Activism

At Christian Zionist gathering in Texas, Trump is God’s Cyrus, and Bill Maher is ‘stupidest Jew in Hollywood’

The Democratic-leaning American Jewish community is becoming increasingly queasy about a U.S.-Israel relationship in the form of a Trump/Netanyahu alliance.  The U.S. is now unabashedly aligned with the far-right, rabidly militaristic, anti-democratic elements in the Israeli government (as opposed to the more acceptable, Obama-style tut-tutting, which purported to distance itself from the more embarrassing Israeli atrocities).  The American Jewish community was apparently only willing to tolerate fascism at a distance, where orientalist tropes enabled the human rights violations to be justified in the “rough neighborhood” of the Middle East. But Donald Trump has brought home what that looks like domestically, and the American Jewish community can no longer fail to notice who they are in bed with.

Israel’s plan B for shoring up U.S. support is to cultivate a much more natural alliance with the white Christian evangelical Zionist community, who don’t need to be mollified with the fantasy of an eventual two-state solution. San Antonio, Texas, is home to the traditional bastion of white Christian Zionism, Rev. John Hagee’s Cornerstone Church, which runs the organization Christians United for Israel. But new initiatives are appearing.


When the Jerusalem Prayer Breakfast, a self-described “prayer movement” announced it would be coming to San Antonio, April 11 to 12, several members of the local chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace decided to attend. The annual event in Jerusalem is hosted by the Israeli government and brings hundreds of evangelicals to the Holy Land. It was founded by the Israeli Knesset in 2017 and spearheaded by Israeli member of Knesset Robert Ilatov with former Congresswoman Michele Bachmann. The sister event in Texas that we attended is also co-chaired by Ilatov and Bachmann, and was hosted by the Justice Foundation, a conservative legal action group that files cases aimed at limiting access to abortion and expanding Christian prayer in Texas public schools. A Facebook page for the event was made by a digital marketing consultant for the Trump 2016 campaign, Adam W. Schindler. It was a merger of the conservative to reaching-far-right end of political life in both Israel and the U.S.  We wanted to learn what we could about the group itself, and about Christian Zionism as it continues to gain political traction.

Robert Ilatov, a member of the Israeli Knesset with a far right party.

At the “Jerusalem Prayer Breakfast Texas” we heard a lot of familiar themes from the Christian Zionist playbook at the founders dinner: the use of the Bible as a roadmap for a political agenda.

From the podium Michele Bachmann raised the notion that Trump is an agent of God who will fulfill the apocalyptic prophecies to restore Jerusalem to the Jews as a condition for the return of Christ; evangelical speaker and author Lance Wallnau made comparisons between Trump and Cyrus; the Tea Party’s Louie Gohmert (R-TX) linked CAIR to ISIS and the Muslim Brotherhood in a healthy dose of Islamophobia. Texas Republican Congressmen Brian Babin and Ron Wright also gave speeches, along with Israeli lawmakers, the event’s founder Robert Ilatov of the extreme right Yisrael Beiteinu party, and Likud’s Anat Berko, infamous for, among other antics, attempting to outlaw displays of the Palestinian flag within Israel.

The consequence of their brand of political theology, as the participants made quite clear, was an open contempt for democracy.  Our government should not be responsive to the collective wishes of the citizenry – it should follow the Bible. Trump should not listen to expert advisers – he should follow the signals that several speakers suggested he is apparently receiving from God. Israel should not heed international law or any secular peace process; “there is only one peace process,” some of the speakers said, and it involves absolute territorial dominance, because this is what is promised in the Bible.  Their political vision is blatantly theocratic.

When Israel is mentioned in the context of state religion, the religion at issue is generally taken to be Judaism.  This was clearly not the case with the prayer breakfast which, despite describing itself a “Jewish-Christian alliance” had an exclusively Christian theocratic agenda.  This distinguishes it somewhat from Hagee’s Cornerstone Church. One participant said she is from the group One for Israel, a proselytizing organization that describes its mission as “Reaching Israelis with the Gospel message.” She confided to me that she has nothing to do with Hagee because he is too reticent about dictating his agenda to Jews – he fails to evangelize – and has therefore diluted and betrayed the purity of the Christian mission.

For many at the event, Jewish dominance over a Greater Israel is a means to a dispensationalist Christian apocalyptic goal, so there was the appearance of a unified Jewish-Christian front.  The Members of Knesset and rabbis in attendance seemed willing enough to tolerate the crazy theology for the sake of material support.  But I was struck by how close to the surface the antisemitism really was. And I don’t just mean the antisemitism inherent in their apocalyptic theology (Jews will convert or die when Jesus comes again).  I mean literal “Jew joke” antisemitism.

For instance, at one point Lance Wallnau referred to Bill Maher as “the stupidest Jew in Hollywood,” to general laughter.  Another speaker bemoaned the inability of Jews to vote in Israeli elections, without any apparent worries about falling into the “dual loyalty” trope.  Ilatov joked that “Jews only accepted the ten commandments because they got them for free” (a remark that drew appreciative and extended laughter from the audience) before clarifying that “the truth is they are free for everybody.” This is not a reference to an antisemitic joke.  This is actually making an antisemitic joke, to a highly receptive audience.

And then there was breakfast.  Registrants had not been asked about food choice, and we were simply presented a plate of food at the start of the event.  The plate consisted of scrambled eggs, beef brisket hash, and pork sausages, accompanied by a yogurt drink. Nobody seemed perturbed, although several hours later, the director announced, awkwardly, incongruously, and without context, that the sausages had been chicken, not pork.  Not only was this a bald lie (I know what pork tastes like), it hardly made the meal kosher.

The implications were clear enough: Jerusalem Prayer Breakfast Texas has no concern for Jews, except as props.  It makes use of a naive Christian fantasy of what Jews are like, carelessly culled from antisemitic tropes.  This is not an intersectional Zionism, it is exclusively Christian, and openly antisemitic. Of course, as the sausage episode suggests, this group was blithely unaware of this fact.  They only recognized antisemitism in the form of anti-Zionism. We are used to the debate over whether anti-Zionism is antisemitic. This group had a new twist: only anti-Zionism is antisemitic.

However insane and political incoherent this group might be, we need to take them seriously.  They clearly wield significant and increasing political power, and they have found in Trump someone who will defy diplomacy and the traditional political channels to help get them what they want (annexation of the Golan Heights, the embassy in Jerusalem, and as a wish list for the future: war with Iran, annexation of the West Bank, criminalization of BDS, and Israeli control of the Temple Mount).

At the same time, this new shift in political fortunes, as the Israeli right seeks to ally with American Christians rather than American Jews, presents new opportunities for resistance.  Liberal Zionist Jewish communities might not want to call out the Israeli right, but they can surely call out the Christian right; aside from being hosted by the Justice Foundation, the Jerusalem Prayer Breakfast Texas included representatives from the NRA.  They have no interest in democracy or even Jews. Their Zionism is antisemitic.

The masks are off – this is a moment of clarity and one we can use to our advantage.

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The Democratic-leaning American Jewish community is becoming increasingly queasy about a U.S.-Israel relationship in the form of a Trump/Netanyahu alliance.

The American Jewish community was apparently only willing to tolerate fascism at a distance,

the American Jewish community can no longer fail to notice who they are in bed with. Israel’s plan B for shoring up U.S. support is to cultivate a much more natural alliance with the white Christian evangelical Zionist community

Liberal Zionist Jewish communities might not want to call out the Israeli right, but they can surely call out the Christian right

there’s no recognition in the article that there’s also a right leaning american jewish community, to the right of liberal zionists. american jews who embrace trump, the gop, the embassy in jerusalem, war with Iran, annexation of the West Bank, criminalization of BDS. all of the people in the article who are on the right are either israelis or christian zionists. why is that?

certainly there are members of the American Jewish community all too willing to not only tolerate fascism, but embrace it up close. it’s not just “Israel’s plan B” to shore up U.S. support for Israel by cultivating “a much more natural alliance with the white Christian evangelical Zionist community”, that’s a right wing jewish american thing too.

mostly i mention this because it seems standard for jewish groups to speak for american jews as if they all agreed with each other. and while i know most jews vote with the democratic party, for sure there’s a strong element that doesn’t. all the right wing stuff doesn’t just come from israeli jews. stephen miller, Mnuchin, the david friedman’s of the world, and many more, they do exist within the american jewish community and i don’t get the sense they are uncomfortable with israel’s more exposed lurch to the right. they like it, they made it happen. https://mondoweiss.mystagingwebsite.com/2019/05/relationship-jerusalem-ambassador/

other than that, great article!

RE: “From the podium Michele Bachmann raised the notion that Trump is an agent of God who will fulfill the apocalyptic prophecies to restore Jerusalem to the Jews as a condition for the return of Christ . . .” ~ Judith Norman

MY COMMENT: According to The Nazi Conscience by Claudia Koonz, some Germans believed Hitler had been sent by God to “save” the German Volk.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

RE: “[E]vangelical speaker and author Lance Wallnau made comparisons between Trump and Cyrus . . .” ~ Judith Norman

SEE: “Televangelist’s show sells $45 Trump coin as ‘point of contact’ to God” | By Aris Folley | thehill.com | May 16, 2019

“The Jim Bakker Show” recently promoted a coin decorated with President Trump’s face as a “point of contact” with God.

In a viral clip of the promotion, evangelical author Lance Wallnau described the $45 coin as a means for believers to establish a “point of contact” with God.

“When I asked the Lord ‘Why the coin?’ he said ‘Because when you take the coin, it’s a point of contact,’” Wallnau said in the clip*, which was shared on Twitter by Right Wing Watch, which “monitors and exposes the activities of Radical Right political organizations.” . . .

CONTINUED AT – https://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/443997-televangelist-sells-45-trump-coin-being-peddled-to-believers-as

* P.S. For $45, Lance Wallnau and Jim Bakker will sell you a Trump/Cyrus coin that you can use as a “point of contact” between you and God as you pray for Trump’s re-election in 2020.
■ CLIP – https://twitter.com/RightWingWatch/status/1128366601445810177

The ‘supersessionist’ theology – Christianity will take the place of Judaism in the divine scheme of things – might not be so offensive to Jewish theology in a version where the result is not to be achieved until the end of the world. This is an implicit admission that not enough has yet happened to convince Jewish people that Jesus came from God is far less unpleasant than the idea that Jesus made his mission manifest in ancient times and that the Jews ought to have accepted this long since. Jesus’ return is now conceived as the delayed fulfilment of God’s promise to the Jews and the duty of Christians conceived as service to Jewish political power. That’s worth a few pork sausages.

“This is not a reference to an antisemitic joke. This is actually making an antisemitic joke”

Which is the only thing the prayer-breakfast b@strdz should be approved and commended for. No joke can be funny if it’s PC-compliant.

To quote the article title, “Trump is God’s Cyrus”, and Ms Bachmann is his twerking Miley.

To be brief:

Zionism, a 19th century fascistic settler/colonialist ideology, is in free fall. It’s only a matter of time.