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to Perspectives on The Passion
Protesting Mel Gibson's Passion
Lacks Moral Integrity
by Rabbi Daniel Lapin, Toward Tradition
NEVER
HAS A FILM AROUSED SUCH hostile passion so long prior to its release as
has Mel Gibson's Passion. Many American Jews are alarmed by reports
of what they view as potentially anti-Semitic content in this movie about
the death of Jesus, which is due to be released during 2004. Clearly
the crucifixion of Jesus is a sensitive topic, but prominent Christians
who previewed it, including good friends like James Dobson and Michael
Novak who have always demonstrated acute sensitivity to Jewish concerns,
see it as a religiously inspiring movie, and refute charges that it is
anti-Semitic. While most Jews are wisely waiting to see the film
before responding, others are either prematurely condemning a movie they
have yet to see or violating the confidentiality agreements they signed
with Icon Productions.
As an Orthodox rabbi with a wary eye on Jewish history which has an ominous
habit of repeating itself, I fear that these protests, well intentioned
though some may be, are a mistake. I believe those who publicly
protest Mel Gibson's film lack moral legitimacy. What is more, I believe
their actions are not only wrong but even recklessly ill-advised and shockingly
imprudent. I address myself to all my fellow Jews when I say that
your interests are not being served by many of those organizations and
self appointed defenders who claim to be acting on your behalf. Just ask
yourself who most jeopardizes Jewish safety today, Moslems or Christians?
For an explanation of why I believe that those Jews protesting Passion
lack moral legitimacy we must take ourselves back in time to the fall
of 1999. That was when Arnold Lehman, the Jewish director of the
Brooklyn Museum presented a show called Sensation. It featured,
from the collection of British Jew Charles Saatchi, several works which
debased Catholicism including Chris
Ofili's dung-bedecked Madonna.
You may wonder why I highlight the Jewish ethnicity of the players in
the Brooklyn Museum saga. My reason for doing so is that everyone else
recognized that they were Jewish and there is merit in us knowing how
we ourselves appear in the eyes of those among whom we live. This
is especially true on those sad occasions when we violate what ancient
Jewish wisdom commends as the practice of Kiddush HaShem, which
is to say, conducting our public affairs in a way best calculated to bring
credit upon us as a group. Maintaining warm relations with our non-Jewish
friends is a traditional Jewish imperative and the raison d'être
of the organization I serve, Toward Tradition.
This was not the first time that Arnold Lehman had chosen to offend Catholics.
While he was director of the Baltimore Museum, in a display of gross insensitivity
to that city's Catholics, he screened Hell's Angel, a film denouncing
Mother Teresa as a religious extremist and depicting her in obscenely
uncomplimentary and ghoulish terms. I am sorry to have to tell you
that no Jewish organizations protested this gratuitous insult of a universally
respected Catholic icon.
Almost every Christian organization angrily denounced the vile bigotry
sponsored by the Brooklyn Museum. Especially prominent was William Donohue,
president of The Catholic League, a good friend who has always stood firmly
with Jews in the fight against genuine anti-Semitism, yet now, in his
fight against anti-Catholicism, he appealed to Jewish organizations in
vain. Almost every Christian denomination helped vigorously protest
the assault that the Brooklyn Museum carried out against the Catholic
faith in such graphically abhorrent ways. Even Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
expressed his outrage by trying to withhold money from the museum. Where
was the Jewish expression of solidarity against such ugliness? Only
a small group of Orthodox Jews joined their fellow Americans in protest
at this literal defilement of Christianity with elephant feces. And
were other Jews silent? No, unfortunately not. In actuality
a small but disproportionately vocal number of them were defending the
Brooklyn Museum and its director in the name of artistic freedom.
Here are a few of the names that were prominently defending the Brooklyn
Museum's flagrant anti-Christianism during fall 1999. Norman Siegel and
Arthur Eisenberg of the New York Civil Liberties Union, Steven R. Shapiro
of the American Civil Liberties Union, and lawyer Floyd Abrams, cousin
of Elliot Abrams who holds the position of top advisor on Israel related
matters in President George W. Bush's National Security Council. Although
at synagogues and around dinner tables revulsion at the Sensation
exhibit was widespread, not very many Jews publicly supported our Catholic
friends in the time of their pain.
You may also remember Martin Scorsese's 1988 film The Last Temptation
of Christ. Then too almost every Christian denomination protested
Universal's release of a movie so slanderous that had it been made about
Moses, or say, Martin Luther King Junior, it would have provoked howls
of anger from the entire country. As it was, Christians were left to defend
their faith quite alone other than for one solitary courageous Jew, Dennis
Prager. Most Americans knew that Universal was run by Lew Wasserman.
Most also knew Lew's ethnicity. Perhaps many now wonder why Mel
Gibson is not entitled to the same artistic freedom accorded Lew Wasserman.
When the Weinstein brothers, through their Miramax films (named after
their parents, Mira and Max Weinstein,) distributed Priest in 1994,
Catholics were again left to protest this unflattering depiction of their
faith alone while many Jewish organizations proclaimed the primacy of
artistic freedom. Surely Jewish organizations would carry just a little
more moral authority if they routinely protested all attacks on faith,
not only those troubling to Judaism.
Oddly enough, Jewish organizations did find one movie so offensive as
to warrant protest. It was Disney's Aladdin that was considered,
by Jews, to be needlessly offensive to Arabs! It makes no sense
at all for Jews to make a big fuss about a gentle lampooning of Arabia
in a cartoon, while ignoring intentional and hurtful insults in major
movies against people who have demonstrated genuine friendship toward
us.
Now I do have one possible explanation for why one might consider it more
important to protest Passion. It is this: in Europe, anti-Semitic
slander frequently resulted in Catholic mobs killing Jews. Our hyper-sensitivity
has a long and painful background of real tragedy. In any event,
Jewish moral prestige would stand taller if we were conspicuous in protesting
movies that defame any religion. Furthermore, opponents of Passion
argue that this movie might cause a backlash against the Jewish community.
Yet when so-called art really does encourage violence, for Jewish
spokesmen, artistic freedom seems to trump all other concerns. Here
is what I mean.
During the nineties, record companies run by well known executives including
Michael Fuchs, Gerald Levin, and David Geffen produced obscene records
by artists like Geto Boys and Ice-T that advocated killing policemen and
raping and murdering women. In spite of Congressional testimony
showing that these songs really did influence teenage behavior, only William
Bennett and C. DeLores Tucker, head of the National Political Congress
of Black Women, protested Time Warner. During that decade of shockingly
hateful music that incited violence, our Jewish organizations only protested
Michael Jackson's song They Don't Care About Us" and the rap
group Public Enemy's single "Swindler's Lust," claiming that
these songs were anti-Semitic. It is ignoble to ignore the wrongs done
to others while loudly deploring those done to us.
In truth however, even though Catholics did kill Jews in Europe, I do
not believe that the often sad history of Jews in Europe is relevant now.
Why not? Because in Europe, Catholic church officials wielded a
rapacious combination of ecclesiastical and political power with which
they frequently incited illiterate mobs to acts of anti-Jewish violence.
In America, no clergyman secures political power along with his
ordination certificate, and in America, if there are illiterate and dangerous
thugs, Christianity is a cure not the cause.
In America, few Jews have ever been murdered, mugged, robbed, or raped
by Christians returning home from church on Sunday morning. America
is history's most philo-Semitic country, providing the most hospitable
home for Jews in the past two thousand years. Suggesting equivalency
between American Christians today and those of European history is to
be offensive and ungrateful. Quite frankly, if it is appropriate to blame
today's American Christians for the sins of past Europeans, why isn't
it okay to blame today's Jews for things that our ancestors may have done?
Clearly both are wrong and doing so harms our relationships with one of
the few groups still friendly toward us today. Jewish groups that
fracture friendship between Christians and Jews are performing no valuable
service to American Jews.
In any event, Jewish organizations protesting Passion are remarkably
selective in their ire. It is so bizarre that the new movie Luther,
which champions someone who was surely one of history's most eloquent
anti-Semites, gets a free pass from our self-appointed Jewish guardians.
Only Gibson is evil, is that right?
Again, why would the soon to be released new movie, The Gospel of John,
be utterly immune to the censoring tactics of certain Jewish organizations?
After all, the soundtrack includes virtually every word of the Gospel
including the most unflattering descriptions of Jewish priests and Pharisees
of Jesus' time, along with implications of their complicity in the Crucifixion,
yet not a peep of Jewish organizational protest. Could their conspicuous
silence possibly have anything to do with the ethnicity of the producers
of The Gospel of John? These include Garth Drabinsky, Sandy
Pearl, Joel Michaels, Myron Gottleib, and Martin Katz. So if Jews
quote the Gospel it is art but if Mel Gibson does the same, it is anti-Semitism?
The Talmudic distinction eludes me. It probably eludes most Christians
too.
These protests against Passion are not only morally indefensible,
but they are also stupid, for three reasons. The first reason is
that that they are unlikely to change the outcome of the film. Mr.
Gibson is an artist and a Catholic of deep faith of which this movie is
an expression. By all accounts, his motive in making this movie
was not commercial. In addition, anyone who saw his Braveheart
would suspect that Mel Gibson profoundly identified with the hero of that
epic, who allowed himself to be violently disemboweled rather than betray
his principles. Does anyone really believe that Gibson is likely
to yield to threats from Jewish organizations?
The second and more important reason I consider these protests to be ill-advised.
While Jews are telling Gibson that his movie contradicts historical records
about who really killed Jesus, Vatican Cardinal Darío Castrillón
Hoyos has this to say: Mr. Gibson has had to make many artistic choices
in the way he portrays the characters and the events involved in the Passion,
and he has complemented the Gospel narrative with the insights and reflections
made by saints and mystics through the centuries. Mel Gibson not only
closely follows the narrative of the Gospels, giving the viewer a new
appreciation for those Biblical passages, but his artistic choices also
make the film faithful to the meaning of the Gospels, as understood by
the Church.
Do
we really want to open up the Pandora's Box of suggesting that any faith
may demand the removal of material that it finds offensive from the doctrines
of any other faith? Do we really want to return to those dark times
when Catholic authorities attempted to strip from the Talmud those passages
that they found offensive? Some of my Jewish readers may feel squeamish
about my alluding to the existence of Talmudic passages uncomplimentary
toward Jesus as well as descriptive of Jewish involvement in his crucifixion.
However the truth is that anyone with Internet access can easily
locate those passages in about ten seconds. I think it far better
that in the name of genuine Jewish-Christian friendship in America, we
allow all faiths their own beliefs even if we find those beliefs troubling
or at odds with our own beliefs. This way we can all prosper safely
under the constitutional protection of the United States of America.
Finally I believe the attacks on Mel Gibson are a mistake because while
they may be in the interests of Jewish organizations who raise money with
the specter of anti-Semitism, and while they may be in the interests of
Jewish journalists at the New York Times and elsewhere who are trying
to boost their careers, they are most decidedly not in the interests of
most American Jews who go about their daily lives in comfortable harmony
with their Christian fellow citizens. You see, many Christians see
all this as attacks not just on Mel Gibson alone or as mere critiques
of a movie, but with some justification in my view, they see them as attacks
against all Christians. This is not so different from the way most people
react to attack. We Jews usually feel that we have all been attacked
even when only a few of us suffer assault on account of our faith.
Right now, the most serious peril threatening Jews, and indeed perhaps
all of western civilization, is Islamic fundamentalism. In this
titanic twenty-first century struggle that links Washington DC with Jerusalem,
our only steadfast allies have been Christians. In particular, those
Christians that most ardently defend Israel and most reliably denounce
anti-Semitism, happen to be those Christians most fervently committed
to their faith. Jewish interests are best served by fostering friendship
with Christians rather than cynically eroding them. Rejecting flagrant
anti-Christianism on the part of Jews claiming to be acting on our behalf
would be our wisest course as a community. Doing so would have one
other advantage: it would also be doing the right thing.
Radio talk show host, Rabbi Daniel Lapin, is president of Toward
Tradition, <www.towardtradition.org>
America's leading bridge-builder; spanning the divide between Christians
and Jews by sculpting ancient solutions to modern problems in areas of
family, faith, and fortune. For information: Contact Jennifer Brunson
at (800) 591-7579.
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