By Jay D. Homnick on 10.29.08 @ 6:07AM
A professor of Holocaust studies endorses Obama on abortion
grounds.
The price of liberty is eternal vigilance, as Senator Ted Stevens
recently discovered. For Jews vigilance tends also to be the
price of survival. When we forget to look over our shoulder we
are likely as not to get a knife in the back. This is why I step
out of character to tolerate the existence of Holocaust scholars.
The title has such a phony ring, conjuring up a vision of the
dean's brother-in-law reading a few Auschwitz memoirs and
cultivating rich survivors in return for an endowed seat where he
can watch Donald Duck cartoons in stocking feet. Even those who
take it very seriously and exhaustively research every aspect of
the Holocaust are one real discipline short of a professorship.
Still we tolerate. It is a small luxury we afford ourselves to be
assured of sentries standing at the gate. We figure if the big
one ever comes down the pike again, these folks will sound the
alarm early.
When one of these personalities steps out onto the political
stage to comment on a policy or candidate, there is one standard
by which to judge this utterance: is it freighted with maximum
consideration for potential danger to Jews? Paranoia is
acceptable, exaggeration is understandable and overprotectiveness
is livable. Only carelessness is offensive, an offense which
brooks no clemency.
With this in mind, I believe that the
endorsement of Barack Obama for President by Deborah E.
Lipstadt, resident Holocaust scholar at Emory University, is an
atrocity in its own right. It represents a profound betrayal of
the raison d'être of her creed.
MS. LIPSTADT begins by saying that McCain is pro-life and Palin
even disapproves of abortion in cases of rape and incest. This is
an unwarranted intrusion into a personal family matter. It also
conflicts with Torah, which puts the life of the mother ahead of
the unborn child. Many rabbinical opinions include mental health
as a factor, considering the danger of losing her mind equal to
losing her life.
Lipstadt concludes: "Were McCain and Sarah Palin to write their
pro-life beliefs into law, their policy could create both an
obstacle to Jewish law and severe invasions into our private
lives."
God, how I wish I was eloquent enough to show you how viciously,
corruptly, grossly false this is! Grrrrr. The citing of Torah in
support of this position is a horror. By Torah law, abortion is a
form of murder. The justification for putting the mother's life
first is self-defense (despite lack of malice), as Maimonides
explains, just as an outside attacker can be killed. To apply
this in the arena of mental health requires a finding that the
mother is in danger of going crazy if the child is born and
adopted.
No state had a law disallowing abortion if the life of the mother
is in danger, even before Roe vs. Wade. No state has a
legislature favoring such a law. The Republican platform does not
advocate such a law. Neither McCain nor Palin supports such a
law. The chances of such a law ever being enacted in the United
States under any combination of executives, legislators or
jurists is absolutely zero for the foreseeable future. Anyone who
really looks to the Torah for guidance must in good conscience
hold the identical view as that expressed in the Republican
platform.
But let's forget the legal categories for a minute and look at it
from the perspective we would assign to a Holocaust scholar.
There are two segments of society, expressing views on a public
matter. One says: "The wording in a law may annoy me in my
private life and could possibly be enforced to the point that a
woman with fragile mental health might have to give birth in an
unhealthy predicament. Therefore, I prefer to see fifty million
babies killed over thirty-five years." The other says: "Yes,
there may be some dislocation of individual situations, but I am
prepared to endure that to save fifty million lives."
Which of those points of view should be of concern to a Holocaust
scholar? Which of those groups is likely to stand up on behalf of
a beleaguered Jewry if the Gestapo makes a comeback?
The next section of her essay belongs in the theater of the
absurd. She explains that the Torah promotes charity and
compassion, so she prefers Obama's health-care plan. After we
shrug off fifty million murders of convenience, it is time to
heal the sick with other people's money.
LIPSTADT is not through dispensing wisdom. She turns to the
question of Israel and its security. Obama impressed Benjamin
Netanyahu, she says, by his grasp of the Iranian threat. How do
we know this? Simple, he told it to the Jerusalem Post. As if he
would tell them otherwise if he believed otherwise.
What we do know is that the leftist professoriate in the United
States, where Obama has his roots, is far from pro-Israel and has
for two decades allowed pro-Palestinian rhetoric to dominate the
academy. Obama himself praised Rashid Khalidi, former spokesman
for Yassir Arafat, for helping him to identify some of his own
"blind spots and biases." Funny, but that sounds to me like a
sound-bite which might perk up the ears of a Holocaust scholar. I
guess not.
Her clincher argument is this. Obama came into his meeting with
the editor of the Jerusalem Post all by his lonesome and said the
right things. McCain, by contrast, brought Joe Lieberman into the
meeting and when unsure of a particular detail he deferred to
Lieberman. This tells Lipstadt that Obama is better prepared to
help Israel.
Once again, the Holocaust maven is faced by two scenarios. One, a
cocky non-Jew who thinks he knows all the answers. The second, a
humble non-Jew who brings an Orthodox Jewish Senator along and
graciously defers to him when in doubt. Which one sounds like the
safer bet for the long term?
Clearly, Lipstadt has learned nothing from her own subject. She
glibly hands the key to Israel's future to a man who loses no
sleep over fifty million souls bartered for convenience and
"privacy." King David had it right when he admonished us: "It is
better to rely on God than to rely on man."