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Philo-Semitism

Philo-Semitism (sometimes Semitism) is an interest in or respect for the Jewish people, and the historical significance of Jewish culture. It is an important phenomenon in the modern world, represented among other things in an unparalleled interest in Jewish culture and history as well as increasing university enrolment by non-Jews in courses relating to Judaism (including Judaism, Hebrew and Yiddish). While earlier some felt compelled to hide their Jewish ancestry for fear of discrimination, today many emphasize even distant Jewish heritage with pride.

Philo-Semitism has been the subject of a series of high profile books and journal articles (see partial listing below). The rise of philo-Semitism has been met by a mixed response among world Jewry. Some warmly welcome it and argue that it must lead Jews to reconsider their identity. This viewpoint has been expressed by the leading liberal Jewish publication The Forward (Editorial, 11/10/00):

There are still anti-Semites in the world. It appears, however, that those who admire Jews outnumber them. [...] This is something new. Our world has changed. And this change carries both a blessing and a challenge. The challenge is to understand the new world we have entered. [...] We are outcasts no longer.

Others, reject philo-Semitism as they feel it, like its apparent opposite anti-Semitism, implicitly gives a special status to Jews. This contradicts the traditional goal of Zionism to make Jewry "a nation among nations". Daniel Goldhagen, Harvard scholar and author of the controversial Hitler's willing executioners, argues that philo-Semitists are often closet anti-Semitists. His detractor Norman Finkelstein, agrees. The thesis is that Jew haters feel a need to talk about Jews, and with anti-Semitism no longer being socially acceptable, they must instead make exaggerated positive statements.

But in modern transcultural contexts, where the terminologies used to describe people are more clearly seen, the issue of the terminology is perhaps more important than the term itself. In this case, a Jewish person does not think of his non-Jewish friends as automatically "philo-semitic"--ethnicity having little or nothing to do with friendship. Similarly, there may be certain people whom he or she finds disfavorable, on grounds that are completely unrelated to Judaism. Thus philo-Semitism, and similarly anti-Semitsm are rather new perceptual terms used by Jews to describe their perceptual relationship to the views of non-Jews in their common society and abroad.

The rise of philo-Semitism has also prompted some to reconsider Jewish history. While the significance of anti-Semitism must be acknowledged, they claim, it would be wrong to reduce the history of the Jewish people to one of suffering. Indeed, Jews have not only survived, but also often prospered throughout history. In many cases, this was helped by philo-Semitism among surrounding Gentiles. While the existence of so-called "righteous Gentiles" during Jewry's darkest hour, the Holocaust, has long been recognized, they were by no means a new phenomenon at the time. Throughout history, philo-Semitism has existed, representing what has been referred to as an unacknowledged harmony during otherwise troubled times.

Books

See also: anti-Semitism, Israel Shahak