To describe the state of American Jewry after the warm spring of the 1950s through the early 1970s is akin to watching a shriveled brown leaf fluttering aimlessly in the wind in the midst of a cold and bitter winter.

At mid-century, the images of the Holocaust and its aftermath were still seared into the consciousness of the American public. Today, young students and even congressional staffers I meet on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., dismiss it as “ancient history.” The moral memory that once anchored U.S. society has been steadily eroding.

A major turning point came in 1979, when Edward Said revolutionized the study of the Middle East with Orientalism , a book that insisted that racism, sexism and Western views of the region all stem from a singular, malign “occidental narrative.

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