually meant beyond opposing Hamas. Speakers
at the rally expressed pain, grief and determination, but lacked any
real focus.
Biden spurned the rally, refusing to send a
high-profile official, instead dispatching Deborah Lipstadt, the
administration’s antisemitism monitor, but offering no larger presence
at the event as another sign that he is moving even further away from
his support for the war on Hamas. Other elected officials however showed
up as did a whole lot of other seemingly random people.
The
emphasis on unity did bring together people you would otherwise have
trouble imagining participating in the same event. Not just Speaker Mike
Johnson alternating with Democrat House Minority Leader Hakeem
Jeffries, but Pastor John Hagee and former Will and Grace star Debra
Messing, a baffling appearance by Van Jones who didn’t seem to know
which rally he was at, and a musical performance by Ishay Ribo, a major
Israeli Orthodox Jewish pop star probably unknown to much of the parts
of the audience that binge watches Will and Grace.
While to
outsiders, American Jews may seem like members of the same group and
reflect familiar stereotypes, the reality is those few millions consist
of a dizzying variety of different groups which have little in common
with each other and inhabit echo chambers. The ‘March for Israel’
brought together devout and secular, Reform and Orthodox, Christian
supporters of Israel and Hollywood celebrities: people whose worlds
never really meet.
And it took a major crisis to get at least
some Jews from suburban temples and urban synagogues, those who study
the Talmud and those who believe in Tikkun Olam, to temporarily stand in
the same place and realize that Islamic terrorists, like the Nazis,
want to kill them all.
That brief community is not likely to
last, just as the unity of unity that brought together New Yorkers after
9/11 fell apart into infighting and routine, but it still is a
meaningful moment.
Although it may not last, it is a rehearsal
for what needs to happen for all of us, Jews and Christians, people who
believe in something and those who believe in nothing, in the face of an
enemy that wants to destroy us all.
There is plenty to criticize
about the ‘March for Israel’, but the content of the march mattered
less than the statement that bringing so many people together to stand
up to terror made.
The flaws of the rally were those of American
Jews: many still addicted to the illusion of peace with terrorists,
incapable of questioning their partisan political allegiances and
trapped in their echo chambers, in pain, but failing to understand where
the pain is coming from.
But for all its failures of
imagination, the March for Israel was representative of American Jews.
From the mother of a hostage to a standup comedian outraged at the
hypocrisy of his industry hostage, from angry college students to the
politicians they hope will save them, the rally was a snapshot of what
is wrong with American Jews, but also a reminder that there is hope.
The
Left has put out a narrative that American Jews are turning on Israel.
Those who are still Jewish, rather than merely possessing Jewish last
names, have not. American Jews suffer from a painful ignorance and some
of their lost descendants, like Kamala’s stepdaughter, may rally for the
enemy, but those who have not given up on being Jewish have not
abandoned Israel.
In Washington D.C., representatives of the
scattered strands of American Jewry briefly met and stood together in
the shadow of enormous hate and evil. And briefly became one.
After
the Passover Massacre by Hamas in 2002, one hundred thousand Jews had
rallied in Washington D.C. That rally may have been smaller, but
resembled this one in many ways.
Elie Wiesel, then still alive,
told the crowd that, “this day will be remembered in the history of
American Jewry.” It was not. But that failure of memory is a choice.
Whether or not this one will be remembered is also a choice. The choice
is a matter of commitment and priorities.
If American Jewry is to have a history, it will have to remember and more importantly act.
Nearly
1 in 10 American Jews showing up in D.C. on a random Tuesday is a
historic moment. But whether it will change history is up to that third
of a million and all the others who watched from home and attended
rallies locally. History is made up of the choices that we make.
Will
the March for Israel crystalize a wave of commitment in Jewish
communities? Will it change how people vote, how they act and the
cultural values that they pass on to their children?
Either we make history or we become history.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.
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