Our Newest Superhero: Foreskin Man?

I found a link to Fore­skin Man on The Good Man Project. To respond fully will require a more care­ful read­ing than I can give the comic now, but even pag­ing quickly through issue two reveals an awful lot that is prob­lem­atic in the way the char­ac­ters are drawn. The Good Man Project pointed to this image of the evil Jew­ish circumcisers:

But the depic­tion of women is also problematic:

The rou­tine cir­cum­ci­sion of infant boys, med­ical and oth­er­wise, is a prob­lem. Some­how I can’t see a comic like this being the way to address it.

Videos I’ve Been Watching: On The Holocaust, On “New Data on the Rise of Women”

Some videos I think are worth watching.

First, The Daily Show on at least one Fox Net­work host’s insis­tence that no one on that net­work ever com­pares peo­ple on the left to the Nazis for rhetor­i­cal effect:

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon — Thurs 11p / 10c
24 Hour Nazi Party People
www​.thedai​lyshow​.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Polit­i­cal Humor & Satire Blog</a> The Daily Show on Facebook

Sec­ond, a link to Yad Vashem’s Per­sian chan­nel–I could not find the embed data – which hope­fully will serve as a coun­ter­weight to the kind of infor­ma­tion cir­cu­lat­ing in Iran about the Holo­caust as shown in this video from the open­ing of a Holo­caust Car­toons Expo in August 2006:

And third, this TED video of a talk by Hanna Rosin, author “The End of Men,” pub­lished in The Atlantic Monthly, “which asserts that the era of male dom­i­nance has come to an end as women gain power in the postin­dus­trial economy.”


Greek Bishop Equates Zionism to ‘Satanism’ — NYTimes.com

I am not quite up to typ­ing a full-fledged post yet, though I will be soon. Still, I couldn’t resist post­ing a link to this piece on The Lede, by Robert Mackey.

Greek Bishop Equates Zion­ism to ‘Satanism’ — NYTimes.com:

The bishop, known as Met­ro­pol­i­tan Seraphim of Piraeus, said dur­ing an inter­view on Greek tele­vi­sion on Mon­day that Jews “con­trol the inter­na­tional bank­ing sys­tem.” He added: “Adolf Hitler was an instru­ment of world Zion­ism and was financed from the renowned Roth­schild fam­ily with the sole pur­pose of con­vinc­ing the Jews to leave the shores of Europe and go to Israel to estab­lish the new Empire.”

In response to the out­rage his state­ments caused, the bishop issued a state­ment, which Mackey quotes in full:

Decem­ber 23, 2010

On the occa­sion of the con­cerns raised by the Euro­pean Jew­ish Con­gress with regard to my inter­view with the MEGA tele­vi­sion chan­nel on Decem­ber 20, I have to say the following:

1. The things I said dur­ing my tele­vi­sion appear­ance on the show “Soci­ety Hour Mega” are strictly my per­sonal views and opin­ions, which I have repeat­edly expressed… ver­bally and in writing.

2. I respect, revere and love the Jew­ish peo­ple like any other peo­ple of our world accord­ing to the teach­ing of the incar­nated Son of God and the true Mes­siah the Lord Jesus Christ the Sav­ior and Redeemer, who was her­alded by all the Prophets and was incar­nated through the Jew­ish nation.

3. My pub­lic vehe­ment oppo­si­tion against Inter­na­tional Zion­ism refers to the organ that is the suc­ces­sor of the “San­hedrin” which altered the faith of the Patri­archs, the Prophets and the Right­eous of the Jew­ish nation through the Tal­mud, the Rab­bini­cal writ­ings and the Kab­balah into Satanism, and always strives vig­or­ously toward an eco­nomic empire set up through­out the world with head­quar­ters in the great land beyond the Atlantic for the preva­lence of world gov­ern­ment and pan-religion.

4. I con­sider like any sane per­son on the planet the Nazi régime and the para­noid dic­ta­tor Adolf Hitler as hor­ri­ble crim­i­nals against human­ity and take a stand with all honor and respect against the Jew­ish Holo­caust and any other heinous geno­cide such as that of the Pon­tic Greek and Armen­ian peo­ple. Besides, the Greek nation mourns thou­sands of mar­tyrs from the crim­i­nal Nazi atrocities.

+ The Met­ro­pol­i­tan of Piraeus, Seraphim

On the one hand, I am not sur­prised; on the other hand, the whole thing leaves me speechless.

Fragments of Evolving Manhood: When Witches Stole Penises 2

Part 1 ended with the fol­low­ing para­graph: And so on and so on, until the fun­da­men­tal dif­fer­ence between the Jew and the woman. Nei­ther believe in them­selves; but the woman believes in oth­ers, in her hus­band, her lover, or her chil­dren, or in love itself; she has a cen­ter of grav­ity, although it is out­side her own being. The Jew believes in noth­ing, within him or with­out him.…The woman believes in the man, in the man out­side her, or in the man from whom she takes her inspi­ra­tion [Jesus], and in this fash­ion can take her­self in earnest. The Jew takes noth­ing seri­ously; he is friv­o­lous and jests about any­thing, about the Christian’s Chris­tian­ity, the Jew’s baptism.

The Jew, in other words, is an even more debased woman than a woman is.

The Jew’s bap­tism. A Jew­ish joke: In the years before Vat­i­can II, when Catholics were still pro­hib­ited from eat­ing meat on Fri­days, a Jew­ish man named Yankel con­verted to Catholi­cism. From that moment on, he insisted on being called only Jacob.

Jacob was a devout church­goer, active in his parish and well-liked and respected by those who knew him. Still, Jacob was a new Catholic and old habits do die hard. So one Fri­day the parish priest decided to stop by Jacob’s apart­ment, just to make sure. As he walked up the stairs to Jacob’s floor, the priest could smell that some­one was cook­ing pot roast. As he approached Jacob’s door, the smell got stronger, and when he knocked and Jacob appeared in the door­way, the priest’s worst fears were con­firmed. The odor fill­ing the hall­way came from Jacob’s apartment.

“Jacob,” the priest tried to be cir­cum­spect, “you do real­ize it’s Fri­day, don’t you?”

“Of course, Father. Would you like to stay for dinner?”

“I’d love to stay, but it is Fri­day, you know, and we’re not sup­posed to eat meat.”

“Oh, don’t worry, Father,” Jacob’s voice was warm and reas­sur­ing, “I’m not serv­ing meat.”

At this obvi­ous lie, the priest got angry. “What do you mean you’re not serv­ing meat! I can smell the pot roast!”

“Really, Father, don’t worry. It’s not pot roast.”

The priest pushed past Jacob into the kitchen. Sure enough, there, in the oven, was a pot roast. “Look,” he was point­ing directly at the meat. “How can you tell me this is not a pot roast?”

“Well, Father, last Sun­day I brought some holy water home from the church, and today, before I started to cook, I sprin­kled some of the water on the meat and I said, ‘In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, you’re no longer a pot roast. You’re a poached salmon.’”

The book was called Sex and Char­ac­ter, and it was bril­liant — all the crit­ics on both sides of the Atlantic said so. Otto Weininger, the author, was a Ger­man Jew who con­verted when he received his doc­tor­ate. By argu­ing that Jew­ish men are essen­tially degen­er­ate women — this is Sander Gilman’s line of rea­son­ing in Jew­ish Self-Hatred—Weininger hoped to prove that he had left his for­mer Jew­ish self behind for good, but it didn’t work. Weininger the Jew haunts the pages of Sex and Char­ac­ter the way the voice of any unwanted self haunts the per­son who tries to dis­own it. We are always, inescapably, at every moment of who we are, all of who we are, and to dis­avow that whole­ness is to turn the part of our­selves we have rejected into a ghost.

The Jew’s bap­tism. I wish I could remem­ber which rebbe it was who first explained to me that Jews can­not con­vert — or, more pre­cisely, that Jew­ish law does not rec­og­nize as valid any con­ver­sion rit­ual to which a Jew might choose to sub­mit. You could live the rest of your life in strict, defin­i­tively non-Jewish adher­ence to the prin­ci­ples of your new faith, adopt­ing what­ever label of iden­ti­fi­ca­tion that faith required, but, accord­ing to this rebbe, there was ulti­mately noth­ing you could do to wipe away the fact of your Jew­ish­ness. “When the day of judg­ment finally arrives,” I remem­ber him telling my class, “God will judge these men and women as Jews, and it will be as Jews that they enter or are pro­hib­ited from enter­ing olam haba, the world to come.”

The under­ly­ing Jew­ish real­ity of my exis­tence, in other words — and I believed this, because in those days I believed almost every­thing about being Jew­ish that my rebbes told me — could not be changed. What it meant for me to be a Jew was as per­ma­nently writ­ten into the foun­da­tion of my Yid­dishe neshama, my Jew­ish soul, as the fact of my cir­cum­ci­sion had been per­ma­nently writ­ten into my body, because even though most of my non-Jewish friends were also cir­cum­cised, mine was dif­fer­ent. My cir­cum­ci­sion had been per­formed in the name of God — this is my grand­mother talk­ing, though I don’t remem­ber why she felt the need to explain it to me — was proof of the covenant God had made with Abra­ham, of my inclu­sion in and oblig­a­tion to ful­fill that covenant. I could change about myself any­thing I wanted to; I could even become a woman — this is me; my grand­mother would never have allowed such a thing to enter her mind — but I could never escape the fact that a divine cut had been made in my flesh, that the mark of God’s cho­sen peo­ple had once been vis­i­ble on my flesh.

Given the fre­quency with which Jews were forced to con­vert to Chris­tian­ity through­out much of Euro­pean his­tory — and as far as I know it was in Europe that the notion of the uncon­vert­ible Jew first took shape — it’s under­stand­able that the rab­bis who shaped Jew­ish law might see becom­ing a Chris­t­ian as some­thing one might do to sur­vive, but not as an act one would choose will­ingly to per­form. Indeed, the idea that there was such a thing as an immutable Jew­ish soul could be under­stood as a form of resis­tance, a way of draw­ing a line that the Chris­tians could not cross under any cir­cum­stances. It’s ironic, there­fore, that the medieval church also con­ceived of the Jew­ish soul as immutable, except that the church thought the impos­si­bil­ity of a fully valid Jew­ish con­ver­sion resulted from short­com­ings with which the Jews were born and which could never fully be overcome.

Remem­ber “the blood of Christ” ver­sus “the blood of a Chris­t­ian”? Accord­ing to de Cantim­pré, the mis­take was made by a Jew­ish prophet who didn’t under­stand Latin well enough to get it right. No, more than didn’t. Couldn’t. Who couldn’t get it right because he was inca­pable, as all Jews were under­stood to be inca­pable, of com­mand­ing any lan­guage other than their own. In de Cantimpré’s time, this lan­guage was Hebrew, the tongue in which the Jews read and inter­preted their holy texts, and it was in the nature of Hebrew, and there­fore in the nature of the Jew­ish soul that per­ceived the world through Hebrew, that the Jews could not see, for exam­ple, the many pre­fig­u­ra­tions of Christ’s com­ing that their texts. To put it another way, the Jews had a lim­ited and essen­tially false view of the world because they spoke Hebrew, and they spoke Hebrew because they had a lim­ited and false view of the world. The Jews’ very exis­tence, in other words, was based on false pre­tenses, and so even when a Jew claimed to have con­verted out of real con­vic­tion, the assump­tion among his new core­li­gion­ists was that he or she was most prob­a­bly lying.

Since Jews in the mid­dle ages could be con­demned to burn at the stake for even the tini­est per­ceived slight against Chris­tian­ity — and a false con­ver­sion was an offense nei­ther tiny nor imag­i­nary — Jews who con­verted had a vested inter­est in putting as much dis­tance as pos­si­ble between them­selves and their own dis­avowed Jew­ish­ness. So, in the 1500s, when the con­verted Jew Johannes Pfef­fer­korn wrote a series of pam­phlets attack­ing the Jews, he had first to con­vince his Chris­t­ian read­ers of the valid­ity and value of his own con­ver­sion. “My dear­est Chris­tians,” he wrote, “you should under­stand and appre­ci­ate the great value and bounty that the Jews will bring to the Chris­t­ian Church.… Much as a hun­gry bear who has bro­ken open a bee­hive will not be dri­ven away because of the attrac­tion of the sweets, so, too, will it occur with the Jews. When they taste the honey, they will say, This is a feast above all feasts, and I believe, as true as it is within me, that all of the worldly feasts are not to be com­pared with one who has under­stood the Old Tes­ta­ment in the light of the New.”1

Pfef­fer­korn wrote in vain. Vic­tor of Kar­ben, a rabbi who con­verted to Chris­tian­ity and became a priest, and who was a con­tem­po­rary of Pfef­fer­korn, summed up where con­verts like him fit into his new reli­gious community’s world view: “And thus, says the Psalmist, one spends the entire day like a poor dog that has spent its day run­ning and returns home at night hun­gry. For there are many unchar­i­ta­ble and igno­rant Chris­tians who will not give to you but will rather show you from their doors with mock­ery, say­ing, ‘Look, there goes a bap­tized Jew.’ And then oth­ers answer, ‘Yes, any­thing that is done for you is a waste. You will never become a good Christian.’.…And [still oth­ers say] with sat­is­fac­tion, ‘Though you may act like a Chris­t­ian, you are still a Jew at heart.’”2

You are still a Jew at heart. The cycle is vicious, because if Jews can never change, then con­ver­sion and its accom­pa­ny­ing sal­va­tion are cat­e­gor­i­cal impos­si­bil­i­ties. And yet if you are a Jew who’s con­verted not only do the Jews have to be able to change, but they also have to be, at the same time, so rad­i­cally and irrec­on­cil­ably dif­fer­ent that your becom­ing a Chris­t­ian negates entirely the Jew you once were. Oth­er­wise, how can you prove that your con­ver­sion is real? Or maybe your con­ver­sion was a lie after all, the result of a Jew­ish deceit­ful­ness within your­self of which you had no knowl­edge. And yet you know how you feel. You know the joy you expe­ri­enced when you were bap­tized. How could that have been false? And yet and yet and yet and yet, and yet again. The cycle is vicious, and it forms the core of all self-hatred — in this case Jew­ish self-hatred — and there is, ulti­mately, no way out of it.

Dear — ,

I was glad to receive your let­ter the other day. It has been many months since you left and I wel­comed the oppor­tu­nity that read­ing your words gave me to hear again the sound of your voice. You ask how, after hav­ing lived most of my life as a Jew, I found it in myself to embrace as fully and with as much cer­tainty as I have the light that is Christ. Indeed, it is a good story, worth telling. Per­haps you, or those with whom you share it, will find it instructive.

At first, it was strictly busi­ness, the way it always is with the Jews. I was in Mainz to keep an eye on Ekbert, the bishop of Mainz, to whom I’d been fool­ish enough to lend money with­out suf­fi­cient col­lat­eral. I went reg­u­larly to his ser­mons, stand­ing at the edge of the crowd, pre­tend­ing to be inter­ested, but really I just wanted to let him know I was there, that it would not be easy for him to get out of pay­ing me back. Slowly, though, I’m not sure exactly when or pre­cisely why, his words started to mean some­thing to me, and it was as if a veil had been lifted from my eyes, a dark­ness cleared. Of course the bind­ing of Isaac pre­fig­ured the cru­ci­fix­ion! And of course Isaiah’s prophecy about the vir­gin was really a fore­telling of the vir­gin birth! How could I not have under­stood this before? Soon I was not only attend­ing Ekbert’s ser­mons; I was also get­ting pri­vate instruc­tion from him, though I had to use the pre­tense of going to col­lect my money so I could see him with­out arous­ing the Jews’ sus­pi­cions. Because they are a devi­ous peo­ple, they trust no one, not even each other, and so I made sure to take from Ekbert just enough money to put my neigh­bors at ease. Of course I gave every bit of it back once my con­ver­sion was complete.

Still, even though I am now Her­mann, the abbot of this monastery at Scheda, even though the man I was, Judah ben David ha-Levi, is as for­eign to me as if he’d never been born, even now, some­times I hear in my dreams the words of the monk to whom I first con­fided my desire to accept Christ, before I asked Ekbert to be my teacher — “Get out! Get out, you hea­then! You blind Jew­ish dog! Get out!” Just as they did when I first heard them, the words par­a­lyze me, and I am over­come with fear that I remain beneath these monas­tic robes noth­ing more than a Jew, for­ever blind and, for that blind­ness, for­ever damned. Only prayer and the knowl­edge that Christ’s love is all-forgiving help me then. May you never know such doubts.

Yours in Christ,

Her­mann

Her­mann — yes, he really did exist3—did not write this let­ter, but I am guess­ing that he wrote or wanted to write one just like it, and so I have imag­ined for him an inter­locu­tor to whom he could express his frus­tra­tions and fears not only with­out fear­ing reprisal, but also, and more impor­tantly, with the hope that in speak­ing to this per­son he would be able to find some affir­ma­tion of what he under­stood to be true about him­self. In this sense, Sex and Char­ac­ter was Otto Weininger’s let­ter to the world, but while the let­ter I’ve invented for my ver­sion of Her­mann suc­ceeds in the sense that he is hon­est about his doubts and the pain they cause him, Weininger’s left him blind.

“The pilpul,”—this is Sander Gilman — “is the quin­tes­sen­tially Jew­ish mode of argu­ment. It is the basis for all Tal­mu­dic dis­course. Sus­pend­ing time and space, it con­fronts the opin­ions of all author­ity, seek­ing the moment of res­o­lu­tion hid­den within seem­ingly con­tra­dic­tory posi­tions.” The pilpul pro­ceeds “based on anal­ogy and approx­i­ma­tion and not on the syl­lo­gism, the basis of clas­si­cal logic.”4 So, for exam­ple, in Trac­tate Bava Met­zia, when the rab­bis take up the ques­tion of what kinds of found objects the finder is obliged to return and what kinds he or she may keep, every­one agrees that if the found object has some iden­ti­fy­ing mark on it, such that the object’s owner has a rea­son­able expec­ta­tion of iden­ti­fy­ing and retriev­ing it, the finder can­not keep the object with­out first mak­ing a con­certed and pub­lic effort to locate the owner. If, on the other hand, the found object has no iden­ti­fy­ing mark, then the finder can keep it with­out mak­ing that effort because we assume that the owner, since he has no expec­ta­tion of iden­ti­fy­ing what he has lost, has given up hope of retriev­ing it.

In other words, if some­one finds “scat­tered fruit” with­out any iden­ti­fy­ing mark, he or she is allowed to keep it. Rabbi Yitzhak wants to know, how­ever, pre­cisely how much fruit spread over pre­cisely how much area qual­i­fies as “scat­tered.” The rab­bis then take a moment to define the con­text in which the fruit is found, decid­ing that they are not talk­ing about a sit­u­a­tion in which the fruit fell by acci­dent or where there is some indi­ca­tion — even if there is no mark on the fruit — that the owner will return later to retrieve what he dropped. Rather, they are deal­ing with a sit­u­a­tion in which grain ker­nels have been left behind on the thresh­ing room floor, and since the effort required to col­lect the ker­nels would be greater than what the owner would gain by col­lect­ing them, we can assume the owner will not come back to do so. Any­one who finds the grain, there­fore, is enti­tled to keep it. On the other hand, though, if the grain is spread over a small enough area such that the owner might con­sider the effort it would take to retrieve the grain worth­while, then we have to assume that he or she will return for the grain, and so the per­son who finds it can­not keep it with­out first attempt­ing to return it.

But another ques­tion still remains unan­swered. The rab­bis want to know the owner’s pri­mary motive for aban­don­ing part of his crop. Is it the fact that it will take too much effort to col­lect the scat­tered grain? Or is it because the value of the grain once it has been gath­ered will be too small? So Rabbi Yirmeyah poses the ques­tion of whether the same prin­ci­ples would apply to half the amount of grain scat­tered over half the area. The effort to gather the grain is smaller, but the value of the grain is less. Do we assume the owner would come back for the grain or not? So then the rab­bis ask about twice the amount of grain spread out over twice the area, where the effort to gather the grain would be greater, but the value would be greater as well. The dis­cus­sion then becomes even more com­pli­cated when the rab­bis start to con­sider that dif­fer­ent kinds of fruit are not only of dif­fer­ent sizes, but they have dif­fer­ent val­ues. Sesame seeds, for exam­ple, are very small and excep­tion­ally hard to pick up, but they were also, in Tal­mu­dic times, extremely valu­able. Given that fact, some­one might indeed be will­ing to expend the effort of gath­er­ing the seeds up, even a rel­a­tively small amount scat­tered over a rel­a­tively large area. So is the quan­tity and square footage that define “scat­tered” for sesame seeds dif­fer­ent from, say, the mea­sure­ments that define “scat­tered” for figs?

And so on and so on and so on, until the rab­bis pro­nounce teiku, which means they have con­cluded that the ques­tions raised by Rabbi Yirmeyah must remain undecided.

And that’s it. They just leave it there. The text records no uneasi­ness that they have not been able to resolve this ques­tion, no frus­tra­tion at Rabbi Yirmeyah for pos­ing an unsolv­able prob­lem. They seem to be con­tent that the prob­lem has been artic­u­lated, and they move on to the next issue, which is a good deal more com­plex and has to do with what it means to say that some­one who has lost an object has given up hope of find­ing it — and remem­ber that we are talk­ing here about objects that have no iden­ti­fy­ing mark. The rab­bis want to know the pre­cise moment at which this loss of hope takes effect, free­ing the finder of any oblig­a­tion to locate the owner. Is it from the moment the loss occurs, whether or not the owner is aware of the loss? Or is it from the moment the owner becomes aware that he has lost some­thing? The ques­tion may seem silly, but there is an impor­tant under­ly­ing prin­ci­ple at stake: Is it pos­si­ble, or even desir­able, to con­sider as hav­ing already occurred events that have not yet taken place, but that will with­out a doubt occur in the future? Here’s another vari­a­tion of the same ques­tion: How does one dis­tin­guish legally between some­thing that hap­pens of its own accord (a storm, say, that knocks a tree from your yard onto your neighbor’s prop­erty and dam­ages your neighbor’s roof) and some­thing that hap­pens because of human action (the same tree dam­ages the same roof, but this time it’s because you were cut­ting the tree down and it fell in the wrong direc­tion)?5

The Jew takes noth­ing seri­ously. So imag­ine you’re a man walk­ing down the road at the time of The Malleus Malefi­carum. Not far ahead some­thing that looks like the largest worm you’ve ever seen is try­ing to crawl across the road. When you get closer, you real­ize it’s a penis, prob­a­bly just escaped from the cage it was kept in by the witch that stole it. Which por­tion of the law should apply? Is find­ing the penis the same thing as find­ing, say, a lost sheep? (Or in this case per­haps a horse, since the witches, you’ll remem­ber, feed their stolen penises bar­ley and oats?) Or is it like find­ing a piece of food that fell from the bag of the per­son who bought it? Or sup­pose instead of one penis, you hap­pen across an entire cage’s worth scat­tered along the road? Does it mat­ter pre­cisely how scat­tered they are? Do we assume that a man who has lost his penis will be able to iden­tify it and so, by def­i­n­i­tion, can­not be said to have given up hope of find­ing it? Or is it all moot because the penises were stolen? And since we’re talk­ing here about penises that have become unat­tached to the men whose bod­ies they used to adorn, we know, I mean, we really know, they had to have been stolen. Must you announce what you’ve found? How, assum­ing some­one comes to claim what you’ve found, will you iden­tify its right­ful owner? Under what cir­cum­stances, if any, can you keep a penis you have found for your­self? Why on earth would you want to?

Well, if you were an eigh­teenth or nine­teenth cen­tury man of med­i­cine or sci­ence, you’d want one in your spec­i­men col­lec­tion, specif­i­cally a Black one, because the study of com­par­a­tive anatomy pretty much demanded that you have one. Founded by Johan Friedrich Blu­men­bach, this new sci­en­tific field treated the body as a text even more reveal­ing of the dif­fer­ences between and among groups of peo­ple than their lan­guages or cul­tur­ally deter­mined behav­iors, espe­cially when the dif­fer­ences in ques­tion were racial. “Every pecu­liar­ity of the body has” — this is the nine­teenth cen­tury anatomist Edward Drinker Cope, quoted by David M. Fried­man in his book, A Mind Of Its Own—“…some cor­re­spond­ing sig­nif­i­cance in the mind, and the causes of the for­mer are the remoter causes of the lat­ter,” a prin­ci­ple under­stood in prac­tice to mean that larger phys­i­cal or phys­i­o­log­i­cal fea­tures con­ferred supe­ri­or­ity on the race that pos­sessed them. With one excep­tion. The larger penises that Black men were under­stood to have — the myth actu­ally dates at least as far back as the ancient Romans — con­ferred on them not sex­ual supe­ri­or­ity but the bes­tial­ity that white peo­ple believed defined Black infe­ri­or­ity. 6

Even in the early years of the twen­ti­eth cen­tury, the idea was wide­spread that the gen­i­tals of Black men pre­cluded any pos­si­bil­ity of equal­ity with whites. In “The Negro as a Dis­tinct Eth­nic Fac­tor in Civ­i­liza­tion,” pub­lished in 1903, Dr. William Lee Howard devel­oped this idea at some length, argu­ing that because “all intel­lec­tual devel­op­ment [in Black men] cease[d] with the advent of puberty,” and because Black men pos­sessed “enor­mously devel­oped” gen­i­tals that com­pelled them to devote their entire lives “to the wor­ship of Pri­a­pus,” result­ing in the cor­re­spond­ing enlarge­ment of the sex­ual cen­ters of their brains, the only way Blacks could be “ele­vated” by edu­ca­tion — the phras­ing that was com­mon at the time — was if that edu­ca­tion man­aged some­how to “reduce the large size of the African’s penis.”7

Through­out his­tory, in other words, peo­ple have believed that what they think they know about the nature of a man’s penis some­how bespeaks the true essence of his char­ac­ter.

  1. Gilman, Jew­ish Self-Hatred: Anti-Semitism and the Hid­den Lan­guage of the Jews 36. []
  2. ibid. 40 – 41 []
  3. Adapted from ibid. 29 – 31 []
  4. ibid. 90 []
  5. My sum­mary here is taken entirely from Rabbi Israel V. Berman, ed., Trac­tate Bava Met­zia, Part Ii, vol. 2, The Tal­mud: The Stein­saltz Edi­tion (New York: Ran­dom House, 1990) 3 – 10. []
  6. David M. Fried­man, A Mind of Its Own: A Cul­tural His­tory of the Penis (New York: Pen­guin Books, 2001) 106 – 07. []
  7. Quoted in Ibid. 120 – 21. []

Church in Florida to Host “International Burn the Quran Day” to Commemorate the September 11 Attacks

The poet Kazim Ali posted this to his Face­book page, say­ing that he thought it “had to be a myth,” and that is what it sounds like at first, but the Dove World Out­reach Cen­ter is indeed invit­ing peo­ple to burn a Quran on Sep­tem­ber 11, 2010. It’s easy to dis­miss this as quack­ery, as not worth giv­ing the atten­tion that it got through CNN’s cov­er­age, but the truth is that if we don’t pay atten­tion to it, if we don’t call it out for what it is – and it’s grat­i­fy­ing to see that the Face­book page protest­ing the event has close to twice as many fans as the Face­book page announc­ing the event – it will spread. More than that, though, it will become – it already has become, actu­ally, and this is kind of fright­en­ing – part of the way per­cep­tions of Islam are framed by our national rhetoric. Here’s the video:

Rick Sanchez, I think, proves him­self to be a par­tic­u­larly inept inter­viewer here – I don’t watch him, so I don’t know if he’s usu­ally bet­ter than this – but one of the things that dis­turbs me about the way he tries to respond to Terry Jones, Dove World Outreach’s pas­tor, is his but-there–are–moderate-muslims-out-there tone, as if those “mod­er­ate Muslims” – and more about that phrase in a moment – are some­how the excep­tion to the rule. Or as if they are, you know, out there, but really well hid­den, and so you have to know the secret code or some­thing to get them to reveal them­selves. Equally trou­bling to me, though, is the way the phrase “mod­er­ate Mus­lims” has taken on the same descrip­tive weight and author­ity as, say, Ortho­dox Jew or Evan­gel­i­cal Chris­t­ian, as if “mod­er­ate” were some­how actu­ally a sect of Islam. Well-meaning as it may be, the phrase actu­ally con­tributes to rather than decon­structs the way in which Islam is being defined as a pro­foundly hos­tile theologically-informed, we-want-to-rule-the-world polit­i­cal stance towards the West, broadly speak­ing, and the United States in par­tic­u­lar, rather than as a reli­gion. This is to me – and I’d be inter­ested to hear what other peo­ple think of this – very sim­i­lar to the way in which the anti­se­mitic rhetoric of Europe framed Judaism from the 18th cen­tury, and cer­tainly the 19th cen­tury on, and it is cer­tainly one of the under­ly­ing assump­tions – i.e., that the Jews want to rule the world – of the “World Zion­ist Con­spir­acy” theories.

It’s also worth not­ing that Jones and his group also declared August 2 “No Homo Mayor” day, a day to protest Gainesville’s openly gay mayor. Both groups – Mus­lims and homo­sex­u­als – are god­less accord­ing to Jones, a logic sim­i­lar to the one that cre­ated the asso­ci­a­tion between being Jew­ish and homo­sex­u­al­ity, to men­tion being com­mu­nist, Jew­ish and homo­sex­ual, that was an impor­tant point of anti­se­mitic rhetoric in this coun­try dur­ing 50s, 60s and even 70s.

It’s easy to dis­miss Terry Jones and his church as a bunch of nuts, espe­cially when his argu­ments for why Islam is a devil’s reli­gion, as quoted in the text accom­pa­ny­ing the Rick Sanchez video, include doozies like this:

“I mean ask your­self, have you ever really seen a really happy Mus­lim? As they’re on the way to Mecca? As they gather together in the mosque on the floor? Does it look like a real reli­gion of joy?” Jones asks in one of his YouTube posts.

“No, to me it looks like a reli­gion of the devil.”

The prob­lem is that Jones and com­pany are only giv­ing expres­sion to the log­i­cal con­clu­sion of what an awful lot of peo­ple in the United State., con­sciously or not, already believe. The term Islam­o­pho­bia may be rel­a­tively new, but the (often racial­ized and racial­iz­ing) hatred of Mus­lims has a long his­tory in this coun­try – and that is some­thing I will per­haps write about in another post – a his­tory that pre­dates the Sep­tem­ber 11th attacks not by decades, but by cen­turies, and its assump­tions, its images, its rhetoric is/has been as much a part of our cul­ture as the assump­tions, images, rhetoric of, say, racism.

I am not an alarmist, though I do think there is a com­par­i­son to be made between the way in which anti­se­mitic rhetoric was deployed so as to make the Nazi’s cam­paign against the Jews and the way Islam­o­pho­bic rhetoric has been more and more mak­ing its way into our pub­lic dis­course. Indeed, I think this com­par­i­son would prob­a­bly work with the rhetoric of any geno­ci­dal cam­paign, though I do not think and I am not imply­ing that this is the begin­ning of some kind of anti-Muslim gov­ern­ment action. Rather, I think, plain and sim­ple, that those com­par­isons should make clear to us how imper­a­tive it is not to let the actions and the rhetoric of peo­ple like Terry Jones go unan­swered.

It’s Good to Remember Our History

From an August 11th arti­cle by Jonathan D. Sarna pub­lished on The Jew­ish Daily Forward’s web­site:

When New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg stood on Gov­er­nors Island, in sight of the Statue of Lib­erty, and force­fully defended the right of Mus­lims to build a com­mu­nity cen­ter and mosque two blocks from Ground Zero, he expressly made a point of dis­tanc­ing him­self from an ear­lier leader of the city: Peter Stuyvesant, who under­stood the rela­tion­ship between reli­gion and state alto­gether dif­fer­ently than Bloomberg does.

As gov­er­nor of what was then called New Ams­ter­dam, from 1647 – 1664, Stuyvesant worked to enforce Calvin­ist ortho­doxy. He objected to pub­lic wor­ship for Luther­ans, fought Catholi­cism and threat­ened those who har­bored Quak­ers with fines and impris­on­ment. One might eas­ily imag­ine how he would have treated Muslims.

When Jew­ish refugees arrived in his city, in 1654, Stuyvesant was deter­mined to bar them com­pletely. Jews, he com­plained, were “deceit­ful,” “very repug­nant” and “hate­ful ene­mies and blas­phe­mers of the name of Christ.” He wanted them sent elsewhere.

Stuyvesant’s supe­ri­ors in Hol­land over­ruled him, cit­ing eco­nomic and polit­i­cal con­sid­er­a­tions. He con­tin­ued, how­ever, to restrict Jews to the prac­tice of their reli­gion “in all quiet­ness” and “within their houses.” Being as sus­pi­cious of all Jews as some today are of all Mus­lims, he never allowed them to build a syn­a­gogue of their own.

It was not until the early 1700s that Jews won the right to wor­ship in pub­lic in New York City. In Con­necti­cut that right was not granted until 1843, and the reac­tion of The New Haven Reg­is­ter, which “viewed the syn­a­gogue as a pub­lic defeat for Chris­ten­dom,” is instructive:

“The Jews…,” the paper thun­dered, “have out­flanked us here, and effected a foot­ing in the very cen­tre of our own fortress. Strange as it may sound, it is nev­er­the­less true that a Jew­ish syn­a­gogue has been estab­lished in this city — and their place of wor­ship (in Grand Street, over the store of Heller and Man­del­baum) was ded­i­cated on Fri­day after­noon. Yale Col­lege divin­ity deserves a Court-martial for bad generalship.”

It took an act of Con­gress, signed by Pres­i­dent Franklin Pierce, for Jews to be able to wor­ship in pub­lic in Wash­ing­ton, DC, where some con­tended that the Reli­gious Cor­po­ra­tion Act granted the right to pur­chase real estate only to Chris­t­ian churches; and just in case you think that Jews no longer run into such prob­lems in the United States, Sarna cites a case from 1999 in which “oppo­nents of a new Ortho­dox syn­a­gogue seek­ing to build in New Rochelle, N.Y. [used] warn­ings [about] ‘rats,’ ‘traf­fic’ and ‘creep­ing com­mer­cial­iza­tion’ [to hide their] real fear, [which was] that ‘the iden­tity of the neigh­bor­hood would change.’”

Mus­lims have been wor­ship­ing in pub­lic near Ground Zero for three decades. The Cor­doba House com­mu­nity cen­ter will not, in other words, be bring­ing some­thing entirely new to the area. Rather, it will pro­vide much needed space for a com­mu­nity that already exists there – not to men­tion the much needed space it will pro­vide for Mus­lims and peo­ple of other faiths to inter­act. The sim­i­lar­i­ties between much of the rhetoric being employed to argue against the build­ing of Cor­doba House and The New Haven Register’s The Jews have out­flanked us ought to dis­turb us all.

What We Talk About (And Don’t Talk About) When We Talk About (And Don’t Talk About) antisemitism and Israel — 5

I am not a Zion­ist. For the first half of my life and then some, the idea that a Jew­ish man or woman could say those words and mean them was almost as far-fetched as the idea that Jews had horns. Israel – it had been drilled into me from the moment I was old enough to under­stand there was a place called Israel – was a cat­e­gor­i­cal imper­a­tive of Jew­ish exis­tence. To sug­gest the Jews were not a nation was not just to be in league with all those who had tried to wipe us out, not just to deny a cen­tral truth of how we’d man­aged to sur­vive in spite of those attempts, but also to cut your­self off from your own peo­ple, to make your­self like a limb sev­ered from its body, and what kind of exis­tence was that? Despite the fact that I’d never been there, that I had no inten­tion of mak­ing aliyah, Israel was my coun­try too, with­out ambi­gu­ity, but not with­out ambivalence.

Hav­ing two coun­tries that I could call my home – Israel and the United States – brought with it the ques­tion of divided loy­al­ties: Are you a Jewish-American or an American-Jew? If the United States and Israel went to war, on whose side would you fight? I remem­ber think­ing, when one of my Hebrew school teach­ers asked the lat­ter ques­tion – and if I was in Hebrew school, then I was still in ele­men­tary school – that it would depend on which side I thought was right, but I also remem­ber being afraid to give that answer, since I knew I would be told that I was wrong. The United States might be a good place for us to live as Jews for now, but not only did we have to remem­ber that it–mean­ing the Holo­caust – could hap­pen here too, and so Israel, the Jew­ish State, the place we could all flee to if we had to, was the only place we could really call home; the very fact that Israel was a Jew­ish state, founded in the blood of Jew­ish heroes, on the land that had been the king­dom ruled by David, our ancient God-given home­land, meant that it could claim, that we owed it, a com­mit­ment tran­scend­ing the acci­dent of our place-of-birth.

Mine, in other words, was not entirely a sec­u­lar Zion­ism. God’s hand could be seen every­where in the story of Israel’s found­ing, most espe­cially in its vic­tory over the sur­round­ing Arab nations when they invaded in 1948 after Israel declared its inde­pen­dence. Con­tem­po­rary Israeli his­to­ri­ans have been ques­tion­ing the tra­di­tional nar­ra­tive of that war – i.e., that the Arabs invaded to pre­vent Israel’s found­ing – but even if the alter­na­tive nar­ra­tives that some of those his­to­ri­ans have pro­posed are indeed closer to the truth than what I was taught, I doubt it would have changed sig­nif­i­cantly the con­clu­sion to which I was sup­posed to come: that God wanted to give Israel back to the Jews and that it was his right as the cre­ator of the world to do so. The fact of Israel’s exis­tence was all the proof any­one should need.

It wouldn’t have mat­tered, in other words, that Israel’s pro­vi­sional gov­ern­ment could have avoided the 1948 war – at least accord­ing to Simha Fla­pan in his book The Birth Of Israel: Myths and Real­i­ties–by accept­ing, as the Arabs had already done, an Amer­i­can pro­posal for a three month truce (cited here) and that this truce might con­ceiv­ably have led to a peace­ful dec­la­ra­tion of Israeli state­hood. My teach­ers, espe­cially once I’d entered yeshiva, would still, I believe, have quoted to me the com­men­tary given by Rashi on the very first word of the Torah, b’reisheet, which is usu­ally trans­lated as “In the begin­ning,” but which is more accu­rately ren­dered as “at the begin­ning of.” Rashi quotes Rabbi Isaac, who points out that since the Torah’s main pur­pose is to teach the com­mand­ments Jews are expected to fol­low, it was not nec­es­sary to begin the Torah with the cre­ation of the world. So why did God begin at the beginning?

For if the nations of the world should say to Israel: “You are rob­bers, because you have seized by force the lands of the seven nations” [of Canaan], they [Israel] could say to them, “The entire world belongs to the Holy One, Blessed Be He, He cre­ated it and gave it to whomever it was right in his eyes. Of His own will He gave it to them and of His own will He took it from them and gave it to us.”

I read those words now and it’s hard for me to believe I actu­ally believed them; and I also, as I read, remem­ber very clearly when my belief started to unweave itself. I was an under­grad­u­ate argu­ing with another stu­dent in my dorm about the Palestinian-Israeli con­flict – which was then known as the Arab-Israeli con­flict – and I was cit­ing chap­ter and verse of every argu­ment I had been taught to jus­tify both Israel’s pres­ence in the world and its treat­ment of the Pales­tini­ans, includ­ing the hor­ri­bly racist canard of Pales­tin­ian moth­ers breed­ing their sons to become ter­ror­ists, which was repeated as com­mon knowl­edge in the cir­cles where I got my ini­tial Jew­ish education.

I don’t remem­ber exactly how I said it, but when I uttered what­ever words I uttered, my dormmate’s lower jaw dropped, and he looked at me with a mix­ture of speech­less pity and absolute dis­be­lief. “Do you really think,” he asked me, “that Pales­tin­ian moth­ers are any dif­fer­ent from your mother or mine? Do you really think they want for their sons any­thing other” – and here he began to count off on his fin­gers – “than a long and full and happy and pro­duc­tive life?” He went on to say some other things as well, but I don’t remem­ber what they were because I had stopped pay­ing atten­tion. It was my turn to stare, slack jawed and  filled with dis­be­lief. How could it never have occurred to me that Pales­tin­ian moth­ers and their sons were actual human beings?

///

Con­tinue read­ing

What We Talk About (And Don’t Talk About) When We Talk About (And Don’t Talk About) antisemitism and Israel — 4

To me, the point was obvi­ous. Bas­ing the Jew­ish claim to the land of Israel on the Jews’ own read­ing of the Hebrew Bible was ask­ing the over­whelm­ingly non-Jewish world to accept as objec­tive and incon­tro­vert­ible the truth that Judaism claimed as its own, never mind the impli­ca­tion that the dis­en­fran­chise­ment of the Pales­tini­ans was some­how the will of the monothe­is­tic god. To assert that line of rea­son­ing as an argu­ment for Israel’s right to exist, I sug­gested, was self-defeating at the very least – even if, as a believ­ing Jew, it was a cor­ner­stone of your faith.

“I never took you for an SHJ,” said one the col­leagues with whom I was talking.

“An SHJ?”

“A self-hating Jew.”

The other agreed. “My hus­band,” she said, “would say you were an anti­se­mitic Jew.”

I stared at my col­leagues across a sud­den gap of estrange­ment I did not know how to bridge. I had never been called self-hating before, but I under­stood it meant that, in their eyes, I’d revealed myself as a Jew who accepted an anti­se­mitic def­i­n­i­tion of Jew­ish­ness. It was a logic I had heard often when I was in yeshiva, though my teach­ers always used it to explain the anti­semitism of non-Jews who were crit­i­cal of Israel: To sug­gest that there might be a per­spec­tive from which Israel’s exis­tence as a Jew­ish state was not self-evidently valid, my rebbes would say, in many dif­fer­ent ways, over and over again, was to sug­gest that the Jews had no right to claim such a state in the first place, which was also to imply that the Jews as a peo­ple ought not even to be.

Con­tinue read­ing

What We Talk About (And Don’t Talk About) When We Talk About (And Don’t Talk About) antisemitism and Israel — 3

Inci­dent #1

It’s 1993. I am walk­ing out of the mail­room in the build­ing where I work and one of my non-Jewish col­leagues – some­one I am not close to but with whom I have pleas­ant enough exchanges when we hap­pen to meet – approaches me with a small news­pa­per arti­cle in his hand. His mouth tilted in a mis­chie­vous grin, he says I really ought to know about this and holds the arti­cle out for me to read. I know that what’s com­ing next is sup­posed to make me laugh, and so when I take the clip­ping from him and read about how the designer Jean Paul Gaultier’s new col­lec­tion is based on tra­di­tional Cha­sidic garb, it is the absur­dity that hits me first, and I do laugh. My col­league laughs with me, the moment is over and we walk off into the rest of the day. Later, as I am grad­ing papers, I find the ques­tions that Gaultier’s col­lec­tion raises about cul­tural appro­pri­a­tion, among other things, gnaw­ing at the edges of my think­ing – not to men­tion ques­tions about why my col­league would choose to show me the arti­cle – but I am busy. My col­league, I decide to assume, just wanted to share a laugh with some­one who would find real sig­nif­i­cance in the trans­gres­sive nature of Gaultier’s design, and so I put the whole inci­dent out of my mind. (If you’re inter­ested, YouTube videos of the fash­ion show where Gaultier’s designs were unveiled are here and here; parts 3 & 4 are up there as well.)

A few days later, this col­league and I are walk­ing towards each other on cam­pus; I lift my hand in greet­ing and nod hello; he does the same. As we pass each other, he says with a smile, “So how come you’re not wear­ing the new fash­ion?” I give a short laugh, and so does he, and we move on to where it is we are going. When I see him on cam­pus again the next day, how­ever, he asks me the same ques­tion; and it hap­pens again the day after that, and again the fol­low­ing week, and I don’t remem­ber how many times exactly this man finds only this one way to inter­act with me – truly, other than that ques­tion, he did not seem to have any­thing else to say to me – but it’s clear to me that he’s sin­gling me out as a Jew, and it makes me very uncom­fort­able. I tell the chair of my depart­ment what’s going on but ask him not to get involved. I have no prob­lem con­fronting some­one with their own anti­semitism, but my col­league stops ask­ing the ques­tion and there is no rea­son to pur­sue the issue any further.

Inci­dent #2

It’s still 1993. Woody Allen and Soon-Yi Previn are in the news, as is Sol Wachtler; each of the men are Jew­ish, and each one is involved in a sex scan­dal. I am sit­ting in the same colleague’s office, talk­ing to his office mate, who is a good friend of mine, about some pieces I have been writ­ing about gen­der and male het­ero­sex­u­al­ity. The col­league he walks in, lis­tens for a few sec­onds to get the gist of our con­ver­sa­tion and then inter­rupts, look­ing straight at me, “First Sol Wachtler and now Woody Allen! What is it with Jew­ish male sexuality?”

“It’s because we’re cir­cum­cised,” I answer, the sar­casm drip­ping from my words. “It makes us feel like we have some­thing to prove.”

My col­league doesn’t say any­thing in response, goes to his desk and starts to work. Since it feels like I made my point, I decide there is no rea­son to engage him fur­ther and I go back to the con­ver­sa­tion I was hav­ing with my friend. Con­tinue read­ing

Fragments of Evolving Manhood: A Full-Throated Protest Against Existence and the World

I have writ­ten before about the book of per­sonal essays deal­ing with man­hood, mas­culin­ity and male sex­u­al­ity that I tried, unsuc­cess­fully (even with the help of an agent) to get pub­lished in the 1980s. Evolv­ing Man­hood was the work­ing title, though my agent pre­ferred and used my sec­ond choice–What Kind of a Man Are You Any­way?–because she thought it might sell bet­ter. When my agent finally dropped me because it was clear that no one was going to buy the man­u­script – which I may one day make the sub­ject of a whole other essay – I put the mate­r­ial aside and went back to work­ing on my poetry, and then I was com­mis­sioned to do the trans­la­tions of Per­sian lit­er­a­ture that I am still work­ing on, with the result that Evolv­ing Man­hood receded into the back­ground of my writ­ing life, and this makes me sad, not only because I worked damned hard on those essays, but also because I think some of the writ­ing has held up pretty well, even though it is, some of it, 20 years old, and because I think the ques­tions I was try­ing to explore are still pro­foundly rel­e­vant. More, I am sad­dened by the fact that the odds are over­whelm­ingly against my return­ing to this mate­r­ial in any sub­stan­tial way. Time, both in the sense of what my com­mit­ments are now, per­sonal and pro­fes­sional, and of my dis­tance from what I wrote back then, is work­ing against me.

So, since I don’t want what I think is worth keep­ing to dis­ap­pear into my fil­ing cab­i­net for­ever, I have decided that I will start a series called Frag­ments from Evolv­ing Man­hood made up of just what the title says, though the posts may be edited if I think it is nec­es­sary. I decided to make this the first one because it is Passover, a hol­i­day that, broadly speak­ing, is (or should be) about social jus­tice but that is also about what it means to be Jew­ish in a world where being Jew­ish can get you killed.

***

A Full-Throated Protest Against Exis­tence and the World

As a Jew­ish man, like it or not, my iden­tity within the Jew­ish com­mu­nity as both a man and a Jew is defined by the fact of my cir­cum­ci­sion. Even though I am Jew­ish first because my mother is Jew­ish, at least accord­ing to the tra­di­tion accepted by most of the Jew­ish com­mu­ni­ties in the world, I entered God’s covenant with Abra­ham, became fully a mem­ber of my own peo­ple, only after my fore­skin was removed, and for the first fif­teen or so years of my life, I roman­ti­cized the moment of that cut­ting. Imag­in­ing a blood­less cer­e­mony sat­u­rated with self-conscious majesty, I saw my boy’s body wrapped warmly and securely in a blan­ket, held peace­fully at ease in the lap of my Uncle Max, smil­ing drunk on the wine-soaked cloth I’d been given to suck on to dull the (as it was explained to me by my grand­mother) very small pain I would feel. Prayers were uttered over my flesh, and after the cut­ting was done, my mem­ber­ship in the covenant, not to men­tion into the com­mu­nity of Jew­ish man­hood, was cel­e­brated with food and drink. I pic­tured myself being passed lov­ingly among the guests, cud­dled and cod­dled as they talked about the man I would grow up to be.

When I turned six­teen, how­ever, I wit­nessed an actual brit milah, or cir­cum­ci­sion cer­e­mony. The house was full of peo­ple. I could see in the room beyond the room where I min­gled with the other guests the feast that had been laid out for after the cut­ting. Peo­ple were chat­ting, jok­ing, shak­ing hands with old friends, and mak­ing new acquain­tances, but when the mohel—the man who per­forms Jew­ish cir­cum­ci­sions — arrived, the atmos­phere became imme­di­ately seri­ous. As he shook hands with the boy’s father and with those other men who would par­tic­i­pate in the cer­e­mony, the women left and the room grew quiet. The boy, bun­dled tightly in a blan­ket, was brought in and placed in the hands of the man who had been cho­sen for the honor of hold­ing the child while the pre­lim­i­nary prayers were recited. Then, the boy was given to the sandek, the man upon whom had been bestowed the priv­i­lege of hold­ing the infant in his lap when the cut­ting was actu­ally done. My view was blocked as the older men crowded around so they could see, but I knew when the cut came because that lit­tle boy howled. A full-throated protest against exis­tence and the world, his scream filled my ears, the room, the entire house with his pain.

The men smiled and laughed as if they did not hear the child’s voice. Above his wail­ing, they shouted mazel tov! — congratulations! — and shook hands with each other and with those who had par­tic­i­pated in the cer­e­mony. Some of them even began to sing. The boy’s scream­ing did not stop. I was taken to meet the child’s father. He smiled at me proudly, grip­ping my hand and, as his still shriek­ing son was car­ried from the room, steered me into the din­ing area where peo­ple were begin­ning to eat. This was not the peace­ful cer­e­mony I had imag­ined. This was hypocrisy, the sanc­ti­fi­ca­tion and cel­e­bra­tion through denial of the pain of the boy who’d just been cut, and also of the pain I had felt, and of the pain of every man in that house. I felt mocked, betrayed, and tremen­dously angry, but I had no words to express what I was feel­ing. Even now, hav­ing rejected cir­cum­ci­sion in my own fam­ily, it’s hard to dis­miss the rit­ual merely as the patri­ar­chal mark­ing that, at its roots, it is. Because what­ever else that rit­ual might be, the his­tory of the oppres­sion of the Jews has made it also a sign of defi­ance, a bod­ily affir­ma­tion of Jew­ish (male) iden­tity and Jew­ish (male) worth in the face of enor­mous persecution.

I put the word male in paren­the­ses in the last sen­tence because, while cir­cum­ci­sion marks only men and is there­fore prob­lem­atic from the point of view of gen­der equal­ity within the Jew­ish tra­di­tion, I do not want to deny the courage that it took for Jew­ish moth­ers to con­tinue to allow their sons to be cir­cum­cised, or for Jew­ish women to con­tinue to value cir­cum­ci­sion as a reli­gious rit­ual, a phys­i­cal mark and as a metaphor for the rela­tion­ship between the Jews and their god at times when forc­ing a man to pull down his pants was one way that anti-semites would iden­tify appro­pri­ate tar­gets for their hatred and vio­lence. In Hasidic Tales of the Holo­caust, for exam­ple, Yaffa Eli­ach tells a story that, whether it is com­pletely true or only an embell­ished ver­sion of the truth, illus­trates pre­cisely what I mean. In the midst of a “children’s Aktion,” a mas­sacre of Jew­ish chil­dren, the tale goes, a Jew­ish woman demanded of a Nazi sol­dier, “Give me [your] pocket knife!”

She bent down and picked up something…a bun­dle of rags on the ground near the saw­dust. She unwrapped the bun­dle. Amidst the rags on a snow-white pil­low was a new­born babe, asleep. With a steady hand she opened the pocket knife and cir­cum­cised the baby. In a clear, intense voice she recited the bless­ing of the cir­cum­ci­sion. “Blessed art Thou, O Lord our God, King of the Uni­verse, who has sanc­ti­fied us by thy com­mand­ments and hast com­manded us to per­form the circumcision.”

She straight­ened her back, looked up to the heav­ens, and said, “God of the Uni­verse, you have given me a healthy child. I am return­ing to you a whole­some, kosher Jew.” She walked over to the Ger­man, gave him back his blood-stained knife, and handed him her baby on his snow-white pil­low. (152)

I am that boy; that boy was me. Had I been alive dur­ing the time of the Nazis, they would have tried to kill me pre­cisely for being “whole­some and kosher.” Yet while the vio­lence that mother did to her son absolutely pales in com­par­i­son to the vio­lence the Nazi intended to do to him, the story nonethe­less omits the boy’s pain, glosses over the blood that must have stained the pil­low, the mother’s hands and the German’s knife. It is that blood which haunts me, for my cir­cum­ci­sion is my con­nec­tion to that mother’s courage, to the courage of the men who cir­cum­cised and were cir­cum­cised at a time when a cut penis could have got­ten them killed. Yet that blood is also about the mak­ing of men, and as long as the mak­ing of men requires such blood­shed, man­hood will con­tinue to require the spilling of blood as its proof.