Review of Reflections on Anti-Semitism by review31
While these complex variants of anti-Semitism persist in fragmented forms, the authors denounce the prevalent thesis which claims that there has been a ‘surge of anti-semitism’ since the early years of the War on Terror. This is not a description of an actual situation but an ideological smokescreen for stigmatising one portion of the population, conveniently one of the most disadvantaged: black and Arab youth.
Brennan mentions the paradoxical fact that equating Judaism to pro-Zionism is in itself an anti-semitic move, and notes the most crucial element of the book, the exploitation of Jewish identity to silence dissent:
They are not criticising Jewish influence on political decisions, but rather the cynical exploitation of Jewish identity, by various individuals in the public sphere, in order to assert Western geo-political hegemony and support the latest manifestation of the reactionary tradition in France.
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