NO HOLDS BARRED: Jews who demonize Bannon and legitimize Iran

Let’s be clear: white supremacists are vile people. They are an abomination to God and America. They are sick and twisted people who need serious help.

Stephen Bannon is pictured during a campaign meeting at Trump Tower in Manhattan in August (photo credit: REUTERS)
Stephen Bannon is pictured during a campaign meeting at Trump Tower in Manhattan in August
(photo credit: REUTERS)
There are few Jewish journalists I like and respect as much as Samuel Freedman, a distinguished professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and Pulitzer-prize nominee, which is why if he criticizes me I take it seriously.
Sam wrote a lengthy feature on me and my friend Peter Noel when we co-hosted WWRL 1600 AM’s morning show in 2002-2003. It was a ground-breaking radio program on America’s legacy black radio station that featured a renowned African-American journalist and a rabbi dueling it out for four hours every morning.
Peter became a brother to me and remains so to this day, veritably one of the truly fine people I know amid our myriad political disagreements. Sam’s lengthy feature in The New York Times captured the vibrancy of our morning program and the capacity of people from different backgrounds to find common ground and love each other. I have the article prominently displayed in my home.
But now Sam writes in Haaretz that I have become worse than a court Jew. I, along with Jared Kushner, Gary Cohn and Alan Dershowitz, am a fig leaf for the racism of President-elect Donald Trump and his stalwarts, such as Stephen Bannon.
Ouch.
Firstly, Sam seems to be confusing me with members of the incoming Trump administration. I enjoy no such position.
Second, he knows there is nothing about me that would ever tolerate racism in even the most minute amount.
From the time I appointed Cory Booker – today New Jersey’s junior senator – as president of our Jewish student organization at Oxford, to being fired from another radio show for using my perch to help relocate African-American evacuees after Hurricane Katrina, to bringing Rev. Al Sharpton on a solidarity mission to Israel right after 9/11, I have gone to the mat to oppose racism in every form.
Indeed, amid my friendship with leaders in the Trump campaign and warm relationship with members of his family, I came out strongly in the election against any temporary attempt to ban Muslims from America amid my praise for Trump’s staunch support for Israel.
But what troubles me about Sam’s criticism of myself, Jared Kushner and others is this: he is more concerned about white supremacists writing comments on websites than Iran being legitimized as a genocidal power with the stated intention of annihilating the Jewish people all over again.
Let’s be clear: white supremacists are vile people. They are an abomination to God and America. They are sick and twisted people who need serious help.
But, at least for now, I agree with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: they are a fringe element in American society and pose no serious genocidal threat to any American group.
So why is Sam condemning Steve Bannon, who used his platform at Breitbart to repeatedly condemn Iran for its illegal nuclear program to build weapons that could be used to carry out its stated intention of annihilating Israel? Bannon is being accused of being an antisemite. That is character assassination, pure and simple.
Tell me how a man who publicly fights the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement and Iran and opens a bureau in Jerusalem to support Israel is a Jew-hater? Tell me how a man who appoints some of the proudest Jews I know – like Joel Pollack – to the most senior positions at Breitbart is an enemy of our people? I met Bannon at Trump Tower. You can imagine that the guy is pretty busy right now. Still, when I asked to meet him about the incoming administration’s human rights agenda, he agreed immediately and was generous with his time.
It was a great conversation. I found him stimulating, direct, focused, warm and knowledgeable. As I left I was astonished that this was the man who was being demonized.
I write for Breitbart, just as I write for The Huffington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Hill, The Jerusalem Post, The New York Observer, and The Daily Beast.
I have seen racist nut jobs comment on my posts at each of those outlets. It’s not unique to Breitbart. As to extremist rhetoric, some of the most anti-Israel screeds I have ever read have appeared in places like The Huffington Post, even as I consider my long-time friend Arianna Huffington an obvious and phenomenal friend of the Jewish people.
Or how about this? While President Barack Obama called Elie Wiesel “the conscience of mankind,” a writer attacked the Nobel laureate as someone who “whitewash[es] Jewish behavior.”
Imagine that. An outlet publishing an author who accuses the most respected Jew of the 20th century of serving as fig leaf for Jewish crimes.
The writer was Peter Beinart. The outlet that published his attack on Wiesel? The same one that published Sam’s attack on Jared Kushner and Steve Bannon: Haaretz.
Does that make Haaretz an antisemitic outlet? Let’s not be ridiculous. It just means that extreme positions are pretty widespread these days.
Why isn’t Sam more concerned about all those who legitimized Iran and never once called it out for its repeated promises to visit a holocaust on Israel?
Has Sam condemned President Obama for never ever once threatening to walk away from the nuclear negotiations with Iran unless the mullahs stopped promising to kill all the Jews? Did he criticize National Security Advisor Susan Rice for threatening Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in connection to his planned speech to a joint session of Congress against this genocidal incitement, lest Netanyahu tear asunder the fabric of the America-Israel relationship? Did he condemn my friend US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power for making an international reputation opposing genocide only to go to the UN and never once slam Iran for genocidal incitement against the Jews, and, for that matter, doing nothing to stop the genocide in Syria?
To my knowledge, he did not. And that’s OK. Not every writer is going to excel at identifying every threat.
But to be more concerned about the threat posed by Steve Bannon, or for that matter Donald Trump, whom Sam also identifies as an antisemite, than Iran’s genocidal plans against six million Jews living in Israel is not just wrong but dangerous.
The author, “America’s rabbi,” whom The Washington Post calls “the most famous rabbi in America,” has just published The Israel Warrior: Standing Up for the Jewish State from Campus to Street Corner. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.