The article below is reprinted from the online magazine Tablet@Table.com which appears in my "inbox" regularly. It's moving and the author is moving. I've been reading his articles for a while. Please see his short bio below. This is his response to the election President Elect Trump.
Liel Leibovitz is an Israeli-American journalist, author, media critic and video game scholar. Leibovitz was born in Tel Aviv, immigrated to the United States in 1999, and earned a Ph.D. from Columbia University in 2007.
by Liel Leibovitz
My grandfather Siegfried was not a sophisticated man. When he bought a
car—always the same car, a blue Peugeot 305, replaced every few years
with a newer model of the same exact make—he kept the seats covered in
plastic to keep them eternally clean. When you asked him for an apple,
he’d hold the fruit in his hand and rotate it like a tiny globe, peeling
it with his pocketknife and making sure to remove only the skin and
none of the flesh. When I ran away, as a child of 6 or 7, to explore a
park nearby, he dashed out the door, wearing nothing but his underwear,
and ran until he found me and hugged me tight. He didn’t even hear the
passersby who pointed and laughed. Nothing mattered to him but his
family.
He died when I was very young, so I know his life’s story only as a
broad outline: Educated in a conservatory in Vienna, he was a promising
young violinist and composer when he was spooked by the goosesteps of
Hitler’s goons. He convinced two of his sisters to trade in a
continental future for one less tender on the shores of Palestine. Some
of his friends, maybe even members of his family, pointed and laughed
then, too, telling him he was hysterical, that he was getting it all
wrong, that it couldn’t possibly be that bad. But grandpa Siegfried
wouldn’t listen: His simple heart advised him to take the thugs at their
word and leave. At least that’s how I imagine it—he never spoke of
those early days, and his family and friends were all soon seized,
deported, and murdered.
I’m not sharing this particular story at this particular point in
time to make some kind of historical analogy. Those are rarely useful
even under the best of circumstances, and to compare Donald Trump to the
Fuhrer or his ascent to the rise of the Third Reich is an absurd and
reprehensible proposition. But I’ve been thinking a lot about my
grandfather’s story this past week, and in it I find three simple
commandments I can’t bring myself to dismiss.
The first, and most obvious, is this: Treat every poisoned word as a
promise. When a bigoted blusterer tells you he intends to force members
of a religious minority to register with the authorities—much like those
friends and family of Siegfried’s who stayed behind were forced to do
before their horizon grew darker—believe him. Don’t try to be clever.
Don’t lean on political intricacies or legislative minutia or historical
precedents for comfort. Don’t write it off as propaganda, or explain it
away as just an empty proclamation meant simply to pave the path to
power. Take the haters at their word, and assume the worst is imminent.
Do that, and a second principle follows closely: You should treat
people like adults, which means respecting them enough to demand that
they understand the consequences of their actions. Explaining away or
excusing the actions of others isn’t your job. Vienna in the first
decades of the 20th century was a city inflamed with a desire to better
understand the motives, hidden or otherwise, that move people to action.
Freud and Kafka, Elias Canetti and Karl Kraus, Stefan Zweig and Franz
Werfel—these were the eminences who crowded the same cafés Siegfried and
his musician friends most likely frequented. But while these beautiful
minds struggled to understand the world around them, the world around
them was consumed by simpler and more vicious appetites. Don’t waste any
time, then, trying to understand: Then as now, many were amused by the
demagogue and moved by his vile vision. Some have perfectly reasonable
explanations for their decisions, while others have little to go on but
incoherent rage. It doesn’t matter. Voters are all adults, and all have
made their choices, and it is now you who must brace for impact. Whether
you choose to forgive those, friends and strangers alike, who cast
their votes so deplorably is a matter of personal choice, and none but
the most imperious among us would advocate a categorical rejection of
millions based on their electoral actions, no matter how irresponsible
and dim. So while you make these personal calculations, remember that
what matters now isn’t analysis: It’s survival.
Which leads me to the third principle, the one hardest to grasp:
Refuse to accept what’s going on as the new normal. Not now, not ever.
In the months and years to come, decisions will be made that may strike
you as perfectly sound, appointments announced that are inspired, and
policies enacted you may even like. Friends and pundits will reach out
to you and, invoking nuance, urge you to admit that there’s really
nothing to fear, that things are more complex, that nothing is ever
black or white. It’s a perfectly sound argument, of course, but it’s
also dead wrong: This isn’t about policy or appointments or even about
outcomes. This isn’t a political contest—it’s a moral crisis. When an
inexperienced, thin-skinned demagogue rides into office by explaining
away immensely complex problems while arguing that our national glory
demands we strip millions of their dignity or their rights, our only
duty is to resist by whatever means permitted us by law. The demagogue
may boost the economy, sign beneficial treaties, and mend our ailing
institutions, but his success can never be ours. Our greatness, to use a
tired but true phrase, depends on our goodness, and to succeed, we must
demand that our commander in chief come as close as is possible to
reflecting the light of that goodness. There’s no point indulging in the
kind of needlessly complex thinking that so often plagues the
intelligent and the well-informed. There’s no room for reading tea
leaves, for calculations or projections or clever takes. The only thing
that matters now is the simple moral truth: This isn’t right. As long as
we never forget that, we can never lose: As grandpa Siegfried knew all
too well, those who refuse to gradually put up with the darkness are
making a very safe bet; if you’re wrong, there’s no harm, but if you’re
right, you win more or less everything.
So forgive me if these next four years I’m not inclined to be smart.
When it comes to the task ahead, I’ve no interest in deep dives or
shades of grey or mea culpas. Like my grandfather, I’m a simple Jew, and
like him, I take danger at face value. When the levers of power are
seized by the small hands of hateful men, you work hard, you stand with
those who are most vulnerable, and you don’t give up until it’s morning
again. The rest is commentary.
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