ed note–as much as our esteemed Hebraic author tries to gloss over the fact that Jews care about Jews first, 2nd, 3rd, ad infinitum and that there is nothing racist, narcissistic or chauvanistic about it, let all get a few things straight here–

1. Jews, as well as the names they have gone by in previous times–Hebrews, Israelites, etc, have ALWAYS been like this, long before 70 AD, long before 1933, long before the Hollerco$t. They have always considered themselves to be the epi-center of the universe and based upon the various teachings found in the Torah, a few of which are as follows–

‘I will bless those who bless thee and curse those who curse thee and because of thee, all the Gentiles shall be blessed…’-Book of Genesis

‘For you are a holy people unto the LORD thy God and He has chosen you to be a special people above all others upon the face of the earth…’–Book of Deuteronomy

‘The sons of foreigners shall build up your walls, and their kings shall minister to you, as your gates remain open, day and night,
So that men may bring to you the wealth of the Gentiles,
And their kings led in humble procession before you,
For the nation which will not serve you shall perish, it shall be utterly destroyed…Book of Isaiah

This is the ‘hook’ of Judaism for Jews–in addition to being given license to engage in all forms of criminality for their own benefit without fear of divine retribution–the unbridled narcissism and self-worship that acts as a highly-addictive drug in keeping them fixated on themselves to the detriment of all others.

Andrew Silow-Carroll, Times of Israel

In the many years between my first job at Jewish Telegraphic Agency and returning as its editor in 2016, I would joke about a headline it published in 1999: “Two Turkish Jews killed in quake.” Perhaps you’ll remember that 17,000 people died in the Turkish earthquake that year. That headline seemed to represent all that was strange and wrong about a narrowly ethnic news service. If they hadn’t identified those two Jewish victims, would the Jewish news service have covered the quake at all — unless to report that “Giant quake narrowly misses Israel”?

Of course, now I am in charge, and we do our version of “Two Turkish Jews” all the time. Last week, following the massacre of 17 students and staff at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, our reporters hit the phones, reporting on the victims and survivors who happened to be Jews. We wrote about the two first-year girls who were remembered as sweet and easy-going. The hero teacher who spent his summers at a Jewish camp and died while making sure the last of his students was safe inside a classroom. We wrote about one of those students, a Jewish boy who recalled being the last kid to make it inside before that same teacher was hit and fell bleeding in the doorway.

This practice of identifying the Jewish victims of a greater disaster makes a lot of people uncomfortable, including some of my colleagues. They worry it signals that tragedies only matter to the degree to which they involve a Jew. That it erodes empathy in a diverse world by suggesting that the only thing that matters is tribe. That it makes us look small, in more ways than one.

I share those misgivings, but also can defend our search for the Jewish angles, to any general story. First, it is not only the Jews who look for a sectarian connection to any major news event. Maybe we do this more publicly and consistently than other groups, but I doubt it. Every local newspaper and television station makes news decisions based on their definition of hometown news. If a plane crashes in Indiana, then it’s news in Chicago if a local person is among the dead. When 230,000 people died in the 2004 Asian tsunami, the BBC took note of the 149 Brits among them.

Sometimes this localism lapses into chauvinism — like network Olympics coverage that lasers in on American athletes and ignores the compelling stories of all the other competitors. Or reductio ad absurdumism — like the article I found in an old Billboard magazine pondering the impact of the civil rights movement on pinball machine profits.

But if handled sensitively, localism can also tap into basic human instinct in order to foster a wider appreciation for humankind.

That’s the point of perhaps the best-known saying of the first century CE sage Hillel: “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am only for myself, what am I? And if not now, when?”

Rabbi Yitz Greenberg suggests that Hillel’s first clause — “If I am not for myself, who will be for me?” — is one of Judaism’s greatest teachings.

“Repair of the whole world starts with my country, my city, my neighborhood first,” writes Greenberg. “Self-interest is legitimate. People work harder and produce more in an economy built on private property. Loved ones or family first is the natural, more human way to operate.”

But Hillel didn’t stop there. Instead, he adds, “If I am only for myself, what am I?” Greenberg explains that concern for family and heritage “should grow and extend to the rest of the world,” and gives a trenchant political example: “If policy concern stops right at the border, then it becomes the isolationist, regressive ‘America First’ of Charles Lindbergh — a political grouping that turned a blind eye to tyranny and refused to hear the cry of the downtrodden.”

It’s natural to give first thought to those closest to us: family, friends, neighbors, coreligionists. It is also our business model. There are plenty of news outlets that will give a general accounting of any major event. Specialty media like ours supplement these reports by giving a narrow view of the same event with an eye toward the particular interests of particular readers.

But it is dangerous and inhuman if that focus stops there — if we are only for ourselves. I would hope that in identifying Jewish victims we don’t foster parochialism. I hope instead that by bringing a story home, we remind readers not just of the Jewish players but also of the Jewish obligations to a wider world — expanding what the sociologist and Holocaust scholar Helen Fein calls our “universe of obligation.” Maybe you can’t relate at first to those thousands of Turks who died in an earthquake. But you can relate to the Jewish victim, and from there find it easier to expand your universe of obligation to include the non-Jews alongside whom they died or suffered.

“Traditionally, our sense of involvement with the fate of others has been in inverse proportion to the distance separating us and them,” writes Jonathan Sacks, the former chief rabbi of Great Britain.

The goal of much of our reporting is to close that distance.

3 thoughts on “‘But were there any Jewish victims?’ Why we Jews report on Jewish victims in any general tragedies”
  1. Khazarians are nothing more than lies, plunder, destruction,and death.
    Victimhood is nothing more than cover for the above.
    “Shoah we the money!”
    One is not a true American until resident in the ADL’s database.

  2. My father began paying attention to the Khazarian problem after being told to note the nationality of victims of crimes reported in the Khazarian-media.
    He began to report that often, if the victim of a crime were a Khazarian national, a crime would be hyped to no end in the Khazarian-media.
    Not hate. Just unacceptable.

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