Culture 'Jews Like Me No Longer Feel Welcome on the Left'

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By Josh Feldman
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Australian writer Michael Gawenda, author of "My Life as a Jew."

For Michael Gawenda, one of Australia's best-known journalists and a former self-proclaimed 'anti-Zionist Bundist,' October 7 was a wake-up call. With the spike in antisemitism in his homeland, particularly among groups he used to see as allies, he is concerned for Australia's Jews

As the first Jewish editor-in-chief of The Age, one of Australia's leading newspapers, Michael Gawenda was a trailblazer in his time. Today, though, he suspects his candidacy would raise concerns if he was vying for a top job in Australian journalism.

"Most newspapers have enough issues with their journalists without having to deal with the perception that a Zionist Jew is running them", says the retired journalist in an interview. "They wouldn't want the hassle."

Calling himself a Zionist was not always an obvious choice, as Gawenda writes in his memoir "My Life as a Jew," published just four days before the October 7 massacre in southern Israel.

In fact, growing up he identified as an "anti-Zionist Bundist" and was active in the youth movement affiliated with this secular Yiddishist ideology. For him and his fellow Bundists, creating a Jewish state was not the answer to antisemitism. Rather, they believed the only solution to antisemitism "was a coming brotherhood of man where all people were treated equally," Gawenda says.

"We thought once there was a socialist paradise, antisemitism would disappear," adds the 77-year-old, who was born in a displaced persons camp in Austria.

'Prophetic'​


Throughout his illustrious career – which included stints as a political reporter, foreign correspondent in London and Washington, senior editor at Time Magazine and editor-in-chief of The Age – Gawenda was "determined not to be a Jewish journalist," he writes in his memoir. Although his ethnicity was widely known, he never wore it on his sleeve.

That Gawenda no longer exists. Over the years, he has grown increasingly attached to Israel, which he now views as central to both Jewish identity and the Jewish story of the past century. He credits the beginning of his turnaround to his discovery of Israeli literature, which gave him a window into a society whose language he doesn't speak – to his great regret.

Gawenda visited Israel for the first time in his 30s as a young reporter, in what would become a transformative experience. "I came to see Israel as the center of the Jewish world," he recalls.

He says he was "already a lover of Israel" when he led The Age from 1997 to 2004, but in recent years has found himself increasingly alienated from the significant sections of the left who are hostile to the Jewish state – a feeling that has only been reinforced since October 7.

"Jews like me, who all their lives have been part of the left, no longer feel welcome on the left," Gawenda notes. In some ways, this was true for him even before October 7.

Indeed, his memoir is in large part a chronicle of how he came to fall out of love with the political movement that raised him – large parts of which, he wrote a few weeks after the Gaza war started, "have come to regard Jews as white supremacists, supporters of colonialism and racism – that is apart from good Jews who are declared anti-Zionists."

"I think my book was sort of prophetic about the left," he reflects today.

But it's not just the non-Jewish left with which Gawenda takes issue. He has found himself similarly frustrated by the inability of many left-wing Jews, including many of his childhood friends, to unequivocally condemn the horrors of October 7 – in what he calls "a sort of anxious silence."

As a young activist in the Bund movement, he recounts, his opposition to the Jewish state "was not an anti-Zionism that threatened the existence of Israel." By contrast, he believes today's anti-Zionists are "fundamentally in favor of the elimination of the State of Israel as a Jewish state – whether that is by force or by some pie in the sky idea that, in the end, Israelis will be convinced that their future is in some sort of Palestinian state where Jews are a minority."

'The world has changed'


The Australian media, Gawenda charges, has also been impacted by a creeping ideological opposition to Zionism. Last November, he resigned from Australia's Media Entertainment & Arts Alliance after its national media section endorsed a letter, which, among other demands, called on Australian newsrooms to "give adequate coverage to credible allegations of war crimes, genocide, ethnic cleansing and apartheid," and "provide historical context when referencing the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel."

For him, this is part of a broader, deeply disturbing explosion of anti-Jewish sentiment in Australian public life over the past 10 months. From chants of "Fuck the Jews" at the Sydney Opera House on October 9 to, more recently, an employee at a major Australian stationery store refusing to laminate a page of The Australian Jewish News because she is pro-Palestinian, Gawenda has been shocked by the public explosion of antisemitism.

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A placard calling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "the butcher of Gaza," during a pro-Palestinian rally in Sydney last October.

"If you told me these things were going to happen 10 years ago, I would have said no, that's not possible, that's unimaginable," he says. "The world has changed."

Gawenda's family history may explain his concerns about this moment in Jewish history. In August 1939, his parents fled the Polish city of Lodz with their two daughters, spending the next six years in Siberia. Many of his parents' loved ones, Gawenda recalls, perished in the Lodz ghetto and Chelmno extermination camp. After the war, his family ended up in a displaced persons camp in Linz, Austria – where he was born – before moving to Melbourne some three years later. He still lives in the southeast Australian city, which is home to over 40,000 Jews.

During his years at the helm of The Age, which coincided with the breakdown of the Oslo Accords and the second intifada, Gawenda says he did not feel compromised as a Jew harboring a special attachment to Israel.

"I did not lie awake at night wondering whether the fact that I was Jewish meant I was pushing the paper's coverage of Israel and Palestine in any particular direction," he writes in his memoir.

Still, there were moments when his Jewishness was forced on him by others – most notably in 2002, when he refused to run a cartoon by the renowned cartoonist Michael Leunig.

Leunig, whom Gawenda describes in his book as a friend, drew a cartoon comparing Auschwitz to Palestinian refugee camps. Along with Gawenda, The Age's Opinion editor and other senior editors agreed that describing Israelis as the new Nazis "was at best based on ignorance and at worst was an act of bad faith," and was not appropriate for a leading Australian paper to publish, he recounted in the memoir.

Gawenda was shocked by the public outcry that followed. "I was not prepared for a debate that was almost wholly about the fact that I was a Jew, based on the assumption that the fact that I was a Jew had caused me to spike the cartoon of one of Australia's living treasures," he writes in his book.

Crossing the line


Now he is retired from journalism and has the luxury of being a more outspoken defender of Israel, he is still no fan of what he calls the country's "appalling government" and its "appalling prime minister," Benjamin Netanyahu. Having brought the likes of extremist ministers Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich into power, Gawenda believes that, ultimately, "Netanyahu will go down in Israeli history as probably the worst prime minister the country ever had."

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Israeli ministers Itamar Ben-Gvir, left, and Bezalel Smotrich, who were brought into power by Benjamin Netanyahu in 2022.

He can't say whether he is optimistic about the future of Australian Jewry. While he believes that "most people have either neutral or good feelings towards Jews," the sudden, widespread emergence of antisemitism in Australia – and the lackluster response from the authorities – has left him literally shaken. In July, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry said reports of antisemitic incidents are 400 to 500 percent higher than before the conflict began in October.

"I worry that we've crossed some lines that won't be easy to pull back from," Gawenda says.

But while he may not know what the future holds for his fellow Jewish Australians, he is at peace with his own Jewish identity. In his memoir, Gawenda questions what being Jewish means for him, given that for most of his life he was a leftist, secular Jew. Today, he says he finally has an answer.

"What it means for me is that I am committed to Jewish continuity. I want my kids to be Jews [he has a son and a daughter]. I want my grandchildren to be Jews. And that means I want to do whatever I can, which includes educating myself about what it means to be Jewish."
 
How do you explain this
I'm sorry you have a deal with people making fun of the wonderful Jewish people. Your such a kind and gentle people and I'm glad you 100 percent support Israel taking in all the illegal in the United states and those descended of African former slaves! I know rest of western world is having a hard time with the mass immigration and thanks to God chosen people they will now be in Israel.
 
Jews always lie and there's no actual anti-semitism problem with the left.
Jews receive a drop of hatred from the Left compared to the constant unending hate they push against Whites.
Articles like this are just Jews using their power and influence to appear as weak and vulnerable.
 
How delusional are you? No one is saying the allied were responsible for the Holocaust, we are pointing out that stopping the Holocaust was not a priority during the war. Any historian would agree but because you were raised to believe that the allied fought WW2 to save the Jews you lose it. WW2 was fought for political interests, not for stopping genocide.
How can you fight to stop the Holocaust when it didn't happen?
 
Watching this thread devolve into retargeting woke arguments at jews makes me want to put a gun in my mouth but this is ridiculous - the first pope was a Jewish convert.
Not talking about that, I'm talking about people calling faithful converts like brother Nathaniel Jewish or claiming Joel Osteen is Jewish because his mother had a Jewish grandfather

I'm sorry you have a deal with people making fun of the wonderful Jewish people. Your such a kind and gentle people and I'm glad you 100 percent support Israel taking in all the illegal in the United states and those descended of African former slaves! I know rest of western world is having a hard time with the mass immigration and thanks to God chosen people they will now be in Israel.
Not an explanation
 
This is demonstrably not true. Jews who convert to Christianity are called fakes and still get discriminated against

That's incredibly rare and I've never seen that or really heard that

Not talking about that, I'm talking about people calling faithful converts like brother Nathaniel Jewish or claiming Joel Osteen is Jewish because his mother had a Jewish grandfather
Lol what. What retards are those people?

Also, that Nathaniel character is fucking insane. I mean absolutely out of his goddamn mind insane.

Joel Olsteen is just a garden variety megachurch pastor with fake teeth and too much money.
 
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Not an explanation
Oy vey, don't want to live along side your golem? Will you ever understand the meaning of the golem? Or do you think you can just create a magical wire around your homes and trick God into thinking you got the message. Human race like Gods see past your tricks and illusions
 
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Groypers ofc, what other Christian group would be that retarded to reject converts?


There are barely any Irish Jews, not likely
Jews are also less than 5% of almost anywhere in the world, yet they have a disproportionate distribution in certain occupations. I wonder if this is one of those times.
 
Gawenda's family history may explain his concerns about this moment in Jewish history. In August 1939, his parents fled the Polish city of Lodz with their two daughters, spending the next six years in Siberia. Many of his parents' loved ones, Gawenda recalls, perished in the Lodz ghetto and Chelmno extermination camp. After the war, his family ended up in a displaced persons camp in Linz, Austria – where he was born – before moving to Melbourne some three years later.
So who died here, exactly? Nebulous "loved ones" ? Surely this would mention if either of his sisters died.

It seems like his parents and two sisters left in 1939, got put in a ghetto, then an "extermination camp", then another camp where he was born. They went from 4 jews to 5 jews during the "holocaust".
 
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