Miami Herald

After film portrayal and bestseller lists, she now fights global antisemiti­sm for U.S.

- BY TRACY WILKINSON

Deborah Lipstadt says she’s working in a growth industry, one that is booming. And that is not a good thing.

Already well-known as an acclaimed Holocaust scholar based at Emory University in Atlanta, Lipstadt was confirmed by Congress in 2022 as the U.S. special envoy to monitor and combat antisemiti­sm abroad.

The role is well-suited for her, but it has been immensely fraught since Oct.7, when Hamas militants launched a brutal assault inside southern Israel, claiming about 1,200 Jewish lives — the most in a single day since the Holocaust. The attack was followed by Israel’s punishing war in the Gaza Strip that health authoritie­s there say has killed more than 38,000 Palestinia­ns.

Among the fallout have been waves of antisemiti­sm in the U.S. and elsewhere, in part as a reaction to Israel’s devastatin­g operations and the continuing death toll. Jewish people wearing kippot have been attacked in L.A., and “Death to Jews” slogans have been scrawled in public places from Manhattan to Berlin.

In some ways, Lipstadt’s work has become easier, because antisemiti­sm, she said, is as clear as ever.

It is “more real, more pressing, more immeBorn diate,” Liptstadt said in an interview in her fifth-floor State Department office during a recent break in her travels.

She considers antisemiti­sm to be the oldest and “most consistent” hatred in world history, pointing to its presence in Christian, Muslim and atheist societies, left and right, religious and secular.

“I want people to take antisemiti­sm seriously,” she said.

Lipstadt is perhaps best known as the scholar who took on Holocaust denier David Irving in a British court in the late 1990s. The long legal battle, in which she eventually prevailed, was the subject of her book “Denial” and then a movie with the same name starring Rachel Weisz as Lipstadt.

During filming of the 2016 picture, the actress called the diplomat and asked her to read lines.

This helped Weisz to emulate her, according to Lipstadt, who praised the actress’ portrayal — which is heroic, but not always compliment­ary.

Today, Lipstadt often finds herself challengin­g those who deny Israel’s right to exist. Her first overseas trip as special envoy was to Saudi Arabia, a country that, like much of the Arab world, still does not recognize Israel. She went to the barren desert kingdom in the dead heat of summer; colleagues thought she was nuts.

“Making a point,” she said.

and educated in New York, Lipstadt, 77, has taught at UCLA and Occidental College and directed the Brandeis-Bardin Institute in Simi Valley. She wears a Star of David necklace and has rust-colored hair and an easy, throaty laugh. She is remarkably forthright in a government agency not known for candor.

The antisemiti­sm position that Lipstadt occupies was created in 2004, but at times has been vacant — the longest absence occurring during the Trump administra­tion. President Biden elevated the role to the level of ambassador.

Some critics, especially in the Muslim community, see the heightened focus on antisemiti­sm as a bias that excludes other minorities. In late 2021, the House of Representa­tives passed a measure that would create a special envoy to monitor and combat Islamophob­ia worldwide, but the Senate has never acted on it.

The State Department says it confronts hatred against other groups — including anti-Muslim violence, which is also on the rise — elsewhere within its bureaucrac­y, such as in its office of religious freedom.

Lipstadt likes to think of herself as an “equal opportunit­y” defender of religious freedom and human rights.

In her first months on the job, Lipstadt defended a group of ultra-Orthodox Jews kicked off a Lufthansa

flight for refusing to wear COVID-19 masks; a liberal Jewish group harassed by Orthodox Jews when trying to celebrate bar and bat mitzvot at the Western

Wall in Jerusalem; and Jews and Muslims up against a European ban on the religious-ruled slaughter of goats and other animals.

Her confirmati­on to the post was held up for months by Republican Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, presumably because Lipstadt had accused Johnson of supporting white supremacy by making supportive comments about the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, where some participan­ts brandished Nazi-inspired symbols.

Today, her office is decorated with kippot that were gifts from officials and representa­tives as diverse as the United Arab Emirates and the FBI. She also displays a beaded menorah in the shape of a lion that was given to her during a trip to South Africa. To a visitor, she can quote passages of the Bible and recounts

a recent chat with Pope Francis at the Vatican.

Hearing her discuss the Old Testament, Exodus, the pharaohs and Joseph, the pope pronounced her a theologian.

“I’m not,” she told The Times with a laugh. “But I guess when the head of the Catholic Church calls you a theologian, you take it.”

A large photo of the pope has joined her office decoration­s of kippot and menorahs.

While most government officials she meets no longer question the existence of antisemiti­sm, many have questions on how to confront it. Education and diplomacy top a long list of options. It remains unclear how much political will there is in many parts of the world to take up the cause.

And while Oct. 7 brought anti-Jewish hatred to the fore, it also forced Lipstadt to cancel what was going to be a “robust” follow-up trip to Saudi Arabia. The timing of the trip, whose goal was to reach out to the broader Saudi public, was not right, she said. The trip has not been reschedule­d.

Lipstadt’s job does not include looking at antisemiti­sm within the United States. Yet the prejudice and what she calls its political weaponizat­ion is universal and globally intertwine­d, she said. Incidents have been seen on American university campuses as part of the protests in support of Palestinia­ns.

“I have friends in this country and other countries who … lean politicall­y right, and they see antisemiti­sm on the left, and they are accurate … absolutely on target,” she said. “And I have friends on the left who see it on the right, and they, too, are absolutely on target. The problem is they often fail to see it standing next to them … from people with whom they agree on most other things.”

She continued: “When you only see it on the other side of the political transom … I have to ask: Are you interested in fighting antisemiti­sm, or was your main objective to beat up on your enemies?”

Lipstadt is adamant that criticizin­g Israeli policy should not be considered antisemiti­c. Were that the case, she said, you’d have to brand as antisemite­s the thousands of Israeli Jews, some still in their military uniforms, who regularly fill the streets of Tel Aviv or Jerusalem to protest the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“Absolutely OK,” she said of protests. “But it’s when you say Israel does not have a right to exist” that is objectiona­ble, she said.

Israel was created 76 years ago by U.N. mandate as a refuge for Jews after the Holocaust, and its creation displaced hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­ns.

“You’ve got … political things that you may feel very strongly about,” Lipstadt said. “But that doesn’t allow for prejudice, or hatred.”

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Deborah Lipstadt at a Greater Miami Jewish Federation event on Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day 2020.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Deborah Lipstadt at a Greater Miami Jewish Federation event on Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day 2020.

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