| Prof. Paweł Śpiewak of the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw provides some examples of antisemitism resulting from the spread of "Judeo-Bolshevist" ideas in Poland |
On March 24, 2014 the International Institute
for Holocaust Research of Yad Vashem hosted an international conference
entitled "Judeo-Bolshevism": The Crystallization of an
Antisemitic Political Concept. The conference was made possible
through the generous support of the Genesis Philanthropy Group and the Gutwirth
Family Fund, and was dedicated to the exploration of the roots and development
of one of the most pernicious myths that laid the ideological and psychological
foundations of the Holocaust – the association of the Jewish people with
communist ideas and practices, as proof of their eternal enmity towards
“orderly” Christian society, based on traditional morals and property rights.
Eight prominent scholars researching the
issues of antisemitism and inter-ethnic relations, from the US, the
Netherlands, Poland, the UK and Israel, took part in the conference. The
scholarly gathering, examining a topic that has never been discussed in such a
broad forum before, was attended by over 200 people, including H.E. Mr. Jacek
Chodorowicz, Polish
Ambassador to Israel, H.E. Mr. Andris Vilcans, Latvian Ambassador to
Israel, representatives from the embassies of Lithuania and Ukraine in Israel,
Chairman of the Yad Vashem Directorate Mr. Avner Shalev, Director-General of
Yad Vashem Ms. Dorit Novak, Ms. Sana Britavsky, Executive Director of the
Genesis Philanthropy Group in Israel, Ms. Naomi Ben-Ami, Head of Nativ (the
Liaison Bureau), Prof. Yehuda Bauer and leading professors from Israeli
universities, and program directors from the AJJDC and the Jewish Agency.
The conference was opened by Prof. Dan
Michman, Head of Yad Vashem’s International Institute for Holocaust Research.
Conference participants were greeted by Ms. Sana Britavsky, Executive Director
of the Genesis Philanthropy Group in Israel, who said: “The discussion about
the history and the consequences of this bloody legend is important – both for
the understanding of the particular brutality and ferocity of extermination of
the Soviet Jews in the first months of the German invasion, and for combating
and preventing similar hateful myths from arising and spreading in the modern
world – against the Jews as against any others.”
| Russian Politics and History Prof. André Gerrits of Leiden University, Netherlands delivers his lecture on the myth of "Judeo-Bolshevism" |
The first plenary session, The Identification of “Jews” with
“Bolshevism”: The Emergence of a Myth was chaired by Dr. Arkadi Zeltser,
Director of the Center for Research on the History of Soviet Jews during the
Holocaust at the International Institute for Holocaust Research, Yad Vashem. This
session explored theoretical issues connected with the creation of the
antisemitic myth, and the reasons underlying the popularity of Judeo-Bolshevist
ideas in the period between the two World Wars and during WWII. This was
the focus of the lectures delivered by Prof. André Gerrits (Russian Politics
and History at Leiden University, Netherlands) and Prof. Zvi Gitelman (Judaic
Studies at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor). The presentation by Dr.
Daniel Uziel (Yad Vashem) was dedicated to the ways in which Nazi propaganda
utilized these ideas to strengthen antisemitic sentiment among Wehrmacht
soldiers.
In his presentation Prof. Zvi Gitelman noted: "The 'Judeo-Bolshevik' myth contains at least five rationales for hostility toward the Jews: they are aliens, foreigners; they are subversive and dangerous; they are anti-Christian; Jews are internationalists rather than patriots; and they threaten the economic foundations of society. All these traits are attributed to Communists as well. For those so inclined, this proves that the Jewish and Communist conspiracies are either the same or very closely related."
The second session, chaired by Prof. Dina Porat, Chief Historian of Yad Vashem,
was dedicated to the specific examples of antisemitism resulting from the
spread of "Judeo-Bolshevist" ideas in Lithuania (Prof. Christoph Dieckmann, Keele
University, Staffordshire), Latvia (Dr. Aron Shneyer, Yad Vashem) and Poland
(Prof. Paweł Śpiewak, Jewish Historical Institute, Warsaw). Following the
presentations, a lively discussion took place. One
of the central topics of the discussion was the degree to which "Judeo-Bolshevist" ideas were based on the actual participation of Jews in the
Communist movement, and to what extent they reflected a general antisemitic
approach with no connection to reality.

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