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by zupatol
554 days ago
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I read some of her books and it also sounds weird to me. The only thing that struck me is that she saw the tribe of Israel in the ancient testament as a nasty example of one group crushing another, something she also didn't like in the roman empire, and also in how french regions were culturally crushed at the expense of the center. Googling turned up this criticism:
- Simone Weil, whose life was devoted to witnessing oppression and injustice, and was almost silent about the persecution of Jews by Nazis — chose to instead focus on the fate of France at the hands of the Germans
https://levecenter.ucla.edu/mary-gordon-2013/ It seems a stretch to call her antisemitic. |
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I often wonder what % of antisemitism is a consequence of overly enthusiastic accusations. Two (or much, much more) can play the imagination game.