When Clerics Say Outrageous and Offensive Things

Religion and Demonization of the Other No Comments

The Magnes Zionist: When Clerics Say Outrageous and Offensive Things, April 4, 2008

What do Pastor Reverend James Wright, Rabbi Mordecai Eliyahu, and Imam Sheik Yunus al-Astal share in common? Well, among other things, a penchant for making outrageous and offensive comments. Here is Chief Rabbi Eliyahu’s latest pearl :

“Even when we seek revenge, it is important to make one thing clear – the life of one yeshiva boy is worth more than the lives of 1,000 Arabs.

“The Talmud states that if gentiles rob Israel of silver they will pay it back in gold, and all that is taken will be paid back in folds, but in cases like these there is nothing to pay back, since as I said – the life of one yeshiva boy is worth more than the lives of 1,000 Arabs,” added Rabbi Eliyahu.

And Sheikh Yunis al-Astal, from Steven Erlanger’s piece on Hamas’s anti-Judaism in the Times .

“The reason for the punishment of burning is that it is fitting retribution for what [the Jews] have done,” Mr. Astal wrote on March 13. “But the urgent question is, is it possible that they will have the punishment of burning in this world, before the great punishment” of hell? Many religious leaders believe so, he said, adding, “Therefore we are sure that the holocaust is still to come upon the Jews.”

And as for the Reverend Wright…well, I don’t have to cite his statements, do I?

The reactions to these statements range from enthusiastic support to unrelenting condemnation of the statement and the speaker, including calls for silencing him in some way. Somewhere in the middle, trying to juggle conflicting values and conflicting loyalties, thinking people may be found. How should they react to hatred and to offensive statements?

As somebody who defines himself as liberal and orthodox (hence, a fundamentalist), here are some of my thoughts:

1. Don’t assume that the speaker is articulating a well-thought-out and consistent ideology. Religious folks, like everybody else, hold inconsistent beliefs. That is because they are generally not that sophisticated and because their sources speak with many voices. The Talmud teaches “Righteous gentiles merit a place in the World-to-come” as well as “Kill the best of gentiles.” What you hear depends on what best serves the immediate interests of the speaker.

2. Religious rhetoric is particularly inflammatory — but don’t assume that the cleric buys into the implications what he is saying, even when he says it. “Rabin is an informer”; “The Arabs are Amalek”; “The Jews are apes and pigs,” etc., are not harmless statements; they can lead others to kill. But they are said all too often in the way reserved for unthinking people (or politicians.)

3. Try to find out about the context of the remarks. There is a big difference between a Palestinian making an anti-Semitic remark during the Second Intifada and a German making the same one during the Holocaust. Both are to be condemned, but the second is to be condemned more. It is one thing for Eliyahu to stand up at a funeral service and make an anti-Arab racist slur. That is bad — but it could be worse were he not to make it at a time of stress, but at a time of relative peace and coexistence. I am not saying that anti-Semitism is hating Jews more than is strictly necessary (the bon mot attributed to Isaiah Berlin). But I do believe that what is particularly invidious about German anti-Semitism, besides its racism, is that in no way could the Jews be objectively viewed as responsible for the troubles of the Germans.

4. Avoid the human tendency to self-righteousness and smugness. Haaretz used to regularly feature on Sunday mornings some of the outrageous pearls of former Chief Rabbi Ovadyah Yosef in his public lecture the night before. Such statements reaffirmed the moral values and Jewish identity of the secularists, but were counter-productive in trying to engage his community in dialogue.

Watanabe, It Sounds Like Hate, But Is It? LAT Feb. 16, 2002

Religion and Demonization of the Other, Religion and Genocide No Comments

Teresa Watanabe, It Sounds Like Hate, But Is It? LAT Feb. 16, 2002

Religion; It Sounds Like Hate, but Is It?; Most sacred texts contain passages shocking to modern sensibilities. Los Angeles Times, Feb. 16, 2002, p. B20.

How do you make sure ancient scriptures mesh with modern-day sensibilities?

The prevailing answer among scholars: You can’t. No scripture is politically correct–nor, many scholars argue, should anyone expect it to be.

Ku Klux Klan Terror, Religion and Demonization of the Other No Comments

evans-the-klans-fight-for-americanism-1926.DOC

Hiram Wesley Evans, The Klan’s Fight for Americanism, 1926

Seneviratne, Buddhist Monks and Ethnic Politics, Anthropology Today, 2001

Buddhism and Sinhalese Nationalism in Sri Lanka, Religion and Nationalism, Religion and Demonization of the Other No Comments

Seneviratne, Buddhist Monks and Ethnic Politics, Anthropology Today, 2001 Vol. 17, Issue 2

Munson, Religion and Violence: A Review Essay

Articles by Henry Munson Available Online, Religion and Violence, Religion and Demonization of the Other, Religion and Genocide No Comments

This review article contains a number of typos as published. But they are by and large easily recognized as such.

Munson, Religion and Violence, Religion, 2005

Religion and Demonization of the Other No Comments

Watanabe, It Sounds Like Hate, But Is It? LAT 2002

Religion and Demonization of the Other No Comments

Shulevitz, Other People’s Religions, NYT 2002