Posted on 08/01/2003 11:44:59 AM PDT by Map Kernow
NEW YORK "The Jews didnt kill Christ," my stepfather was fond of saying. "They just worried him to death." Nonetheless, there was palpable relief in my Jewish household when the Vatican officially absolved us of the crime in 1965. At the very least, that meant we could go back to fighting among ourselves.
These days American Jews dont have to fret too much about the charge of deicide or didnt, until Mel Gibson started directing a privately financed movie called "The Passion," about Jesus final 12 hours. Why worry now? The star himself has invited us to. Asked by Bill OReilly in January if his movie might upset any Jewish people, Gibson responded: "It may. Its not meant to. I think its meant to just tell the truth."
"Anybody who transgresses has to look at their own part or look at their own culpability."
Fears about what this truth will be have been fanned by the knowledge that Gibson bankrolls a traditionalist Catholic church unaffiliated with the Los Angeles Roman Catholic Archdiocese. Traditionalist Catholicism is the name given to a small splinter movement that rejects the Second Vatican Council which, among other reforms, cleared the Jews of deicide. The Wall Street Journals opinion pages, which have lavished praise on Gibson and his project, reported in March in an adulatory interview with the star that the films sources included the writings of two nuns: Mary of Agreda, a 17th-century Spaniard, and Anne Catherine Emmerich, an early-19th-century German.
Only after Rabbi Marvin Hier of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, among others, spoke up about the nuns history of anti-Semitic writings did a Gibson flack disown this provenance.
Emmerichs revelations include learning that Jews had strangled Christian children to procure their blood. Its hard to imagine a scenario that bald turning up in The Passion. Indeed, its hard to imagine the movie being anything other than a flop in America, given that it has no major Hollywood stars and that its dialogue is in Aramaic and Latin (possibly without benefit of subtitles). Its real tinderbox effect could be abroad, where anti-Semitism has metastasized since Sept. 11, and where Gibson is arguably more of an icon (as his production company is named) than he is at home.
In recent weeks, Gibson has started screening a rough cut of his film to invited audiences, from evangelicals in Colorado Springs to religious leaders in Pennsylvania to celebrities in Washington. But the attendees are not always ecumenical. At the Washington screening, they included Peggy Noonan, Kate OBeirne, Linda Chavez and David Kuo, the deputy director of the White Houses faith-based initiative.
The screening guest list did include a token Jew: that renowned Talmudic scholar Matt Drudge. No other Jewish members of the media were present, said one journalist who was there.
That journalist must remain unnamed as a result of signing a confidentiality agreement a practice little seen at movie screenings. Since then, some of those present, including Drudge, have publicly expressed their enthusiasm for The Passion.
If The Passion is kosher, couldnt Gibson give Jews the same access to a Washington media screening, so they could see for themselves? Such inhospitality is not terribly Christian of him. One Jewish leader whose requests to see the film have been turned away is Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League. If you tell everyone they wont see it until its ready, O.K., Foxman said in a phone interview from Jerusalem. But what Gibsons done is preselect those wholl be his supporters. If the movie is a statement of love, as he says it is, why not show it to you or me?
When I addressed this question last week to the stars press representative, Alan Nierob, he told me that the ADL was being kept out because it had gone public with its concerns as indeed it had, once Foxmans letter to Gibson about The Passion failed to net a meeting with the filmmaker or a screening three months after it had been sent. When I asked to see The Passion, Nierob said The New York Times was a low priority because The Times Magazine had run an inaccurate article in March in which Hutton Gibson, Mel Gibsons father and a prominent traditionalist Catholic author, was quoted as saying that the Vatican Council was a Masonic plot backed by the Jews and that the Holocaust was a charade. But in fact, neither Hutton nor Mel Gibson nor anyone else has contacted the magazine to challenge the accuracy of a single sentence in the article in the four months since its publication.
Eventually, Gibsons film will have to face audiences he doesnt cherry-pick. We can only hope that the finished product will not resemble the screenplay that circulated this spring. That script which the Gibson camp has said was stolen but which others say was leaked by a concerned member of the stars own company received thumbs down from a panel of nine Jewish and Roman Catholic scholars who read it. They found that Jews were presented as bloodthirsty, vengeful and money-hungry, reported The Jewish Week, which broke the story of the scholars report in June.
Perhaps The Passion bears little resemblance to that script. Either way, however, damage has been done: Jews have already been libeled by Gibsons politicized rollout of his film. His game from the start has been to foment the old-as-Hollywood canard that the entertainment elite (which just happens to be Jewish) is gunning for his Christian movie. But based on what? According to databank searches, not a single person, Jewish or otherwise, had criticized The Passion when Gibson went on OReillys show on Jan. 14 in January to defend himself against any Jewish people who might attack the film. Nor had anyone yet publicly criticized The Passion or Gibson by March 7, when The Wall Street Journal ran the interview in which the star again defended himself against Jewish critics who didnt yet exist. (Even now, no one has called for censorship of the film only for the right to see it and, if necessary, debate its content.)
Whether the movie holds Jews of two millenniums ago accountable for killing Christ or not, the stars pre-emptive strategy is to portray contemporary Jews as crucifying Gibson. A similar animus can be found in a new book by one of Gibsons most passionate defenders, the latest best seller published by the same imprint (Crown Forum) that gave us Ann Coulters Treason. In Tales From the Left Coast, James Hirsen writes, The worldview of certain folks is seriously threatened by the combination of Christs story and Gibsons talent.
Now who might those certain folks be? Since no one was criticizing The Passion when Hirsen wrote that sentence, you must turn elsewhere in the book to decode it. In one strange passage, the author makes a fetish of repeating Bob Dylans original name, Robert Zimmerman a gratuitous motif in a tirade that is itself gratuitous in a book whose subtitle says its subject is Hollywood stars.
Another chapter is about how faith is often the subject of ridicule and negative portrayal in Hollywood. One of the more bizarre examples Hirsen cites is Sophies Choice, in which passages from the New Testament are quoted by Nazi officials in support of atrocities that were committed.
Now sectarian swords are being drawn. The National Association of Evangelicals, after a private screening of The Passion, released a statement last week saying, Christians seem to be a major source of support for Israel, and implying that such support could vanish if Jewish leaders risk alienating two billion Christians over a movie.
Foxman says he finds that statement obnoxious and offensive.
Heres the first time weve heard that linkage: We support Israel, so shut up about anti-Semitism, he added. If thats what support of Israel means, no thanks.
But the real question here is why Gibson and his minions would go out of their way to bait Jews and sow religious conflict, especially at this fragile historical moment. Its enough to make you pray for the second coming of Charlton Heston.
Maybe because they stole a draft copy of his script and began running hit-pieces about the movie way back when?
Maybe because they've been attacking Gibson regularly since learning of the project?
Maybe because the ADL's record on responsibility in leveling accusations of anti-semitism against anyone who doesn't toe their party line is second only to that of the little boy of wolf-crying fame?
Or maybe just because it's his movie and he can show it to anyone he wants.
I seem to recall that Foxman is greatly offended by the thought that some Christians want to tell Jews about Christ. So what good purpose would it serve to show it to him?
Simply excellent point. Chalk another one up for liberal hypocrisy...
Anyone with even a cursory knowledge of the NT could not blame the Jews as a whole for the death of Jesus. (And anyone with even a cursory knowledge of Gibson's film could not claim it is anti-semitic.)
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