Ask Haviv Anything - Episode 64: The Soviet roots of today's antizionism, with Izabella Tabarovsky
Episode Date: November 28, 2025Izabella Tabarovsky is a scholar of Soviet antizionism and contemporary antisemitism, a contributor to many books and a senior fellow at the Z3 Institute. Her latest book is “Be a Refusenik: A Jew...ish Student’s Survival Guide.”It’s available here: https://www.amazon.com/Be-Refusenik-Jewish-Students-Survival/dp/B0G2GKWKCJ/ref=zg_m_bs_g_8975368011_m_sccl_1/142-8265824-8567764?psc=1Today we are going to dive into the story of Soviet Jewry and the ideological war carried out by Soviet authorities against Jewish religious life and identity that ended up driving so many Soviet Jews to Zionism.And we delve into the vast, well-funded, decades-long Soviet propaganda efforts against the West in the third world and how that campaign’s vocabulary about Israel still drives a great deal of academic and activist discourse on Israel today. The links run deeper than mere vocabulary. Much of what we’re seeing today — the discourse on Israel that goes beyond criticism of the Gaza war to rejecting the very idea that Jews are a nation — had its start in that Cold War context.This episode is sponsored by Ceki Aluf Medina, a longtime listener and member of the Turkish Jewish community who is currently living in the United States. He asked to dedicate the episode to the soldiers of the IDF, the reservists and the regular army, who have sacrificed so much for the safety of the Jewish state. In Ceki’s words: “We in the diaspora recognize our obligation to support you, to vouch for you and take great pride in celebrating your accomplishments.”He also asked to dedicate this episode to the work of Shuva Achim, “brothers return,” a volunteer based grassroots organization that has been there for the IDF soldiers since the early days of the Gaza war, providing at their cafe and way station outside Moshav Shuva on the Gaza border countless hot meals, coffee and amenities to soldiers heading in and out of war.If you like what we do here, please join our Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/c/AskHavivAnything. There you can ask the questions that guide the topics we cover on the podcast, join in our great discussions where listeners share news and valuable resources, and take part in our monthly livestreams where Haviv answers your questions live.If you would like to sponsor an episode, please email us at haviv@askhavivanything.com.Musical intro by Adam Ben Amitai.
Transcript
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Hi, everybody. Welcome to a new episode of Ask Haviv Anything. I'm really excited to have today a scholar who I have learned from a great deal in recent years about Soviet Jewry, the history of Soviet Jew and the surprising relevance of the history of Soviet Jewel to today, to what's happening today, to a great many of the concerns and anxieties that worry us, that are familiar to us, that we talk about them constantly, but sometimes the things we talk about most hide their deepest truths from us. We think we have.
have, we understand them because we're constantly discussing them. And then we suddenly discover
that our constant talking about them actually hides a kind of confusion. So I asked Isabella
Tabarovsky to join me today to help sort through some of the confusion of this moment.
She is a scholar of Soviet anti-Zionism, contemporary anti-Semitism. She's a contributor to many
books. She's a senior fellow at the Z3 Institute and a fellow.
at the Wilson Center in D.C.
Her latest book is B.
Refusenik,
a Jewish student's survival guide.
Before that, I want to tell you
that this episode is sponsored
by Seki Aluf Medina.
I really hope I pronounced your name correctly.
Thank you so much.
As somebody named Kaviv,
who spent years in the United States,
I have a deep respect for how people pronounce names,
but my Turkish is not what it used to be.
A long-time listener.
Thank you very much.
member of the Turkish Jewish community, who is currently living in the United States.
Sheki had asked to dedicate the episode to the soldiers of the IDF, the reservists and the
regular army, who have sacrificed so much for the safety of the Jewish state.
He asked me to say, we in the diaspora recognize our obligation to support you, to vouch for
you and take great pride in celebrating your accomplishments.
Thank you so much for that sponsorship and for the dedication.
And he asked to dedicate this episode to the work of Shuvaheachim,
volunteer-based grassroots organization, which has been there for ID of soldiers since the
early days of the Gaza War, to provide a warm meal, a cup of coffee, or any other amenity
soldiers need before going to war. Shuvah Achim, which in Hebrew means our brothers shall
return, is an impromptu cafe and way station located at the intersection right in front of
Moshev Shuvah, one of the Israeli villages on the Gaza border. It was miraculously spared
the attack on October 7. The residents of Shoeva watched as Soloveh.
soldiers rushed to the front lines and as countless wounded were airlifted out.
And needing to do something to help, three brothers from the Mosheav,
Kobi El Iran and Dr. Trabelisi, took their Shabbat, Water Urn, which is a water heater,
two Shuvat Junction, pitched a table and began serving coffee to those soldiers,
and they never left. Two years later, they're still manning a refreshment stand for soldiers
coming in and out of Gaza. Now it's not just coffee, it's clothing, toiletries, food rations,
drinks. They serve 2,000 cooked meals a day. This is the story of Israeli society mobilizing
and of the strength of a society that is unbelievably strong, capable, competent, and deeply,
deeply interconnected. Finally, I want to invite everybody to join our Patreon. If you want to ask
us the questions that guide what it is that we talk about on this podcast, if you want to join
a discussion forum with, at this point, thousands of members who load up, who put up
their just incredible resources, opinions, comments, rich, interesting stuff I have learned
from reading these discussion forums. I participate in the discussion forums. And also,
if you want to join our monthly live stream where I answer all your questions live,
that is where you do it. That's at patreon.com slash ask Javiv. Anything.
Isabella, how are you?
I'm doing well. Thank you so much for having me, first of all.
Thank you. Thank you for joining me. It's a, it's really great to have you. I'm really excited for this conversation.
As I just laid out at the very beginning, very, very briefly, it's a big story. It's a story of millions of Jews.
And it's a story that I'm afraid we're a little bit forgetting because Russian-speaking Jews in Israel, former Soviet Union Jews in Israel, are just Israeli at this point.
You know, a friend of mine who's parents, she was a little kid when they came,
her parents came from Russia.
Her Russian is very bad, right?
And it's just to exchange some words with grandma.
And she's deeply, deeply Israeli.
The 800,000 Soviet Jews who came to America after the fall of the Iron Curtain,
they're so deeply Americanized.
Obviously, I'm talking about the new generation, right, under 40.
And so this story is being forgotten, but really we live in a world that was in some important ways framed by this Soviet story.
So I guess my first question to you is let's set the history.
Can you walk us through the topsy-turvy, strange, interesting Soviet relationship with Jews and then also with the Jewish state and Israel and Zionism?
Wow, that's a really broad question.
So I think what I'll start with, I think the story that's most relevant is the story of the Soviet relationship with Zionism, with Jews, yes, but also with Zionism, because that is really, I think, what we're inheriting today and in this moment.
And this story really begins quite early on.
already in 1913, Jan Stalin writes an article, which can be easily found on the internet today.
It's called Marxism and the National Question.
And in this article, Stalin argues that Zionists are wrong when they say the Jews are a people.
And this is really crucial because the entire kind of substance of Soviet opposition to Zionism,
especially in the late years, in the 70s and 80s after the Six-Day War,
is the notion that Jews are a people and Soviet Jews want to rejoin or be part of this people,
and the Soviets are really opposing to that.
And they use every tool in their toolbox to undermine the idea that Jews are a people.
And it's something that we hear echoes of today very, very clearly.
Why? Why would the Soviets be against Jewish collective national ethnic identity?
We should just say that in the Russian Empire for centuries, the millions of Jews who, because of the partition of Poland, came under Russian rule.
But before that, there were quite a few Jews, not millions, but quite a few in the Russian Empire.
For centuries, they were defined as an ethnicity.
They were another nation, not Russians.
And then suddenly comes, Comrade Stalin and says, Jews aren't really a nation.
They're just, I don't know what a religion.
Why does this matter to them?
Is this because of Marxism and universalism?
And so he doesn't want there to be nations in the world?
I think, look, in the article that Stalin writes in 1913, he says he argues with Zionists, I think because at that point, so he argues in theoretical grounds.
He says, Jews are not a nation because look at the Jews around the world.
They don't share the same language.
They don't share a territory.
They clearly don't have the same culture.
They don't share any political and economic activity.
So therefore, based on Marxism, they are not a.
people. But I think underlying this, or maybe in parallel with this, there are also practical
considerations. And this is a time when in the Jewish world, you know, there is this, the fight
between Zionists and Bundists. But what the Bolsheviks want, what the Russian socialists want,
is a revolution in which all the oppressed people of the world will participate, certainly
all the oppressed people of the Russian empire. And Zionists are essentially a competition.
for the loyalties of the Jewish masses,
because Zionism was quite popular
among the Jewish masses
of the Russian Empire,
which were extremely oppressed.
They never became emancipated
the way Jews in Europe were emancipated.
By the early 20th century,
there's still limitations on their movement.
They are confined to what's known as the Pale of Settlement.
It's very hard for them to live in big cities
if they want to, you know,
their legal rights,
are not equal. So they are really oppressed. And in general, there is also, of course, the opposition
to nationalism of all kinds. And Zionism is a nationalist movement. And so what do the Bolsheviks
say? What is what are they trying to sell the masses? They're saying, you know, it doesn't
matter where you come from. What matters is that if you are a worker, if you're proletariat,
remember the slogan, proletarians of all the world unite.
Right. So your ties are not based on your ethnicity. They're not based on who is next to you. They're based on your class belonging. So you are closer as a proletarian in Russia to the proletarians in Japan and in Africa and in Latin America. And what are Zionists saying? Zionists are saying, you as Jews, we are together. We are people. We take care of each.
other, right? Our people who are well off are taking care of our poor and our future is in Palestine
in the land of Israel. So it's a very different project. And so from the very beginning, the Soviet
sea Zionism is really threatening to what they're doing. So Stalin's writing this in 1913.
So he's a couple of years before, right, the 1917 revolution. And it's competition for Jews. He wants
Jewish support. Right. There's a lot of Jews. There's a whole Jewish intellectual class. They
were Russian integrationists. They turned Zionist, basically because of the great
progrims and the oppression and the fact that the Russian Empire turned reactionary. In a sense,
Stalin feels his movement and the Jews, the suffering Jews of the Russian Empire, have the same
enemies. These views are also, by the way, correspond to Lenin's views. Stalin is really
channeling Lenin's views at this point. And Lenin, it's very interesting because the Bolsheviks
in competing for Jewish loyalties, they very much speak up against.
anti-Semitism. And the Russian Empire was nothing if not anti-Semitic, right? And it was really
supported from the top. And there are, of course, terrible pogroms from the late 19th century
onward, 1903 is the Kishonov pogroms. And it continues. Russia also is the birthplace of the
protocols of the elders of Zion. So this is this thinking that dominates Russian society,
very much so, right? And so Lenin talks about
talks about anti-Semitism and that the Bolsheviks are against it, but in a very particular frame.
So it's not, he describes anti-Semitism as part of the, of a characteristic of the Russian Empire as a dying kind of order and believes that anti-Semitism will just wither away with the establishment of socialism, because socialism is internationalist.
under socialism, there is no distinction between ethnicities and races. Everybody's equal. And so,
therefore, anti-Semitism will disappear by itself. And of course, then the revolution happens,
and there are bloody pogroms during the Civil War. And anti-Semitism does not actually
disappear, surprise, surprise. And it's also important to note that even as the Bolsheviks,
who then become known as, you know, the communists in the Soviets,
talk about being against anti-Semitism.
You know, this comes with conditions.
What are the conditions?
The conditions are that you shouldn't be religious
because the Soviet state is against religion in general.
And you shouldn't be nationalist.
So you shouldn't be Zionists.
So religious Jews and Zionist Jews are subjected to persecution
throughout the 1920s and certainly throughout the 1930s.
So as the Soviet Jews, those Soviet Jews who accept this bargain are actually now doing really well.
You know, for the first time, the limitations are removed.
They are free to move throughout the country.
They're free to pursue any professions.
All of a sudden, there are Jews in prominent places, in leadership roles, in managerial positions.
There were also Jews at the head of the Bolshevik Party.
And so for those Jews, for a while,
things are fine. And I measure this roughly. I say that the 1920s is probably when the Soviet
internationalism had kind of came the closest to being implemented. When you read memoirs from
people who lived through that time, they would say, you know, that we really, nobody asked
anybody, what nationality are you, what ethnicity are you, nobody really cared. We were all
building the socialist enterprise. And then, of course, that begins.
to change with Stalin's arrival and as the state becomes increasingly more repressive, oppressive,
more like a police state, a terror state.
The sentiment toward Jews radically changes in the 1940s, because that is in the early 1940s
during World War II.
That's when you start to hear the talk about, you know, it's the war, which in the Soviet Union
is called the Great Patriotic War.
It's a really huge earth-shattering event that lasts from 1941 until 1945.
And this is when you start to hear, well, Jews don't fight.
Jews are sitting the war out in Tashkent, which was a lie.
Tashkent is the capital of Uzbekistan.
A lot of people, there were internal refugees who went there from the territories that were being occupied by the
Nazis, and in fact, a lot of Jews did end up there, but also half a million Jews fought on the
front lines, which was really far outweighed their percentage in the country.
But this starts to be spread.
You know, the areas that have been under the Nazi occupation, you know, big chunks of Ukraine,
Belarus, they also undergo the Nazi anti-Semitic Nazi propaganda.
And so anti-Semitism really begins to blossom there.
And it never really went away, but it really begins to blossom then.
And also at some point, Stalin realizes that in order to motivate the troops in the war, he needs to bring in this Russian nationalist sentiment.
And so the Russian nationalist sentiment is revived.
And so it's a real kind of final departure, I would say, from the original internationalist Soviet thinking.
and that brings with it also anti-Semitic sentiments.
And then toward the end of the war, of course, Soviet Jews experienced the brunt of the Holocaust
before the European Jews.
Approximately a third of the six million were murdered in the Soviet territories within the 1939 borders,
in the execution pits.
They are murdered even before Auschwitz, quite a bit before Auschwitz gets going.
And but then when the war ends, Soviet Jews are not allowed to tell this story.
And those Jewish intellectuals who try to tell this story are actually, the anti-fascist, Jewish
anti-fascist committee are arrested and tortured and executed on the day of the night of the murdered poets.
This is what it's known as in the West, even though not all of them were poets.
Why does Stalin need to kill anti-fascist Jews who, in theory, have it out for Nazism?
Right.
What about this indicates to him that there's some anti-Soviet, I don't know what, that they might not be loyal, that they might not be true Marxists.
Why would he go after them?
Well, you know, this is where I think what plays a role here is actually, I mean, I think there are multiple factors.
You know, during the war, this was a group of.
Yiddish-speaking intellectuals.
Solomon Nihals was the best known among them.
He was a great Soviet actor.
During the war, Stalin organizes them,
creates this Jewish anti-fascist committee
and sends them out into the world to raise money
for the Soviet anti-war effort.
Because he remembers all of a sudden
that Jews have money.
He, you know, he has the stereotypes.
So he says, you know, Jews need to go and raise money for our effort and raise support for the Soviet Union.
And so they go.
They go to the U.S., they go to South America, they go to the U.K., and they really propagandize on behalf of the Soviet regime.
And they do it in a way, I have to say, they misled Western Jews because by the time they're out there raising money,
I would say the vast majority of Soviet Jews
who were going to be murdered by the Nazis
are already murdered.
And what they're telling Western Jews is
give us money so that we can help
the Jews in the Soviet Union.
And then they come back and the climate changes.
You know, after the war, the climate changes.
And I think that part of it is the establishment
of the state of Israel, which, interestingly enough,
the Soviets played an important role.
Stalin played an important role in the establishment of the state of Israel.
And without the Soviet support at that UN vote, it wouldn't have happened.
But the sentiment changes very fast because part of what happens is he sees the excitement that Soviet Jews express for the newly established Jewish state.
And to the point where some are calling, you know, the government and saying, can we go and fight in the,
Israel's independence war.
And that really triggers every kind of red flag for Stalin, who is famously paranoid.
When Goldemeyer comes to the USSR in September of 1948, it's a really landmark moment when
Soviet Jews are told, and this is around the Rochechoshana, you know, the September
holidays, high holidays, Jews are told, stay away, don't come out, you know, just don't do anything.
and Soviet Jews come out en masse.
Like they, she goes to the synagogue in Moscow and they,
Soviet Jews are hanging off the lampposts, literally.
You know, they're so excited to see this representative of the Jews.
Exactly.
An amazing moment.
An amazing.
But can I ask, there was, there was a perfectly rational Soviet anti-Zionism.
They're anti-nationalist in principle.
They're competing for the suffering masses of Jews.
Whoever gets those suffering masses builds a movement of millions.
In the end, the millions are killed, and the surviving Jews build Zionism, but the competition is clear.
The anti-nationalism of Marxism is clear.
And then there's anti-Israel opposition, deep opposition, an alliance with the Arabs and reorganizing of them.
I mean, now there's basically military backbone for the entire Pan-Arab alliance in the 50s is Soviet weaponry.
I mean, that's the patron of that whole alliance.
why does Gromiko at the UN defend the Jewish state?
Why is the Soviets in this little window
when their vote is absolutely necessary
for the establishment of Israel
or at least for the passage of the UN
approval of the establishment of Israel?
Why are the Soviets in that little window Zionist?
Well, they, in that window,
they're not really Zionist
unless we say it with tongue in cheek.
This is all part of geopolitical calculations.
They are aware that the Jews in Palestine, many of whom have come from the Russian Empire,
many of whom are Russian speaking.
They have established this Kibbutzim that are very socialist in orientation.
Many are quite Stalinist, actually.
They are beyond Leninist.
They're Stalinist.
And he believes that Israel, once it's established, can become sort of a Soviet foothold in this really critical region,
which he understands in the post-war environment.
The geopolitics are such that this region is very important.
You know, this is where the British Empire is still kind of there, right?
So he's hoping that Israel will become this platform for which the USSR could attack
and ultimately defeat British imperialism.
And he was also hoping there were some contradictions and disagreements
between the British and the Americans with regard to Jews and Palestine
and what should be their future.
And so he was hoping that this could sort of create,
intensify the tensions.
So this is really the geopolitical calculation.
And so one of the reasons why he turns his mind,
or changes his mind, is that Ben-Gurion pretty early on
makes it clear that Israel will not be a Soviet puppet state.
And this, you know, this in combination with this perception that at home,
There is the fifth column, the Jews are the fifth column, really creates a turn.
And so that's the turn also against the Jewish anti-fascist committee.
And this is when, you know, you mentioned how early on the Soviet, the Bolshevik opposition to Zionism was fairly rational.
And I completely agree with that.
And when we look at early, you know, Soviet dictionaries, how they define Zionism.
You know, they look at Zionism through a Marxist perspective, but they describe it in a way that would be recognizable to all of us today.
They explain that Zionism arose as a response to European anti-Semitism, et cetera, et cetera, that it is a specifically Jewish national movement, that it's relevant to one particular part of the world, Palestine.
When you get to Stalinism, late Stalin in the 1940s, it begins the anti-Zionism of the Soviet Union.
Union begins to acquire a conspiracy's dimension. He begins to tap into anti-Semitic conspiracy theory
as he thinks about Zionism. And so what does it mean? So Zionists are the enemy of the Soviet people.
Zionists are the enemy of socialism. Zionists are the enemy of communism. Zionists seek to undermine
us from within. You start to hear that language. And that is. And that is.
is kind of the overarching theme. You know, at that time, they talk about bourgeois nationalism
with regards to Jews, but what they mean is Zionism. And so there's a whole bunch of things
that happens. They are instigating this trial against Czech communist and Prague, completely
loyal Czech communist who were anti-Zionist. You know, they were as kind of hardcore,
classic orthodox communist as can be. But they are accused of being bourgeois nationalist and they're
executed. So that's late 1952. And then early 1953, you have the doctor's plot where a bunch of Jews,
Jewish doctors are accused of plotting to murder the Kremlin leadership, to poison it, etc.
And accusations of bourgeois nationalism are there as well. So in other words, these Jews are more loyal
to their national kind of to the state of Israel, to Zionist forces.
You know, they start to bring in the idea of foreign intelligence services that are acting to undermine us.
This was always part of Soviet propaganda that there's this intelligence services out there, the CIA, the Mossad, etc.
So this is, and at this point, Stalinism ends, Stalin dies in 1953, and Soviet Jews always remember that he died on Purim, which is highly symbolic.
But this is kind of that turn where Zionism becomes conspiracist in the Soviet view.
And that will carry through to, you know, I notionally divide Soviet anti-Zionism into three stages.
I mean, it never ended.
But the first one is that early stage when it's still, when Soviets think of it,
the Bolsheviks think of it in terms that are recognizable to us, to then conspirological under Stalinism.
And then after 67, that.
acquires a really massive international dimension.
Because under Stalin, it largely remains within the country.
It only spreads to Czechoslovakia.
But after 67, it really goes global.
So now we are in the, you know, in the 50s, the Soviets, Israel sides with the Americans.
We're, you know, at the height, not at the height.
I guess that's the 60s.
But the Cold War is well underway.
And it's clear that Israel's not Soviet.
and therefore the Soviets, you know, go with the Arabs in a big way,
and for other reasons, but nevertheless.
And now Israel is set up as a geopolitical adversary of the Soviet Union,
and maybe it becomes rational again.
And it becomes this crazy conspiracyism,
but standing against Israel and then deploying, you know,
this tyrannical empire's, you know, tools to stand against something,
the propaganda, et cetera, is not unimaginable.
It's not hard to understand.
And then in the 50s we see, and this is something I read, among other places in your writing,
a kind of Jewish Soviet turned to Zionism, which we have to think, given the dancing in the streets in 48,
when Goldemir shows up, we have to, as ambassador from the new state of Israel, we have to think was latent, was deep, was there.
Russian Jews were the most excited about Zionism from day one.
Herzl at the Basel Conference in 1897.
He doesn't get the tremendous confidence that this weird little movement that he just started with 200 delegates in a Swiss town,
that it's going to become, how did he write in his diary at Basel established the Jewish state?
He writes it right after that first Zionist Congress.
He wasn't writing it about a handful of Americans or British aristocrats who showed up.
was writing it about the power and the commitment and the need that the Jews from the East were
expressing at that conference. He was writing it about the Russian Jews. And so there's this deep,
latent sense that they're Jews, the Soviets had a chance to offer them solutions. The Soviets
chose not to offer the Jews the egalitarian universalist solution. And now we're in the 50s. And the Soviet
Union has basically criminalized Zionism. You know, it's criminalized thought. But,
But Zionism is one of those crimes, but it has also begun to actively enforce that criminalization.
It is actually a death sentence if you are accused.
It can be.
It depends on the local commissar, but it can very much be a death sentence if you're a Zionist activist.
And yet in the 50s, we see Soviet Jews turning to Zionism in larger numbers or maybe just in more public numbers,
this thing that is quiet in the house, the whispering Jews, become something in the streets.
Tell us about that.
What drives a rise in Zionism?
Daphka, as we say in Hebrew, specifically, despite there's no good translation for Dufka,
at a moment when it's the most dangerous time to be a Zionist in the Soviet Union.
Well, so the 1950s, this is where we're in the Khrushchev era.
So 56 is when I think that it really begins to revive, I would say, not in mass yet, but for some Jews.
And what happens in the 1950s, after Stalin dies, he dies in 53, then I think in 56 is when there is an amnesty for the victims of Stalin's terror.
And I think at least a million people come out of the Gulag.
And there is actually a bit of a loosening.
They call the Khrushchev saw.
So there is a loosening of the atmosphere a little bit.
And there are sort of dissident movements start to be born, both on the left and.
and kind of liberal, I would say, and conservative all the way up to the far right, like
neo-fascist, neo-Nazi.
Like, there's just a general bubbling under the surface, you know, because the repression
has ended and people naturally feel more free to express themselves.
But among the people who come from the Gulag are the old Zionists, the members of the
youth movements who were arrested in the 20s and 30s, those who were lucky to have survived,
who were not executed.
So some of them come back.
And most of them, you see it especially in Latvia, for example, in Riga.
Riga was a really important center of the revival of Soviet Jewish, of Zionism, really Soviet Zionism,
and one of the centers of Soviet Jewish national movement that really gets going after 67.
But in the 1950s, these people come back there and they begin to.
talk to other Jews who are still there.
And remember, this is after the Holocaust,
so the numbers are really diminished.
Latvia had massive,
you know, mass execution sites akin to Babi-R
in Rumbula and elsewhere outside of Riga.
And these old Zionists come in
and they kind of gather around them
the remnants of Latvia's Jews
who are not afraid, you know,
because everything's very,
really in deep freeze then. After the Stalin, you know, the Stalin's anti-Semitic campaign,
the Jewish life and sentiment is in deep freeze. But the fact that this is happening in Riga
and in Latvia is significant because Latvia was one of the, the Baltic states,
were one of the last to join, to be annexed to the Soviet empire. Ukraine, for example, you know,
had been already under Soviet rule since 1918. And Riga and Latvia were, there were people
there who still, A, remembered Yiddish and spoke Yiddish, remembered Jewish observance.
They had, a lot of them had relatives who had gone to Palestine.
So there were those, you know, the Jewish identity was a little bit thicker than in the
rest of the Soviet Union.
And so they start to organize Jewish youth, these old Zionists.
And what do they do?
You know, this is already getting into the early 60s.
They start with something very simple and also something very Zionist somehow.
I can't even really explain what makes it so Zionist.
Maybe you can tell me.
But they organize this Jewish youth, and they start taking them to these sites of mass murder,
to these mass graves in Rumbola, in the Rumbola forest,
and they just start cleaning them up.
That's all they're doing.
And some of the people I've talked to over the years talk about Yosef Mandelovich, for example,
a great refusnik, really, one of the heroes of the Jewish people
that we all should remember, and for some reason, I think a lot of us have forgotten.
But he says that something happened to him at those graves, being there and looking at what had been done to Jews and realizing that the Soviet power was not doing anything to uphold or tell the story of what happened to Jews during the Holocaust, was really letting these graves go and be desecrated completely.
something happens to him there.
He says, he comes to a realization that this is the fate of our people.
This is what has been done to our people in the past.
And if we stay here, it will also be done to our people in the future.
And at some point, he gives a speech, and he's only 18.
This is really extraordinary, like 18 or 19.
On one of the anniversaries, he gives a speech where he says, you know,
these graves are telling us, they're whispering to us, don't stay in this cursed land. Go to the land of your forefathers. And so I don't know if this is, do you think, I want to ask you, do you think this is something that the Zionist understood? What is so Zionist about this project of caring for Holocaust graves?
I think there's a core, I don't even know if it's an idea, an ethos, an instinct and impulse of Zionism.
that the Jews have each other.
And in the end, that's all they have.
And this was a debate that in Soviet times, under Soviet rule, had to be implicit.
But the debate was basically, you know, is there a world community,
which can be class, it can be based on other, you know, frames of religious or, I don't know what,
the Judeo-Christian or the monotheistic Abrahamic faiths or, you know, international community after World War II,
framed in international law?
a world community, a universalism
that can accept me. By the way, the only place where
it is a serious
Jew, not a stupid
idea, not an ideological idea,
not willfully blind idea that there
might be, has been in the, in
America, has been in the Democratic,
liberal, English-speaking
West. Outside of those
spaces, Jews had
only ever actually been able to
rely on each other. And so an act of taking
care in Judaism,
taking care of the dead is a mitzvah
that is called a jesed shelemait, a truth, a righteousness of truth, or a perfect righteousness,
a pure righteousness.
Why is it a pure righteousness?
Because when you care for the dead, the dead can't reciprocate.
The dead can do nothing for you.
It is pure giving.
And so taking care of somebody to get them a proper burial, to clean up the place where they were
massacred, to respect them, to remember them.
It's one of the purest forms of, I might not steal because I want to live in a society where
my own property is protected. There's a lot of self-interest in don't steal. There's no self-interest
in taking care of the of the dead and honoring the dead. And so, yeah, the core, not, you know,
it's not ideological. It's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
and as you relate this story, okay, and, and, and I, I know some of it, I, by the way,
some of it learned from you. So that's why I know some of it. Um, but I can't help, but I, I,
to get into the story of Birrobyjan, for example. To me, Birrobijan encapsulates the Soviet
Jewish story, but I come at it without deep knowledge, and so I'm afraid to do that. But
basically, the story of Birrobijan is that in the 1930s, I think it begins in 1928, where the Soviets
begin to talk about, Zionism is actually very popular, by the way, to talk about the latency
of Zionism. It suddenly explodes. Well, if it suddenly explodes, it was there the whole time,
they just couldn't talk because you're a dictatorship, you're a tyranny. But in opposition to
this Zionism of the Russian Jews, the Soviet Union builds this Jewish autonomous province,
a self-governing kind of province, where Yiddish is an official language, obviously not Hebrew,
and it's a response to Zionism where communism says, hey, Jews can even express their culture.
By the way, they're still not allowed to express their religion.
There's a whole debate, are Jews of religion or are Jews of people?
Well, they're not allowed to quite be either, but they could be some kind of a culture that's
neither religion nor people, just like you described it.
Okay, that's very little.
That's bagels and Yiddish theater.
There's literally, there's no identity there.
And Birri Bijan will express that in case you need an identity.
But then, of course, Stalin in the 30s and more so in the 40s, massacres them.
I mean, the massacres, the leaders, massacres, the playwrights, you know.
And Birri Biyjan empties almost to the last Jew.
I don't know if there's a Jew left in Birri Berynian.
There must be a Shabad.
Obviously there's a Jew there, but in the 90s of the fall of the Iron Curtain.
And now there's still streets named in Yiddish.
There's still Yiddish street signs, but there's nothing else.
What was fascinating to me about Birri-Bjan was that I remember the first time years ago
when I read about how the Jews got to what is today Ukraine.
Because it was over the course of centuries that the Russians and the Ottomans fought wars,
the Ottomans controlled the north of the Black Sea.
The Russians conquer that terrorist.
You know, Crimea, established the city of Odessa, which is only 200, 300, I don't remember exactly, 100 years old.
It's not an ancient city, Odessa.
It's a new Russian imperial city basically meant to establish a foothold in newly taken territories from the Ottomans.
And then what does the Russian Empire do?
Because of the Partition of Poland, in the 1700s, it suddenly controls millions of Jews.
It creates the palest settlement essentially to force them to settle in these newly conquered territories as a settlement.
Now, where was Birroby John under Stalin?
Birerby John is in the far east on the Chinese border.
And so what was Stalin actually doing?
He was sending his Jewish population, which was absolutely not allowed to be what it wanted to be, needed to be.
The state does not serve it.
It lives or dies for the state to a place he needed to settle.
He needed to populate on the Chinese border for defensive reasons, for demographic reasons.
And that's it.
The Jews were just useful pawns for the great empire.
the Jewish experience, the move from the Russian Empire to the Soviet Empire, changed nothing,
except I think that the breakup of the traditional Stedl, except that it took away their religion.
It changed nothing.
The only alternative that ever arose in Eastern Europe that wasn't just the same old thing
but worse was Zionism, was taking care of each other, was circling the wagons,
dancing for the Israeli ambassador when she shows up, all of that was the only time you could actually
be a Jew because everything the Soviets offered you was Tsarist evil reframed.
And that's my sense of it.
Of the meaning of taking care of the graves.
Right.
I went farther along.
But is that a, is that, you know a lot more about this than I do.
Is that a fair assessment?
I'm sometimes accused of simplifying.
Is that a fair sense of the Jewish experience of those at that 200-year arc?
Well, look, I think that there are a lot of things that are similar.
In fact, I was actually thinking about it today as I was, you know, preparing for this conversation.
Some things remain the same.
And, you know, in the Russian Empire, you know, the Russian Empire acquires Jews with Catherine's under Catherine the Great, as you say, during the partition of Poland.
And they don't really know what to do with them.
And, you know, there is this long couple of centuries where they are vacillating between integration and segregation, integration and segregation, you know, and different czars approach it differently.
Some want them more segregated, others want them more integrated.
But characteristically, in most cases, the reforms end up actually harming Jews, and Jews experience them as an attack on either on their traditional way of life or on, you know, on, you know, on.
in general, on their life, on their families, et cetera.
You know, in some ways, the Soviets are also struggling with the same, you know, in their
own kind of Soviet way.
On the one hand, they want their Jews to be completely integrated or, as we would say
today, assimilated.
And to that end, they remove every marker of Jewishness from Jewish life.
So religion, culture, Jewish knowledge, languages, all.
of it is either removed and made unavailable or it is in fact prohibited.
You know, and I remember growing up in the USSR in the 70s and 80s.
You know, I wrote about it in a piece I insurpeer a while ago.
You know, I could tell you, I could describe to you the national dress and national cuisine and songs of every major national national
in the Soviet Union.
very much part of our upbringing. Friendship of the peoples, you know, we are all friends,
we all love each other, you know, Georgians, Stagic, Russians, we're all friends. I would not have
known, I would not have been able to tell you one thing about what it means to be a Jew.
And I wouldn't have even thought to ask. That's what's so interesting. That's the extent to
which they really completely removed Jewish everything, Jewish particularity, from your
field of awareness and experience.
But at the same time, you know, Jews were not segregated
territorially the way they were under in Russia,
but they were segregated socially in a way you could say
because we all were easily identified as Jews.
Because first of all, we were all marked as Jews
in our internal documents, which everybody was.
You know, the Soviets just attached huge importance
to your ethnicity, as it was.
was no nationality.
You know, so it was stamped in your passport.
But of course, only in the case of Jews, it signified a whole slew of, you know,
oppressive measures.
It meant discrimination.
So as soon as from the early age, when a kid came to school, it's a very common motif
in ex-Soviet Jews stories of their awareness of their Jewishness.
It's when they come to school in the first grade, age seven, and the teacher,
opens the list of students on the first day and reads out the name of the student and also
their snicity. Again, like really important to mark this student named so-and-so is Russian.
This student named so-and-so is Ukrainian. This student named so-and-so is a Jew, at which point
everybody laughs or everybody turns around and looks at the kid and they say, really,
you're a Jew? You know, because by then, being a Jew,
became so demonized that, and there was something so shameful attached to it.
So this is, so in a sense, you always felt like you were not part of the, of the society,
but you couldn't really, so the segregation motif, right?
But you couldn't really explain, though, what made you different.
And this is something that in 1967, when Jewish revival and renewal begins underground, you know,
with the refusnik activists, et cetera, this is one of the questions that they struggle.
with the most. They're asking, okay, I'm a Jew. What does it mean? I don't even know what it means.
The Soviets tried a two-pronged attack, right? You empty the Jews of their identity,
culture, religion, history, sense of self, but also you, you corner them, you box them in,
you segregate them socially to preserve their sense of self. Not to, that's not the reason,
but in a way that you need to know that they're Jews.
Never mind what they know.
You need to know that they're Jews because centuries of Christian society in Russia
knew that they were Jews.
They were the Jewish.
They were the underclass.
That's how the Christian knew he was the overclass.
This is the law.
This is the law of the land when Alexander III comes to power
and he has a reactionary against his father.
First thing he does is pass the May laws.
The May laws are reinforcing, doubling down,
tripling down on Catherine's Pale of Settlement.
on the restrictions, on the anti-integration.
He was afraid his father, before he died,
might have accidentally integrated the Jews.
By the way, a lot of Jewish thinkers thought that.
And so you hold them separate
because you need the Jew to be something separate.
You can look at and look down at.
And yet you also try to empty them of every sense
of self-incolent.
And one of the fascinating things to me is
it 67 comes along.
And Israel's astonishing, inexplicable victory.
The day before the war, the Israelis are digging mass graves
in Tel Aviv. The Soviets are parroting all the propaganda from the Egyptian radio,
etc. about Israel about to be destroyed. The Jews are listening to this. They don't have
access to proper Western media trying to report six sides of the story. And then the
victory is so great and enormous, you can't spin it. You try, you fail. You cannot spin it.
And suddenly the Jews have, having been emptied of all other avenues of Jewishness because
of the integrationist demand of the Soviets, Zionism is the only. Zionism is the only thing.
only thing left to fill it. The Soviets turned their own Jews Zionists by trying to both
annihilate all Jewishness, all other avenues of Jewishness, while also holding them exactly
in the same social place that the old sort of orthodox Christian Russian imperial system held them at.
They keep making Zionists these anti-Zionists or these anti-Semites. I wish I could just explain it
to them. If they just love their Jews, there'd be so much less Zionism in the world. Why doesn't
anybody understand?
It's very, very true.
And the, what happens in 67 is the Soviet Jews for the first time realize that there is something
positive that can be attached to your Jewish identity, that there can be a sense of pride.
You know, because until until then, it's only associated with shame and discrimination and, you
know, abuse in the streets and certain professions being close to them.
And now comes 67 and Israel's victory, and there's just an incredible explosion of Jewish pride,
which, by the way, I think also happens elsewhere.
I think American Jews have heard them describe 67 as a pivotal point for them, right?
It's when they decide to go to Israel or otherwise their identity deepens.
But for Soviet Jews, it's really radical.
And many begin to think or some begin to think and recognize that,
They, they, this is, this is what they, you know, for many, it's the first time that they really become aware of Israel and its meaning as a Jewish state.
And they realize that they want to be there. They think, well, you know, this country doesn't like us. This country, in fact, hates us. So why am I still here? I want to be part of that story.
Can you characterize for us that awakening? Tell us a little bit about that 1967 on awakening. I was once a,
for a couple of years
a spokesperson for Natanzharanski when he was
chairman of the Jewish agency. And I had read him
and I had admired his story and generally the story of the
Refusenikz and Yosef Mentelevich, which you talked about,
who begins as this
almost Jewishly illiterate
communist Jew in the Soviet Union
ends his life as an Israeli rabbi. So
that arc, some dreams are fulfilled.
Right. But it's a story that
is, you know, astonishing. These are people who in order to attach themselves to their own sense
of self and story, stared down the Soviet Empire, stared down the KGB, went to the Gulag for years.
There's a member of Knesset today, Yuli Edelstein, who sat in the Gulag for three years,
and he always, he doesn't always complain. I once heard him as a joke complain, but he complained
that he's good friends with Natan Sharanski. Natanzan went to this gulag for nine years.
went to KGB, actually, prison for nine years.
Yuli only went for three years.
Nobody respects three years in a KGB prison because everyone's always looking at nothing, nine years.
But wow, I couldn't, I don't know if as a young man, I would have, I mean, I only ever was in America and Israel.
I was only ever in democracies, but wow.
So that strength.
Describe for us that 1960s awakening.
And then, what are we, 40, 50 minutes in?
I want to get to our point.
But our point is Soviet anti-Zionism.
its influence today. So 67. 67 is a real turning point for many people. For Moscow,
it's a real crisis. And it's a crisis because they don't understand how is it that a tiny
little state in the Middle East has overcome the Soviet-trained and armed and financed armies.
and they come to the conclusion, which is very much on brand, that of course Israel couldn't have done it itself.
Of course, it was supported by the biggest Soviet opponent, which is the United States, which is not true in 1967, but this is the conclusion they come to.
And most importantly, because the Soviets view the world through the ideological lens, right?
And there in this counter, there in this, there's a good Russian word for a
protosteanya, which I can never find an English equivalent.
It's the Cold War.
They are fighting their primary opponent, the United States, looking at everything ideologically.
So they're asking themselves, what is it?
What is the ideology that is behind Israel's victory?
And here is their good old friend.
and enemy Zionism.
And so they really, this is when they unleash
a massive, massive propaganda campaign
in multiple languages, targeting multiple countries,
in which they are equating Zionism
with every evil under the sun, every secular evil.
Remember that in classical anti-Semitism,
you know, Jews are the devil.
Well, the Soviets are A-Sys,
they can't talk about the devil,
so they talk about the Nazis.
So they equate Zionists with the Nazis,
with the fascists.
And they talk about Israel as a genocide and apartheid state already, you know, 67, it's already
part of the propaganda, but actually it appears even before then.
They talk about Israel as a colonial state, as an imperialist state.
So everything that is essentially the enemy of the global left, they attach Zionism
to it because they genuinely believe in a very conspiratorial fashion, but you have to
understand, you know, they genuinely believe that Zionists are everywhere.
and they control the world and they control everything in America,
because look at all the Jews and all the synagogues that have the Israeli flag in them,
or, you know, all the Jews who are Zionists who are in positions of power.
In the 1950s, under Khrushchev, the KGB adopted a doctrine,
which stated that the United States, that it could defeat the United States
by spreading its influence to the third world, as it was known then.
And so all of it, and they were quite successful.
at it, you know, and they were doing quite well, you know, really imposing their influence or drawing
into their sphere of influence, the post-colonial world, you know, the African, Latin American states,
et cetera, and of course the Arab states. And then all of a sudden this victory in the heart
of a region that the Soviets really viewed as their sphere of influence. So that's, that's
number one. That's the external reason. And there's also the internal reason. And that goes back
to the Jewish national revival that happens in 67.
All of a sudden, they're seeing Jews inside the country agitating, you know, demanding more rights, showing more interest in their Jewish identity, showing more interest in Israel, in learning Hebrew, and learning something about Judaism and Jewishness, and also demanding a right to emigrate and go to Israel.
And they also see, what they also see is that in the United States and in other countries around the world, but most importantly in the United States, a campaign arises in support of Soviet Jews.
So that's the Soviet Jewry campaign that's really a unique 20, 25 years in their American Jewish history, which also for some reason American Jews are forgotten about, but it's a moment of incredible solidarity.
incredible, you know, working on behalf of other Jews who are oppressed on the other side of the world.
American Jews really created a miracle through this campaign, working together with the refused
inside the country.
And so what is the Soviet?
You're saying the Soviets are not stupid for seeing American Jews and American Jewish organization
as set against them.
They're not crazy for seeing Israel as a fundamental undermining.
And they're actually scared of what it's.
doing to the Jews within, getting a little uppity, stepping a little bit out of the social
role assigned to them by society, and all of those things for cultural social reasons within
and for geopolitical reasons and American advocacy. So they're set against, and they now have launched
this after the 60s mass propaganda war. Can you describe to us how this works and describe to us
how this gets to academia? One of the surprising things I have found on college campuses
facing college kids is that I have had everything thrown at me, not just a certain framing of Israel as bad, not just a framing of Israel as settler colonialists.
That is an ideological frame that is less Soviet. It's more new than that. It's basically from the 90s, the way I could, what specifically academics talk about when they talk about settler colonialism.
And I think we're going to do more episodes on that and discuss it because it really is an important part of the story of the discourse about against Israel.
but I have been accused of being imperialist and colonialist and Nazi and apartheid and fascist and an ethno state.
I get accused of being everything.
And that to me is a sign that I'm not really being accused of being anything.
I'm being accused of existing while being Jewish.
All of these debates I've had.
I've had them till they're coming out of my ears.
I've had them till I'm exhausted.
I've had them until I just want to turn the world off and go watch TV.
None of them matter. None of them matter. It doesn't matter if it is the next day, someone who agrees with me that it's not colonialism on the other side, we'll still use the word colonialism because it's useful, ideologically, pedagogically, propagandistically, all of these words deployed, all of them. There's not a word that, now there's new sides being deployed, ecocide and other side. It's not, genocide is no longer enough because it's overused. So now we're going to find other sides just to showcase just how evil is. It's all the evils.
Right. Scholastic side, etc.
Where does that come from?
How does that work?
How much did they get that from the Soviets?
Yeah.
So, you know, when I listen to this discourse, when I even listen to you describing it,
first of all, I have a deja vu.
I feel like I'm back in the USSR in the 1970s.
I feel like I'm, you know, the seven-year-old girl listening to the Soviet TV,
and I hear all these words floating at me from there.
You know, what we're dealing with,
We're putting so much effort into debunking these arguments.
They're not arguments.
They were created as propaganda for specific geopolitical purposes of one particular empire in the 20th century.
When you look at how did they arrive at these terms?
Well, so they wanted to demonize Zionism.
Remember that the Soviets wanted to win the Cold War in the third world.
and they came quite close.
They thought that they were doing really well in the 1980s
in terms of their influence.
So, you know, if you compare Zionists to Nazis, to the Europeans,
they immediately get the point.
You know, associations are immediate.
You get the story.
You know, you don't need to explain anything.
If you go, for example, to Africa,
the association is not immediate.
But you know what would be much more immediate
is if you say that Zionism is racism
Or if you say, well, you know what, Zionists are just like the Zionist Israeli state is just like South Africa.
And you know how terrible South Africa is.
It's apartheid.
So, you know, Israel is just like that.
A British colonialism in Kenya or everywhere they gave their local example.
Precisely.
And so and they varied their propaganda depending on the target audience.
You know, in the early 70s, late 60s, early 70s, they're talking, they're comparing the Palestinian cause to the,
the cause of the Vietnamese who are fighting the Americans.
And they're also comparing it to the cause of the Chilean socialists
before, you know, before Pinochet comes to power.
So whatever is the current moment, whatever is the current popular cause,
you see Soviet propagandists equating the Israel to that, you know,
and equating Israel to the evil side of that, of that,
and Palestinians putting them on the side of that cause that the left is fighting.
So this becomes, it's a tool.
You know, it's an industrial strength propaganda machine,
which is in fact grounded in the protocols of the elders of Zion and a Nazi propaganda,
but it speaks in terms that can be acceptable to the global left.
And they are putting these ideas out through, you know,
through the communist press, which they sponsor, you know,
they sponsored communist press all over the world.
So it's very interesting to see how in 67 there is a switch.
You know, the global left, the American left, the British left,
are not really speaking about Zionism and Israel in those terms.
I mean, they critique it, they dislike it,
they have all kinds of bad things to say about them, again,
because they're internationalists and Zionism as a nationalism.
But this poisonous toxic rhetoric that's grounded in conspiracies thinking
only comes after 67.
So for communist press, this is what they do.
And there are all kinds of, you know,
communist symposia and events where they introduce this rhetoric,
where they literally fly people from all around the world
to all these conferences.
And they inculcate these ideas at these events.
They understand, you know, there is this idea of,
first pioneered by the sociologist, the Milderkheim,
collective effervescence.
And they understand that when people get together for mass events and they participate in some kind of a ritual,
they normalize ideas and values and something that may have seemed extreme before,
no longer seems extreme after you participate in this collective ritual.
And that's what he refers to as collective effervescence.
So the Soviets give the use of the world, the socialist and communist use of the world,
and just the new left.
They're no longer so ideological.
that they only work with communists.
They're quite omnivorous at this point.
Whoever wants to join them,
they give them this experience
of collective effervescence.
They're huge festivals.
It's three days.
It's one of the ways in which they do it.
We should say because I don't know if it's clear to everybody.
This is not something needs to be told to Americans in the 80s,
but it does need to be told to Americans today.
This was an immense operation.
There were front organizations.
Your article mentions the World Peace Council.
There were the, what was it,
the International Federation of Trade Union?
there were maybe 200 of these organizations
that were essentially front organizations
for this Soviet effort. They spent
tens of billions of dollars
over the course of these decades.
They probably, they had millions of members in these
organizations that were Soviet fronts
for these information wars.
It was probably the largest ideological export operation.
That's how one scholar,
American scholar describes this process
in the history of, in the history.
of propaganda and the history of war and the history of ideological contests.
And it was immense.
There were probably 200,000 people employed in the Soviet global propaganda effort,
much of which was focused on the third world.
So you're describing things.
I just want people to understand you could not have done it bigger.
They did it as a foundational tenant.
They spent on it like they were building an army, like they were building a nuclear program.
They spent on it, you know, a percentage of their economy.
That is how big it was in their scale and how it went.
And people just Google it.
Go to chat, GPT, look it up.
You will be astonished, and you will begin to understand, by the way, in universities in the third world.
And also universities established in Moscow, essentially with the express purpose of taking in foreign students, inculcating this stuff in them,
and then sending them back into their countries, whether it's Kenya.
By the way, Palestinians, armed with these tools, armed with this ideological toolkit, with this vocabulary,
and with his propaganda.
Well, that's right.
And Mahmoud Abbas, of course,
famously defended his thesis in Moscow.
He studied at the Patrice Lumumba
and defended his thesis
at the Institute of Oriental Studies
under Primakov,
one of the chief Soviet ideologues,
at the Institute that was part
of that system that you're describing
whose explicit purpose,
or there was a department
in this institute,
it was called the Israel Department,
but it's explicit purpose.
There weren't really Israel's special.
there. I don't even know if they had any experts who spoke Hebrew.
But its explicit purpose was to legitimize the propaganda because the propaganda was already there.
And his doctorate was an analysis of the Holocaust that argued that it wasn't as big as they say.
And also Zionists are responsible for it.
The Zionists collaborated with the Nazis in the Holocaust.
That university is essentially a propaganda package, a PR package that you have to build yourself
and deploy into the world, and then you go home knowing how to do that.
It was a propaganda university.
Well, and when you look at that thesis, which I have looked at, you know, as a scholar and a nerd,
the first place I go to is the footnotes.
And so you look at the footnotes and you see who he quotes.
And he quotes all of these people who were known as Zionologists.
So the propagandists specifically hired and employed in order to develop this propaganda
that we're talking about.
There were maybe a dozen and a half of them.
They were employed by the, you know, the KGB and but more openly or kind of more overtly
they were employed by the International Department of the Central Committee of the Communist
Party.
So at the highest level.
So, you know, so this is who he quotes.
And some of them were openly anti-Semitic, actually were part of those far-right
neo-Nazi, neofascist circles that developed in the U.S.S.S.R. in the 50s and 60s and 70s.
So it's all really, really, really toxic. You know, and just to illustrate something,
you mentioned the scale of this operation. So in that article, I talk about how this front
organizations, how do you know that it was coordinated? So all of these front organizations
that claim to be representing students and women and journalists, you know, the
This is what made them fronts.
They claimed to have one agenda, but in reality, their agenda was to support Soviet geopolitical goals abroad.
And so when the Yon Kippur war started, they all came out with a statement that was practically the same.
All this massive organization put out a statement that condemned Israel and called it an aggressor
and called for all the good people of the world to stand up against it.
So this has been propagated for years and decades.
And, you know, so through, also through diplomatic channels, we have records of the correspondence of a long-serving Soviet ambassador in Washington, Anatoly Dobrynin, with his superiors in the foreign ministry from 1970, where he is being told, you have to go and talk to the people on the hill, both Republicans and Democrats, and tell them about the, tell them about the evils of Zionism and try to create a division between Zionism.
Jewish Jews and non-Zionist Jews, and I'm paraphrasing here, but this was, these were his explicit
instructions. And imagine that this was being done all around the world, because the Soviets
really believed that Zionists operated all around the world and needed to be fought everywhere.
And what I want to say, I want to bring us back to where we started. Remember how we said
that early on, the Bolsheviks had a fairly realistic, if skewed, ideologically biased,
understanding of what Zionism was. They understood that it all.
only related to a small group of people, namely Jews,
and had relevance to one tiny territory geographically,
which was Palestine, and they understood the causes and effects.
By the time you get to 67, all of that is gone.
You have a picture straight from the protocols of the elders of Zion
about Jewish conspiracy only it uses the word Zionists.
And so how does it get to the academy, you ask?
me a long time ago and I'm still getting to the answer.
You know, what we see is that already in the early 70s,
the global left is speaking in this language.
By like 72, 73, it has adopted this language.
And so I think that from there,
it just naturally proceeds into the academy
because the academy tends to the left.
And so they, it just became kind of a,
a default understanding of Israel and a Palestinian issue and Zionism on the left.
And, you know, I used to say that it was just the far left.
And now the more I read about it, the more I think that actually it was in plain view in regular,
kind of in the mainstream press at its universities, already in the 70s, and we just ignored it.
You know, there's a really interesting article that was published in 1971.
I remember the date, January 3rd, 1971, a 5,000 word essay in the New York Times that talks about how anti-Zionism has become a new anti-Semitism, essentially.
So it analyzes in detail, 1971, how the left is now attacking Zionists in the way that right-wing anti-Semites attack Jews.
So the question that I'm really struggling with, and there are other.
There's other evidence I see that academics already saw it. It was already present in universities.
Of course, the UN ruled that Zionism was racism in 75. And actually the World Jewish Congress
already, I think it organized a symposium in 76, where it was already hearing from
attendance from Latin America that they were distancing from Zionism because it became so toxic.
So the question I'm struggling with is, why didn't we pay attention then? Because
people already saw it then?
And why is it that we're here now?
50 years later, we're still calling it new anti-Semitism.
And every time a crisis arises, we are like a deer in the headlights trying to improvise
strategies to counter it on the fly when, again, it's been around for 50 years.
Could it be that we have kind of known it was there, but not actually noticed it or done
anything about it because the simple
truth of Jews outside of Israel
is that they actually are dependent on the
good wishes and good faith
of everybody around them and that they don't
actually have a lot that they can do to defend
themselves if not simply
hope that society remains liberal
and accepting of them. What could Jews
have done? Prevented the universities
from becoming a left-wing
monoculture? I think that you're right.
Probably in the 70s, American
Jews still felt really
confident in their position, actually, in American society, that they didn't have to worry about
about it. So on the one hand, you're probably right that they don't want to fight anything. And on
the other hand, they feel pretty secure. A lot of what we talked about I mentioned in my book.
Can I plug my book? Is that okay?
Please. We'll put a link to it also in the show notes.
Okay. So the book is Be a Refusnik, a Jewish student's survival guide. So a lot of this history that
we covered today is covered there as well in a very brief way, really user-friendly. But also,
I wanted to tell, to remind American Jews of this story that they were part of. They refused
Nix fight, how they fought for them and how they fought for themselves, for their Zionism,
for their sense of peoplehood, how they really just ignored the propaganda. You know, we talk a lot
about fighting anti-Semitism, but I think there's a lot to be said for strengthening your course,
it's what you're talking about.
It's part of your toolbox is not actually to give it up.
We know from the history of Soviet Jewry that the more you give up, the worse it gets.
And the only solution is to reclaim all of these parts of your identity
that your enemies want you to discard.
And I think the good news today is that we have young people,
and I write about them too.
I profile six American Jewish activists.
and I actually, I match the stories with the stories of the refusiness,
because there is a certain mentality that is very, very similar.
Obviously, the systems are completely different.
No question about that.
You know, Shabos Kestenbaum is not going to go to prison for saying what he's saying,
or to the Gulag especially.
But there is a certain shift in mentality that at some point,
these American Jewish activists today,
who have become household names, arrive at,
which incorporates reclaimers.
all the things that they're being told to discard
and standing up for themselves
and for the Jewish people and for their identity.
Are you optimistic for the future of American Jews?
There's a lot of articles out there
about the end of the golden age.
There's a lot of debates over what this new anti-Semitism means.
We had a conversation today about the left.
That was our topic.
Obviously, everybody's watching
this unbelievable explosion
and the Candice Owens, Tucker Carlson side of the Republican Party of insane neo-Nazi explicit.
You know, Hitler wasn't necessarily the bad guy of World War II kind of unbelievable.
It's cartoonishly, you know, one commentator said about one of the Tucker Carlson podcast
that he was accusing the Jews of Usury again.
And he said that was his attempt to completely embarrass.
every one of his remaining defenders.
Now, that is in a very optimistic take
that suggests that his defenders are embarrassed.
I don't know that his defenders are embarrassed,
and these are some of the biggest podcasts
and some of the biggest people in the world,
no matter what crazy insane thing they're saying.
And so we're watching that.
But in that vice of this long-running, intellectualized,
basically protocols the elders of Zion,
and on the other side,
the just return of Nazism,
Are you optimistic about the state of the Jews?
Can they rise up and fight these things back, beat them back?
Is American society generally going to come through this moment having pushed those forces to the sidelines?
Or is this more of what the future holds for American Jews?
I mean, this is really the key question.
You know, I just came back from California.
I was at the Z3 conference out there.
And I gave a couple talks to a synagogue and public.
Palo Alto and at the Z-3 conference.
And I got to talk to members of the Jewish community there.
And, you know, I have kind of a dual feeling.
It's very hard to be optimistic right now.
And I think that there is a division between grassroots and the establishment,
which I think is very interesting because during the Soviet Jewry movement,
there was also the same division where the grassroots really led the structure.
struggle and the establishment, the Jewish establishment, came in later and joined the fight
and brought its institutional and financial muscle to the struggle. I don't know what will
happen here, but I feel like the establishment, the established Jewish organizations,
they're much more hesitant and perhaps are at a loss and confused and don't know what to do,
whereas, and this is what gives me optimism,
I did sense some energy from grassroots organizations
which want to give a fight to what's going on.
And, you know, I'll tell you what I think this fight is about to begin with,
and this is just me sensing it out through my, you know,
ex-Soviet Jewish sensibility.
I think it's a fight for our Jewish dignity.
I think this is, I think people have been subjected
to such an incredible amount of toxic,
demeaning propaganda, that they want to fight it.
And so I think that there is hope.
I think the hope is in the grassroots.
You know, the first people who encountered it in America were Jewish students.
And they encountered it already, you know, I write about it in the book in 2017, in 2018.
Nobody wanted to hear them.
You know, they kept calling attention to what was happening on campuses.
People were ignoring it, just like they ignored it in the 1970s.
70s. And then it all exploded in our faces and we can't ignore it anymore. But I think that there
are enough young Jews who will not surrender their dignity and their Jewish identity. And I want to
remind people also that, you know, this is again why the Refusnik story is so important, is that,
you know, it doesn't take a lot of really kind of powerful high-profile figures like Sharansky and like
Edelstein. Not everybody can be a Sharansky. Not everybody can be Edelstein. Not everybody can be Yosef
Mendelovich or Silva Zalmansen. You know, it takes a very special character to be that, to go through
something like that, to go, you know, and whatever the equivalent of abuses in America,
obviously, again, I'm not comparing it directly, but students go through abuse. So not everybody
can rise about above that. But you don't need a whole lot.
of them, you know, around those heroes in the Refusnik movement, there were maybe a few hundred
of those, but then there were, like, concentric circles, you know, there were thousands of those
who were also refusenics, but not activists, but they resisted at the family level in their
kitchen, you know, they taught their children not to buy into the propaganda. And then even a broader
circle of maybe a few hundred thousand who quietly helped out with the underground publications. Maybe
they would deliver, you know, as some as that publication from one place to another in their
suitcase. So I think that we have to, I think this is a very useful model that perhaps
can give us a bit of optimism and hope that if we want, I think American Jews can't fight this.
I really think they can, but the only pass is through reclaiming Zionism,
peoplehood, rejecting victimhood. You know, one of the most extraordinary things about the
about people like Sharansky or Edelstein.
You know, Edelstein was really injured in the Gulag.
He was there for only three years.
But I think in his case, one year counts for five.
I mean, he was really, really injured.
You know, none of them thought of themselves as victims.
That's what's so extraordinary about it.
I think we have to give that up.
And we have to prioritize our Jewish, the Jewish interests,
the Jewish interests, you know,
it doesn't mean that we give up,
that American Jews need to give up,
their, you know, broader political commitments.
But I think it's time to understand that we are in a very precarious moment and we need to
prioritize the what would help the Jewish people today.
Isabella Taborowski, thank you so much for joining me.
I really, really appreciate it.
I think that there's a lot of depth here and a lot of history here that if you, once you see
it, once you see the connection, once you understand the scale of Soviet propaganda,
And once you understand how the vocabulary through these third world, this kind of ideas, make it into the academy, how utterly unchallenged it is in the academy, you begin to understand what it is what it is we're dealing with.
And none of it is criticism about the Gaza War.
Thank you so much for coming on.
Thank you so much for having me.
