Watching a news report of a group of students chanting “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,” I wondered if they were even cognizant that their refrain, repeated so full-throatedly and relentlessly, was a call for genocide.
I wondered whether, 20 years hence, they would tell their children about how they went about, face wrapped in a keffiyeh, marching and calling for the eradication of an entire nation and race of people. Just like all the other students they knew.
Because chanting horrible, genocidal phrases in a crowd is the sort of thing you do when your brain is not yet fully developed and you’ve been trained in neither critical thinking skills nor the sort of nuance that must flavor authentic justice – when your reason is still malleable, and it’s so much easier to go along with a moment, particularly if you get to feel powerful and anti-establishmentarian as you do it.
Someday, perhaps – if those students ever do learn to think critically if they ever do discover that the world is much more about shades of gray than black-and-white absolutism – they may come to realize exactly what it was they were chanting for in 2023, exactly what they were doing while standing, bravely face-covered in Harvard Square, calling Jews “dirty, dirty animals” who “should be exterminated,” or cheering as Jewish students were locked away for their own protection at Cooper Union College, as threats against Jews canceled classes at Cornell, as Jewish travelers were being hunted down at a Russian airport.
They might even have the good sense to repent of it – to feel shame as they recall that all the cheers, all the chants, served a demon of chaos and mass murder.
Crowd obeys without thought
Another broadcast showed a march in New York City. A maddeningly shrill female voice prompted the marchers with the same terrible chant, and I was struck by the obedience of the mob. If the caller changed her inflection, so did the crowd. If she emphasized a different word or a distinct syllable, the crowd obeyed without missing a step, or a beat.
Without a thought.
“From the river, to the sea! Mommy, Daddy, look at me! Gonna get those Jews out of Israel and into… into… hey, where are we going to get those Jews into, anyway?”
Oblivion, apparently. Hamas spokesman Ghazi Hamad has said they’ll repeat the Oct. 7 attack again and again “until Israel is annihilated!”
It is to be hoped that these marchers may eventually bring what reasoning skills they possess to task and consider that war is itself a genuinely terrible affront to human dignity, but that outright genocide goes well beyond war by identifying human beings as something “other than” and expendable – and that willfully seeing people as such is a symptom of serious mental illness or something worse, an oppressive spiritual illness choosing evil.
The terror of the mob
It takes an unthinking mob to serve evil. Ignorance, joined to mob mentalities, hastens the most repellent and cowardly sort of human behavior – pogroms, lynchings, craven insurrections, disingenuous demands, and anarchist-led violence. The chase-downs and beatings are usually cheered on by the mad, who justify it all with lies their followers want to believe. They are usually sane enough, however, to stay far away from the roiling, bloody streets they’ve urged on.
A mob permits anonymous participation in heinous acts by people who might never have moved beyond a vague fever dream, if left to themselves.
Some blame social media platforms for the speed with which the antisemitism we’re witnessing has surged, everywhere. I’m sure it has contributed, but algorithms can’t fully explain it. Throughout history it seems the scapegoats to genocidal hate all have a turn – women who healed with herbs, indigenous peoples, people of color, the Irish – but the
Jews have regularly reappeared on that list, bobbing up to the top like apples in a barrel, century after century.
And of course there was Jesus of Nazareth, the mindless mob’s greatest victim, “pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities…” (Is 53:5). Jesus was a Jew, one led “like a lamb to the slaughter,” but with a pure and transcendent purpose.
Not again. Not ever again
The last time the pogroms came, the last time mobs marked houses with stars of David and clamored to get their hands on the Jews, too many obeyed – they followed the law.
They, too, went like lambs, corralled into ghettos and hoping for the best. Then they held hands and walked into ovens at gunpoint. Quite understandably, they will not do so again.
And God help us all if this madness, this naked evil currently preying upon society, does not soon subside.
“This kind of spirit does not go out except by prayer and fasting” (Mt 17:21).
Elizabeth Scalia is culture editor for OSV News.