In the
spring of 1945 George Orwell was having difficulty finding a publisher for his
latest work. He’d written a novella entitled Animal Farm: A Fairy Story and had sent it first to his regular
publisher, the left-wing publisher Victor Gollancz, - who rejected it - and
then to several other publishers, including T.S.Eliot at Faber and Faber. Nobody
would publish it, this allegory of the way cults of personality form and lead
to dictatorship and terror. For these publishers, the fable - woven around a thinly-disguised critique of Stalin and the
Soviet Union - could not be allowed into the public domain. The Soviet Union were Allies, and a key member of
the alliance that were about to defeat Hitler and the Axis powers after six
years of bloody and exhausting conflict.
Orwell
however was undaunted. That spring, 1945, he wrote an introduction to Animal Farm confident that he’d soon
find someone who would publish his work. He was right. Yet when Secker and
Warburg did publish it in mid-August of that year, Orwell’s introduction was
missing, for reasons that remain obscure.
So you are unlikely to have read his introduction, even if you have read
at some stage in your life what became this internationally recognised classic
tale, Animal Farm.
Here’s his
introduction – or at least, here’s part of it:
At any given moment there is an
orthodoxy, a body of ideas which it is assumed that all right-thinking people
will accept without question. It is not exactly forbidden to say this, that or
the other, but it is “not done” to say it, just as in mid-Victorian times it
was “not done” to mention trousers in the presence of a lady. Anyone who
challenges the prevailing orthodoxy finds himself silenced with surprising
effectiveness.
In its way
this is an amplification of the remark
made by the playwright Ibsen sixty years before that in his play An Enemy of the People (1882): “The
worst enemy of truth and freedom in our society is the compact majority”. Later
on, Orwell developed this theme about how hard it is to go against prevailing
orthodoxies, when he wrote in his novel 1984
about societies that succumb, willingly, or unwillingly, to what he termed ‘Groupthink’
- Orwell had a sure instinct about the ways in which societies can become
dominated by hyper-conformity and manufactured consent, often out of deference to,
or compliance with, the thoughts of strong personalities or leaders. People are
persuaded – or bullied – into believing a strongly stated view, regardless of
whether it is true or not. It becomes just what ‘we’ think. Or are supposed to
think.
One more sentence from Orwell’s
unpublished introduction – self-justifying, but understandably so - and then I’d
like to connect these themes to some contemporary issues:
That’s a very interesting proviso,
isn’t it? – the right to say or print anything one believes to be true, provided only that it does not harm the rest
of the community in some quite unmistakable way. I want to keep this in
mind because the question of what ‘harms’ a community is a moot point. It gets close to the nub of our current
discontents and distresses in the Jewish community here in the UK. For we are
being told, by people who should know better, that we as a community are being harmed ‘in some quite unmistakable way’.
Let’s be clear though what it means
that people have the right to say or print what they believe to be true. It
means Donald Trump has the right to tweet whatever fatuous, blustering and
narcissistic remarks he wants – and each of us has the right, as do
commentators anywhere, to mock, scorn, argue with, point out the inconsistencies
and lies in, or just ignore, what he has tweeted. He’s not harming the rest of
the American community – people agree with him or not – the harm he’s doing is
more to the Office of the Presidency, and to the notion that there is a
difference between facts and opinions (and that that difference matters), and
not least there’s the harm he’s doing to the English language itself.
So what about Jeremy Corbyn? ‘Oh -
Jeremy Corbyn’. What does he have a right to say, and what has he said that
might have done harm to the rest of the community in some quite
unmistakable way?
First of all, obviously, he has the
right to say that he abhors racism and anti-Semitism. He has a long track
record supporting that claim - the problems that have arisen for some in the
Jewish community revolve not around this claim but around him offering support to pro-Palestinian groups, and
solidarity with some who themselves have clear anti-Semitic views. That was
enough, some three or so years ago, for the Jewish press in this country and
some leaders of communal organizations to start a campaign to expose him as an
anti-Semite himself. Until recently it’s been a campaign of slurs and innuendo
and guilt by association but then came that revelation - gold dust - posted
online by the Daily Mail, (who of course have no agenda of their own about
Corbyn), about his remarks in 2013 at a meeting with the Palestinian ambassador
Manuel Hassassian.
And yes, when you refer to a group of
people in a room – or even if they aren’t in the room – as Zionists who despite
“having lived in this country for a very long time, probably all their lives,
don’t understand English irony” – then, yes indeed, that crosses a line. The
implication of that is pretty clear: Jews are fundamentally ‘other’, alien,
people who will never be truly English/British. It’s a classic antisemitic
trope, and as my colleague Rabbi Alexandra Wright of the Liberal Jewish
Synagogue wrote, his words were “indefensible, ill-advised and, no doubt,
designed to rebuke and give maximum offence” – offence to those Jews who were
at the meeting to argue with the Ambassador.
Was he aware when he said this, that
this was antisemitic? Who knows? Unlike Trump, Corbyn is not an ignoramus. Stubborn
maybe, but not stupid. But at the very least these comments revealed a clear
moral blind spot - and this needs to be, as it has now been, called out. People can be, and are, unconscious of,
unaware of, their anti-Semitism. That’s not an excuse, just a reality. He may
in private be horrified to realise, as we all would be, that he’s unwittingly
given voice to a deeply pernicious and prejudicial view. I don’t know about
Corbyn, and none of us knows, or can know.
I would suggest though, before we get
too much on our high horse, that all of us can at times be unconscious of the
potential offensiveness of some of our views and opinions. We are all capable
of moral blind-spots. And if these things are ever exposed we feel shame and
humiliation, sometimes too much to bear. We get defensive and, often,
belligerent. And for politicians in particular this puts them in a truly unbearable
position. Corbyn could never admit it, publicly, even if he felt it, that he’d
got something seriously wrong in those off-the-cuff remarks.
But I’m not worrying about Corbyn’s
soul – this is the time of the year, this period of reflectiveness and inward-looking
heart-searching between Rosh Hashanah
and Yom Kippur, to focus on our own
souls, not those of others. Part of our work at this time of the year is not to
cast our eyes outwards and see the faults in others, but to see how what we
perceive as faults in others reflect parts of ourselves we’d rather disown, or
not know about. Where are we guilty of sins of prejudice? And stereotyping? of
sins of hatred? of sins of disdain towards others? Let’s use Corbyn, in other
words, as a mirror, as uncomfortable as that might be, to reflect on our own
failings to live up to our ideals, our better selves; to reflect on the gap in
ourselves between the vision of how we’d like to be, how we’d like to think
about ourselves - and our failures to live up to those ideals.
I want to leave Corbyn for now, he
will soon enough become just a footnote in the history of these decades. I hold
no candle for him, by the way – I think his leadership on the gravest issue
facing this country, the Brexit fiasco, has been quite hopeless. So don’t hear
my remarks about him as coming from some Labour-supporting cronyism. I’m much
more concerned about the witch hunt against him by elements within the Jewish
community and the harm that could do to the well-being of our community, than I
am concerned about one leader’s failures to be rigorous in his commitment to
anti-racist views.
We know that the issue that has been
concerning the community is wider than Corbyn – that it’s been about real
antisemitism in parts of the Labour party, and the party’s relative failure to
address this thoroughly and comprehensively.
I’m not naïve: I have no doubt that
strands of real hostility to Jews exists in the UK – this is nothing new, it
exists in all political parties and in all sectors of British society, from
what used to be called the working classes through polite English middle class
prejudices to the aristocracy and their longstanding contempt for interlopers
into their ranks – think of the upper-class opprobrium heaped in the 19th
century on men like Disraeli, the Prime Minister, and the Rothschilds; or of
the common-or-garden antipathy towards Jews expressed by writers like T.S.Eliot
and Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc and Graham Greene. Anti-Semitism has always been part of the fabric of this country:
always has been, always will be. But we have survived it and thrived, in spite
of it all. And we’ll survive these latest shenanigans as well.
So why am I wanting to bring Orwell
into all this current furore? What is he speaking about that is so relevant to
us today? Well, sadly, it’s prompted by what I see going on around me: am I
alone in thinking that it’s all become rather hysterical, all this talk about ‘existential
threat’, this fantasy that British Jews are getting ready to pack their bags en masse and leave the country out of
fear for their well-being and very survival?
What I am concerned about is the way
in which an atmosphere has been created, led by some very prominent communal voices
(rabbinic and lay) and by the Jewish press, an atmosphere and attitude that has
become a kind of orthodoxy. As Orwell reminds us: At any given moment
there is an orthodoxy, a body of ideas which it is assumed that all
right-thinking people will accept without question. It is not exactly forbidden
to say this, that or the other, but it is “not done” to say it.
Well, it might be “not done” to say
this, but I need to say it: it’s as if a virus has been let loose amongst us,
and it is affecting our mental well-being, our capacity to discriminate the
wood for the trees, our ability to think clearly about what is happening, to
get a perspective on events. There are elements of hysteria in this, elements
of paranoia, elements of attention-seeking, and I sometimes wonder – and I
hesitate to say this, as if I’m breaking a taboo – I even wonder if there’s a
strand of hidden feeling, a kind of unconscious wish, where we Jews in this
generation can secretly compare ourselves to Jews in Germany in the 1930s, but
this time make the story turn out differently: as a victory over the forces of
evil rather than being annihilated by them.
Jews have always been haunted (understandably)
since the events of the Holocaust by questions like: would I have had the
courage to leave everything behind, leave family members, or all my material
comforts and possessions? how would I have known what to do? what would I have
done and when would I have done it?
An atmosphere has been stoked up over
this last year or so, and particularly in recent months, with the strong
subtext that there’s this unprecedented threat to the future safety of the
Jewish community in this country. Comparisons with the 1930s are the most
convenient historical peg for some Jews to hang their anxieties on to. So, I
have heard people comparing Corbyn to Hitler – but this is bonkers (as we used to say up North).
And to compare Corbyn’s ignorant
remarks to Enoch Powell’s inflammatory speech of fifty years ago – which was
made as Shadow Defence Secretary in the highly charged atmosphere of the
arrival of thousands of Kenyan Asian British citizens and the debate over the
1968 Race Relations Act to outlaw discrimination – to make that comparison might
be a piece of slick rhetoric but it is a wilful misappropriation of history. It
was a reckless analogy. It hardly helps Jews in this country to be aligned in the
public mind, as Lord Sacks did, with that wave of immigration that was stirring
up ill-feeling and that Powell was addressing. That is not our situation as
Jews in this country.
This is all terrible stuff to have to talk
about, and for some it might be unbearable to hear it, or it may make you very
angry. So when I talk about these things in public, I’m sorry if that is the
response. But I feel a deep responsibility – as a rabbi, and as someone who has
been thinking about these kind of issues, and the psychology of these issues,
all my life - to try to throw some dispassionate light on all this rhetoric and
drama that is being played out around us.
Over recent years I’ve noted the
number of speeches given by major British Jewish figures, rabbis and lay
leaders, who go to conferences - often in other parts of Europe, or in Israel -
or they give interviews to European or American newspapers, and they talk about
Anglo-Jewry as being awash with fear for their survival, about to pack up and
leave, suffering from existential dread - and this kind of hyperbolic language
has now flooded into our communal discourse and
it is ratcheting up our fears in ways that are just not congruent with our
external realities.
Because when I look around me at the
community I know best, Finchley Reform and at other synagogue communities
across the religious spectrum in London, what do I see? I see dynamic
programming, whether it is for Jewish learning or Jewish social action or
interfaith work – I don’t know how it is outside London, but I get reports from
Manchester or Brighton, Glasgow which certainly aren’t filled with doom and
gloom – but what I can see across London is a vibrancy, a creativity, a freedom
to innovate and explore Jewishness that isn’t only within religious sectors of
the community, but is there in communal institutions like JW3 and the Jewish
Museum, it’s in Limmud and its offshoots, it’s in the passionate commitment of
workers in and supporters of a huge range of Jewish charities, it’s in
festivals of music and cooking and the arts and film, it’s in the spread of
Jewish schools, primary and secondary, it’s in a healthy sub-community of
Israelis who have left their homeland to set up life here in the UK - no doubt
for a variety of reasons, but surely not unaffected by having had to live for
two and more generations being told daily by Israel’s leaders that they are
under daily “existential threat” for their very lives. I see all that rich
fabric of Jewish life.
And then I note how it’s Netanyahu’s
language that has now contaminated British Jewish leaders’ responses to our own
recent local manifestations of that-age old antipathy towards Jews. (So thank
you for that, Bibi, that’s a great contribution you have made to our well-being).
So what I see when I look around me - and in emails I get from people confused about what on earth is going on over
these last six months, and when I talk to people about how they actually feel - what I see is not a community waiting to pack its bags, a community living with
a sense of “existential dread”, but a community that is a leading European
centre for Jewish life.
It was ironic – thank you Jeremy
Corbyn, my sense of irony is fully developed, intact and robust, I can spot an
irony at 100 yards – there was an irony for me over this summer, a sobering irony,
that while all this brouhaha was going on here, I was at a conference of
Christians and Jews in Germany. And listening to some of the pastors there, and
to members of congregations, Catholic and Protestant - people who are
wholeheartedly committed to their historical work of reparation for the sins of
the past - when they spoke about issues they are dealing with in their local areas,
and about their concerns about the rise of the AfD in Germany, a right-wing,
anti-immigrant party who entered parliament for the first time in September
last year and are gathering 20-30% support in the polls, a party behind the
attacks on foreigners in Chemnitz last month, a party that joins in
demonstrations with Nazi salutes, a party that is not as overtly anti-Semitic
as other parties in Europe (in Hungary, in Poland, in the Czech republic) but
only because Muslims make a more readily identifiable target at the moment,
when I look at the rise of real anti-Semitic
activity on the mainland of Europe, when I look at all that, I know that many European
Jews still do remain vulnerable, more so in some countries than others. But that’s not the situation we are faced
with.
As this New Year begins I’d like us to
feel what a privilege it is to be able to live freely as Jews in this country
at this time in our history, free to celebrate, free to be as expressive and
creative as we want to be. And free to
critique and resist the ‘groupthink’ some in the Jewish community would like to
impose on us, free to resist ‘bodies of ideas which it is assumed that all right-thinking people will
accept without question’.
I hope this
New Year brings us all much fulfilment, joy, contentment, good health, and a
renewed sense that – in spite of the problems the UK faces – as a Jew one can
make a real contribution to the
well-being of this nation, and to our own community, local or Jewish. Let’s
keep our vision clear, as individuals and as communities, and continue to celebrate who we are, what we
have - and the good fortune we have, the blessing we have, to be living in this
place at this time in the long and glorious history of our people.
[based on a sermon given at Finchley Reform Synagogue on the second day of Rosh Hashanah, September 11th, 2018]