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Ralph Melnick's avatar

Anne Frank mentions in her diary attending a few Zionist meetings with her boyfriend Hello, but chose to stop when she experienced the contention between factions. And Anne grew increasingly more political while in hiding, coming to understand the forces at work within The Netherlands that were supporting the Germans and those which Resistance represented. But above all of this, Anne saw Antisemitism as an age-old hatred that Jews were once again experiencing in the extreme. She had little illusion that it would be ended with the war's end. Instead, she spoke of the likelihood that this Jew-hatred would not end with the Germans and their collaborators' defeat. If she spoke of people as having good hearts, she spoke more often, and in that same paragraph, of the truly nasty aspect of human nature which got in the way of this being fully and often expressed. She was under no illusions, though so many who have clung to this out of context quote appear to still be. As for those who misuse Anne for their own politics, and especially those who would steal her legacy as a proud and conscious and expressive Jew who thought well of her sister's Zionist aspiration for emigration and service to the Jewish community in Palestine, I only ask: Have they no shame at all in feeding off the death of the Holocaust's most well known murder victim?

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Chen Drachman's avatar

I think the question of - what would Anne say today were she alive (a question that, as you know, I had on my mind in different capacities) would also depend on whether or not she grew up in this era, or are we talking about an older Anne who survived to see what the world is coming to. Because there's also a generational aspect no doubt. And the immigrant and refugee aspect.

A LOT of Jews in the diaspora who haven't previously felt a connection to Israel now do, and rightfully so. I saw Jerry Seinfeld talked to the NY Times (I didn't read it) but my understanding is that he's sort of breaking his silence. It's just now, that so many people are starting to wear their Judaism proudly, that you realize how, even if someone was very culturally Jewish externally, we've been hiding. Sort of low-key assimilation where you try to be a good Jew and not rock the boat.

But the biggest issue, and that is really the core of the issue imo, is that you can be leftist, AND a zionist. Whatever the movement was in the past, today it's the belief of the Jewish right for self-determination in our homeland. That does not at all contradict Palestinian rights. You can support the one AND protest the lack of the other. I hate it when people try to frame Zionism as a racist ideology. And when you tell them that's not it, they argue, as if they have the right to tell you what it is.

Anywho, I'm back in town and would love to see you and discuss some ideas! :)

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