Reconcilable Contradictions

September 9, 2007 |

Russian youth’s embrace of Nazism doesn’t just happen in Russia. It’s also happens where one might not initially expect: Israel. Haaretz reports that Israel’s Interior Ministry arrested eight members, all aged 16 to 21, of a Nazi gang in Petah Tikva, a suburb outside of Tel Aviv. The arrests are the result of a year long investigation into street attacks and vandalism of the suburb’s Great Synagogue. The group, who is responsible for attacks on religious Jews, immigrants, homosexuals, homeless, and drug addicts, which they filmed, was found in possession of Nazi literature and posters, five kilos of explosives, a pistol, and an M-16. The M-16 was acquired when one of the youths was drafted into the IDF. He has since fled Israel back to Russia, leaving the rifle with his comrades. The Israelis plan to seek his extradition. Six of the eight have confessed their crimes to police. One of the two holding out is the gang’s leader, Eli Boanitov, who told police, “I won’t ever give up, I was a Nazi and I will stay a Nazi, until we kill them all I will not rest.”

Reports on the story are quick to deny the perpetrators’ “Jewishness.” Haaretz states that all eight youths “have distant ties to Judaism and nonetheless immigrated to Israel from the former Soviet Union under the Law of Return.” Y-Net states that all but one are “are non-Jewish immigrants” from Russia. The Jerusalem Post also emphasized that the youths were “immigrants” and not bona fide Jews. Such assertions have led Israeli politicans to call for a tightening of the definition of the Law of Return. Some are considering to revoke the youths of their Israeli citizenship. Parliamentarian Effi Eitam, a member of the right wing National Religious Party, said that the Law of Return has allowed Israel to become “a haven for people who hate Israel, hate Jews, and exploit the Law of Return to act on this hatred.” Another deputy, Eli Yishai, the ultra-Orthodox Minister of Trade and Industry told reporters, “We have to rid ourselves of this Satan who lives in the heart of Israel.” This is despite statements from Prime Minister Olmert that the incident shouldn’t be used to “criminalize an entire population nor make generalizations.” Instead, he said, “Israel, as a society, failed in educating the youths discovered to be neo-Nazis.” Other commentators were quick to stress that the incidents were isolated and not indicative of a wider trend.

While this may be true, the uproar such an isolated incident has caused signifies the youths’ apostasy. And the fact that the gang’s leader, Eli Buanitov is in fact a Jew makes his sin all the more significant.
Eli Buanitov told police “I won’t have kids. My grandfather is half yid, so that this piece of trash doesn’t have ancestors with even the smallest percent of Jewish blood.” In interview with Israel’s Channel 10, Buanitov’s mother denied that her son was a Nazi and that “he is simply a boy and maybe he didn’t fully understand what [Nazism] is and maybe for him it was like a game.” She also emphasized that her son was indeed Jewish. “He was born in a Jewish family and was raised in a Jewish family. And he knows a lot about the war.” In response to a question about whether her mother was a Holocaust survivor, she replied, “Yes. When he was young he heard a lot of stories about it. And he knows very well how terrible it was. And how many Jews were killed.” As far as his Nazi tattoos, Mrs. Buatinova explained that they read in Yiddish, “God is with us.” In addition to his mother’s statements, Buatinov’s lawyer attempted to boost his client’s patriotic credentials. He stressed that the Buatinov family immigrated eight years ago, his client even has a brother serving in IDF combat units, that Eli attended a yeshiva high school for a twelfth grade, and has been working in a “security office in a very sensitive position” for the last year.

What is interesting about this case is not whether the youths indeed committed the crimes or if they sincerly embraced neo-Nazism as an ideology. What is at issue is whether the perpetrators are Jewish or not. The fact almost all of the youths are Russian immigrants with dubious Jewish connections allows many Israelis to rest easy. They can reason: Neo-Nazism is not some homegrown phenomenon but a disease injected into the body politic by the infiltration of some outside Other. But Buatinov’s existence threatens to rock the conceptual foundation of Jewishness itself. The idea of a neo-Nazi Jew is such an anathama that Israel has no law against it. If a Jew can also be a neo-Nazi, and worse become one in Israel, then what does that say about the conceptual coherency of Jewishness itself? The fact that Israeli society could breed its very negation seems to call into question the stability of its justification for existence. Put simply, the gang’s existence posits the question: in a post-Holocaust world, can a Jew be a Nazi?

The question, it seems, is too horrifying to ask, let alone answer. And this is why the gang’s non-Jewishness and antisemitism is being emphasized and not the fact that non-Jewish immigrants were also their victims. After all, Israeli racism against immigrants, especially Asians, Africans, and Russians, is common. The idea that Nazism could be embraced as an expression of that racism toward reveals the fact that two absolute contradictions–Jew and Nazi–are perhaps not so absolutely contradictory after all.

But these questions are likely to be ignored. If reader responses are any indication, targeting Israel’s Russian immigrant population as the breeding ground for wayward youth seems to be the comfortable route. Somehow, however, I doubt explaining racism with racism will do much to alleviate the problem. It will only shroud it further with nationalist fetishisms that will only inflame calls to exact the Russian cancer from Israeli’s otherwise healthy body politic.

Maya Haber provided all Hebrew translations. 


Comments

236 Comments so far

  1. Tim Newman on September 9, 2007 8:50 pm

    Israel is a fairly liberal and politically free society, especially when compared to the basket-cases which surround it. One of the downsides of a liberal society is that it produces all manner of utter fuckwits and allows them to associate with others. Take a look at the assorted bands of halfwits which assemble in places like the US, UK, Denmark, or Germany for evidence of this.

    Israel will deal with this one way or another, and I agree that although symbolically the presence of Jewish Nazis in Israel is huge, they probably number in the tens. I’d say that this is pushing it a little far:

    The fact that Israeli society could breed its very negation seems to call into question the stability of its justification for existence.

    And I know that your mentioning it does not come with any unsavoury intent, but I am personally rather uncomfortable with yet another reason being wheeled out to call into question Israel’s justification for its existence.

  2. John S. on September 9, 2007 9:04 pm

    I think it is funny how the media and government is acting like this is some utterly unique singular event. Remember a few years ago when the “White Israeli Union” neo-Nazi group had its website taken down? With all the video of the neo-Nazis - giving the Hitler salute in their full IDF uniforms - talking about how to kill the Arabs for practice and how not to act like a “zhid” (Jew, in Russian)? Or then there were the skinhead gangs stormtrooping through Tel Aviv a few years ago too. Anyone who follows the “The Israeli Information and Assistance Center for the Victims of Anti-Semitism” ( http://pogrom.org.il/ ) which monitors neo-Nazis in Israel regularly knows this most recent event isn’t particularly unique. The problem is that the government and police “turn a blind eye” to Israeli neo-Nazis which gives them freedom to expand. Rest assured this cell isn’t all of them.

    Here we have another aspect of Israel’s demographic crisis. In the rush to import olim whose only real criteria is they are not Arab or Muslim it can’t come as any surprise that that managed to import traditional Russian anti-Semites too. Most of these kids are Russians who were brought to Israel by their parents against their will, they don’t want to be Israeli and never did. HOWEVER, in the end, if Israel had not imported the million plus Russians - many, or even most, of them non-Jewish - then the non-Arab population between the river and the sea would already be a definite minority to the Arab population. There just aren’t enough legitimate Jews to maintain the current “Greater Israel,” thus the floods of non-Jewish olim, the mass conversions of Ethiopians, Indians, and Peruvian Indians, and so on. These measures - the desperation for any non-Arab/Muslim immigrants - undermines the “Jewish character” of Israel just as surely as any compromise with the native Palestinians would.

  3. Maya on September 9, 2007 9:20 pm

    The very existence of Nazis in Israel IS what questions its justification to exist.

    Israel by definition is a “national home for the Jewish people.” The only justification that allowed for the creation of the little racist state, sanctioned by the United Nations, was that it was to provide Jews with a state where they would be able to escape persecutions.

    Yet, defining Jews according to blood line and implementing a law based on the Nuremberg Laws, Israel has admitted and “accepted” Nazis into its ranks. Now, that it no longer provides Jews with a safe heaven, why would it exist?

  4. Chrisius Maximus on September 9, 2007 11:33 pm

    “Russian youth’s embrace of Nazism”

    Isn’t that a little strong? It’s a vocal, but marginal movement. This is like saying “American youth’s embrace of anarchism” following the Seattle anti-WTO demonstrations. No offense, I just think you’re overstating things here a lot.

  5. Chrisius Maximus on September 9, 2007 11:35 pm

    ‘“zhid” (Jew, in Russian)?’

    Actually, it’s an ethnic slur. “Zhid” is not Russian for “Jew” any more than “nigger” is English for “person from Africa.” The word is “evrei.”

  6. W. Shedd on September 10, 2007 2:06 am

    I’m not exactly shocked that people living in Israel might become racists or bigots.

    http://nuhairi.net/nucleus/media/1/20060720-From%20Israel%20with%20Love.jpg

    Should I be?

  7. Nothing is Free on September 10, 2007 2:14 am

    What’s next? Black white supremacists?

  8. John S. on September 10, 2007 2:36 am

    Chrisius Maximus: re: “zhid” - you’re right, my mistake.

  9. Tim Newman on September 10, 2007 2:39 am

    On a similar theme, there were Jews present at Iran’s recent Holocaust denial conference.

  10. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 4:57 am

    As is true with others, Jews are far from being monolithic.

    ———————————————-

    “It will only shroud it further with nationalist fetishisms that will only inflame calls to exact the Russian cancer from Israeli’s otherwise healthy body politic.”

    ****

    Yeah right!

    Israel is considering to prosecute Israeli Druze who had the audacity to visit Syria.

    Blame the Russians for Nazism. Meantime, where did that movement originate?

    Chris is right about how some negatives like the topic of Russian Nazis get inflated.

    On another front, Morgan Williams of the AUR posted Goble and RTTV on Ukraine, while omitting the criticism to Goble. AUR got those pieces from Quick Takes.

  11. Buster on September 10, 2007 4:57 am

    Put simply, the gang’s existence posits the question: in a post-Holocaust world, can a Jew be a Nazi?

    Didn’t Ryan Gosling already address this possibility in The Believer?

    I was just about to blog about this event, but Sean, you beat me to the punch.

    A few comments. First, I agree that to over-emphasize the Russian/non-Jewishness of the perpetrators is dangerous, but to ignore the Russianness might also be a mistake. Before I even read beyond the headline, I had a sinking suspicion that it was another example of what I’m worried might be “A Diaspora of Hate.”

    On the one hand, the cries that an entire community should not be stigmatized as racist are appropriate. It is the action of a small group of Russian-speakers. On the other hand, to ignore that these youth are connected to larger organized movements and cultural trends makes it impossible to address the deeper problems. I think that some combination of state-fostered nationalism in Russia, pan-European organized white supremacists, and broader social dislocations needs to be addressed, rather than just looking at Russians as innately or primordially racist (which obviously isn’t right).

    Second, the element of hate/racism circulated through the Russian-langauge internet/diasporic formations is fascinating to me. Add this story to the attack on an Indian in California by Russian-speakers, attacks in Germany, and, of course, the recurrent problems in the former USSR. The only silver lining is that maybe more international pressure will now come down on Putin to do something about the growing problem of racial/ethnic violence, if people see the transnational dimensions of the problem.

    Third, I’m curious about the ninth suspect who fled the country and whether he’s in Russia. The possibility brings up the curious idea of Russia as an exilic haven for fugitive racists, in light of the current Andrei Vusik (tied to the California murder) situation. (But presumably an Israeli citizen doesn’t have Russian citizenship and, thus, isn’t protected.)

    I digress, and I guess I just put my blog post up here in your comments. (Apologies for that.)

  12. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 5:17 am

    Those no good Russians racists, who probably intermarry more with other groups (Jews included) than any other Euro group.

    The US has yet to have one president or vice president of known Jewish background. Post-Soviet Russia has had two prime ministers of known Jewish background.

    As for the broken record comments, they’re an appropriate reply to the broken record observations which often fall short in fully discussing the involved issues at hand.

    Like how 90% ethnic Slovenian Slovenia debates building one mosque in its capital where none exist. Meantime, Russia is probably leading Europe in the building of mosques.

    BTW, I understand that the Kremlin has a kosher kitchen unlike the White House.

    The unchecked hate continues to be the subtle to not so subtle Russia hating bigotry found in Eng. lang. mass media, academia and body politic.

  13. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 5:35 am

    On the subject of Jews and Russia, Diane von Furstenberg was born to a Greek Sephardic Jewish mother and Russian Jewish father:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diane_von_Furstenberg

    I read that she very much identifies with her Russian background. Her two children have Russian names.

    I read somewhere that during Stalin’s time in the USSR, it was considered somewhat appropriate for Soviet bigwigs to have Polish Jewish wives, who were considered witty. Note that Polish Jewish often categorizes Jews from Galicia and Vilnius.

  14. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 6:06 am

    “Eli Buanitov told police ‘I won’t have kids. My grandfather is half yid, so that this piece of trash doesn’t have ancestors with even the smallest percent of Jewish blood’.”

    ****

    Highlighted comments like the above quoted are typical of the selective targetting out there. The overwhelming majority of people of ROC/Jewish background are the exact opposite. Their very background expresses tolerance.

    An extreme offshoot of Kahane Chai (such a political species exists) calls the Russian Jews scum for not being Zionist enough.

  15. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 8:49 am

    Mike, it is simple why Russians are thought of as anti-Semitic by many Westerners. The West got a large proportion of its Jews from Russia, fleeing the pogroms circa 1905, which were a huge scandal in Europe and North America. Their descendents, much like their White Russian and Ukrainian Nationalist emigree counterparts, have Diaspora Disease, in which Russia is eternally 1905 as seen through the prism of family stories.

  16. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 8:55 am

    “I think that some combination of state-fostered nationalism in Russia”

    But the state-sponsored nationalism is Great Power nationalism, not ethnic nationalism. Putin speaks out about the latter interminably. I mean, if you read the (ethnic) nationalist Russian press, you will see they do not like Putin. At all.

  17. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 8:57 am

    Chris, many Westerners are hypocrites. This includes a number of left of center types, who have some twisted views of pre-1917 Russia.

    Once again, Russia NEVER had anything resembling Nazi Germany.

    The propaganda of 1905 related to how many opposed Russia playing a leading global role.

    The pogroms against American Blacks and Indians was much worse.

  18. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 9:04 am

    Once again as well: the pogroms were prevalent in non-Russian parts of the Russian Empire. Simultaneously, there were many Jews living in Russia proper, the territory comprising today’s Russian Federation.

    The initial Jewish migration to the East was due to the prejudices it found in the West. This includes Germany, well before Hitler.

    Sholom Aleichem is formally acknowledged by Russia as a Rusisan literary figure. This as the teflon Turks continue to deny its mass killing of Armenians. Something which the AUSTRIAN Hitler acknowledged.

  19. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 9:12 am

    The often Russia unfriendly Wikipedia cites (among others) Solzhenitsyn’s research:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pogroms#In_the_Russian_Empire

  20. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 9:16 am

    “The pogroms against American Blacks and Indians was much worse.”

    When were there pogroms against Indians? military campaigns do not count?

    When were hundreds of blacks lynched within the course of a month?

    “the pogroms were prevalent in non-Russian parts of the Russian Empire.”

    And lo and behold, thos regions — Ukraine, Poland, Romania — are also usually thought of as anti-Semitic.

  21. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 9:17 am

    Care of some Soviet policies, how many Jews as well as others were killed?

  22. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 9:20 am

    “Care of some Soviet policies, how many Jews as well as others were killed?”

    Not relevant to discussion.

  23. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 9:29 am

    “And lo and behold, thos regions — Ukraine, Poland, Romania — are also usually thought of as anti-Semitic.”

    ****

    Most defintely.

    ———————————————-

    “When were hundreds of blacks lynched within the course of a month?”

    ****

    Ovberall, when compared to the pogroms, the figures of Blacks in lynchings is high. Among such instances was the Civil War era draft riots in New York City.

    ———————————————-

    “When were there pogroms against Indians? military campaigns do not count?”

    ****

    According to such logic: some pogroms against Jews, involving locals and some leftists don’t count.

    You know anything about how Indians are treated on reservations? Some say that’s a form of genocide.

  24. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 9:31 am

    “Not relevant to discussion.”

    ****

    Anything going against a certain slant fits that perception.

  25. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 9:35 am

    The propping of Ethan Burger (c/o Lavelle, JRL and RP) and censoring of those disagreeing with him contributes to the ignorance:

    http://www.siberianlight.net/2007/04/10/the-best-books-about-russia-on-the-radio/

  26. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 9:41 am

    In prior instances, KKK ties with some local authorities was evident.

    This was true as late as the last century and as far north of the US as Long Island.

  27. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 9:46 am

    Besides Wiki, one can find a plethora of credible source material on the extent of lynchings in America:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynching_in_the_United_States

  28. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 10:01 am

    A very politically incorrect post, which no one has yet replied to:

    “Maya on September 9, 2007 9:20 pm

    The very existence of Nazis in Israel IS what questions its justification to exist.

    Israel by definition is a ‘national home for the Jewish people.’ The only justification that allowed for the creation of the little racist state, sanctioned by the United Nations, was that it was to provide Jews with a state where they would be able to escape persecutions.

    Yet, defining Jews according to blood line and implementing a law based on the Nuremberg Laws, Israel has admitted and ‘accepted’ Nazis into its ranks. Now, that it no longer provides Jews with a safe heaven, why would it exist?”

    ****

    For the record, I find it a bit on the politically acid side.

    I see how Russia is often caricatured.

  29. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 10:45 am

    Seeing how Israel and some of its policies have been discussed, here’re references to a couple of anti-Zionist Jews:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenni_brenner

    http://cosmos.ucc.ie/cs1064/jabowen/IPSC/php/authors.php?auid=14

  30. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 10:56 am

    A military campaign is not a pogrom.

    Face it Mike, 19th-century Russia was a very anti-Semitic place. Deal with it.

  31. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 11:09 am

    “A military campaign is not a pogrom.

    Face it Mike, 19th-century Russia was a very anti-Semitic place. Deal with it.”

    ****

    On the first point, I wasn’t referring to such.

    Face it Chris, much of what’s written on 19th century Russia is either ideologically driven and-or hypocritically applied, given what else was going on during that period. Deal with it.

  32. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 11:15 am

    19th century Russia didn’t nurture Hitler and his future accomplices.

    19th century Russia wasn’t all about pogroms.

  33. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 11:19 am

    “Face it Chris, much of what’s written on 19th century Russia is either ideologically driven and-or hypocritically applied, given what else was going on during that period.”

    Really? Ya think?

    You went off on one of your “Russia is misunderstood!” rants, and then I explained why it is misunderstood. That is, the image of Russia in the West is largely determined by the accounts of Jews fleeing the turn-of-the-century pogroms. If there had been much black emigration from the US to, say, France during Jim Crow, then you would have lots of accounts of “eternal American racism” in French newspapers today.

  34. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 11:21 am

    “19th century Russia didn’t nurture Hitler and his future accomplices.”

    It nurtured Alfred Rosenberg and the Protocols, which were very influential in Nazi Germany.

    Anyway, it doesn’t matter. France didn’t nurture Mao; Guatemala didn’t nurture Torquemada. So what?

  35. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 11:22 am

    “19th century Russia wasn’t all about pogroms.”

    Nobody said it was. PS. 19th-century America wasn’t all about killin’ Injuns. Nazi Germany wasn’t all about Auschwitz. What’s your point?

  36. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 11:28 am

    Come to think of it, I suspect the reason you are so obsessed with this pogrom issue is that they were largely committed by people to an extent ideologically similar to Mike Averko. They were committed largely by monarchists carrying the portrait of the Tsar and the two-headed eagle.

  37. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 11:49 am

    Leave it to Chris Doss to resort to the asshole route which befits his prior manner.

    Among others, Roy, the elder of the Chubais brothers and Pankratov have shown an appreciation for some of what existed in Russia prior to 1917.

    Herr Doss has an aversion to Russia’s national emblem.

    Rosenburg was a Russia hating non-Russian. Much unlike many of his fellow Baltic Germans. The tsar rejected the protocols.

    As for who committed much of the pogroms, “Russian monarchists” aren’t Moldovans, Ukrainian nationalists and leftists (the latter had some of those elements).

  38. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 11:52 am

    Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 11:22 am “19th century Russia wasn’t all about pogroms.”

    Nobody said it was. PS. 19th-century America wasn’t all about killin’ Injuns. Nazi Germany wasn’t all about Auschwitz. What’s your point?

    ****

    It isn’t obvious? You’ve some hypocritically warped views which don’t conform with actual reality.

    Imperial Russia NEVER came close to matching what Jews faced in Germany, Austria and elsewhere.

    Ditto Armenians in Turkey, as well as Blacks and Indians in America.

  39. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 11:55 am
  40. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:03 pm

    “You’ve some hypocritically warped views which don’t conform with actual reality.”

    What? That pogroms occurred?

  41. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:03 pm

    “Herr Doss has an aversion to Russia’s national emblem.”

    I do?

  42. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:06 pm

    “The tsar rejected the protocols.”

    Not because they were anti-Semitic. Because they were fake. He was, you know, an anti-Semite.

  43. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:08 pm

    You don’t?

    ———————————————-

    “Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:03 pm ‘You’ve some hypocritically warped views which don’t conform with actual reality.’

    What? That pogroms occurred?”

    ****

    Your hypcritically warped spin on the matter.

    From the same guy who fends for the Cossacks’ role in those acts.

    Oh yeah, he’ll say he knows and studied them.

    Maybe if he did that with some others, he’d have a different take.

    Then again…

  44. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:09 pm

    “Your hypcritically warped spin on the matter.

    From the same guy who fends for the Cossacks’ role in those acts.”

    What the hell are you talking about?

  45. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:10 pm

    Top of my last post was in reply to CD’s last one.

    ———————————————-

    “’The tsar rejected the protocols.’”

    Not because they were anti-Semitic. Because they were fake. He was, you know, an anti-Semite.”

    ****

    Compared to Kaiser Wilhelm, Hitler and some others of that period?

    Different period having different standards.

  46. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:13 pm

    “Different period having different standards.”

    Did anybody say they didn’t?

    Ya know, “he was less anti-Semitic than Hitler” is pretty damn weak.

  47. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:13 pm

    “Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:09 pm ‘Your hypocritically warped spin on the matter.

    From the same guy who fends for the Cossacks’ role in those acts.’

    What the hell are you talking about?

    ****

    I’m talking about how you’ll challenge some misguided stereotypes on matter which you’ve studied, while readily parrotting some other dubious claims.

    It’s clear you know little about the White Russian community.

  48. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:15 pm

    “Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:13 pm ‘Different period having different standards.’

    Did anybody say they didn’t?

    Ya know, ‘he was less anti-Semitic than Hitler’ is pretty damn weak.”

    ****

    How about Kaiser Wilhelm and perhaps Henry Ford?

  49. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:17 pm

    Whereas Nicholas rejected the Protocols, the Vatican (to my understanding) didn’t excommunicate Hitler.

  50. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:21 pm

    So, Mike, was Nicholas II an anti-Semite or not?

    Were, or were not, the October 1905 pogroms a reaction by pro-monarchists horrified by the introduction of a constitution? Did they, or did they not, march under the Tsar’s portrait? Did the Tsar, or did he not, personally regard them as a sign that his subjects still supported him and absolutism?

    Did the Russian Empire, or did it not, have a blood libel trial as late as 1913?

    Was there, or was there not, a pro-monarchist group known as the chernosotentsy terrorizing Jews and other people seen as anti-monarchist?

    Did thousands of Jews flee the pogroms, or did they not?

    And what about this whole Pale of Settlement thingie?

  51. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:22 pm

    For that matter, elements in the Vatican helped to shield Nazis at war’s end.

  52. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:27 pm

    “Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:21 pm So, Mike, was Nicholas II an anti-Semite or not?

    Were, or were not, the October 1905 pogroms a reaction by pro-monarchists horrified by the introduction of a constitution? Did they, or did they not, march under the Tsar’s portrait? Did the Tsar, or did he not, personally regard them as a sign that his subjects still supported him and absolutism?

    Did the Russian Empire, or did it not, have a blood libel trial as late as 1913?

    Was there, or was there not, a pro-monarchist group known as the chernosotentsy terrorizing Jews and other people seen as anti-monarchist?

    Did thousands of Jews flee the pogroms, or did they not?

    And what about this whole Pale of Settlement thingie?”

    ***

    An Eng. lang. mass media tact.

    On his last point, America had and has actual versions of the “Pale of Settlement”. Plenty of Jews lived in Russia proper during that paper law.

    Note how he broadly sterotypes in the very same manner he rejects when his beloved Cosascks are discussed.

    I already addressed those other points of his.

  53. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:35 pm

    Come on Mike, say it: “The Russian Empire was very anti-Semitic.” It will be therapeutic. Why can’t you admit it? It’s weird.

    What’s next? “Slavery of blacks wasn’t so bad! They had serfdom in Russia at the same time! Some blacks even had slaves of their own! What are these hypocritical double standards?”

  54. W. Shedd on September 10, 2007 12:38 pm

    You know that romantic comedy formula where two people start off hating each other, but also can’t stay apart from each other, and their edginess conceals a hidden attraction - and then something happens, some moment of weakness, they both break down and fall in love with each other?

    Something was just reminding me of that, I forget what it was.

    Good catch by Newman on the Holocaust Denials.

    There is something about the aggressiveness of Israel and the atmosphere it creates that makes this a non-surprise. That isn’t to say there isn’t a reason for that atmosphere, given the state of their neighbors. But if the anger, emotions, disenfranchisement, what have you of muslim states spills over into terrorism - why should we be surprised that similar youths in Israel wouldn’t turn to something equally ugly?

  55. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:39 pm

    “I already addressed those other points of his.”

    You didn’t address a damn one of them.

    Perhaps you should move to Dingburg: http://zippythepinhead.com/Merchant2/merchant.mv?Screen=PROD&Product_Code=9-Sep-07&Category_Code=sun2007&Product_Count=37.

    gabba-gabba-hey

  56. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:40 pm

    I refuse to let Billy Crystal play me.

  57. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:42 pm

    Chris has a way of distorting.

    Blacks in America had it worse than Jews in Russia.

    The former doesn’t excuse the latter as I’d previously indicated.

    At the same time, I’m not going to suck up to BS/PC horse shit.

    BTW, during WW I, many Jews in non-Russia proper/Russian Empire teritory fled into Russia proper when the German army attacked.

  58. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:43 pm

    I replied to your points Chris.

    There were prior threads.

  59. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:44 pm
  60. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 12:45 pm

    “But if the anger, emotions, disenfranchisement, what have you of muslim states spills over into terrorism - why should we be surprised that similar youths in Israel wouldn’t turn to something equally ugly?”

    Ah! I real person! What a breath of fresh air!

    I asked a friend of mine in Israel about the Nazi subject, and he says it’s likely in part a reaction by Israelis who don’t consider themselves Jews to the constant hyping of Jewishness by the Israeli government and educational system, compounded by a general negative attitude by older israelis toward immigrants fron the FSU that has economic repurcussions. Sort of “well, we’re outsiders, and by God we’ll make you know it!”

  61. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:50 pm

    Especially during the Cold War, many Israeli Jews from Arab countries were somewhat jealous of the USSR emigres. The Israeli government would help the latter in a way that the “Oriental” Jews felt were biased. On the other hand, the USSR emigres to Israel were often highly skilled professionals unlike many of the “Oriental” Jews.

  62. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:52 pm

    Since 2003, considerably more people leave Israel for Russia than vice versa.

  63. Michael Averko on September 10, 2007 12:55 pm

    A Cold War era politically incorrect saying which made the rounds in Brighton Beach:

    “Life in America isn’t as good as we thought it was and life in the USSR wasn’t as bad as we thought it was.”

  64. W. Shedd on September 10, 2007 1:52 pm

    “Life in America isn’t as good as we thought it was and life in the USSR wasn’t as bad as we thought it was.”

    Heck, based on the few Brighton Beacher’s I’ve spoke to, I think they STILL say that there.

    The problem - Brighton Beach isn’t America. If your impression of life here is based upon that small enclave, then of course it isn’t going to seem much better than Russia or the former USSR.

    I think this is wandering considerably from Jewish Nazi’s.

    Maybe Sean’s Russia Blog should have a chat room.

    What hours are you two operating on anyway? Seems I wake up, check my email at 6:30 am or so, and if I check a volatile thread on this forum Chris and Mike have been going at it all night.

    Well, not going at it, but bickering/antagonizing each other.

  65. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 3:49 pm

    “Well, not going at it, but bickering/antagonizing each other.”

    Cue music?

  66. ivanov on September 10, 2007 5:09 pm

    Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 10:56 am

    “A military campaign is not a pogrom.

    Face it Mike, 19th-century Russia was a very anti-Semitic place. Deal with it.”

    I think we can say this about Europe as well… I mean - very anti-Semitic place.

    Military campaign is not a pogrom unless it’s aim is to eliminate all Jews.

    PS. I have no problems with Jews. 1/5 of our family friends are Jews. And among upper management level (at least in my place) every third one is Jew (and as you know they don’t make 33% of population).

  67. Maya on September 10, 2007 5:54 pm

    Maybe this is the real problem in Russia. Notice how both Ivanov and Averko constantly count Jews?

    The one stated that “Post-Soviet Russia has had two prime ministers of known Jewish background.” while the other counted the number of Jewish family friends and Jews in managerial positions in his company.

    A Russian friend of mine once told me that his mother had always wanted him to marry a Jew (she was Kalmyk and had probably never met a Jew in her life) because she wanted his children to be successful.

    Is that not antisemitism?

  68. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 6:08 pm

    “Is that not antisemitism?”

    It’s stereotyping. It has to be a negative (and false) stereotype to be anti-semitism.

  69. W. Shedd on September 10, 2007 7:16 pm

    Yes - I was going to point out the “anti” part of that word.

    Let’s do a show of hands, who here is Jewish?

    Here a Jew, there a Jew, everywhere a Jew, Jew.

    It’s interesting that the grandmother and mother are standing up for one of the accused - insisting he’s not a Nazi. I thought ignoring your children and being in total denial about their bad behavior was an American trait.

    I’ve also read some bits about half-Jewish or Russian Jewish immigrants being treated as less than full Jews in Israel. There was a quote from one of the boys families about how it wasn’t easy being half-jewish in Israel, etc.

  70. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 7:33 pm

    Do you know the old Soviet joke?

    A Soviet Jew is preparing to emigrate to Israel. His father tells him, “remember, son — here, you’re just a Jew. There, you’ll be just a Russian.”

    They’re immigrants, outsiders, looked down on by older-generation Israelis and in an economically worse off situation. Not as bad as Ethiopean or Arab Jews, but still not great.

  71. Global Voices Online » Russia, Israel: Neo-Nazi on September 10, 2007 7:57 pm

    […] Russia Blog writes: “Russian youth’s embrace of Nazism doesn’t just happen in Russia. It’s also happens […]

  72. Maya on September 10, 2007 8:37 pm

    Oh please, “positive” stereotyping is the beginning of anti everything.

    The stereotype of Jews is that they are successful - isn’t that also the source of their trouble? I could hear in the “among upper management level (at least in my place) every third one is Jew (and as you know they don’t make 33% of population)” the smell of “Jews are taking over our country.”

  73. Maya on September 10, 2007 8:40 pm

    And as for Israel - don’t remember who said that it was a liberal free country - have you ever heard of a liberal state based on religious law? Are there other free countries where someone can’t get married because he doesn’t officially belong to one religion or another?

  74. Chrisius Maximus on September 10, 2007 9:18 pm

    “The stereotype of Jews is that they are successful - isn’t that also the source of their trouble? ”

    The classic Russian anti-Semitic stereotype is a bit stronger. They’re supposed to be secretly running the world for obscene purposes, usually in cohorts with the Masons. And they killed Christ.

    Jews actually do tend to do pretty well materially and socially speaking in contemporary Russian society.

  75. ivanov on September 11, 2007 1:51 am

    Maya on September 10, 2007 5:54 pm

    “Maybe this is the real problem in Russia. Notice how both Ivanov and Averko constantly count Jews?

    The one stated that “Post-Soviet Russia has had two prime ministers of known Jewish background.” while the other counted the number of Jewish family friends and Jews in managerial positions in his company.”

    I’m not counting them - I’m living with them.
    And they are not top manager in “my company”. They are top managers (or bosses) everywhere. The only reason I “counting” them - this topic is about them. 4/5 of our family friends and 2/3 of bosses are not Jews :)))
    Frankly - I know the nationality of very few of them. As I don’t care much about it.
    And what is nationality of a person if mother has Asian/Russian (who are they - Russians?) roots and father has Northen Scandinavian/British roots? “Pure white” with “pure yellow” and Russian layer between :))

  76. Michael Averko on September 11, 2007 6:23 am

    Some more on the Israeli/Russian neo-Nazis:

    http://www.russiatoday.ru/news/news/13874

    As a follow-up to the prior post: misrepresenting what people say can be Nazi like as well.

  77. Chrisius Maximus on September 11, 2007 6:34 am

    I see that Mike’s madness is progressing.

    Madness… the wind howls through the gables… the gibbous moon hangs bloated in the sky… screeches reverberate through the asylum halls of Mike’s mind, the pandamonium unleashed… “Hark? what is that I hear? is it Ethan Burger? He follows me, yeessss… He is in the wall, I tell you! And you call me mad?!?!? They laughed at me at Adelphi… I’ll show you, I’ll show Ethan Burger, I’ll show you all… it’s just a little cut, don’t be afraid, i needs it ta make the bad-gunky come out, if’n I don’t, Ethan Burger gonna come git me, he’s a-gonna come and git us all… What was that I saw in the black pit of N’kai where no man walks? Was it Ethan Burger’s immense form I saw rise and stumble through the depths? Cthulhu fthagn! Mwa-ha-ha-ha!”

    Or so they found scrawled in blood over the quivering body of the wretched inmate. He had bitten off his own tongue.

  78. Michael Averko on September 11, 2007 6:39 am

    A related article to this discussion:

    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2007/09/11/011.html

    In some circles, calling Jews successful and smart is as bigoted as tagging them as money grubbing…..

    At times, there’s a bit too much over-analysis on such matter.

    Nobody seems to consider it bigoted when Russians are described as proud and arrogant. This was said on a recent radio show by a Polish commentator. Rather ironic, in that some would tag that label on a good number of Poles.

    The bottom line is that there’s a good deal of selective sensitivity out there.

  79. Sean on September 11, 2007 6:56 am

    You guys aren’t going to do this all night are you?

  80. Michael Averko on September 11, 2007 7:04 am

    It doesn’t beat the Lavelle/Babich (snooze) duo on RTTV?

  81. Michael Averko on September 11, 2007 7:41 am

    Forgot this one from Mr. Shedd:

    “There was a quote from one of the boys families about how it wasn’t easy being half-jewish in Israel, etc.”

    ***

    The 1969 Costa Gavras directed movie “Z” (great movie) starring Yves Montand and Irene Papas about the Greek junta had a related scene.

    When reviewing the files of dissidents, one of the security personnel isolates a Jewish dissident and says that he’s half Jewish and adds that half Jews are the worst because they think they’re superior to everyone else.

    I remember seeing that film and recollecting how that scene drew laughter from the movie theater’s audience.

  82. Michael Averko on September 11, 2007 8:39 am

    How can I overlook this bias from CD:

    “The classic Russian anti-Semitic stereotype is a bit stronger.”

    ***

    More like clASSic from him.

    The Spanish Inquisition and Nazism came from the West and not Russia.

    Henry Ford wasn’t Russian. Ditto Posse Comatatus or however the **** it’s properly pronounced.

    Last week, a LI synagogue was vandalized with anti-Jewish graffiti. The ADL can detail how such acts are quite common in the US.

  83. Tim Newman on September 11, 2007 9:51 am

    Here’s a question in Jewish philosophy:

    If a married Jewish man is walking alone in the park, and expresses an opinion without anyone around to hear him, is he still wrong?

  84. Sean on September 11, 2007 1:41 pm

    I had some hope for some decent discussion on this thread. But the usual forces prevailed in sending it into a descending spiral into nonsense. It always seems to happen when I’m asleep. What am I gonna have to do, close down comments every night before bed? Hire a hall monitor?

  85. Chrisius Maximus on September 11, 2007 1:48 pm

    Well, there was some decent discussion before.

    Does your Israeli SO have any opinion on this?

  86. Sean on September 11, 2007 1:58 pm

    Mike, in my slew of comment deletions, I accidentally deleted one of your more, ahem, substantive comments where you said that Maya was full of shit and they declare yourself to be the “only true blue Jew.” What ever the fuck that’s supposed mean.

    “Maya misrepresented our comments Ivanov. I know how to address such misinformation.

    Wally, regarding some of your comments about the discussion, I was recently likened to an IMOM (International Man Of Mystery)/MOL (Man Of Leisure). Once in awhile, it’s not a bad idea to throw a 90 plus MPH fastball under the chin of a wise ass. Understand that there’re different forms of wise assism. Some forms are more progressive than others.

    Maya, you’re so full of shit. I didn’t initiate the discussion about Jews here. Rather, I corrected some of the false impressions about how Russians at large view Jews. Your somewhat suggestive tone of my being anti-Jewish is groundless horse shit. Peter Lavelle’s pal Ethan Burger failed miserably at trying to put that label on me. Shortly thereafter, Tim Newman backed my opposition to a series of anti-Jewish remarks made at a Siberian Light discussion. From the looks of things, I might be the only true blue Jew (if you may) in this discussion. You obviously don’t like what I’ve to say. In the long run, misrepresenting what I’ve said will flop.

    Shalom!

  87. mab on September 11, 2007 3:09 pm

    It’s not so surprising that a couple of Jewish kids in Israel from Russia or the CIS turn out to be anti-Semitic given the social/cultural acceptance for ethnic stereotyping here — regardless of ethnicity. One only has to recall Zhirinovsky’s famous statement about his nationality: “My mother was Russian and my father was a lawyer.” Or a bizarre pseudo talk show with Prokhanov insisting that “all the oligarchs were Jews,” but that this was fine in some ways, since “Jews are really smart.” Or even a segment in a sitcom aired on NTV last night. One of the characters is meeting with her father and his second wife, who have emigrated to Israel. The second wife (who is Jewish) says, “I always say, the only problem with Israel is that it’s filled with Jews! You just can’t imagine what it’s like to live with only Jews…” As long as this sort of thing is acceptable to say on national TV, some kids who aren’t very smart and who spend time reading much worse stuff are going to turn into skinheads.

  88. W. Shedd on September 11, 2007 3:21 pm

    Understand that there’re different forms of wise assism.

    There’re? That isn’t a word, is it?

    Hmmm … that might suspiciously fall into the less than progressive form of wise-assism.

    Regarding earlier comments, I just was noticing how certain individuals can’t stay away from each other. Yin and Yang. Frick and Frack. Laurel and Hardy. George and Gracie.

    Why, in light of that, I even went out of my way to affirm something that Mr. Newman said. Heck, I even liked his Jewish husband - is he still wrong joke.

    Or perhaps I am misjudging and it was my “here a Jew, there a Jew” comment that was less progressive. I had noticed a general tone of “I’m more Jewish than you” reverberating through the tail end of the thread.

    By the way - off topic for Israeli neo-nazi’s but on topic for hate crimes: Had anyone else noticed this recent story?

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/11/AR2007091100544.html

    Six white people in West Virgina kidnapped a young black woman and abused her in almost every way imaginable. One of the questions these sorts of stories always bring to my mind (other than the nature of hatred and violence the U.S.) is how such stories play differently here than if they happened in Russia or elsewhere.

    I know that is a common Mike Averko theme, I certainly am guilty of pointing that out as well, when I think it is appropriate.

  89. Chrisius Maximus on September 11, 2007 4:44 pm

    Actually Mab I can easily imagine somebody making that Jewish joke on US television, on MAD TV or something like that (is that show still around?).

  90. Chrisius Maximus on September 11, 2007 4:54 pm

    Nope, US TV would never air an anti-Semitic joke: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ue3EOslwwd0

  91. mab on September 11, 2007 4:57 pm

    Has the story about the Russian skinheads in Israel been covered in the mainstream US media?

  92. W. Sparticus on September 11, 2007 4:58 pm

    There is a line there between humor and satire. I recall Borat’s infamous film, which was so clearly over-the-top as regards poor Borats impressions of Jews as to be satire.

    However, you can certainly make jokes without the hint of “wink-wink” and be cutting on Jews.

    Damn, Maximus - I can’t believe you didn’t say anything about there’re. What’re you thinking?

  93. Chrisius Maximus on September 11, 2007 5:09 pm

    “There’re” Brrrrr. I’ll pretend it doesn’t exist.

    I’ve never seen Borat, but I suspect that if it had been made in Russia its existence would be adduced in some quarters as a sign of Russian anti-Semitism.

  94. W. Sparticus on September 11, 2007 5:09 pm

    Has the story about the Russian skinheads in Israel been covered in the mainstream US media?

    Depends on what you mean by the mainstream media.

    I don’t watch television news, so I can’t speak to whether ABC, NBC, CNN, etc. have been reporting much about it on TV.

    I don’t usually catch much news via radio, but I can say there was a passing reference to it on a “Headlines” section on the local sports radio station yesterday morning during the commute to work.

    Certainly the larger newspapers, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, Washington Post, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, etc. have all picked up on the story.

    Topics of interest in Israel and the Middle East are often reported by mainstream TV here in the US. Speculation as to why this is could make you sound like Mel Gibson. However, much of the US foreign policy and worries center around conflicts in the Middle East, so suffice it to say that such topics attract concerned viewers and sell newspapers.

  95. W. Sparticus on September 11, 2007 5:17 pm

    I’ve never seen Borat, but I suspect that if it had been made in Russia its existence would be adduced in some quarters as a sign of Russian anti-Semitism.

    Even having not been made in Russia, it was seen as a sign (by some) of Kazakhstan anti-Semitism. Borat played it straight as a character, but so exaggerated as to provide the hint that it was meant to be satire or spoof.

    Literally, there was a scene where it is supposed to be the annual “Running of the Jews” in his Kazakh village. A person is a large headed troll-like costume parades through the street. The large ugly She-Jew lays a “jew-egg” in the street. The children are encouraged to throw things at the ugly Jew creatures.

    While at country and western bar/pub in the U.S., he sings a song entitled “Throw the Jew Down the Well (so my country can be free)” and encourages the crowd to sing and clap along (which they do).

    It was pretty damn over-the-top.

  96. Chrisius Maximus on September 11, 2007 5:49 pm

    See, if this bit were done by students not at Duke, but at MGU, it would be interpreted very differently: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=viwSywMkfqs

  97. Chrisius Maximus on September 11, 2007 6:47 pm

    I don’t mean to overdo it, but for yet more anti-Semitic jokes in mainstream US popular entertainment:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9I_c0pYmdu0

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NMjaR5QTz3w&mode=related&search=

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bMLAvGouvK0

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UihUqDzAJ18

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNc4A9zXqa0&mode=related&search=

    I didn’t realize Family Guy had so much of this stuff. Robin Williams also does some “goofy Chinaman” stuff I notice.

  98. Tim Newman on September 11, 2007 8:40 pm

    I didn’t realize Family Guy had so much of this stuff.

    Is there any minority group which Family Guy doesn’t abuse? I love that show.

  99. mab on September 11, 2007 8:43 pm

    Sorry, but I don’t get you guys. Despite Mr Averko’s protests to the contrary, Russia and the USSR have historically been quite anti-Semitic. Now there is a growing problem with nationalism, chauvinism, and hate crimes. This particular case strikes me as a sad story of some terribly mixed up kids, who probably probably picked up a lot of anti-Semitism through the mainstream and other media.

    When this sort of thing happens in the US, and it does, aren’t you appalled? Didn’t you read about that horrible case of 6 white people torturing a black woman for a week and gasp? Didn’t you think about the history of racism in the US and think this is another example of it?

    Then why the attempt to either downplay the seriousness of a similar problem in Russia (”it happens everywhere, the US is no better, you’re “biassed” to focus on it”) or state that it’s blown out of proportion by the dreadful Western media?

    If this were the one and only case of Russian teen skin-heads that has occurred in the last year and all the newspapers picked it up — yes, it would show “biassed coverage.” But nationalism and hate crimes, including anti-Semitic hate crimes, are an enormous and growing problem in Russia. Of course journalists write about it. Of course people are concerned about it. Of course people pay attention if kids at MGU do a chauvinistic skit or whatever — because it happening in a particular political and social context — of thousands of violent hate crimes a year and organized nationalist-fascist youth groups that are picking up, by conservative estimate, about 10000 kids a year.

    That’s a problem, guys. If most foreign students in the US were subjected to verbal insults and dozens were beaten up and killed every year, wouldn’t you raise the alarm? I sure would. Then why, when that’s happening in Russia, are you trying to downplay it?

  100. Buster on September 11, 2007 8:56 pm

    While I’ve been steadfastly trying to avoid the horror of this thread, I will, for solidarity’s sake, add: “I’m with Mab.”

  101. Chrisius Maximus on September 11, 2007 9:01 pm

    “Then why, when that’s happening in Russia, are you trying to downplay it?”

    I wasn’t aware I was.

    But I think it’s due to different reasons than you appear to think. I think it’s mostly due to massive migration, which is a first in Russian history, and the economic disenfranchisement of a lot of the population that is a result of what happened in the 1990s. I don’t think it is a result of the mass media or current government policy.

  102. Chrisius Maximus on September 11, 2007 9:06 pm

    “Is there any minority group which Family Guy doesn’t abuse? I love that show.”

    It is a good show. I just suspect that if Mab had seen The Scarejew on a Russian TV program, she (? — sorry if I’m getting your gender wrong Mab) would interpret it differently. Which was in a roundabout way my point.

  103. Michael Averko on September 11, 2007 10:30 pm

    mab & co.

    There’re some who lean towards assigning a collective guilt on the German people for what happened during WW II. The supporting point being that a very educated people should’ve known better. This view is common among a good number of older WW II era Jews (some of my relatives included, with others taking the opposite view).

    I don’t assign collective guilt for several reasons. I see how grossly unfair and in some instances bigoted it’s to make that claim of Russians. Marx thought that Russia wasn’t ripe for his envisaged revolution. Heck, among European nations, Germany wasn’t the most ripe of countries for a Nazi like movement. During WW II, there’re credible accounts about how some non-Germans behaved more Nazi like than the Germans.

    One of several left professors of mine (a German military history expert) stated that what happened in Germany could’ve easily happened elsewhere. I very much agree with him. Let’s look at: the Germans were a very educated people who should’ve known better claim. I see how mab and at least one other participant at this thread repeat the bogus notion of Russia standing out as a anti-Jewish place when compared to other European nations. These are educated folks making that claim which has been passed down to them by the kind of skewed Eng. lang. mass media and academia presentations out there. As intelligent people, why don’t they bother second guessing such a dubious claim?

    In lieu of the broken record horse shit about Russia, I’ll repeat some earlier points, which don’t seem to resonate with some:
    - Russia never had anything matching Nazi Germany and the Spanish Inquisition.
    - Jews arrived in Russia after fleeing discrimination in the West.
    - Among Euros, Jews have probably intermarried most with Russians.
    - Whereas the US has never had a president or vice president of known Jewish background in its lengthy enough history, post Soviet Russia has had two prime ministers of known Jewish background during its short existence.
    - It’s my understanding that the kremlin has a Kosher kitchen unlike the White House.

    Did anyone see the very excellent film “Europa”, which is based on the story of a WW II era Jew? During the film, there’s a scene where upon the implementation of Molotov-Ribbentrop, Jews are fleeing the Nazi occupied area to the Soviet one, with Poles doing the reverse.

    Someone mentioned Prokhonov. Note that he has been employed by “liberal” Ekho Moskvy, which to my knowledge seems to mute non-bigoted and intelligently presented Russocentric views.

  104. Tim Newman on September 11, 2007 10:43 pm

    Whereas the US has never had a president or vice president of known Jewish background in its lengthy enough history, post Soviet Russia has had two prime ministers of known Jewish background during its short existence.

    Why are you comparing US Presidents with Russian Prime Ministers? Why not compare US Presidents with Russian Presidents?

  105. Michael Averko on September 11, 2007 10:48 pm

    Sean:

    While citing a Y-Net dispatch in my last QT (dealing with the apparent Israeli over-flght into Syria), I left out the same day piece from that venue which dealt with the Israeli/Russian skinheads.

    My anti-censorship/censorship in knowing how that latter piece would get picked up elsewhere. It’s not as if QT hasn’t covered issues pertaining to intolerance. For example, QT dealt with Gleb Pavlovsky’s stupid comments about David Miliband. Though stupid, his comments weren’t were anti-Jewish. They were stupid because it gave the hate Russia side a talking point. This coming from a supposed semi-Russian government connected “spin doctor”. Some in that category leave a good deal to be desired when it comes to providing intelligent insight. The kind of criticism about Russia not getting picked up at outlets like JRL.

    It often appears somewhat criminal for taking a contrary approach to what’s being presented as worhty news stories and political views.

  106. Michael Averko on September 11, 2007 10:50 pm

    Tim:

    If America is so tolerant, why no Jewish or Black or female VP?

    A rhetorical question to hit home at the standards which can no longer be called double.

  107. Tim Newman on September 11, 2007 11:42 pm

    Mike,

    I am not interested in getting into a discussion with you or anyone else on this thread on America’s alleged intolerance vs that of Russia.

    I was specifically asking you why you are comparing US Presidents with Russian Prime Ministers as opposed to US Presidents with Russian Presidents.

  108. W. Shedd on September 12, 2007 2:54 am

    If most foreign students in the US were subjected to verbal insults and dozens were beaten up and killed every year, wouldn’t you raise the alarm? I sure would. Then why, when that’s happening in Russia, are you trying to downplay it?

    Actually, I think what is happening is the US ignores its own problems with racism and hate crimes, and points their finger abroad at Russia and other places.

    I was actually the person who cited that case in West Virginia. Horrific case, barely makes a blip on the radar screen here - and that stuff happens all the time. Hell, we elect KKK members into political office in the U.S. And yes, NOBODY makes a stink about it.

    These problems are on the increase in Russia, I have little doubt,, even the despite the sketchy statistics (and the statistics are sketchy and largely anecdotal - the OSCE/SOVA data collection methods are haphazard at best). However, the U.S. hate crime statistics are awful as well (8,804 hate crimes in 2005 with incomplete FBI data).

    So, I would tell you, pretty bluntly - nobody in the U.S. cares about domestic hate crimes. We turn a blind eye to it and aren’t horrified. There have been a string of 5 murdered blacks from Cape Verde in Boston in the past year, no one talks about it. No one calls it a hate crime. We largely save such judgments for other nations, so we can cluck our tongues and say “how horrible it is in other places, aren’t we so glad that we’re the U.S of A. and so much better.” Sadly, we’re not. And we isolate our selves so much from the rest of the world, we live with our illusions intact.

  109. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 4:03 am

    So true Wally.

    Tim:

    I actually said American presidents and vice presidents relative to post-Soviet Russian presidents and prime ministers. There has yet to be a Russian president of known Jewish background. There’ve been two Russian prime ministers of known Jewish background.

    On another matter, do you identify with the Eng. national team, or do you see it as something of a rival to Wales, or perhaps both? As you probably know, England-Russia will be playing in a short bit.

  110. Tim Newman on September 12, 2007 4:12 am

    On another matter, do you identify with the Eng. national team, or do you see it as something of a rival to Wales, or perhaps both?

    When it comes to Rugby Union, which is the principal sport of Wales, then I am an ardent supporter of Wales and wish England to be thrashed soundly by anybody they come up against, including a Taliban XV.

    As far as football goes, Wales simply cannot compete at any serious level so I find it hard to support them as they don’t participate in any major tournaments, although obviously I want them to do well. My support of England depends on whether I think they deserve to win based on player selection and performance. If they are playing like a load of overpaid, spoiled brats selected from a clique within the English football clubs, I have no desire to see them win anything (especially as the response of most of the fans to English success would be unbearable). If they have selected a good few youngsters who deserve a game over and above the “old guard” who get a game whether regardless of recent performance, I genuinely want them to do well. It’s an odd attitude to have I know, but there it is. So in the upcoming game against Russia, if I think the manager is being an arse in his selection and England play like idiots, I will want Russia to come away with the spoils. Actually, I want Russia to win anyway. For me, club football is much more important than internationals.

    In cricket, the England and Wales teams are combined as “England”, so I support them fully. And with lesser sports, I am happy for any British team to perform well.

  111. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 4:58 am

    Thought so. Many folks in Ukraine and Belarus identify with Russian teams, with many Russians reciprocating.

    As per ice hockey: in 1972, I was for the Soviet national team against the Canadians because the latter carried on like brats. In 1980, I was all for the youthful hard work of the USA against the power house USSR.

    ****

    On some prior observations which seemed to touch on why many Jews appear to not be so fond of Russia, several variables should be considered for accuracy sake.

    Jews are well represented in an American mass media, academic and body politic environment which overall isn’t Russia friendly, regardless of ethno-religious background. I’ve run into some non-Jews who present to me the number of not so Russia friendly Jews they see in American mass media, academia and mass body politic. I point out to them that American mass media, academia and body politic isn’t Russia friendly. Some views are more equal than others in that environment. It therefore stands to reason that many Jews in that setting will advocate a certain line like their non-Jewish counterparts. Just how reflective those Jews are of Jewry on the whole is questionable. Take the neo-cons for example. Neo-conservatism is an overwhelmingly Zionist political movement, comprised of many Jews within its domain. Simultaneously, most Jews aren’t neo-conservative.

    For that matter, reference the kind of Ukrainian views propped in Eng. lang. mass media. A generation of misinformed Anglo-Americans think that Ukrainians hate Russians. They base this on their exposure to the anti-Russian Ukrainian views typically propped over the pro-Russian Ukrainian views.

    Many Jews from not so Russia friendly places like Poland and western Ukraine often share the anti-Russian biases of their non-Jewish neighbors from those lands. As I earlier mentioned, the Vilnius born Polish kitchen rabbi at a former employer of mine would say the most anti-Russian of comments, only to acknowledge that Russians were less anti-Jewish than Poles, Balts and Ukrainians. Others can be added to that category.

    Finally, here’s something that will rub some the wrong way. Russians are often caricatured for wrongly being anti-Jewish (like I said, I don’t buy that in the collective sense). Take into account that some (stress some) Jews (others as well) can be wrongly anti-Russian. The selective sensitivity is definitely there.

  112. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 5:01 am

    On another footie note, the US was very fortunate to tie the DPRK at a FIFA Women’s World Cup qualifying match.

    Those DPRK ladies are the real deal.

  113. mab on September 12, 2007 5:48 am

    Mr Shedd, I take your point that it’s easier to point fingers than deal with one’s own problems. I’m not sure I’d agree that racism and anti-Semitism aren’t media issues in the US; it seems to me that there have been plenty of tv analysis shows and articles about it, at least in what I read and have seen. And there are certainly watchdog organizations that follow it and complain about it.

    But let’s say for the sake of argument that the US isn’t dealing with its hate crimes. That doesn’t mean that it’s therefore okay for Russia to ignore or downplay its hate crimes; nor does it mean that no one in the world should comment on them; and certainly it doesn’t mean that the world shouldn’t worry about them.

    Discussion of Russia/USSR in the US has always been hampered by domestic US politics. If some right-wing lunatic says something critical about the USSR/USA, the liberals and left-wing has a knee-jerk reaction to defend it, to dispell the underlying premises of that right-wing position (can’t trust them russkies) and to fight the implied policy decisions to deal with it (build up the military, place bases around the country, keep them out of WHO, etc.) The problem is that the liberal and left-wing ends up excusing or downplaying or ignoring or defending a system that is exactly the opposite of their values.

    Russia has been historically anti-Semitic. It was the country that gave us the phrase “beyond the pale,” meaning the Pale of Settlement where Jews were made to live. It wasn’t, as Mr Averko, insists, a “paper law” that no one paid attention to. Over the centuries, depending on the particular policy of the tsar, Jews had it better or worse, but they were always massively discriminated against — couldn’t live in argicultural areas or the major cities (except for certain “categories”); couldn’t own land; couldn’t get a higher education (except later by quota). They were banished by the thousands from Moscow and St Pete in the late 19th century and killed by the thousands in pogroms. The tsarist police gave the world The Elders of Zion. The church called them Christ killers and insisted that they performed ritual murders of Christian babies. Jews, not surprisingly, supported the revolutions, and indeed, all these discriminary measures only ceased in 1917 — which was much later than similar measures in most of Europe. If the early years of the USSR were good for Jews, they were persecuted again after the war (the execution of Yiddish writers and artists, the Doctor’s Plot, the rewriting or presentation of Nazi atrocities to leave out Jews as victims) and were second class citizens for most of the rest of the Soviet era. There have been surges of anti-Semitism at the end of the 1980s and more recently. This is not to say that the country is 100 percent anti-Semitic. The majority of Russians is not, or at least they not acitvely beating up Jews. But it is historically a problem, and the story that started this thread is yet another example of the problem. And other than a few official statements about it (usually after some outrage), there isn’t any movement here to deal with it — not in society, not in the state media, not in the govt, not in the church.

    Actually, the only “movement” that has made life better for Jews recently is the skinheads’ switching their focus from Jews to people from the Caucasus. A Jewish friend of mine joked darkly that he hasn’t been beat up once in the last few years because the skins have been beating up Chechens instead.

  114. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 6:06 am

    Here we go again with the misguided stereotypes.

    The Pale of Settlement was a paper law as shown by the significant number of Jews living in Russia proper.

    Why isolate the ROC when the Vatican never excommunicated Hitler and gave cover to fleeing Nazis at the end of WW II? How about Martin Luther’s not so Jewish friendly views?

    The Doctor’s Plot involved doctor’s of non-Jewish origin.

    The Imperial Russian government didn’t have a master plan targeting Jews. Some Russian government officials supported it in an unofficial way. During the same period, America faced the same scenario with the massive violence against Blacks. BTW, the Russian government put down pogroms which in some instances were probably started by anti-Russian government forces seeking to destabilize Russia.

    Contemporary Russia has in fact taken a stand against extremism. Awhile back, Putin went on TV to award a non-Jew who came to the aid of a Jew getting attacked.

    It’s so easy to stereotype. Yelena Khanga’s Jewish relatives in American Georgia don’t welcome her presence for reasons having to do with her African background. Over the course of time, how many Jewish families have gone bonkers over inter-marriages with Russians and other non-Jews?

  115. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 6:11 am

    I’d like for mab to address all of these previously raised points:

    - Russia never had anything matching Nazi Germany and the Spanish Inquisition.
    - Jews arrived in Russia after fleeing discrimination in the West.
    - Among Euros, Jews have probably intermarried most with Russians.
    - Whereas the US has never had a president or vice president of known Jewish background in its lengthy enough history, post Soviet Russia has had two prime ministers of known Jewish background during its short existence.
    - It’s my understanding that the Kremlin has a Kosher kitchen unlike the White House.

    Did anyone see the very excellent film “Europa”, which is based on the story of a WW II era Jew? During the film, there’s a scene where upon the implementation of Molotov-Ribbentrop, Jews are fleeing the Nazi occupied area to the Soviet one, with Poles doing the reverse.

    Someone mentioned Prokhonov. Note that he has been employed by “liberal” Ekho Moskvy, which to my knowledge seems to mute non-bigoted and intelligently presented Russocentric views.

    ****

    Never mind her earlier misinformation about how Rusisans don’t correctly intepret what has been going on in former Yugoslavia.

  116. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 6:20 am

    USSR faults notwithstanding, it preserved the Yiddish language better than any other nation during its existence.

    As Begin acknowledged in his memoirs, the USSR saved the Jews.

  117. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 6:32 am

    Regarding Jews during the Stalin period, see post 9 at the below AUR link, which cites Yevgenia Albats’ research:

    http://action-ukraine-report.blogspot.com/search?q=Mike+Averko

  118. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 7:00 am

    “Russia has been historically anti-Semitic. It was the country that gave us the phrase “beyond the pale,” meaning the Pale of Settlement where Jews were made to live. It wasn’t, as Mr Averko, insists, a “paper law” that no one paid attention to. Over the centuries, depending on the particular policy of the tsar, Jews had it better or worse, but they were always massively discriminated against — couldn’t live in argicultural areas or the major cities (except for certain “categories”); couldn’t own land; couldn’t get a higher education (except later by quota). They were banished by the thousands from Moscow and St Pete in the late 19th century and killed by the thousands in pogroms. The tsarist police gave the world The Elders of Zion. The church called them Christ killers and insisted that they performed ritual murders of Christian babies.”

    I don’t disagree with you, but I would like to point out that roughly the same things could be said about most European Christian societies at various previous periods of time. As European societies had been before, 19th-century Russia was a largely medieval peasant society in which most people believed in the literal intervention of the Devil in daily life, the real existence of witches, wonder-working icons, and so forth. A lot like much of contemporary Africa now that I think of it.

    Modern Russian society is a bit different.

  119. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 7:12 am

    “So, I would tell you, pretty bluntly - nobody in the U.S. cares about domestic hate crimes. We turn a blind eye to it and aren’t horrified. There have been a string of 5 murdered blacks from Cape Verde in Boston in the past year, no one talks about it.”

    Yeah. People were getting gay-bashed all the time in my largely gay neighborhood in San Diego circa 15 years ago (he says, dating himself). Nobody cared. It was accepted like the weather.

  120. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 7:33 am

    Periodically, Russia and Russians get bashed for linguistically differentiating between ethnic Russian citizens of Russia and non-ethnic Russian citizens of Russia. Isn’t that a tolerant sign of showing how not everyone in Russia is Russian?

    On the other hand, one can easily portray intolerance with words like “goyim” and “shiksa”. “Schwartze” is no more progressively utilized than the “cherno..” variant.

    As per a recent comment, let’s be careful about damning the rural folks over the city ones. The latter have some very bigoted elements of the worst kind; specifically, the sophisticated over the not so sophisticated.

  121. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 7:39 am

    “They were banished by the thousands from Moscow and St Pete in the late 19th century and killed by the thousands in pogroms.”

    ****

    Citation(s) please.

    Once again, note the Spanish Inquisition and what happened in Germany and Austria a few decades later. Once again, note the Armenian genocide. I’m sorry that some of my Balkan Sephardic brethren tow the official Turkish line on that latter mentioned one. They do so out of a perverse gratitude for being treated well under that entity which brutalized others.

  122. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 8:00 am

    I do not believe that century-old Russian history has any but the flimsiest relevance to the present discussion. However, I would like to point out that the pogroms were not “anti-Jewish.” They were anti-anybody perceived as enemies of Samoderzhavie. That included Jews, “liberals,” university students, seminarians (which were hotbeds of liberal radicalism — Stalin’s closet Marxist seminary was not an exception), intellectuals, and the bourgeoisie. They are popularly thought of as anti-Jewish for reasons I have alluded to before — their image in the West is a product of the experiences of Jews fleeing them.

    They also did not kill thousands (unless one wishes to take several decades of them all collectively, I suppose). I have provided these before — here are casualty statistics for the October 1905 pogrom broken down according to nationality of victim and a partial list according to city, taken from S. Stepanov, Chernaya Sotnya.

    Casualties according to nationality. Number killed/number wounded

    Jews: 711/1207
    Russians, Ukrainians and Belorussians: 428/1246
    Armenians: 47/51
    Georgians: 8/15
    Azerbaijanis: 5/7
    Poles: 4/6
    Latvians: 2/1
    Germans: 1/7
    Greeks: 1/0
    Karaite Jews: 1/0
    Moldovans: 0/7
    Lithuanians: 0/2
    Caucasian peoples: 10/53
    Undetermined nationalities: 404/932

    **

    Partial list of casualties according to city

    Loss of life in all the Russian Empire: 1622

    Cities:
    Kiev 68
    Baku 51
    Chisenau 53
    Vilno 9
    Ekaterinslav 68
    Minsk 52
    Orsh 28
    Saratov 8
    Simferopol 42
    Tomsk 68
    Tiflis 36
    Tula 22
    Odessa 618*

    *figure taken from government report on the Odessa pogrom

  123. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 8:06 am

    What about mab’s quote of thousands of Jews being expelled from Moscow and St. Pete during the late 19th century?

  124. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 8:09 am

    If I recall correctly very many were expelled following Alexander II’s assassination. I do not know how many. Thousands sounds right intuitively, but i don’t really know.

  125. mab on September 12, 2007 8:17 am

    CM: Yes, certainly most European countries had anti-Semitic policies, but most of them began changing them well before Russia did, and post-war official anti-Semitism was heinous. And certainly Russia is not to be blamed for its past sins for ages unto ages. AND what I think of the best of the Russian intelligentsia, both pre-Revolutionary and post-, was and is renowned for its “internationalism.” AND I can add to the list of what horrors Americans have heaped upon their citizens. I don’t disagree with any of that. But none of that changes the fact that anti-Semitism is still a problem in Russia and is not being dealt with rigorously.
    I am particularly interested in how popular culture shapes values, since I have expertise in this area (hence my interest in sitcoms etc.). In the story Sean posted, I was particularly interested in the defense/bewilderment of one of the kid’s mother. My heart goes out to her. I have a close friend here in Moscow who doesn’t have an ounce of anti-Semitism in her, but her kid has gotten seriously involved with a nationalist skinhead group. In this case I think it is adolescent rebellion mixed with brainwashing, but it is exacerbated by the climate of tolerance for anti-Semitism and xenophobia in society.
    That “climate in society” interests me because I tend to believe in the tipping point theory of change. Right now the hard-core nationalists make up about 12-15 percent of the population, which is pretty much average for a country’s lunatic fringe. But surveys are registering a change in attitudes among the other 85 percent, with increased numbers expressing “Russia for Russians” attitudes, approving of using energy to blackmail Europe, citing longer lists of “enemies of Russia,” etc. There is virtually nothing that is countering this in the popular culture, on the political arena, in the church, in the mass media, or in the largely officially discredited NGO community. As long as Russia is rolling in dough, I’m not too worried. But you don’t need a majority to tip a country onto another path, as we know.

  126. mab on September 12, 2007 8:24 am

    CM: I can’t speak about all the pogroms, but certainly the Chisinau one in 1903 was against Jews specifically. A Russian kid had been murdered nearby and newspapers called it killing by Jews (I think it was called a “ritual killing). True, “only” 49 Jews were killed, but about 500 were injured, about a third of Jewish property was destroyed, and the synagogue was desecrated.

  127. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 8:36 am

    mab: Forgive me for digression and partial repetition, but I think it is important to realize that Russia not long ago (just a bit longer than the oldest of living memories) was basically a medieval society for the great bulk of its population. I don’t think the average peasant in Russia or Ukraine in 1880 lived much differently, or had a much different worldview, than his or her English counterpart in the time of Chaucer. It is not surprising that residues of those attitudes persist. It’s only been 3-4 generations!

    (To digress further, OF COURSE lots of people believed in Trotskyist conspiracies in the 1930s. They had believed in grand Jewish plots to rule the world just a few decades before — it’s not really a big leap.)

    Europe west of Poland experienced the Industrial Revolution first, which created among other things urbanization, wider levels of education and cosmopolitanism.

    Given Russia’s extreme multinational character, I think any kind of radical ethnic Russian nationalism seizing control of the state would lead to rapid territorial disintegration of the country. I think the Kremlin is perfectly aware of this.

    As far pop culture, well, Dima Bilan is a Karachai, if that means anything. :)

    Given Russia’s vastness and great regional differences, I think it would be interesting to examine nationalist attitudes according to particular regions, if such data are available. The megalopoloi (Moscow and Piter) are supposed to be more xenophobic than “border” areas, which makes sense as the latter are historically more multiethnic. I am going to Kazan in a couple of weeks and will keep my eyes open!

  128. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 8:39 am

    “CM: I can’t speak about all the pogroms, but certainly the Chisinau one in 1903 was against Jews specifically. A Russian kid had been murdered nearby and newspapers called it killing by Jews (I think it was called a “ritual killing).”

    Could be. My information regards the 1905 pogrom after limitation of the tsar’s powers.

    Speaking of accusations of ritual killings, I wonder what happened to Beilis (the defendant in the 1913 trial). I know he fled the Black Hundreds to Palestine and then New York. I went as far as looking up Beilises in the NYC phone directory to see if maybe he has any descendants there (there are two Beilises listed).

  129. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 8:42 am

    Some citation on the claimed thousands expelled from St. Pete and Moscow during the late 19th century.

    Kishniev (Chisinau) is/was mostly Moldovan.

    ———————————————-

    “Right now the hard-core nationalists make up about 12-15 percent of the population, which is pretty much average for a country’s lunatic fringe. But surveys are registering a change in attitudes among the other 85 percent, with increased numbers expressing ‘Russia for Russians’ attitudes, approving of using energy to blackmail Europe, citing longer lists of ‘enemies of Russia,’ etc”

    ****

    Standard neocon/Soros funded neolib hypocrisy.

    Russia doesn’t have enemies or not so friendly forces confronting it?

    The EU tells Serbia it can’t expect to join that org. until the Kosovo conflict is resolved in the form of Belgrade agreeing to let the disputed province go. The US still has an embargo on Cuba.

  130. mab on September 12, 2007 8:49 am

    “Given Russia’s extreme multinational character, I think any kind of radical ethnic Russian nationalism seizing control of the state would lead to rapid territorial disintegration of the country. I think the Kremlin is perfectly aware of this.”

    Actually, that is one of the possible scenarios… The problem is putting the genie back in the bottle. I think the great power nationalism stuff was/is supported on high (or not stopped) because it was vygodno, but there is that tipping point when it becomes uncontrollable. I hasten to add that I don’t think this will necessarily happen, but rather that it is a danger.

    I have seen some surveys that look at regional differences, but I can’t recall them off the top of my head. Have you ever been to Kazan before? I was there quite a while ago, and remember it for a bizarre chat with some Tatar nationalists who insisted, among other things, that St Basil’s had been a mosque in Kazan that was taken apart and rebuilt in Moscow after Ivan the Terrible conquered the city. They also told me a lot about the pernicious influence of Russians on Tatars, which was a mirror of the Russian nationalists telling me about the pernicious influence of the Tatars on Russians…

    It will be interesting to hear your impressions.

  131. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 8:54 am

    One can find “pernicious” attitudes between various groups in America.

    Marat Safin among many other Tatars hasn’t faced discrimination.

    In terms of autonomy, Tatarstan reflects everything that Chechnya could have peacefully been.

    Like Kalmykia, Tatarstan reveals how greater independence from Moscow doesn’t necessarily mean greater democracy.

  132. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 8:57 am

    I’ve been to Kazan once, but it was only for a day and I was with my then-girlfriend, so I wasn’t really looking around much. I’m quite interested in Tatars, actually.

    I think great power nationalism is a counterweight to ethnic nationalism, or can be. It requires identification with the state rather than with an ethnic group.

  133. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 9:17 am

    From the original article:

    “The group, who is responsible for attacks on religious Jews, immigrants”

    So this is a group of immigrants beating up other immigrants?

  134. Tim Newman on September 12, 2007 9:27 am

    When I was in Kazan’ for a week back in 2005, I didn’t notice it being mucn different from any other Russian city save for the lovely new mosque, some of the people looked a bit different, and the road signs were all in dual-language. Yuzhno-Sakhalins with its huge Korean population seems more abnormal.

    BTW, I regularly walk around Yuzhnii with my Rubin Kazan’ football shirt on. Most Russians have no idea who they are, despite them playing in the top division.

  135. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 9:33 am

    I was in Kazan in 2005 too.

    I saw more people wearing Islamic clothing in half an hour in JFK airport in New York than I saw in an entire day in Muslim Kazan, or in seven years in Russia.

  136. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 9:46 am

    During the NHL strike, AK Bars Kazan had a star studded multi-national roster which would’ve qualified for the NHL playoffs. It got knocked out in the Russian Super League quarterfinals. NY Yankees syndrome of the highest paid roster not winning it all.

    Regarding jerseys, see:

    http;//www.russianjerseys.com

  137. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 9:47 am
  138. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 9:55 am

    This link has 11 photos related to that AK Bars Kazan team:

    http://www.sptimes.com/2005/03/27/hockeygallery/page6.shtml

  139. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 10:06 am
  140. mab on September 12, 2007 12:04 pm

    Well, I was in Kazan in the early 90s during the peak, I think, of Tatar nationalism. I thought the city was quite pretty, though run down as most cities were then. This is probably of no interest, but Tatarstan is quite progressive in health care and particularly reproductive health and HIV-AIDS, and has been funding their own decent work.

    CM, on great power vs ethnic nationalism — agreed. But unfortunately here the two are largely blurred.

  141. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 12:18 pm

    Ah, the early 90s, the heyday of kooky post-Soviet nationalisms…

    Did you know that Ukrainian is the world’s oldest language, and Buddha was a Ukrainian? That the Koran was written by a Chechen, and Noah’s Ark ran aground on a Chechen mountain? That the Bashkir tribes shared a common background with the English? That Jesus was an Ossetian? Really, it’s all true!

  142. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 1:00 pm

    “The church called them Christ killers and insisted that they performed ritual murders of Christian babies”

    This was abolished by Imperial decree in the early 1800s IIRC. The prosecution in the Beilis trial actually could not find an Orthodox priest willing to stand up in court and testify to the existence of Blood Libel — they had to drag in a Catholic teacher of Hebrew from Tashkent to do so.

  143. Buster on September 12, 2007 1:40 pm

    Dear Sean,

    While this thread has improved in quality here a little at the end, it has basic problems that nobody actually listens to each other and half the people (who shall remain nameless) seem nuts.

    Please blog on this: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070912/ap_on_re_eu/russia_government and kill/bury this thread.

    Best,
    Buster

  144. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 1:48 pm

    “While this thread has improved in quality here a little at the end, it has basic problems that nobody actually listens to each other and half the people (who shall remain nameless) seem nuts.”

    You can’t talk about Tim Newman that way!

  145. W. Sparticus on September 12, 2007 2:19 pm

    That doesn’t mean that it’s therefore okay for Russia to ignore or downplay its hate crimes; nor does it mean that no one in the world should comment on them; and certainly it doesn’t mean that the world shouldn’t worry about them.

    Considering we have over 100 posts on this topic on this thread alone, I don’t feel most of us downplay the topic of this problem in Russia.

    However, I can easily demonstrate bias with newspaper articles of similar hateful events, attacks, or murders within the U.S. and Russia. The character of language American or English-language news media uses is completely different depending on where the crime occurs. In fact, I’ve done blog posts on this topic in the past. 5 dead black men in one Boston neighborhood is a statistic or coincidence in the U.S. It gets a small blurb in the Boston Globe, a footnote.

    In Russia, if 5 black students were murdered in St. Petersburg in one year, it would be evidence of a hate crime and sign of rising neo-nazi fascism. It’s like a bad Yakov Smirnoff joke. Why is that? I believe this is because anxiety or angst about problems in Russia plays into Cold-War era fears and sell newspapers - and dealing directly with our own social ills is more difficult.

    I think you’re wrong about the U.S. willingness to deal with our own bigotry, hatred, and social ills. I’ve cited the list of over 600 hate-groups in the US in this forum before. Our murder rate is the highest of any Western or “1st World” nation, placing us squarely in the midst of nations we consider less civilized. It has been this way for a long time in America. If we are dealing with such problems, then we are REALLY bad at it. Certainly our governments own actions these last 6 years reveals America’s most base and dark instincts.

    On the flipside, Russia passes lots of laws regarding extremism and hate crimes, but then simply allows petty-ante judges, mayors, and police forces to use them to restrict the voices of undesirable (generally more liberal) individuals.

    If you think such discussions minimize or downplay problems in Russia, then I’m afraid I can’t help you. I’ll willingly point out that Russia’s murder rate is 4 to 5 times that of the U.S., per capita. 5th highest murder rate in the world. What I won’t do is demonize the facts or discuss Russian problems in a vacuum, as though no other social ills existed in the world (or here at home).

  146. W. Sparticus on September 12, 2007 2:27 pm

    Victor Zubkov, interesting.

    I’ve been saying for a while now that Putin nominating someone off the chart may play into any political strategies for his return in 2012.

  147. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 2:31 pm

    “What I won’t do is demonize the facts or discuss Russian problems in a vacuum, as though no other social ills existed in the world (or here at home).”

    I’d also like to point out that these people are Israelis, not Russian citizens. I am not sure if any of them had ever been to Russia. I think that to explain their behavior one would be better advised to look at the situation in Israel, rather than try to explain it by reference to the Russian media and so forth, which it is unclear they ever actually watched, read or listened to, or to Russian government policies.

  148. W. Sparticus on September 12, 2007 3:01 pm

    Please blog on this: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070912/ap_on_re_eu/russia_government and kill/bury this thread.

    Your wish is my command, oh great one.

    http://accidentalrussophile.blogspot.com/2007/09/putins-hudsucker-proxy-zubkov-nominated.html

    I saw this coming for a while now. I took Putin at his word when he repeatedly hinted that some outside candidate may be his choice (although I was thinking of someone like Valentina Matviyenko).

    Of course, he could throw another curveball and nominate someone else for the presidency. As a political strategy, the more divisions in power he leaves behind, the easier it would be for his return in 2012.

  149. W. Sparticus on September 12, 2007 3:12 pm

    Yes, very good point by Maximus to bring the threads of thought together and return us to Israel.

  150. Buster on September 12, 2007 3:49 pm

    Considering we have over 100 posts on this topic on this thread alone, I don’t feel most of us downplay the topic of this problem in Russia.

    But aren’t like half of them downplaying Russian ethnic violence?

    Regarding the complete RED HERRING of “why don’t you pay attention to racism in America,” please go to my blog and peruse the blogs/sites linked in the right-hand column. I’ll bet that half of them have some criticism of racism in the USA on their front pages.

    This typical dvoinoi standardt line makes me feel the way I feel when I hear a seven-year-old complain “That’s not fair.” Not angry, but certainly not indulgent either.

    Now really, please, thread, die.

  151. Buster on September 12, 2007 4:02 pm

    To be clear, though I quote WS in the above post, I am not referring to him as the one wielding the fish.

  152. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 4:22 pm

    This thread will never die. It will go on and on, until at some point in the far future it will acquire sentience and worship us as its gods.

  153. Lyndon on September 12, 2007 4:25 pm

    Buster, I’ve also responded to your command and blogged about Mr. Zubakov.

    Regarding something you said much earlier:

    The possibility brings up the curious idea of Russia as an exilic haven for fugitive racists, in light of the current Andrei Vusik (tied to the California murder) situation.

    It’s not an entirely new idea, as Russia has been accused of sheltering wanted war criminals from the former Yugoslav conflicts (see, e.g., here and here).

  154. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 5:18 pm

    Lyndon:

    How about the un-indicted Albanian KLA goons that have been repackaged as acceptable political leaders? The NATO kangaroo court at the Hague (let’s call it for what it’s been about) is a mockery of the legal system.

    “Dear Sean,

    While this thread has improved in quality here a little at the end, it has basic problems that nobody actually listens to each other and half the people (who shall remain nameless) seem nuts.”

    ****

    Buster:

    Soviet psychiatry if the above quoted is mis-directed. Some do a much better job than others when it comes to directly addressing what their political opposites say. MAB doesn’t do a comparatively better job.

  155. Lyndon on September 12, 2007 6:03 pm

    Mike, I don’t know much about the KLA and am not sure how it’s relevant to my comment about Russia harboring wanted war criminals, other than to provide a tenuous comparison allowing you to claim “double standards” yet again.

    As for the ICTY, which you call a “kangaroo court,” it has actually meted out justice to people on more than one side of the various conflicts and I think has been generally judged a more or less successful, if somewhat experimental, approach a complex post-conflict situation. Wikipedia has a pretty good article on ICTY, which I think you’ll enjoy, as it outlines many of the criticisms of the tribunal. Incidentally, I thought it was pretty funny that you earlier referred to Wikipedia as “often Russia unfriendly,” as though it has a single editorial policy. That’s sort of impossible, given that it’s written and edited by thousands of people worldwide, including people of every imaginable point of view and many people who try to keep the articles neutral. You might as well say that the whole world, or at least the whole English-speaking world, is “often Russia unfriendly” - and I guess maybe you’d have a point, but I think ascribing some kind of anti-Russian bias to Wikipedia is a bit silly, especially since there are no doubt many English-speaking Russians who contribute to and edit Wikipedia articles. Perhaps there’s a dissertation (or at least a seminar paper) for someone in mining and parsing the differences between articles in the English-language and Russian-language versions of Wikipedia.

    But I have digressed from the main point of my comment, which was in itself a bit of a digression from the topic of the post. In any event, you’re wrong to suggest that the court was established by NATO - as I’m sure you know, the ICTY was established by a UN Security Council resolution, which means that Russia did not oppose its establishment - in addition, all members of the UN acknowledge the authority of the UNSC in such matters (it’s in the UN Charter, though, like so many questions of this nature, subject to debate). So it seems like a pretty legitimate institution to me, and hardly a “kangaroo court” (much less a “NATO kangaroo court,” unless you believe that NATO somehow dominates the UN Security Council), though I don’t doubt there are some Serbian nationalists who take the latter view.

  156. Pajamas Media on September 12, 2007 6:28 pm

    Fall “Cleaning” In Russia…

    Russian President Vladimir Putin - who just dissolved his government - has again confounded the experts by naming unknown Viktor Zubkov, not Sergei Ivanov, his Prime Minister. Sean Guillory of Sean’s Russia Blog analyzes what this might mean as strong…

  157. Buster on September 12, 2007 6:36 pm

    Soviet psychiatry if the above quoted is mis-directed.

    Mr. Averko, It took me five minutes to try to parse this sentence so it would make sense. Finally, I came up with: “If the above-quoted is Soviet psychiatry, it’s misdirected.” But it wasn’t Soviet psychiatry. I’m neither Soviet, nor trained in psychiatry. I was just using the everyday language of “You’re crazy!” or “That’s nuts.” I like everyday language and highly recommend it to others, who shall still remain nameless.

    Re: Wikipedia

    There’s an interesting article on research into who contributes to wikipedia (at least in English–I’d be super-curious to know who contributes to the Russian variant). IP addresses indicate folks at the CIA, Congress, Halliburton, and the New York Times. That said, I imagine a number of those revisions/entries just come from bored workers perusing wikipedia, rather than some nefarious plan. But who’s to say? I’ll leave it to the nuts.

    http://www.sfbg.com/entry.php?entry_id=4327&catid=4&volume_id=254&issue_id=311&volume_num=41&issue_num=47

  158. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 6:41 pm

    Lyndon:

    Some influential forces in the West often accuse the UN of having various bureaucracies favoring unjust foreign interests.

    You show extreme ignorance for believing that the referenced kangaroo court has been objective. In overall terms it clearly hasn’t.

    http://www.swans.com/library/art7/herman01.html

    http://www.antiwar.com/szamuely/sz021301.html

    http://antiwar.com/orig/jatras.php

    Make light of the anti-Russian biases out there. You aren’t alone. Fortunately, there’s growing clout against such deceit.

  159. mab on September 12, 2007 6:54 pm

    Hm. Conflicting instructions. Either kill the thread or reply reasonably to criticism.
    Buster seems really compelling… will only say that if you read what I wrote, you’ll see that I don’t underestimate the problem of racism in the US or elsewhere, though may overestimate efforts to deal with it. I just don’t see what it has to do with rising nationalist etc violence here. To me they are, in the Russian tradition, flies and cutlets. They both exist, and both are real, but you keep them separate.

  160. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 7:02 pm

    Ducking the earlier stated misperceptions (at another SRB thread) like the false belief that Americans are generally better informed than Russains on the wars of the last decade in former Yugoslavia.

    Likewise with the prior stated exaggerations pertaining to intolerance in Russia.

  161. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 7:10 pm

    Pardon misspell.

    Misinterpreting what actually happened or is happening leads to misguided perceptions.

    It’s one thing to have a difference of opinion while getting the facts right. Quite another when a questionable opinion is confused with fact(s).

  162. Lyndon on September 12, 2007 7:14 pm

    Mike, I’ll allow that ICTY has been perceived as meting out victors’ justice, but I don’t entirely agree with that perception, and I don’t think an element of victors’ justice (present also at Nuremberg Trials) necessarily delegitimizes a proceeding.

    Think what you like about these issues, but you’re not doing your side of the argument any favors by swinging your rhetorical cudgel so indiscriminately (e.g., an immediate accusation of “extreme ignorance”).

    Perhaps it is indeed time for this thread to die - especially since we can now head over to the latest post and ask Sean about the details of his arrangement with Paj-Media…

  163. Michael Averko on September 12, 2007 7:22 pm

    Lyndon playing the innocent again, which isn’t the case.

    He allows himself to be sarcastic.

    Lyndon, compare your last two posts. You back track a bit on your initial portrayal of the ICTY.

    As for your reference to Nuremberg, the Serbs didn’t come close to resembling Nazis and their adversaries weren’t comparatively innocent.

  164. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 7:31 pm

    Oh God.

  165. Chrisius Maximus on September 12, 2007 7:59 pm

    Wally: “However, I can easily demonstrate bias with newspaper articles of similar hateful events, attacks, or murders within the U.S. and Russia. The character of language American or English-language news media uses is completely different depending on where the crime occurs. In fact, I’ve done blog posts on this topic in the past. 5 dead black men in one Boston neighborhood is a statistic or coincidence in the U.S. It gets a small blurb in the Boston Globe, a footnote.”

    Yes, let’s see what’s happened in the US in just the last few days. Is America lurching toward fascism?:

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070912/…_4vPsCYUCs0NUE

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/thenation/20…tion/4231753_1

    http://www.wboc.com/Global/story.asp?S=7050328

    http://www.nbc4.com/news/14094778/de…ss=dc&psp=news

    http://www.nbc11.com/news/14086228/d…s=bay&psp=news

    http://www.contracostatimes.com/ci_6846510?source=rss

    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crim…k.html?ref=rss

    http://www.myfoxatlanta.com/myfox/pa…Y&pageId=3.2.1

    http://www.insidebayarea.com/ci_6827275?source=rss

    http://cbs2chicago.com/local/local_story_252165834.html

  166. Tim Newman on September 12, 2007 8:51 pm

    You can’t talk about Tim Newman that way!

    I live on Sakhalin and am married to a Russian. I’m allowed to be nuts. :)

  167. Tim Newman on September 12, 2007 9:03 pm

    I thought the city was quite pretty, though run down as most cities were then.

    Kakan is a lot better now, as it recently had its 1,000th year anniversary, (some 40 years after its 750th anniversary or something!). And as is well known, in Russia every 1,000 years the authorities mend the road and paint the buildings, so it looks really nice now. My advice is go and take another look in 3005.

  168. Tim Newman on September 12, 2007 9:04 pm

    Kakan? Where is this city of strange name? I meant Kazan.

  169. Brandon on September 13, 2007 1:18 pm

    W. Spartacus wrote: “5 dead black men in one Boston neighborhood is a statistic or coincidence in the U.S. It gets a small blurb in the Boston Globe, a footnote.”

    I think that if those 5 black men were murdered by gangs of young skinheads, they would have been more than a simple footnote. I agree it is sad that Americans have become so desensitized to violence in inner city neighborhoods, to the point where we don’t even flinch when we hear about the latest murder on the evening news. I also find it deplorable that the American government has been so ineffective at reducing crime in these neighborhoods. But the idea that “nobody in the US cares about domestic hate crimes,” as W. Shedd suggested, is an exaggeration. Claudius Maximus posted a bunch of links (most of which were invalid) to stories on hate crimes. I admit I hadn’t heard about any of them, but I’m guessing that they were big news in the communities where they happened. Here at Indiana University, we’ve had several acts of vandalism at the local mosque. I’m guessing that folks in New York never heard about them (which some folks here would interpret as proof that Americans don’t care about hate crimes), but they were a pretty big deal here and led to all the usual flowery calls for inter-cultural peace and harmony, outspoken condemnations in the local papers, and even a small protest. And the more egregious instances involving brutal white-on-black murders certainly do garner national attention. I can think of a half-dozen such cases. I do agree with some of the posters here that the extent and significance of racist violence in Russia is exaggerated in the Western press, and I know that there are many Russian journalists, academics and even politicians who are genuinely concerned about the problem. But it is a serious problem, one that should concern Russians and foreign scholars of Russia, keeping in mind that we should not delude ourselves into thinking that we have solved all of these problems in our own countries.

  170. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 1:24 pm

    My name is Chrisius Maximus. Claudius is my older, better-known brother, with whom I am often confused. Will I never step out from under his shadow?

    I hate to sound like a broken record, but I think what is really of interest in this story is what it may say about conditions in Israel, not Russia.

  171. Sean on September 13, 2007 2:05 pm

    I hate to sound like a broken record, but I think what is really of interest in this story is what it may say about conditions in Israel, not Russia.

    This is my view too. I don’t know how Russia, let alone, the US, got into all of this. My original intention in the post was about Israel, and more specifically about some of the problems the Russian immigrant community faces there. I don’t know why the racism displayed by Israeli youths has anything to do with Russia. It’s not like any of them came to Israeli yesterday. The main figure, Buanitov, has been living in Israel for over 8 years. He’s 19 years old, making his conscious political life reared in Israel, not Russia.

    What I found interesting about the neo-nazism in Israel is not so much the racism and violence, but the fact that its existence opened up the question as to whether some Russians who came to Israel on the Law of Return and were given Israeli citizenship because they are categorized by Israeli law as Jews are now having their Jewishness questioned. Not only does this reveal how one’s ethnicity/race/nationality has no natural essence and is constituted by law and politics, but also, ironically in my view, the blood splinting that has occurred in trying to determine whether such and such Russian is or isn’t a Jew shares the very ideological foundation of Antisemitism. That is, biological concepts and arguments about who is and who isn’t a Jew. But it’s even more than that. Those biological arguments (whether such and such Russian really has such and such Jewish family member) have slipped into the realm of political ideology in that a person who is a “Jewish Nazi” somehow undermines the very essence of his own “Jewishness” and therefore can’t be a “Jew.”

    It also reveals something else about Israeli society that many, and not just antisemites, often forget: that Israel is very complex with internal divisions and hierarchies, and even racism within Jewry itself. A complexity that not only undermines the assumptions behind antisemitism, but also the one behind Zionism (and hence my comment in the post that the existence of neo-nazism calls the Israeli own stated right to existence into question): that all Jews are the same and share a bond of blood and community.

  172. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 2:15 pm

    I don’t think this is all that surprising. You have people growing up who don’t identify as Jews in a society that is obsessed with Jewishness. These people are economically second-class and discriminated against. They feel like outsiders. It would be surprising if things like this DIDN’T happen.

  173. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 2:17 pm

    “That is, biological concepts and arguments about who is and who isn’t a Jew. But it’s even more than that. Those biological arguments (whether such and such Russian really has such and such Jewish family member) have slipped into the realm of political ideology in that a person who is a “Jewish Nazi” somehow undermines the very essence of his own “Jewishness” and therefore can’t be a “Jew.””

    I think it might be worthwhile to go and read Vladimir Jabotinsky (or “Vladimir Hitler,” as Ben Gurion called him) in this context.

  174. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 2:54 pm

    The blue shirts as opposed to the black shirts and brown shirts.

    Sean, check this last paragraph:

    “But these questions are likely to be ignored. If reader responses are any indication, targeting Israel’s Russian immigrant population as the breeding ground for wayward youth seems to be the comfortable route. Somehow, however, I doubt explaining racism with racism will do much to alleviate the problem. It will only shroud it further with nationalist fetishisms that will only inflame calls to exact the Russian cancer from Israeli’s otherwise healthy body politic.”

    ****

    That last sentence is open to question.

    At this thread, there was a misguided view that Russians are inherently anti-Jewish/bigoted in a way not found in many other quarters. When challenged, there was a bit of intellectual gymnastics displayed. The at one time they were mode is relative, given what existed at one time in other parts of Europe.

    I come from a multi-ethno-religious family which includes many experiences over the course of time. I get offended when Russians are caricatured (as is often the case among some establishment types), while knowing what exists among other groups. One time, in reply to a bigoted Jew, I coined the term Kosher Nazi to underscore my disgust with the kind of mass media, academic and body politic hypocrisy that nurtures such sentiment.

    An example of different standards: the not so Russia friendly novelist John le Carre referred to the Ossetians as mischievous interlopers into other people’s land. When he stated this in a NYT op-ed some years back (shortly after the USSR collapsed), there was no outrage. Were that said about some others, there would be a good degree of protests against such a characterization.

  175. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 3:20 pm

    Ths relates to a certain DC based attorney, who erroneously put the anti-Semitic tag on someone as said attorney willingly appears on LR. Like others, he doesn’t speak out against official acts of Russia hating bigotry like the Captive Nations Committee/Captive Nations Week. The elitny take good care of him.

    That many are unaware of the CNC/CNW further underscores the ignorance and hypocrisy out there.

  176. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 3:48 pm

    As Leon Hadar’s commentary suggests, it’s not out of the ordinary for Israel to have positive and negative traits associated with Europe:

    http://globalparadigms.blogspot.com/2007/09/israel-and-eu.html

    Then again, just how European are those traits? Is it more a matter of some being overly Euro focused in a way which often overlooks what’s going on elsewhere?

  177. Sean on September 13, 2007 4:09 pm

    That last sentence is open to question.

    And that question is? I can’t seem to find one in your comment.

    At this thread, there was a misguided view that Russians are inherently anti-Jewish/bigoted in a way not found in many other quarters. When challenged, there was a bit of intellectual gymnastics displayed. The at one time they were mode is relative, given what existed at one time in other parts of Europe.

    Actually, Mike, after scanning to through the initial comments, it was you who attacked this misguided view though no one expressed it. For some reason you conflate mention of the very real problem of racism in Russia with assumptions that Russians are inherently racist. To my knowledge no one who participates in this forum seriously holds this view. I think everyone here would agree that Russians are no more racist than anyone else. (In fact in my view, most people are racists simply by the very fact that they believe “race” determines some kind of essential characteristic about an individual. But that is another discussion.) Yet you use a view that no one holds as a red herring to divert the discussion. Thus the discussion becomes not about racism, extremism, Israel, Russian Jews, or even the Russians you proclaim to defend. It becomes about Mike Averko.

  178. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 4:35 pm

    Here you go Sean:

    “It will only shroud it further with nationalist fetishisms that will only inflame calls to exact the Russian cancer from Israeli’s otherwise healthy body politic.”

    ***

    Just how “healthy” is Israel’s body politic? The quoted passage seems to suggest a Russian corupting of something already having existing faults. Like the threatened prosecution of Israeli Druze who recently visited Syria.

    More than one person harped on the historically anti-Semitic/bigoted Russian theme.

    I can’t control how people choose to reply to what I say and I do find it somewhat disingenuous how anti-Russian prejudices aren’t studied in as great a detail. The latter is arguably more dangerous in the sense that it’s more intelligently presented and done so at some relatively high profile venues.

  179. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:02 pm

    I don’t think I have ever met a Russian that would deny that Russia has historically been anti-Semitic. That would be like an American denying that the US has historically been racist. It’s just a fact that not even Solzhenitsyn denies. In fact there is much discussion of this in the Russian press and many books are written on it. Just look at the long series Vlast has been doing reprinting articles from the newspapers at the time of the Revolution addressing this very subject.

  180. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 5:11 pm

    Never having ANYTHING matching Nazi Germany or the Spanish Inquisition. Not as bad as how Blacks and Indians have been treated in the US. Ditto the Turkish genocide of Armenians. Russians are being tagged as racists in a way not seen of Americans, Turks and some others.

    Someone at this thread said that thousands of Jews were expelled in the late 19th century from St. Pete and Moscow in the late 19th century. I once again request citations(s) on that claim.

    Why not the emphasis on other points like the number of intermarriages between Jews and Russians, two post-Soviet prime ministers of known Jewish origin (to no American vice presidents or presidents of known Jewish background), or how other Euros have been arguably more anti-Jewish?

  181. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:13 pm

    “Someone at this thread said that thousands of Jews were expelled in the late 19th century from St. Pete and Moscow in the late 19th century.”

    Use google.

    Are you calling Solzhenitysn a liar? :)

  182. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 5:14 pm

    I sense that most Russians would share my sentiment.

    They’re not to be confused with the Russians more preferred by many Eng. lang. mass media outlets.

  183. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:16 pm

    No, they wouldn’t.

  184. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 5:17 pm

    “Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:13 pm ‘Someone at this thread said that thousands of Jews were expelled in the late 19th century from St. Pete and Moscow in the late 19th century.’

    Use google.

    Are you calling Solzhenitysn a liar?”

    ****

    Show me where he (or anyone else) substantiates that point.

    Meantime, the above quoted had earlier showed pogrom figures lower than what has been citede elsewhere.

  185. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 5:19 pm

    “Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:16 pm No, they wouldn’t.”

    ***

    Bullshit. You don’t speak for them. I’ve spoken to my share.

    You, who stereotype the White Russian community.

  186. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:31 pm

    “Show me where he (or anyone else) substantiates that point.”

    Read his book. It’s heavy on the footnotes.

    “You don’t speak for them.”

    You don’t either.

  187. Sean on September 13, 2007 5:32 pm

    Just how “healthy” is Israel’s body politic?

    It’s not. Do you think that I’m claiming it is? Because if so then you need to learn how to recognize sarcasm or at least read with a little more nuance in mind. To break it down for you just in case you didn’t understand, it’s the idiot Zionists who think that the great purity of their society would be realized if only they carved out the Russian cancer that corrupts it. It is this belief in purity, which doubles back as racism against Russians, that I refer to as the “nationalist fetishism.”

  188. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 5:34 pm

    I speak for them better than yourself.

    You’re punking out on the first point. Heavy on footnotes doesn’t give credence to the claim being questioned.

  189. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 5:34 pm

    Prior post of mine meant to go before Sean’s.

  190. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:37 pm

    “Punk out”?

    Read the book.

  191. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 5:39 pm

    Sean:

    Thanks for the clarification.

    It’s easy to misintepret. On that point: you might recall how you reposted a comment of mine which addressed observations made by Maya about Ivanov and yours truly.

    I think it’s fair to say that part of the disconnect relates to the differences in sympathy some have on the matter of national identity.

  192. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 5:41 pm

    CD:

    Once again, does Solzhenitsyn or anyone else substantiate the stated claim at this thread of thousands of Jews being expelled from Moscow and St. Pete during the late 19th century?

  193. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:42 pm

    Come to think of it, I did translate for the benefit of friends a few pages of Solzhenitsyn’s two-tome monolith on Russo-Jewish history a couple of years ago. If anybody’s interested in them I can send them to you.

  194. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:49 pm

    Let’s see. I go through the hard, back-breaking labor of googling ‘Alexander Assassination Moscow “expulsions of Jews”‘, and in 30 seconds I get this: http://www.angelfire.com/ms2/belaroots/wolf.htm

  195. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 5:51 pm

    Let’s see. After going going through the 30 seconds of back-breaking labor it takes to google ‘Alexander Assassination Moscow “expulsions of Jews”‘, I get this: http://www.angelfire.com/ms2/belaroots/wolf.htm

  196. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 5:59 pm

    And where’s the confirmation/substantiation of thousands of Jews being expelled from St. Pete and Moscow during the late 19th century?

    That was the specific inquiry.

  197. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 6:02 pm

    It’s in the document.

  198. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 6:16 pm

    Where?

  199. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 6:24 pm

    1891.
    This year was a year of lamentation and panic, the fears aroused by the wholesale expulsions from Moscow causing no fewer than 76,000 persons to seek refuge in the United States.

    1893.
    This year the right of residence again suffered further curtailments, but, as will be seen, there were limitations in other directions as well:-

    January 14th. - A circular of the Minister of the Interior cancels the orders of the former Ministers Makoff and Tolstoi (April 3rd, 1880 and June 21st, 1882) establishing the principle that all Jews who had settled outside the Pale prior to April 3rd 1880, should be left undisturbed.
    This circular was the cause of _many thousand expulsions_ from places where the authorities had followed the former regulations. It is true that the Jews were usually given a respite until June 1st, 1894, and in extreme cases to June 1st, 1895, but the measure none the less meant utter ruin for most of them.

    1897.

    November 13th. - An Imperial order depriving Jews and Jewesses studying pharmacy, or attending schools of surgery and midwifery respectively of the right to reside in the town or government of Moscow for this purpose.
    This year, as is fully related elsewhere, they went so far as to expel from Moscow merchants of the first Guild, and to arrest persons “of Semitic physiognomy” in the streets in broad daylight, handing them over subsequently to the police to be deported. Some conception of the devastation wrought among the Jewish community of Moscow may be formed from the fact that of five synagogues only one remained, and that the Jewish school, or “Talmud Tora” had been compelled to close its doors. In Siberia, too. where the domiciliary right of the privileged Jews had been questioned or curtailed, the bureaucracy fumed and fretted, and wholesale expulsions were the rule. In Tomsk alone some 800 Jewish families who possessed real estate were on this account victimised and driven out.

  200. Lyndon on September 13, 2007 6:29 pm

    Don’t forget this detail:

    1891 - March 28th. - An order depriving the privileged category of artisans, mechanics, etc., of the right of residence in the government of Moscow (including the town of Moscow as well). The Jews of this category settled there, numbering with their families ten thousand souls, are expelled without delay.

  201. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 6:40 pm

    Ah, I missed that one. Thanks Lyndon.

  202. mab on September 13, 2007 6:41 pm

    Well, Buster, I’m sorry. I tried, I really did, but the thread that will never die lives on.

    I seem to be the poster who has drawn Mr Averko’s ire. But as Sean pointed out, his portrayal of my point of view has been turned into a straw man. As others like Brandon and Claudius — um, er — no, I mean the younger, more handsome and talented brother — Chrisius Maximus have stated more eloquently than me, when there is a historical trend of anti-Semitism and racism in a country, be it the US or Russia, it doesn’t mean that everyone is anti-Semitic or racist, or that they are more anti-Semitic or racist than anyone in the world, or that the country will remain that way until the end of time. (Boy do I sound like a fourth-grader or what?) But I believe that a country has to put efforts into overcoming it. Or else it pops up, usually in times of economic or social upheavals. And it might — might, I said — mutate into something truly nasty.

    I have refrained from replying to the many other attacks on me by Mr Averko because, well, sorry to be blunt, but it’s like the joke about the old conductor’s advice to the new conductor about the trombones: Don’t even look at them — it only encourages them. It seems that you want to do your haigiography of Russia, facts be damned. And anyone who questions the sainthood gets labeled as stupid, biased, right-wing, hypocritical, anti-Russian and generally all around nasty.

    Calling me biased against Russians is pretty wild, unless you think I’m a masochist, since I’ve been living in Russia longer than some of you have probably been alive, and I’m about as integrated into Russian society as anyone with a different colored passport can be. For all I know I may the longest American resident of Moscow. I started reading this blog because I realized that I didn’t know what the vast West was writing about Russia. I don’t have cable TV, and the magazines I get keep me up to date (sort of) on the US, but not much on what’s being written about Russia. Oh — there’s JRL, but that’s David’s quirky selection of articles, so it doesn’t show what someone in, say Peoria, is reading every day.

    In any case, I’m not part of whatever great debate is going on in the US about Russia and I’m not in the whole Kremlin-watching, poly sci crowd. I’m writing about what I know here, personally, from friends, from my work, and from a wide variety of Russian news and other sources. Nationalism, anti-Semitism, racism (a new problem), and xenophobia concern me because I can personally feel a difference, and when the time frame of experience is nearly 30 years (yes, I’m an old broad — but young at heart, honestly), I trust my senses. To repeat myself (because no one is going to dig through this pile of posts), so far the worst of it is marginal and it may never grow beyond that. But it makes me nervous that there isn’t any kind of concerted, all-around effort to stop it.

    And it makes me personally nervous when teens gather in my courtyard to drink after a football game and the ladies in the local store tell me to rush home “just in case.” The poster who calls himself Irishman wrote about something like happening to him once. It’s really something. It makes you sit up and take notice. I had interviewed African students before, and that made me sit up and take notice, too, since the orientation they give the new students when they arrive is to tell them to basically stay off the streets after 5 pm. I’ve also translated for Jewish organizations, and when there are armed guards with you “just in case,” you begin to see a bad trend.

    Disclaimer: Nothing in this message should be taken as implied comparison with other countries, exisitng now or in the past; be perceived as a blanket condemnation of any nation, ethnic group, religion, community or group of individuals; nor be understood as a defense or praise of any other nation, ethnic group, religion, community, or group of individuals.

  203. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 6:46 pm

    “As others like Brandon and Claudius — um, er — no, I mean the younger, more handsome and talented brother — Chrisius Maximus ”

    Recognition at last! Sweet! Take that, Claudius!

  204. mab on September 13, 2007 6:49 pm

    I keep thinking the “thousands expelled” query is a trick question that I will be sorry to answer, but the figures the Jewish community use are 2000 from St Pete and 20,000 from Moscow. That’s all over the internet. I’d give a citation for a source in Russian, but I gather Mr Averko doesn’t read Russian; it describes the life of the artist of Isaac Levitan, and how many times he got kicked out of Moscow in various campaigns.

  205. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 6:50 pm

    You’ve been here 30 years? You never knew the Lockshins, did you? I used to work with the son.

  206. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 6:51 pm

    Thanks.

    The above quoted confirms that many Jews lived in Russia proper despite the Pale of Settlement.

    That era in Russia had many educated Jews who became educated in that country in a collective way that American Blacks and Indians weren’t during the same period.

    The Antonsecu era and what’s evident in present day Romania and Moldova isn’t so enlighhtening.

    Here’s a seemingly politicized report:

    http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/40258.htm

    Note how Russia and Belarus are singled out. Are those two really more anti-Jewish than others like say Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Hungary, Latvia and Lithuania?

    On matters of bigotry, the State Dept. says nothing about the bigoted anti-Russian Captive Nations Committee/Captive Nations Week Resolution which is still official.

  207. mab on September 13, 2007 6:55 pm

    See, I told you it was a trick question.
    Nope, didn’t know the Lokshins.

  208. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 6:56 pm

    MAB: keep dreaming all you want. Some of what you’ve said here about Russia and Serbia is in fact biased.

    Like your know it all attitude about Srebrenica and the makeup of the NATO bombing campaign.

    You clearly have some very Eng. lang. mass media like biases.

  209. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 7:03 pm

    So, by this logic, when Blacks are lynched in Mississippi, that means that Blacks were already alive in the area to lynch, and so Mississippi doesn’t have a history of racism. If they were really racist, they would have lynched them earlier!

  210. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 7:06 pm

    “Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 7:03 pm So, by this logic, when Blacks are lynched in Mississippi, that means that Blacks were already alive in the area to lynch, and so Mississippi doesn’t have a history of racism. If they were really racist, they would have lynched them earlier!”

    ****

    Wrong!

    It was previously suggested that Russia proper didn’t have a signicantly sized Jewish population because of the Pale.

    As for old Miss., do you think the Blacks there have had it comparatively better?

  211. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 7:21 pm

    Population in Pale: 5 million
    Population outside Pale: 200,000

    1897 census

    Now that that’s cleared up, anybody have any thoughts about Israeli society and all that?

  212. Michael Averko on September 13, 2007 7:37 pm

    Check these comments about Russian Israelis from an Arab:

    http://www.dutchpal.com/kawther/K20040808A.html

    As an undergrad studying international affairs, I’d read the UN Monthly Chronicle which has some rather absurd Cold War era exchanges. Like the Saudi delegate accusing the Soviets of supporting Israel with his stated evidence being the influx of Soviet citizens into the Jewish state.

    On how a topic is covered, during the 1973 war, the Israelis frequently quoted Sadat’s admiration for Nazi Germany. That point was deflated after Camp David.

  213. mab on September 13, 2007 8:07 pm

    Oh sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will never harm me…
    Gosh, this is bringing out the worst of me.

    I think, Mr Averko, you ought to look up the word “bias” in a dictionary and use it more advisedly.
    It would also be good if you’d actually read what people write and comment on their actual postings instead of what you imagine them to have written.

  214. Buster on September 13, 2007 9:44 pm

    Mab, Please get ready for a response that makes no sense. There’s no use bothering, really. I spent all daying praying I would come home to the comment count remaining unchanged. Such are the useless dreams of a man walking in Moscow. (Still praying.)

  215. W. Shedd on September 13, 2007 10:30 pm

    So, by this logic, when Blacks are lynched in Mississippi, that means that Blacks were already alive in the area to lynch, and so Mississippi doesn’t have a history of racism. If they were really racist, they would have lynched them earlier!

    They were racist in Mississippi.

    They just weren’t efficient racists.

  216. Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 11:24 pm

    Hey, you changed your name back to Shedd. Are you ashamed of your Roman heritage? Are you some kind of court appointed not so Roman Empire friendly?

    The worst Roman is a self-hating Roman.

    Speaking of which, the Romans never killed all the Christians. They just crucified notable ones. That means the pre-Constantine Romans had a liberal attitude toward Christianity. If you say otherwise, that’s because you hate Italians, you racist bastard.

  217. nabovka on September 14, 2007 12:26 am

    I think everyone is overlooking the most important question of all: the lack of a kosher kitchen in the White House!

    Just joking. Couldn’t resist. I can’t even read most of the comments here anymore, despite the fact that I know some of you are making valiant efforts. Too bad they are all in vain.

    CM: You win a nabovka gold star for your fine use of census statistics! Bravo! And thanks. The sick and ridiculous claim that the Pale of the Settlement was a quote “paper law” made me want to vomit.

    That’s all. Please pardon my interruption.

  218. Lyndon on September 14, 2007 12:48 am

    mab, take heart - as you may have seen, Mr. Averko has at one time or another brought out the worst in just about everyone who frequents the SRB comments section. On the bright side, I think this post might have what it takes to break the all-time SRB comments record of 413.

    nabovka - that’s also been my favorite “argument” from this thread. I’ve taken to thinking of it as the KKK argument (Kremlin Kosher Kitchen), and it sure is konvincing - especially after being repeated a few times!

  219. W. Shedd errr... Spartacus on September 14, 2007 1:37 am

    Ooops … by not using my ancient Roman name, I have revealed that my comment was made from my laptop at home - as opposed to my laptop at work.

    Here a laptop, there a laptop, everywhere a laptop laptop.

    Christ, mab 30 years in Moscow - that means you were there in 1977. Willingly. I’m afraid my in-laws wouldn’t believe it if I told them. I’ll have to tell them in the morning.

    I wonder what would happen if we decided to switch all commentary to Russian.

  220. Tim Newman on September 14, 2007 3:07 am

    I wonder what would happen if we decided to switch all commentary to Russian.

    Я бы делал много ошибки.

  221. Michael Averko on September 14, 2007 3:43 am

    Some people’s Russian would improve.

    The asshole factor strikes again in the form of Nabovka misrepresenting what was said about the Pale and selectively jibing at the Kosher kitchen point, while ignoring the others made in that particular sequence.

    Her selective cheerleading reamins most unimpressive.

    Lyndon Allin is being an out and out demagogue, as per his own sordid track record of dubious impressions. Like the one he recently made about Russia and indicted Serb leaders relative to the involved abomination of a legal system.

    Just setting the record straight.

  222. Michael Averko on September 14, 2007 3:54 am

    “mab on September 13, 2007 8:07 pm Oh sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will never harm me…
    Gosh, this is bringing out the worst of me.

    I think, Mr Averko, you ought to look up the word ‘bias’ in a dictionary and use it more advisedly. It would also be good if you’d actually read what people write and comment on their actual postings instead of what you imagine them to have written.”

    ****

    I do a much better job than yourelf mab and you’re very biased in an Eng. lang. mass media kind of a way. Reference your claims about Srebrenica and the 1999 NATO bombing campaign.

    BTW, in its hey day (pre-Soviet breakup) Novoye Russkoye Slovo was the leading Russian language news publication in the US. It had a White Russian slant and was largely staffed by Jews.

  223. Lyndon on September 14, 2007 3:56 am

    *yawn*

    Mike, if you want to “set the record straight,” you might try writing something that makes at least a little bit of sense. Not sure we’ll get to even 300 comments at this rate. Bring back the Irishman!

  224. Michael Averko on September 14, 2007 4:04 am

    Lyndon

    That last post of yours further confirms my comments about you. You’re the one carrying on with nonsense.

    Sean & Co.

    At an earlier thread, Nabovka acknowledged an asshole side to her manner.

    I was actually hoping to stay on a civil tone. Note how someone recently wanted to discuss the Israeli situation. I proceeded to post a link related to that subject. Regretfully, a troll patrol barrage followed.

    Among others, Sean recently commended me on my BBC panel performance.

    I know how to behave thank you. Post insults and expect a return volley. That’s more than fair.

  225. Lyndon on September 14, 2007 4:17 am

    Wally, по-моему некоторые из нас здесь уже пробовали переходить на русский - насколько я помню это привело к тому, что Г-н А. начал злиться и перечислять типа видные Russia analysts которые не владеют русским, дабы оправдать его собственное невладение этим языком. Хотя мне кажется что под конец он узнал об интернет-переводчиках и начал что-то соображать - наверно лучше всего было бы разговаривать на транслите. Ne dumaiu, chto est’ internet-perevodchik, kotoryi by pereviol translit neposredstvenno na angliiskii, khotia kto znaet, internet bol’shoi, ves’ ne obishchesh…

    В любом случае, наши прежние попытки обсуждать дела на русском были, мне кажется, достаточно забавные для остальных участников разговора. Однако в архивах всё это дело окутано тайной, так как переход на Wordpress оставил лишь вопросительные знаки. Может пора нам снова заговорить на (великом могучем) русском?

  226. Michael Averko on September 14, 2007 4:37 am

    “Chrisius Maximus on September 13, 2007 11:24 pm Hey, you changed your name back to Shedd. Are you ashamed of your Roman heritage? Are you some kind of court appointed not so Roman Empire friendly?

    The worst Roman is a self-hating Roman.

    Speaking of which, the Romans never killed all the Christians. They just crucified notable ones. That means the pre-Constantine Romans had a liberal attitude toward Christianity. If you say otherwise, that’s because you hate Italians, you racist bastard.”

    ****

    Some more distorting sarcasm done with a Machialavellian intent.

  227. nabovka on September 14, 2007 6:51 am

    At an earlier thread, Nabovka acknowledged an asshole side to her manner.

    At least someone around here recognizes his/her “asshole side.” I think the particular side that I referenced in the past was my snarky one. Мне не стыдно.

    How very “Machialavellian” of me.

    Seriously, MA, my joke about the kosher kitchen wasn’t even meant malevolently. My criticism of your claim that the Pale of the Settlement was a “paper law” was, however, most earnest. Just because I disagree with you does not mean that I have distorted what you said (i.e., that the Pale was a “paper law”).

    And, MA, I honestly believe that people around here would gladly cheerlead you if you weren’t an “Eng. lang. mass media” (in the sense that you seem to mean it) unto yourself.

    I can’t speak for anyone else here, but I would be most glad to encounter an MA who brings an open mind to SRB and who doesn’t regularly trade in on-or-off-topic hyperbole. I do appreciate your enthusiasm, if not always your methods or conclusions. In fact, I give your enthusiasm a “nabovka gold star.” Enjoy it.

    К стати, я бы тоже делала много ошибок.

  228. Michael Averko on September 14, 2007 7:17 am

    Nabovka

    I acknowledge what a censoring editor called my attitude of an “all is fair in war” attitude in the form of an eye for an eye.

    My point about the Pale was that despite its existence, it didn’t prevent Russia proper from having a noticeably sized Jewish population. I understand it to haven’t always been enforced. On a related note, I’m on the verge of possibly discovering something that’s otherwise considered rather unique regarding Russian-Jewish history. Anr aspect of “my media” (if you may), is the and coverage of areas not so well known by many of the top talking head scholars on Russia. Topics like Vlasov, Suvorov, and the Captive Nations Committee. Not to be overlooked is the covering the coverage mode which critically reviews how a number of topics are covered. That last aspect annoys some elitny, whose wallet connections become highlighted.

    With Aleks and Wally chiming in, the record shows that I provided considerable detail debunking the myth that Russians don’t have a good idea of what happened in former Yugoslavia. I also provided enough substantive backup in support of the view that the ICTY is essentially a NATO kangaroo court and that it’s hypocritically wrong to lambaste Russia for having supposedly hosted indicted Serb “war criminals” (which to me is an often very relative term), given the un-indicted/repackaged KLA goons roaming wild in Kosovo.

    I’ll take the star as a compliment

  229. Chrisius Maximus on September 14, 2007 8:03 am

    “Хотя мне кажется что под конец он узнал об интернет-переводчиках и начал что-то соображать”

    Hey, that makes sense. That’s why the Власов был зоофил was never addressed issue, since зоофил is not a word likely to be in Internet dictionaries.

  230. mab on September 14, 2007 8:05 am

    Well, Mr Averko has declared victory, so maybe we can all go home.

    On my srok in Russia — it’s been nearly 30 years, since 1978, with one period of a couple of years mostly away. I sat down one day and figured out that I’ve spent about 25 of the last 29 years here. I’m very glad for the Soviet years, since it gives some perspective on what’s happening now. Although at the time it was sometimes quite rough. Well, as Russians say, what does not kill us makes us strong…

  231. Chrisius Maximus on September 14, 2007 8:15 am

    I’m quite envious mab. I would love to have been able to see the Brezhnev years (given that I was 13 when he did, that would have been unlikely). I would love to hear what you have to say about racism in that era, or lack thereof.

  232. Chrisius Maximus on September 14, 2007 8:33 am

    Wally, I can’t tell you how much it saddens my proud Roman heart to hear that you had to exchange the fine, viril name of Sparticus for the more American-sounding Shedd in order to get a job as a Roman immigrant in the United States. My heart goes out to you and your family. I blame the negative image of Romans in the Eng. lang. mas media and the mchinations of the wealthy financier from Gaul, Georgo Sorosititintix. Many Gauls have anti-Roman biases.

  233. Aleks on September 14, 2007 9:55 am

    On the Israeli thing, it should be noted that sephardic jews, many of which were airlifted out of Ethiopia, Yemen and the like by the israeli airforce at various times (http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,962706,00.html° have also complained about racism against them. They certainly did receive some shabby treatment (http://www.newstatesman.com/200511210027), though how relative this is to the new wave immigrants into Israel during the 1990s who also complained of being on the bottom of the scale, I can’t say.

    A second point I’d like to make is about the change in jewish ‘identity’ pre- and post creation of Israel. Previously, strict identity laws (to be considered jewish, only your mum needs be fully kosher) helped to keep identity in a world where the jews were never really settled (i.e. subject to discrimination, not allowed to own land and packed off elsewhere).

    Now that Israel exists, there is the whole israeli/jew issue. As a state, and the protections it affords, the strictness of previous laws and traditions to protect identity has significantly(?) weakened, hence the increasing divide between the orthadox/ultra-orthadox (is there really a quantifiable difference) and the regulars. The irony here is that the orthadox/ultra-orthadox used ex-soviet ‘jews’ to bolster their hand (1990s immigration), despite the relative lack of jewish identity. The sov-jews haven’t experienced 5 wars and brought the soviet ‘nyet’ mentality to Israel, hence skewing the political landscape. I suppose the easiest way to describe it is their ‘other’ jewish history.

    It would be interesting to compare the ex-sov jews to the ex-sov germans who have moved to germany (if they could prove blood-linkage (if I recall correctly). I have a feeling that similar themes would arise.

    So, after my very long winded though above, I really don’t see it at all bizarre or contradictory that there is ‘jew on jew anti-semitism’. As for the Israeli press, they are certainly shocked, but there have long been stories and reports about the problems of integrating the ex-sov jew, not to mention the sephardis…

    One a small side note, The jewish autonomous region out east was set up in the late 1920s (http://www.eao.ru/eng/?p=361), which still exists. Then again,I only found out about it when MosNews reported that a man in Birofeld blew himself up after trying to recover scrap material from a live anti-aircraft missile…

    How I miss MosNews.

  234. Chrisius Maximus on September 14, 2007 10:30 am

    I’ve never been able to quite figure out what this “Soviet mentality” people talk about is supposed to be.

  235. Buster on September 14, 2007 10:46 am

    On the “Soviet mentality” question — I don’t really believe in it, but I can give you a clear example of the last time I heard it used in front of me — one week ago. I was coming home and stopped by the pirozhki window to grab a samsa s myasom, as I am want to do when I don’t walk home past the chebureki stand. There were about five people queued up in front of me and after about a minute, I noticed that we weren’t moving. I asked the woman in line ahead of me if there was anyone in the kiosk. Nope.

    My American friend immediately ejaculated, “Totally fucking Soviet.” I took this to refer to the penchant for lining up for what may never come. Especially when there’s another place to buy pretty much all the same things about 100 meters away.

    Like I said, I don’t really buy the idea, but since I have no embraced this thread, and no longer believe in God, I’ve decided to contribute to its growth, as I’m sure MA will object to my English language mASS media presentation of the line outside the kiosk and attack me for not noticing that Americans line up to vote every four years in elections that don’t matter. Or something like that.

    I actually have more faith in you that that, MA. Show me some even better comparison. I know you’ve got it in you. I even handed you the useful verb “ejaculate” above, and I’m sure you know what to do with it.

  236. Chrisius Maximus on September 14, 2007 10:57 am

    “I even handed you the useful verb “ejaculate” above, and I’m sure you know what to do with it.”

    Not according to his ex-wife. Hyuck, hyuck.

    It would be interesting to see what an israeli has to say about this. I’m going to write a guy I know in Tel Aviv and ask.

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