David Mamet: The pagan sacrifice of Israel

 David Mamet plays the Akedah (Binding of Isaac) card against those in the West whom he accuses of abandoning Israel: … And God told Abraham to take his son up the mountain and kill him, as humans had done for tens of thousands of years. Now, however, for the first time in history, the narrative […]

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 David Mamet plays the Akedah (Binding of Isaac) card against those in the West whom he accuses of abandoning Israel:

… And God told Abraham to take his son up the mountain and kill him, as humans had done for tens of thousands of years. Now, however, for the first time in history, the narrative changed. The sacrifice, Isaac, spoke back. He asked his father, "Where is the Goat we are to sacrifice?" This was the voice of conscience, and Abraham’s hand, as it descended with the knife, was stayed. This was the Birth of the West, and the birth of the West’s burden, which is conscience.

Previously the anxiety and fear attendant upon all human life was understood as Fear of the Gods, and dealt with by propitiation, which is to say by sacrifice. Now, however, the human burden was not to give The Gods what one imagined, in one’s fear, that they might want, but do, in conscience, those things one understood God to require.

In abandonment of the state of Israel, the West reverts to pagan sacrifice, once again, making a burnt offering not of that which one possesses, but of that which is another’s. As Realpolitik, the Liberal West’s anti-Semitism can be understood as like Chamberlain’s offering of Czechoslovakia to Hitler, a sop thrown to terrorism. On the level of conscience, it is a renewal of the debate on human sacrifice.

Read the full essay at The Wall Street Journal.

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