Rav Dov Fischer
Again, Politics of Appeasement Isolate
the Jews
Los
Angeles Times, January 23, 1991
January 23, 1991, Wednesday, Home Edition
SECTION: Metro; Part B; Page 7; Column 2; Op-Ed Desk
No one in my family was directly touched by the Nazi Holocaust. Nor did
any of my friends lose any relatives to Hitler. While that unspeakable
tragedy has deeply affected the psyche of every Jew born in the past
half century, not many of us directly experienced what it was like to be
a Jew in that era.
Until now.
Since Thursday night, when the first Iraqi Scud missiles landed in Tel
Aviv and
Haifa, I have
been emotionally spent. Although I have close family and dear personal
friends in Israel,
my concern for their safety and security is not the source of my deep
angst. Many of them live in the Samaria
region of the West Bank, which is, ironically, Israel's safest neighborhood right
now. Scuds are not very accurate, and if Saddam Hussein aimed at Samaria, he would probably annihilate the Arab city of Kalkilya instead.
I am emotionally wrenched, rather, by the realization that, 50 years
after Hitler, Jews continue to stand alone in the world. We are once
again expendable. We are pawns in other people's chess matches.
The Allies of World War II opposed Hitler and fought his Nazi Germany until it fell. But, in those
bleakest of years, Great Britain
sealed shut the gates of Zion to the
thousands of desperate Jewish refugees who fled Germany in the final moments. The United States,
similarly, imposed tight immigration quotas, effectively dooming those
same refugees, who had nowhere to go. And, despite the facility with
which they could have done so, the Allies refused to bomb the rail lines
leading to Auschwitz.
It is happening all over again. The multinational forces allied against
"the new Hitler" are warning the Israelis: "Don't make this a Jewish
war." At home in
America, we Jews have been receiving
the same message from the Pat Buchanans of the media. We are expected to
lie low. To remain silent. To put our faith in our leaders, who will
"not let Israelis be slaughtered."
But we watch as missiles hit Tel Aviv, and we hear the "protectors" urge
Israel
to "show restraint." Why? Because this "grand coalition against the new
Hitler" includes countries like Syria
and Saudi Arabia,
who also want all the Jews dead. Churchill sealed the gates of hope to
appease the Arabs in the 1940's, and now a new coalition once again
worries about appeasing certain Arabs who lust for Jewish blood.
So Jews, once more, find themselves fearing poison gas. This time,
however, the Jews are the ones preparing the hermetically sealed rooms
-- for protection. The "Butcher of
Baghdad" targets civilian centers in Tel Aviv,
seeking to draw Jewish pawns into a war and create a political fissure
in the multinational coalition. And President Bush tells the Jews to
turn the other cheek because, otherwise, "the grand coalition against
the new Hitler" might lose the allegiance of Hafez Assad, a butcher in
his own right.
Israel
stands alone and knows it. Looking at this grand coalition, Israel sees
France, which, together with the Soviet Union, helped build the Iraqi
war machine; Italy, which freed the terrorists of the Achille Lauro; and
Syria, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, not one of which has condemned Iraq's
attempt to murder masses of Jews.
At this time of war I proudly and enthusiastically join with my fellow
Americans in rallying behind my President, in support of the brave young
men and women who are fighting overseas. But my heart goes out to the
Israelis, too. May God stand by their side. Few others will.