Opinion Why Jews Cannot Stop Shaking Right Now

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Why Jews Cannot Stop Shaking Right Now
Oct. 22, 2023
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An illustration showing a grieving woman being comforted and a historical image of damaged scrolls.
Credit...Illustration by The New York Times; Photographs by Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times; Jewish Chronicle/Heritage Images/Getty


There is a reason so many Jews cannot stop shaking right now. The concept of intergenerational trauma doesn’t begin to describe the dark place into which this month’s attack plunged Jewish communities around the world.

On Oct. 7, a Jewish holiday, Hamas terrorists went house to house in southern Israel murdering and abducting children and grandparents, pulling them from their beds, displaying victims’ dead bodies online, in a massacre of at least 1,400 people. In at least one instance, terrorists were reported to have uploaded a video of the murder of one victim to her own social media account for her family to discover.

The feeling of deep dread that these atrocities stirred in Jews was horribly familiar. This is what Jewish history has all too often looked like: not civilians tragically killed in war but civilians publicly targeted, tortured and murdered, with the crimes put on public display. Accounts of past crowd-pleasing killings are folded into Jewish tradition; every Yom Kippur, we recount the public torture and execution of rabbis by their Roman oppressors in a packed second-century stadium. Those ancient stories are consistent with the experiences of the more immediate ancestors of nearly every Jew alive today.

I’m not even talking about the Holocaust, which several of last week’s oldest escapees and victims also endured. (Far more Jews were killed on Oct. 7 than on Kristallnacht.) No, I’m thinking of the Farhud pogrom in 1941 Baghdad, a two-day rampage in which hundreds of Jews were raped, tortured and murdered. I’m thinking of the pogroms of 1918 to 1921 in Ukraine, in which an estimated 100,000 Jews were slaughtered in organized massacres, reminiscent of this month’s attack.

I’m thinking of the lynching of Leo Frank in Georgia in 1915, after which the delighted crowd’s snapshots of Frank’s body were made into postcards mailed around the country and pieces of his clothing were sold as souvenirs. I’m thinking of how many of the earliest books off Europe’s first printing presses were about the executions of Jews accused of blood libel and of a 10th-century massacre of thousands of Jews in the Spanish caliphate encouraged by a poem calling for Jewish blood and of the paintings and illuminated manuscripts showing Jews who were burned alive by the Spanish Inquisition and during the Black Death — all crowd-pleasing events celebrated in popular media and art.

Even ancient Romans celebrated their destruction of Judea by issuing commemorative coins featuring a bound Jewish woman and inscribed with the words “Judaea capta.” The humiliation and murder of Jews have always made a great meme.

Many American Jews, like Jews around the world, are descendants of those who survived. Our ancestors, in one way or another, were the ones who either made lucky decisions or barely made it out alive from Lodz and Kyiv and Aleppo and Tehran.

For diaspora Jews, the recent attacks were not distant overseas events. As was true in ancient times, the ties between global Jewish communities and Israel are concrete, specific, intimate and personal. My New Jersey Jewish Federation has institutional ties with the southern Israeli town of Ofakim and its surrounding communities, sharing annual home stays with a place whose death toll from the attacks already exceeds that of the notorious Kishinev pogrom of 1903, in which 49 Jews were murdered. Millions of American Jews, not to mention Jews in Britain, France, Australia and elsewhere, have friends and relatives in Israel. Even if Hamas hadn’t made it clear that they see all Jews as targets, our connection is personal and all too real.

We spent days desperately scrolling to learn who among our acquaintances was dead, maimed or captive, connecting American hostages’ families with State Department contacts, attending panic-stricken online briefings and pooling resources and supplies for victims — all while fighting obtuse official statements from our own towns, schools, companies and universities that refused to mention the words “Israel” or “Jews” in referring to the largest single-day massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, lest some antisemite take offense at the existence of either.

We have tried to get our children off social media, shielding them from images of the violence. We’ve held mass fasts, recited psalms and sung ancient prayers for the rescue of captives. And as we gather by the thousands despite our many contradictory opinions and despite the extra security required for our gatherings even here, we have returned to the words of our ancestors that have carried us through thousands of years: Be strong and courageous. Choose life.

Many of us were physically carrying those words during the weekend of the attack, celebrating Simchat Torah, a joyous holiday when congregations dance with Torah scrolls, read the Torah’s final words and then scroll back to the beginning to start the book again.

As a child, I found this baffling. Why read the same story over and over, when we already know what happens? As an adult, I know that while the story doesn’t change, we do. What defines Jewish life is not history’s litany of horror but the Jewish people’s creative resilience in the face of it. In the wake of many catastrophes over millenniums, we have wrestled with God and one another, reinvented our traditions, revived our language, rebuilt our communities and found new meanings in our old stories of freedom and responsibility, each story animated by the improbable and unwavering belief that people can change.

Right now many of us feel trapped in this old, old story, doom-scrolling through images with terrible outcomes. But in our grief, I remind myself that each year as we finish the reading of the Torah, we immediately, at that very moment — and at the moment of this newest, oldest horror — scroll back to the story of creation and the invention of universal human dignity. We recall, once again, that every human is made in the divine image.

The story continues; we begin again.

Dara Horn is the author of five novels and the essay collection “People Love Dead Jews.”

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.

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Source : https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/22/opinion/hamas-israel-jews-massacre.html
 
This little tidbit needs clarification. When jews say this, they mean every jew, correct? Non-jews being non-human, correct?
The yiddish word for non-jewish women is "shiksa". It means "abomination".
A commonly used term that's not even hiding its hostility.

So yes, all goyim are niggercattle to a jew. The palestinians just happen to be uppity niggers.
 
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The concept of intergenerational trauma doesn’t begin to describe the dark place into which this month’s attack plunged Jewish communities around the world.
Intergenerational trauma is a lot of nonsense. How is it transmitted, exactly?

I’m thinking of the pogroms of 1918 to 1921 in Ukraine, in which an estimated 100,000 Jews were slaughtered in organized massacres, reminiscent of this month’s attack.
Therefore, send Israel gibs, not Ukraine. Do I have that right?
 
Praise be to Allah, for the infidels who fornicate with swine, and falsely claim to be His servants and call themselves Hamas, shall be cast into the darkest pits of Hell and be denied entry into Jannah for their heinous crimes against unarmed civilians.
 
Many peoples were victim of genocides.
Constantly talking, educating, researching and referencing the holocaust, instead of moving on is exactly what made jews this fragile compared to all other affected nations.
"Never forget" is not a strength for them, it is a weakness.
 
Keep on shaking, keep on coping, keep on seething. If you weren't so arrogant about Israel's "right to exist", maybe public sympathy for you would be greater. The US uniparty has poured billions into your little economic region while our own country descends into ruin. Imagine that. You people are so fucking greedy, so slimy, that Hamas is seeing more support.
 
Many American Jews, like Jews around the world, are descendants of those who survived.
No fucking shit. How're you gonna have kids if you get holocausted lmao. Everyone is a descendant of someone who survived long enough, you aren't special.
 
Intergenerational trauma is a lot of nonsense. How is it transmitted, exactly?
It's what gets talked about in the house a lot if it's a group identity thing like they have with the Holocaust so you are reminded by the older generation that you're helpless and everyone wants to kill you, which must fuck you up. In a population already predisposed to neuroticism, so they cling to that victim mentality.

Or just if your parents were shitty in a particular way that theirs were shitty to them. When you have your own kids you can fight it and correct it, but if you're not the type of person who has self-reflection you won't notice and just keep on doing it.

Or the child abuse chain, where most abusers were abused. Or girls without fathers thinking it's normal to also be a single mother, or boys thinking it's cool not to raise your kid because their father didn't. It's transmitted by making really destructive shit seem normal because the parents give that example.
 
Look buddy, if your friend got kicked out of 109 bars then at some point you're going ask him if it's because he's an asshole.
 
Man if only the constant drumbeating of muh fucking six gorillion hadn't worn every last shred of empathy out of me for an entire group of people, I might have even an iota of a shit to give about this, rather than immediately thinking of how absurd it is for some faggot who writes NYT opinion pieces to be writing a hand-wringing op-ed acting as if he's about to be thrown, pumpkin-spice latte and all, bodily from his office by a rampaging Palestinian.
 
I’m not even talking about the Holocaust, which several of last week’s oldest escapees and victims also endured. (Far more Jews were killed on Oct. 7 than on Kristallnacht.) No, I’m thinking of the Farhud pogrom in 1941 Baghdad, a two-day rampage in which hundreds of Jews were raped, tortured and murdered. I’m thinking of the pogroms of 1918 to 1921 in Ukraine, in which an estimated 100,000 Jews were slaughtered in organized massacres, reminiscent of this month’s attack.

I’m thinking of the lynching of Leo Frank in Georgia in 1915, after which the delighted crowd’s snapshots of Frank’s body were made into postcards mailed around the country and pieces of his clothing were sold as souvenirs. I’m thinking of how many of the earliest books off Europe’s first printing presses were about the executions of Jews accused of blood libel and of a 10th-century massacre of thousands of Jews in the Spanish caliphate encouraged by a poem calling for Jewish blood and of the paintings and illuminated manuscripts showing Jews who were burned alive by the Spanish Inquisition and during the Black Death — all crowd-pleasing events celebrated in popular media and art.
I'm not familiar with the Farhud pogrom, but every other one is a retaliation against killings done by jews. Funny they should lump Spain with Leo Frank, as Spain would first expel jews over multiple cases of jews killing children.
 
It's what gets talked about in the house a lot if it's a group identity thing like they have with the Holocaust so you are reminded by the older generation that you're helpless and everyone wants to kill you, which must fuck you up. In a population already predisposed to neuroticism, so they cling to that victim mentality.

Or just if your parents were shitty in a particular way that theirs were shitty to them. When you have your own kids you can fight it and correct it, but if you're not the type of person who has self-reflection you won't notice and just keep on doing it.

Or the child abuse chain, where most abusers were abused. Or girls without fathers thinking it's normal to also be a single mother, or boys thinking it's cool not to raise your kid because their father didn't. It's transmitted by making really destructive shit seem normal because the parents give that example.

Additionally, when you are taught to believe the only reason anyone dislikes you is irrational hatred, you never examine your own actions. Israeli Ashkenazim treat everyone, even Sephardim, pretty shabbily, and have no idea why Christians, Muslims, and the rest all dislike them.
 
>bunch of Jews were killed a hundred years ago
>bunch of Jews were killed this month
>author's main concern is how we can make these things all about her


This is the kind of person accusing you of being "hateful" and "lacking empathy" online.
 
every Yom Kippur, we recount the public torture and execution of rabbis by their Roman oppressors in a packed second-century stadium.
Who gives a fuck? This is the thing I don't understand about Jews. Why do they act less like individual human beings and more like some sort of giant colonial organism? Like some kind of fucking fungus? Joan of Arc was burned at the stake in 1431. Even though she was white, her death has absolutely nothing to do with me whatsoever. I don't commemorate the occasion, or use it as an opportunity to build resentment for some imaginary oppressor. Hell, maybe I should?

Imagine if white people behaved exactly the same way as Jews. Any criticism of whites means you're anti-white and must be publicly tarred and feathered by one of our many foundations dedicated specifically to white pride. You must teach your children the names of all the white martyrs throughout history so they grow up narcissistic, vengeful, paranoid, and malevolent, imagining everyone's out to get them. We must have a special ethnostate dedicated exclusively to white people, and if you don't fund its defense, you're anti-white.

Seems to me like we have a lot we could learn from Jews. Clearly, this is a winning strategy.
 
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