A lot of people on the left have been arguing for years, and especially since the Oct. 7 Hamas terror attack on Israel and the ensuing war in Gaza, that Greenblatt’s ADL has improperly focused on the antisemitism of the anti-Zionist left versus the white supremacist right. This column is not about that — partly because the accusation itself is part of the false binary baseball-game paradigm, and mostly because there is something much more important at stake.
The question Monday’s events brought to the fore is whether, as Trump and Musk move to circumvent the Constitution and otherwise undermine our democratic institutions and principles like free speech, we will continue to have trustworthy arbiters calling balls and strikes without regard to the pitcher.
This is as much about independent, non-ideological news outlets as it is about watchdog groups and whistleblowers. We need people to stand up to authoritarianism, not capitulate to it. Which is why I was also troubled on Monday by President Joe Biden’s preemptive pardons of family members and top aides. If leaders can absolve all around them of wrongdoing, how will we ever hold the powerful to account?
“That’s the danger of collaboration,” Eric K. Ward, a scholar of extremism, said when I asked him yesterday about the reaction to Musk’s gesture. “It may come dressed in the language of pragmatism, but it is a weapon of authoritarianism. It calls on us to sacrifice the most vulnerable to proximity to power. It makes us complicit in the activities of those who might seek to do harm.”
Ward, who has worked with Greenblatt and the ADL, did not equivocate about the gesture itself.
“Like Elon Musk, I’ve been excited in public plenty of times,” he told me. “I’ve done exaggerated waves, clapping, finger snaps — but somehow I’ve never accidentally stretched my arms out stiffly at a 45-degree angle not once but twice.
“I get awkward moments happen,” Ward added. “But I can’t normalize a gesture that evokes some of the darkest chapters in history.”
A Forward reader named Jon Garfunkel shared with me the letter he wrote to the ADL this week to complain about its response to Musk’s gesture. In it, he cited a famous Elie Wiesel quote: “What hurts the victim most is not the cruelty of the oppressor but the silence of the bystander.”
The ADL, of course, is not supposed to be a bystander, but a bold and brave advocate for Jews and against hate. It has done mostly that since its founding in 1913, and we will need it to keep doing so every day of this Trump 2.0 administration.
By Thursday, as Musk reveled in all the hullabaloo over his “gesture” with an emoji-filled post of crass Holocaust puns, I was glad to see Greenblatt return to his role.
“The Holocaust was a singularly evil event, and it is inappropriate and offensive to make light of it,” he wrote on X. “@elonmusk, the Holocaust is not a joke.”
I reached out to Greenblatt to ask whether, in retrospect, it had been a mistake to say so quickly and definitely on Monday that Musk’s move had not been a Hitler salute, and to talk generally about the challenge of calling out antisemitism in an age of threats and retribution. He did not respond on Thursday; this morning, he texted from the airplane as he flew back from Davos, where he’d been on a panel about antisemitism, and said we could talk more next week.
Meanwhile, I got an email from a Holocaust survivor named Alice Muller, who was born in Czechoslovakia in 1932 and told her story in the 2023 book My Name is Alice,
At age 9, Muller told me, she saw her “father being taken by the Slovak Nazis” and then had to hide in an attic with her mother and brother. At one point, her mother and a Jewish neighbor paid off a Nazi official with a sweater and 500 kronen, and she had to give a Nazi salute in order to stay safe.
“Two things can be learned from this event: First is you pauperize yourself in order to save yourself,” Muller wrote. “The second thing is I knew how to make a Nazi salute.
Someone “who is trusted by most of the world should state that it is proper to avoid gestures that remind people of Nazi salutes even if unintentional,” she added. “Elon will not admit he was possibly wrong. It is up to us to indicate that the world would prefer to avoid such salutes in case they create upset for survivors and their progeny.”
It is, indeed, up to all of us, and it’s not even that hard. |