Surely it is
now time to analyze the statements by various Jewish groups and
their leaders about Mel Gibson over the past six months. I do this
in the hope that an analysis might help forestall some similar ill-conceived
and ill-fated future misadventure on the part of self-anointed Jewish
leadership. At the very least it might advance human understanding
of destructive group pathologies. 
As the whole
world knows by now, Mel Gibson, his movie, his father, his church
and anything else even remotely associated with Mr. Gibson have
been smeared as anti-Semitic. From the immoderate assaults, you
might have thought that the target was a thug with a lengthy rap
sheet for murdering Jews while yelling "Heil Hitler."
From the intensity of the rhetoric you would have thought that from
his youth, Gibson had been hurling bricks through synagogue windows.
Yet until The Passion, he was a highly regarded and successful entertainer
who went about his business largely ignored by the Jewish community,
so why now do they hate him so?
Even assuming
for the moment that Jewish organizations had a legitimate beef with
The Passion, which assumption I have refuted in earlier columns,
they should have hated the movie rather than its creator. After
all, Judaism originated the calming idea of hating the sin rather
than the sinner. Yet from the pages of The New York Times to Jewish
organizational press releases and from rabbinic rantings to synagogue
sermons the personal hatred for Mel has been palpable.
The key insight,
vital to understanding their hatred, is this: just because an organization
has either the word "Jewish" or else some Hebrew word
in its title does not mean that its guiding principles emanate from
the document that has been the constitution of the Jewish people
for 3,500 years -- the Torah. Every organization has a set of guiding
principles which defines its purpose and unifies its membership.
However the guiding principles are often not what they appear to
be. This departure from founding principles is not unique to Jewish
organizations but is found throughout our culture. For instance,
almost none of the eighteen hundred chapters of the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) supported the nomination
of Clarence Thomas to the United States Supreme Court in spite of
the undeniable fact that Justice Thomas was, and remains a "colored
person."
Were the NAACP
truly to be guided by the principle of advancing the interests of
colored people, it would always do so even if it occasionally disagreed
with the positions of the colored people it supported. For instance,
back in 2000, when the NAACP filed an Amicus brief on behalf of
convicted cop-killer Mumia Abu-Jamal, it surely was not endorsing
the killing of law enforcement officers as a form of political expression.
The NAACP was simply doing what it claims it was formed to do, support
people of color. In reality of course, as their failure to defend
Clarence Thomas reveals, the causes adopted by the NAACP share something
far more profound than the skin color of their protagonists. They
share a uniform commitment to the doctrines of secularism. In non-political
terms one could say that the NAACP seems to be guided by the principles
of secular fundamentalism. Secular fundamentalism is the belief
system which buttresses the creed of political and economic liberalism
just as the Biblically-based beliefs of Judaism and Christianity
buttress the creed of political and economic conservatism. It was
its adherence to the guiding principles of secular fundamentalism
which compelled the NAACP to obstruct the rise to greatness of a
religious conservative, even if he did happen to be a colored person.
Again, almost
nobody in NOW, the National Organization of Women, supported radio
personality Laura Schlessinger while her media career was being
destroyed by homosexual activists. Now Schlessinger is undeniably
a woman, so clearly NOW's guiding principles are not to support
all women but to support only certain women. Had NOW been about
all women, it would have supported Schlessinger, pointing out perhaps
that although they do not endorse all her views, since she is a
woman under attack the organization supports her just as it was
formed to do. After all, in 2001, NOW had no compunction supporting
Houston child murderer, Andrea Yates, who cold bloodedly drowned
her five tiny children. As Deborah Bell, president of the Texas
chapter of NOW put it, "One of our feminist beliefs is to be
there for other women." "Other women" obviously doesn't
include Laura Schlessinger. Not only could NOW not bring itself
to support Schlessginger, it named Andrea Yates Mother of the Year.
An honest explanation is that NOW seeks to advance secular fundamentalism,
and since Dr. Laura preaches religious conservatism NOW, in remaining
true to its guiding principles, had no option but to oppose her.
Similarly, many
Jewish organizations and even many individuals of Jewish ethnicity
who possess the title "rabbi" are not guided by the principles
Judaism found in the Torah. Instead, like the NAACP and NOW, they
are guided chiefly by the principles of secular fundamentalism.
Nothing else can explain their dogmatic and ideological commitment
to causes such as homosexuality and abortion, both of which are
unequivocally opposed by the Torah-based guiding principles of Judaism.
How revealing it was last November, when one such Jewish organization
saw fit to publicly applaud the Massachusetts Supreme Court on their
ruling in favor of homosexual marriage. In choosing between courageously
defending Judaism's unequivocal opposition to homosexual marriage
and obsequious obeisance to the doctrines of secular fundamentalism,
this "Jewish" organization made its choice and in so doing,
proved my point. Paradoxically, these so-called Jewish organizations
are virulent secularists because of belief -- the belief that religion
poisons the world and that we would all be better off living in
an eternal utopia of secular democracy.
In their belief
system, serious Christianity, which they recognize to have founded
Western Civilization, must be confined to the home, synagogue, and
church. It must never be allowed to influence our culture or our
political law-making apparatus. In their belief system, religion,
when practiced by professional religionists like priests, pastors,
and rabbis, is acceptable because these professionals, doing what
they are expected to do, are unlikely to influence significantly
the public perception of faith as a refuge for the uneducated, the
unsuccessful, and the miserable. However, religion when practiced
seriously by influential public figures such as presidents and movie
producers is totally unacceptable because it might lead to upsetting
the current religious-secular cultural balance.
Thus President
Bush also merits hatred. Here is Whoopi Goldberg musing in the pages
of The New York Times, "Wait a minute, is this man leading
this country as an American or is he leading the country as a Christian?"
Just try to imagine the outcry from the Jewish groups I describe
herein were Mel Gibson to have asked during the 2000 presidential
elections, "Will Joe Lieberman lead this country as an American
or would he lead this country as a Jew?"
Once Mel Gibson
revealed himself to be, like the President, a person of serious
religious faith the gloves came off. Mel Gibson has done a major
favor for serious faith, both Jewish and Christian, in America.
He has made it 'cool' to be religious, but in so doing he has unleashed
the hatred of secular America against himself personally, against
his work, and against his family. God bless him.