George Soros and the Problem of the Radical Non-Jewish Jew By Dennis Prager

What do Karl Marx, Leon Trotsky, Noam Chomsky and George Soros have in common?
They were/are all radicals, born to Jewish parents, had no Jewish identity and hurt Jews (not to mention non-Jews).
George Soros, Chairman of the Open Society Institute, speaks at a forum sponsored by the New America Foundation in Washington September 13, 2006. Soros discussed 'the age of fallibility, the consequences of the war on terror'. REUTERS/Jason Reed (UNITED STATES) The term 'non-Jewish Jew' is generally attributed to the Jewish historian Isaac Deutscher, who wrote an essay by that name in 1954. The term describes the individual who, though born a Jew (Judaism consists of a national/peoplehood identity, not only a religious one), identifies solely as a citizen of the world and not as a Jew, either nationally or religiously.
Once the walls of Jewish ghettos broke down and European Jews were allowed to leave Jewish societies, many Jews became non-Jewish Jews. In most cases, either they or their children assimilated into the societies in which they lived. However, a small but significant percentage became radicalized. They came to loathe 'bourgeois,' i.e., traditional middle class, values and Judeo-Christian society; Western national identities (though they generally supported anti-Western national identities); and they particularly loathed Jewish religious and national identity.
Full Article...
No comments:
Post a Comment