The International Campaign for Real History
![]() Posted Saturday, March 16, 2002
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Memo from: Jude Wanniski To: Mortimer Zuckerman, publisher, New York Daily News, US News & World Report, former publisher, The Atlantic Monthly, Chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations Re: The Rev. Billy Graham’s 1972 comment NOW don’t get me wrong, Mort. I’m not saying just because you own a significant slice of the American news media and that you are a prominent Jewish leader means that Rev. Billy Graham was right in 1972, when he complained to President Richard Nixon that Jews control the media. I actually do think Jews dominate the news media when it comes to issues related to Israel, and I think that fact was what Nixon had in mind when he concurred. He mentioned the dominance of Jews in the Democratic Party, those who would never vote for him, but by 1972 Jewish cohesion was already most pronounced on the Arab/Israeli front. On Billy Graham’s mind was the entertainment media, where he worried that the dominance of secular Jewish owners going back to the earliest days of Hollywood led the culture toward Sodom and Gomorrah. If you read the tape transcript, you will find both men agreeing that “the best Jews” were in Israel, because the locals were “irreligious.” After I presented my commentary yesterday on why Jews have been politically inept, quoting Irving Kristol who preferred the word “stupid,” I got some angry e-mails from Christians who insisted Billy Graham was not anti-Semitic, as I had written. They calmed down when I answered that I had written “anti-Semitic” in quotation marks, as I certainly do not believe either Nixon or Graham had complaints about Jewish people beyond the “political” realm. In my mind, anti-Semitism requires one to want to do harm to Jews in some way — at a low level barring Jews from country club membership, for example, a practice that still exists in some clubs at least “unofficially.” When it comes to Israel, though, the Jewish political establishment that you officially represent will not tolerate a breaking of the ranks. There may be fierce debate inside Israel on government policies toward the Arab/Palestinian world, but once decisions are made, there is no further debate permitted here.
Think of it, Mort. If you had agreed to meet with Min. Farrakhan when I begged you to, three years ago I think, perhaps you would have been able to persuade your colleagues to shift gears enough to give the Arab/Islamic world some hope on Middle East matters. And 9-11 might not have happened. Remember I told you that Farrakhan had informed me that he would meet with any journalists I recommended, and said he would come to New York City to meet with the editorial board of the Jewish weekly Forward, but that its then-editor Seth Lipsky said he could not have that happen. When I told you that Seth was too small, but you were big, you replied “I’m not that big,” and you reminded me that your name began with a “Z” and I should come back when I went through the rest of the alphabet of Jewish political leaders. How sad it is. Can’t you see that if one of the most powerful and influential media figures in both the news media and the Jewish political establishment is afraid to meet with Min. Farrakhan — because the word is to avoid doing so at all costs — how do lesser men and women in the press corps break ranks, whether Jewish or not? My old boss at The Wall Street Journal told me at the time I discussed Min. Farrakhan with you that he cleared all issues involving Jewish matters with Seth Lipsky of the Forward. I offered to have Min. Farrakhan meet with the editorial board of The New York Times, or to have him pen an op-ed, but there was no interest.
Do Jews control the media? You bet they do on this issue. Min. Farrakhan tells of a dinner meeting with a group of influential rabbis in Chicago a few years back, a dinner arranged by Irv Kupcinet, the columnist. He says the dinner went beautifully and the rabbis suggested they adjourn to another room for coffee, to come down to business. He said one rabbi took out a sheet of paper with a list of demands, telling him that if he complied with them, they would assure him his problems with the news media would go away. One of the demands was that he apologize for everything he had said in the past that distressed them, another that he say nothing in the future that would distress them. Farrakhan told me he said he would apologize for anything he said that was not true, if they would wish to discuss it with him man-to-man, but that he could not grant blanket apologies as if he were a child and thus could not comply. He said he told the rabbis that he could also take a list of demands from his pocket, if they were willing to sit and listen. He said he acknowledged the Jewish community had done more for the black man over the past century than any other ethnic or religious group. It was always in a parent/child relationship, and it was time for equal footing at an adult level. No deal. No deal, Mort, because I believe the fear of losing Israel to the Arabs is so great that your group will not take any risks of the only kind that might actually produce peace in the Holy Land. And you are not big enough, you say. Your name starts with the end of the alphabet. Too bad.
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