9 May 2024

A Brief History of Irish/Jewish Relations (With Reference to Current Events)

Larping for Palestine with the students of 
Trinity College Dublin
 
I.
 
I have previously written on the relationship of Irish Republicanism to National Socialism [1].
 
However, in light of the authorities at Trinity College Dublin agreeing to the demands of a hundred or so useful idiots amongst the student body to cut commercial ties with Israel because of the war in Gaza [2] - which, for want a better term, we might describe as a Judenboykott - I thought it might be interesting to take a further (brief) look at the history of Irish/Jewish relations. 
 
 
II. 
 
There have never been many Jews choosing to settle in Ireland. 
 
Nevertheless, the history of Jews on the Emerald Isle can be traced back over a thousand years; the Annals of Inisfallen [3] makes the earliest known reference to them, recording that when, in 1079, five Jews came from overseas bearing gifts they were quickly sent back - so much for the welcoming nature of the Irish (more of a modern than a medieval trait it seems). 
 
Despite this, by the early 13th-century there was a tiny Jewish community in Ireland, based in or near Dublin, though how settled they were (and what rights they had) at this time is uncertain. It's really only in the 16th-century that Jews became accepted into Irish society - though the first synagogue wasn't built until 1660, near Dublin Castle.   
 
During the late 19th-century there was an increase in Jewish immigration to Ireland, but in 1901 they still numbered less than 4,000 (up from around 450 twenty years earler). Again, most of these people resided in the capital where they established schools, shops, and synagogues and became prominent in business, education, and politics.  
 
Officially neutral during the Second World War, the political establishment of Ireland tended to be indifferent to the fate of European Jews, even if overt antisemitism was not widespread in Ireland. The Nazis - always planning ahead - had listed the 4,000 Jews of Ireland for future extermination. 
 
Perhaps not surprisingly, given this indifference - and the fact it had been made very difficult for Jews to gain refugee status in Ireland during and after the War [4] - the native Jewish population saw a significant decrease in numbers in 1948 after the establishment of Israel; many choosing to move there out of ideological and/or religious convictions. 
 
In subsequent decades, more Jews would also emigrate to Israel, the UK, and the US due to the decline of Jewish life in Ireland and for better economic prospects. According to the census of 2022, there are now around 2,200 Jews living in the Irish Republic (over half of whom are in Dublin). 


III.
 
Having said that overt antisemitism isn't (and never has been) a major problem in Ireland, that doesn't mean the Irish are entirely innocent with reference to this ...
 
Indeed, many of  Ireland's key political figures - including the founders of two major parties - were noted for their antisemitic speech and behavior [5] and even now there are delightful political figures including Réada Cronin, Chris Andrews, and Mick Wallace to contend with [6].  
 
And then there's the Church ...
 
Throughout the 20th-century, several leading figures in the Catholic Church have promoted antisemitic beliefs and attitudes, and a number of leading Catholic newspapers and journals carried what the historian Dermot Keogh termed "radical anti-Jewish articles" [7] - and by which he refers to really shocking stuff, that I really don't wish to reprint (or even discuss) here. 
 
 
IV.
 
In sum: it's not surprising that students at TCD seem to be not merely supportive of Palestine, but actively hostile to Israel; for it's a politico-religious prejudice that pre-dates the current war in Gaza [8], which started, let us remind ourselves, on 7 October 2023, when Hamas and several other terrorist groups launched a coordinated attack on southern Israel, killing over 1,100 people and taking some 250 hostages. 
 
I don't think the students are morally retarded, so much as misguided and naive concerning the dangers of what Foucault terms micro-fascism; of just how easy it is to slip from being pro-Palestinian to pro-Hamas and from being anti-Zionist or anti-Israeli to antisemitic. 
 
Foucault asks: "How does one keep from being fascist, even (especially) when one believes oneself to be a revolutionary militant?" [9]    
 
It's a crucial question and one which all activists indulging in the ugly politics of ethno-religious identity and victimhood should ask themselves: "How do we rid our speech and our acts, our hearts and our pleasures, of fascism?" [10] It's not easy. But I would suggest one might begin by refraining from the following three things:
 
(i) mindlessly chanting slogans and waving flags ... 
 
(ii) cosplaying in keffiyehs ... 
 
(iii) making raised fist gestures for the cameras.   
 
 
Notes
 
[1] See the post entitled 'The Shamrock and the Swastika' (16 Feb 2020): click here.   
 
[2] In a statement, the university declared that Trinity College Dublin will "complete a divestment from investments in Israeli companies that have activities in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and [...] endeavour to divest from investments in other Israeli companies". See the report by Rory Carroll in The Guardian (8 May 2024): click here
 
[3] The Annals of Inisfallen are a chronicle of the medieval history of Ireland originally compiled c. 1092, but regularly updated by the monks of Inisfallen Abbey after this. It is housed in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. 
 
[4] In 1948, a Department of Justice official explained that it was the policy to restrict the admission of Jewish aliens, for the reason that any substantial increase in numbers might give rise to antisemitism. 
 
[5] Arthur Griffith, founder of Sinn Féin, subscribed to all the usual Jewish conspiracy theories, whilst Éamon de Valera, a founder of Fianna Fáil and one of Ireland's most significant statesmen, personally called on the representative of the Nazi German government to express his condolences for Hitler's death.
 
[6] Réada Cronin, a Sinn Féin TD from Kildare North, posted several antisemitic tweets, which included claims that Jews were responsible for European wars and that Mossad (the Israeli intelligence agency) was influencing British elections. After she apologised, Sinn Féin took no further action. 
      Chris Andrews, another Sinn Féin TD, liked posts on social media referring to Israelis as "murderous Zionist bastards". 
      Mick Wallace, an MEP, shared links to publications on social media suggesting that Jews control the media and were responsible for the 9/11 attacks. 
 
[7] Dermot Keogh, Jews in twentieth-century Ireland: refugees, anti-semitism and the Holocaust (Cork University Press, 1998), p. 92.
 
[8] See Manfred Gerstenfeld's review of Rory Miller's Ireland and the Palestine Question, 1948-2004, published as 'Ireland: A Country Hostile to Israel', in the Jewish Political Studies Review, Vol. 19, No. 1/2 (Spring 2007), pp. 188-191. The review can be found on JSTOR: click here. I would suggest relations between Ireland and Israel have not got any better during the last twenty years.
 
[9] Michel Foucault, Preface to Deleuze and Guattari's Anti-Oedipus, trans. Robert Hurley, Mark Seem, and Helen R. Lane (University of Minnesota Press, 1983), p. xiil. 
 
[10] Ibid
 
 
For a related post to this one, please click here.
 
 

4 comments:

  1. 'Useful idiots' and 'mindless' sloganeering? O dear! You really come over as turning into an embittered/reactionary old man, I'm sad to say. Presumably you think the students currently following suit at Oxford, Cambridge, Leeds and Newcastle, for example, are all also 'idiots' rather than young adults taking responsibility for the world they want to live in, exerting power over their academic administrations, and getting real results in this domain by asking for their institutions and fellow students (that they fund directly while paying some of the highest fees in the world) to disclose their investments, divest from Israel and acknowledge the horror of Gaza? And with your ill-advised and distastefully Germanised use of the term 'Judenboykott', it's really as if your determination to go on conflating Judaism and Zionism (and now it seems Germany) is wilful beyond the will (something you can't seem to stop yourself pressing on with in sec. IV).

    The idea that Israeli's attack on Gaza and the Palestinian people straightforwardly 'started' on October 7 is a boring, trite and uncritical cliche that belongs among the dregs of the gutter right wing press not an often incisive and sharp-minded forum like TTA. To enlarge the lens, it was the result of decades of Israeli militarism, expansionism and destruction (which does not mean of course that Hamas' action was not a provocation).

    In fact, as The New York Times has reported (hardly a bastion of Islamist terror), there is plenty of evidence that Israel had advance notification of an incursion up to a year before 7 October and indeed facilitated it.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/30/world/middleeast/israel-hamas-attack-intelligence.html

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2023/12/02/klox-d02.html

    As Andre Damon has gone as far to write,

    'These revelations expose the Gaza genocide to be a criminal conspiracy by the Netanyahu regime and its imperialist backers, whose victims include not only 20,000 slaughtered Palestinians, but the Israeli population itself.'

    While, as Hamas' own revised document in 2017 agreed, I remain in favour of a two-state solution in this region (provided that the Israeli state is suitably policed and managed by an international task force), I feel more and more sure that the current regime, which is now prepared to 'go it alone' in its attacks on Rafah, is beyond saving. Let us hope its own people will put it to the sword, symbolically speaking, and its army will mutiny, rather than run the risk that Hamas' next action is more bloodthirsty still.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Am I turning into an 'embittered/reactionary old man'? Or is this not merely another example of the abusive ad hominem remarks you seem to specialise in.

      And - just to clarify your own position - do you agree with Andre Damon and members of the World Socialist Movement that what's unfolding in Israel and Gaza is 'all part of a criminal conspiracy by the Netanyahu regime and its imperialist backers'?

      Delete
  2. I think I've contributed generously already, and leave TTA readers (of which I am just one) to adjudicate further.

    Yes, I think turning reactionary/embittered is something it behooves us all to watch for in ourselves and our friends, and it's a fiercely caring thing, if anything, to point it out. (Criticism is a function of love, as surely you realise.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. PS Re 'abusive ad hominem' remarks in which I supposedly specialise, perhaps you might feel better if you actually dealt with the lengthy discussion I have effortfully made of this and other recent posts on this topic on TTA, rather than fixating on any personal slight(s), perceived or otherwise. Or maybe just grow a thicker skin!

      It's also noteoworthy that your riposte against me comes when it was you leading the attacks on the 'useful idiots' (among other unpleasantries) that seem to you to be the best way to write off widespread arguments/demos re Palestine that you happen to dislike for your own reasons. If anything, therefore, I've been following your own style.

      Delete