Preface. I. The Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Leadership Council. Disband this body of (un) representatives. Uncharitable thoughts of hidden agendas. Only one Jewish View? You must be joking. Joint statement that is not so joint. The Board, a true history. A seasonal game of follow my leader. II. British Jews and British Politics. Labouring under an old misapprehension. Why Tory success will get Liberals going. the self-confident and the self-hating. Voting tactics can have a moral basis. Pernicious pits of popular prejudice. So, now it's over, how was it for us? Israel's role in a PM's downfall. Jewish roots of Blair's Labour... Let Lord Levy speak his mind. Our 150 years of wasted power. III. Kenneth Robert Livingstone. Night mayor? Livingstone, I presume. Just one more sordid career move. Why not to vote for Livingstone. Ken lost us, then lost London. IV. Orthodoxy and Non-Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy has no need of these 'bans'. UK's strong signs of middle-Jewry spread. The odour of rabbinic politics. 'Greatest' too great for the top job? Dream on, you Progressive Jews. British Jewry does not exist. I worry about Masorti outreach. Playing the numbers game. A Reform Chief Rabbinate soon? V. Orthodoxy and Ultra-Orthodoxy. Gossipy blot on the charitable landscape. North-Eastern authority is not just local. Voted out, staying out and crashing out. More of those splinters of our discontent. Testing that fails some fundamental tests. It is most reasonable to take days off. Slander, hypocrisy, error and jealousy. On patrol with the modesty police. The extremists are taking over. School built on dubious foundations. Holy doesn't mean above the law. Why not support this lively cause? The treif chickens of Monsey. Club debacle sets off alarm bells. Fund intolerance? No thanks. We all need a secular education. VI. Jonathan Henry Sacks. A decade of unfulfilled communal aims. No Mohammed nor mountain but a move. Public matters need a public airing. Just a little more thought for the day. Chief Rabbis and moving experiences. The Chief's cynical about-turn. VII. Israel and its Enemies. Deep-rooted nature of anti-Jewish views. On truths not universally acknowledged. Blaming the medium for the message. Water Minister turning on the wrong tap. Tawdry text messages for our time. Pay attention at the back there! A UN paper so biased it's funny. Human shields can cover up many things. There's a PA in Patten and a Patten in PA. Let us have some real Palestinian justice. So, Dr. Waite, what of 'so-called' evil? More raspberry - than whistle-blower. Murky business from start to Finnish. Disturbing turns in pulpits and theses. Verdict endorsing cant and hypocrisy. Money and justice are seldom in tune. A message from the synod... Restrictions on Arabs aren't racist. Lebanon is guilty of apartheid. Defending Israel? Don't be nice. A revisionist revises his views. VIII. The Problem with Islam. A massacre and the roots of revenge. Truth will provoke the loudest anger. Terror measures are way off target. Our view of evil must not be clouded. Mistaken responses to acts of war. Murderers, minorities and majorities. 'Honour,' it seems is a relative term. Danish cartoons are not bad taste. Will Muslim leaders speak out? Muslims are not the 'new Jews.' Keep extremists out of college. My hostility to Islam is rational. IX. Islamic Judeophobia. Stop crying wolf but don't stop crying. either a catastrophe or a conspiracy. Heed these dire words... How Arabs conspired in the Shoah. The blood libel flows on Nile TV. Muslim dialogue? Don't bother. Police failed us over imam racism. Iranians are in denial on Israel. X. With Friends Like These... Trembling on secular side of fence. Offstage playwright's skewed views. Different wavelengths on the radio. JPR loses mind in choice of new head. My relative who's a hit in Tehran. We're not a 'people'? Outrageous. XI. Exposing Myths. Integrity rather than flattery in memorium. Rabbit-like response to Resettlement. Cable Street Heroics are a myth. Maimonides was a racist. XII. Nazism. Salutary German (and history) lessons. How inconvenient the truth can be. One more step the Pope should take. Grubby fingerprints on old paintings. XIII. Sex. No sex education, please - we're frum. Victims of the violent victims of stress. Even with many sinners, a sin is still a sin. It is not a sin to visit a prostitute. Gay adoption undermines us. Mr. Gay Israel is welcome here. XIV. Islamophobia. An 'invasion' that should not be repelled. Human rights should apply to all humans. This liberation is a form of repression. Is our beth din the model for Sharia courts?
Geoffrey Alderman (Ph.D. University of Oxford, 1969) is the Michael Gross Professor of Politics & Contemporary History at the University of Buckingham and is the acknowledged authority on the history of the Jews in modern Britain. In 2006, Oxford conferred on him with the degree of Doctor of Letters in respect of his work in this field.
"In The Communal Gadfly, Alderman, professor at the University of
Buckingham and author of Modern British Jewry, collects more than a
hundred of his weekly columns from the venerable Jewish Chronicle
since 2002, ranging widely in topic and tone. Though it represents
only one man’s perspective, Alderman’s grab-bag of a book will be
appreciated by historians half a century from now who want to
establish what issues British Jews deemed worthy of discussion and
debate in these years."
*Tablet*
There is something in Geoffrey Alderman’s book, The Communal
Gadfly, to irritate everybody, which is quite as Geoffrey Alderman
would like it. This book, comprising selected columns written for
the British Jewish Chronicle, provides an overview of both
Alderman’s and British Jewry’s main interests from about 2002 to
2008. Although some of the columns are dated, they are a pleasure
to read, educational and opinionated, when dealing with the subject
of British Jewry and of British politics. It is when he raises his
eyes from these local affairs to the Middle East that his critique
deserts him and his articles become a drumbeat of orthodox Zionist
clichés, which not even the author’s inimitable style can rescue.
The distinction between the two is sharp and perhaps reveals the
limitations of what can and cannot be said in good Anglo-Jewish
company. In discussing British Jewry, Professor Alderman, who wrote
its history over a decade ago, comes from a conservative but never
dull vantage point. He certainly has much material to work on and
does it with unseemly glee at times—analyzing, dissecting and
ruthlessly disposing of many of the guiding myths of the Jewish
“community.” One of his main theses, running like an arrow through
the analysis of British Jewish foibles is that there is no such
thing as a unified British Jewish community and the sooner that
Jews realize this, accept it, have their institutions reflect it,
and move on, the better for all. It is hard to disagree with
Professor Alderman in this. The main trend in British Jewry over
the last fifty years has been the decline/collapse of Central
Orthodoxy as the main guiding point of British Jews and the
fragmentation of the Jewish community into diverging movements.
Jews in Britain, as elsewhere, are divided by religion and
politics, and misrepresented by those communal leaders who pretend
otherwise. One can see the best part of this book as a contemporary
chronicle of a fragmenting Anglo-Jewish field, be it Masorti
(Conservative) Jews opposed to Orthodox “outreach,” liberal Jews
abandoning their attempts to be accepted by the Orthodox, or the
splintering of Orthodox Jews. Many of the situations he analyzes
have their analogies in the U.S., and readers will perhaps go
through these sections with a sinking sense of déjà-vu. Alderman is
scathing of those with pretensions to speak for an increasingly
mythical Jewish community. Thus, in the first section of the book,
the Board of Deputies of British Jews who purportedly represent the
community are treated as a bunch of bumbling idiots and the Jewish
Leadership Council as a group of secretive undemocratic
plutocrats—the “funding fathers” in Alderman’s memorable put-down.
In this criticism, Alderman is probably voicing the opinions of
most British Jews. There is an entire section devoted to the
hapless Orthodox Chief Rabbi of England, Jonathan Sacks, although
“devoted” may be the wrong word to use here. Amidst the often very
funny criticism, Alderman is making a serious point—as mainstream
Orthodox Jews become less and less interested in religion, the
organs of Orthodox Judaism are increasingly taken over by hardline
religious leaders, and have become subservient to the diktats of
Ultra-Orthodoxy. Although the chief rabbi has been notoriously
inept at dealing with these tensions, exhibiting breathtaking
displays of bad faith, one wonders if anyone else would have
managed any better, given the systemic nature of this crisis. In
any case Sacks’ kowtowing to the strictly Orthodox is grist to the
Professor’s mill, since of the many things he disdains, he is
particularly disdainful of the hypocrisies of strictly Orthodox, or
what he calls ultra-Orthodox Jews (indeed, the one time when
Alderman will criticize Israel, it is over the growth of
ultra-Orthodoxy). This criticism is rooted in the fear that, as a
column of October 2008 has it, “The extremists are taking over.”
Alderman’s fears here can be seen as analogous to Samuel Freedman’s
take on U.S. Jews in Jew vs. Jew. When Alderman moves to discuss
British politics he remains interesting and irritating,
supplementing his conservative views with nuggets of political
information which educate, irrespective of one’s position. He is in
his element in the short section “Exposing Myths,” where he
disposes of Maimonides as a racist, the famous battle of Cable
Street (where London Jews fought alongside dockworkers to prevent a
fascist march in 1936) as counterproductive, and the organs of
British Jewry as historically supine. Whether one agrees or not,
the arguments are interesting. Geoffrey Alderman is fulfilling his
gadfly role. All changes when it comes to Muslims and Israel, where
far from asking “subversive questions,” the author mouths the
customary communal pieties. In relation to Muslims, he exhibits a
depressing depth of paranoia and dislike, along with, it must be
said, tepid calls for a certain degree of toleration. This
antagonism is one time when Alderman is in complete synch with his
despised Board of Deputies. Ditto for Israel, where Alderman
rigorously stays within the conventions of right-wing Zionism. It
is not simply a matter of the reader disagreeing with Alderman on
Israel and Palestine, as one might elsewhere. It is the glum
certainty of knowing in advance what he will say. Settlements—not a
problem, discrimination against Arabs—nothing to see here, Rachel
Corrie—an idiot who bought about her own death. And so on. The
critical distance he shows in relation to British Jews is effaced
when facing Israel. Or rather it is replaced by invective against
those whom he sees as the enemies of Israel. It is a familiar
dreary litany, from the dangers of liberal do-gooders to the perils
of Islam. This includes the expected snapping at the heels of those
Jews who, unlike Alderman, defy communal orthodoxy and criticize
Israel’s policies towards Palestinians. When reading Alderman’s
articles on British Jews, one marvels that he has managed to retain
his weekly column at The Jewish Chronicle, so trenchant are some of
his criticisms. When reading his writings on Israel and Islam, one
understands why. Geoffrey Alderman represents the limits of
acceptable dissent. This is as revealing as anything in his
articles; in showing these limits Alderman illustrates the
lineaments of mainstream Anglo-Jewry, a place where one is given
carte blanche to criticize pretty much anything about a fragmented
local community so long as one shows unremitting support for
Israel’s actions.
*David Landy, Department of Sociology, Lancaster University*
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